This brand of soap has the same smell as once in the big House he visited when he was eight: the walls of the bathroom open To reveal a lawn where a great yellow ball rolls back through a hoop To rest at the head of a mallet held in the hands of a child. And these were the joys of that house: a tower with a telescope; Two great faded globes, one of the earth, one of the stars; A stuffed black dog in the hall; a walled garden with bees; A rabbit warren; a rockery; a vine under gla**; the sea. To which he has now returned. The day of course is fine And a grown-up voice cries Play! The mallet slowly swings,
Then crack, a great gong booms from the dog-dark hall and the ball Skims forward through the hoop and then through the next and then Through hoops where no hoops were and each dissolves in turn And the gra** has grown head-high and an angry voice cries Play! But the ball is lost and the mallet slipped long since from the hands Under the running tap that are not the hands of a child. From Louis MacNeice (1964) “Soap Suds.” In Selected Poems of Louis MacNeice, Edited by W.H. Auden, Faber & Faber, 1964. Reprinted with permission.