Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Bacchus by Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Bacchus

    By Ralph Waldo Emerson



    Bring me wine, but wine which never grew
    In the belly of the grape,
    Or grew on vine whose tap-roots, reaching through,
    Under the Andes to the Cape,
    Suffer no savor of the earth to scape.

    Let its grapes the morn salute
    From a nocturnal root,
    Which feels the acrid juice
    Of Styx and Erebus;
    And turns the woe of Night,
    By its own craft, to a more rich delight.

    We buy ashes for bread;
    We buy diluted wine;
    Give me of the true,--
    Whose ample leaves and tendrils curled
    Among the silver hills of heaven
    Draw everlasting dew;
    Wine of wine,
    Blood of the world,
    Form of forms, and mould of statures,
    That I intoxicated,
    And by the draught assimilated,
    May float at pleasure through all natures;
    The bird-language rightly spell,
    And that which roses say so well.

    Wine that is shed
    Like the torrents of the sun
    Up the horizon walls,
    Or like the Atlantic streams, which run
    When the South Sea calls.

    Water and bread,
    Food which needs no transmuting,
    Rainbow-flowering, wisdom-fruiting,
    Wine which is already man,
    Food which teach and reason can.

    Wine which Music is,--
    Music and wine are one,--
    That I, drinking this,
    Shall hear far Chaos talk with me;
    Kings unborn shall walk with me;
    And the poor grass shall plot and plan
    What it will do when it is man.
    Quickened so, will I unlock
    Every crypt of every rock.

    I thank the joyful juice
    For all I know;--
    Winds of remembering
    Of the ancient being blow,
    And seeming-solid walls of use
    Open and flow.

    Pour, Bacchus! the remembering wine;
    Retrieve the loss of me and mine!
    Vine for vine be antidote,
    And the grape requite the lote!
    Haste to cure the old despair,--
    Reason in Nature's lotus drenched,
    The memory of ages quenched;
    Give them again to shine;
    Let wine repair what this undid;
    And where the infection slid,
    A dazzling memory revive;
    Refresh the faded tints,
    Recut the aged prints,
    And write my old adventures with the pen
    Which on the first day drew,
    Upon the tablets blue,
    The dancing Pleiads and eternal men.



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