Hidden Ice - Louis MacNeice There are few songs for domesticity For routine work, money-making or scholarship Though these are apt for eulogy or tragedy. And I would praise our adaptability Who can spend years and years in offices and beds Every morning twirling the napkin ring, A twitter of inconsequent vitality. And I would praise our inconceivable stamina Who work to the calendar and maintain The equilibrium of nerves and notions, Our mild bravado in the face of time. Those who ignore disarm. The domestic ambush The pleated lampshade the defeatist clock May never be consummated and we may never Strike on the rock beneath the calm upholstering. But some though buoyed by habit, though convoyed By habitual faces and hands that help the food Or help one with one’s coat, have lost their bearings Struck hidden ice or currents no one noted. One was found like Judas kissing flowers And one who sat between the clock and the sun Lies like a Saint Sebastian full of arrows Feathered from his own hobby, his pet hours.