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On the Circuit by W. H. Auden
Among pelagian travelers, Lost on their lewd conceited way To Massachusetts, Michigan, Miami or L.A.,
An airborne instrument I sit, Predestined nightly to fulfill Columbia-Giesen-Management's Unfathomable will,
By whose election justified, I bring my gospel of the Muse To fundamentalists, to nuns, to Gentiles and to Jews,
And daily, seven days a week, Before a local sense has jelled, From talking-site to talking-site Am jet-or-prop-propelled.
Though warm my welcome everywhere, I shift so frequently, so fast, I cannot now say where I was The evening before last,
Unless some singular event Should intervene to save the place, A truly asinine remark, A soul-bewitching face,
Or blessed encounter, full of joy, Unscheduled on the Giesen Plan, With, here, an addict of Tolkien, There, a Charles Williams fan.
Since Merit but a dunghill is, I mount the rostrum unafraid: Indeed, 'twere damnable to ask If I am overpaid.
Spirit is willing to repeat Without a qualm the same old talk, But Flesh is homesick for our snug Apartment in New York.
A sulky fifty-six, he finds A change of mealtime utter hell, Grown far too crotchety to like A luxury hotel.
The Bible is a goodly book I always can peruse with zest, But really cannot say the same For Hilton's Be My Guest.
Nor bear with equanimity The radio in students' cars, Muzak at breakfast, or--dear God!-- Girl-organists in bars.
Then, worst of all, the anxious thought, Each time my plane begins to sink And the No Smoking sign comes on: What will there be to drink?
Is this ma milieu where I must How grahamgreeneish! How infra dig! Snatch from the bottle in my bag An analeptic swig?
Another morning comes: I see, Dwindling below me on the plane, The roofs of one more audience I shall not see again.
God bless the lot of them, although I don't remember which was which: God bless the U.S.A., so large, So friendly, and so rich.
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