SUPERNATURAL TRAVEL
It is said
that we live in the age of the train, and, judging by the number of trains on
the rails these days, such a claim cannot be far wrong, even though most people
would probably give priority to the plane.
At any rate, the twentieth century is the age of the train that runs on
two rails, whether across the surface of the land or deep underground, and we
may believe this fact is inherent in the relative nature of an atomic society,
which likes to do things in pairs. The
monorail, it would seem, is something for the future, since suggestive of an
absolute trend more applicable, it may well be, to a Social Transcendentalist
age than to a liberal or democratic one.
I like the idea of the monorail train
quite a lot, and I am confident that it will function both above ground, on an elevated line, and beneath ground, like the
contemporary underground. Though not
every country will desire the latter, for reasons I shall shortly outline. It is well known, for instance, that
For what is an underground system? Not simply a mode of mechanized transport,
but, like all other artificial phenomena, a mode of transport corresponding to
a specific ideological equivalent, in this case ... a Marxist one. Yes, the fact is that the underground system
signifies a plunge into a democratic or, rather, anti-democratic absolutism,
much as submarines signify a like-plunge compared with
a surface vessel, such as a destroyer or a cruiser. We may argue that, to a degree, the one
precedes the other, the relative the absolute, and that, just as surface ships
pre-date submarines, so trains pre-date underground trains, as a land/air
relativity preceding a tunnel absolutism and, moreover, as a relativity between
trains running in opposite directions on adjacent, parallel tracks ...
preceding an absolutism of independent underground trains running along the
single tracks of a given tunnel, isolated from those heading in the opposite
direction, which likewise have a tunnel to themselves.
In the underground, then, we perceive a
'fall' (forwards) from the relative to the absolute, as from above-ground
liberalism to beneath-ground radicalism, equivalent to a communist status. Now when this fact is properly appreciated,
it won't surprise us to find that the Irish, with their theocratic bias, do not
possess an underground system and probably wouldn't want to build one even if
they could afford to, bearing in mind the ideological implications of such a
system - implications that may have been grasped intuitively rather than
rationally by the modernity-wary Irish!
A fact that would apply no less to the building and staffing of
submarines, which are likewise Marxist and also scorned by the Irish, who
prefer gunboats and corvettes, corresponding to a petty-bourgeois liberal
integrity.
We may therefore presume that, unless
These days, however, I dislike the
underground on principle and make a point of avoiding it. I have been on surface trains once or twice
in recent years, but would not wish to cultivate a habit with them either, partly,
I suspect, because of the expense, yet partly also for ideological
reasons. If I were asked to stipulate an
ideal mode of rail travel, I would have no hesitation in replying: overhead
monorail travel, as equivalent to a Social Transcendentalist ideological
integrity, and therefore applicable not to an anti-natural bias, nor even an
anti-supernatural one, but to a supernatural bias, such as I trust Ireland will
develop to a greater extent in the near future.
Yes, for if surface rail corresponds to a
liberal, or democratic, ideological position, then air rail, as we may call it,
would certainly conform to a radically theocratic integrity, as appropriate to
a people who fight shy of democratic and, in particular, Marxist criteria,
being heir to a Catholic tradition. Such
a transcendental absolutism would be the logical successor to the current
diesel/electric trains, and would doubtless permit of greater speeds, each rail
running separate from rather than parallel to another, as in the underground
system, with any given train travelling backwards and forwards along its
particular rail. Probably, on second
thoughts, the ideal way of designing monorails would be to have one above the
other, so that a vertical as opposed to a horizontal arrangement was established,
in accordance with transcendental criteria.
Thus neither train on any specific route would ever see the other, since
each of them would be on different levels of track, and stations would have to
be designed accordingly ... with platforms one above the other, though not
necessarily on opposite sides of their respective rails but, to save space and
enable stations to be built along the most vertical lines, one directly above
the other, with the trains' doors opening on opposite sides, depending on the
direction of the train in question, but only on one side in each case.
Who knows, such suggestions may yet bear
fruit, once qualified people get down to working out the details of a viable
two-way monorail system of overhead transport, the lower rail itself some yards
above the ground, the higher one several yards above that, with no possibility
of either train colliding. Certainly
safer than the parallel type of tracks, which more accords with a democratic
society, where a horizontal compromise is never far away and collisions are
always possible. As are derailments, a
misfortune I can't conceive of happening to a monorail train, sunk deeply onto
and around the rail, almost hugging it from either side, as if afraid to part
company. Yet, for all that, more
flexible than the conventional twin-track train, which is obliged to slow down
to accommodate bends in the track and would almost certainly become derailed if
it leant over too far on either side.
There is something ponderous and materialistic about such a train,
whereas the monorail alternative would suggest a wavicle
lightness and swiftness applicable to the supernatural. Thus it would form the transcendental
complement on land to hovercraft at sea, which skim across the water's surface
in a like-supernatural capacity, greatly preferable to surface ships, with
their liberal equation. As yet, however,
monorail and hovercraft are, alike, something of a rarity, even in the most
advanced industrial/technological nations.
A full appreciation of their significance has still to come, as it surely
must during the twenty-first century!
Thus speaks Peter Sloane, transportational spokesperson for the Social
Transcendentalist revolution.