Arthur Quiller-Couch, ed. 1919. The Oxford Book of English Verse: 1250–1900.
Ralph Waldo Emerson. 18031882671. Bacchus
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’d no savour of the earth to ‘scape. | 5 |
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, | 10 |
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 curl’d | 15 |
Among the silver hills of heaven | |
Draw everlasting dew; | |
Wine of wine, | |
Blood of the world, | |
Form of forms, and mould of statures, | 20 |
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: | 25 |
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. | 30 |
Water and bread, | |
Food which needs no transmuting, | |
Rainbow-flowering, wisdom-fruiting, | |
Wine which is already man, | |
Food which teach and reason can. | 35 |
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; | 40 |
And the poor grass shall plot and plan | |
What it will do when it is man. | |
Quicken’d so, will I unlock | |
Every crypt of every rock. | |
I thank the joyful juice | 45 |
For all I know; | |
Winds of remembering | |
Of the ancient being blow, | |
And seeming-solid walls of use | |
Open and flow. | 50 |
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; | 55 |
Reason in Nature’s lotus drench’d— | |
The memory of ages quench’d— | |
Give them again to shine; | |
Let wine repair what this undid; | |
And where the infection slid, | 60 |
A dazzling memory revive; | |
Refresh the faded tints, | |
Recut the agèd prints, | |
And write my old adventures with the pen | |
Which on the first day drew, | 65 |
Upon the tablets blue, | |
The dancing Pleiads and eternal men. |