Charles Sangster

The Wine of Song

WITHIN Fancy’s halls I sit and quaff
 Rich draughts of the wine of Song,
   And I drink and drink
   To the very brink
 Of delirium wild and strong,
Till I lose all sense of the outer world
 And see not the human throng.
 
The lyral chords of each rising thought
 Are swept by a hand unseen,
   And I glide and glide
   With my music bride,
 Where few spiritless souls have been;
And I soar afar on wings of sound
 With my fair Æolian queen.
 
Deep, deeper still, from the springs of Thought
 I quaff till the fount is dry,
   And I climb and climb
   To a height sublime
 Up the stars of some lyric sky,
Where I seem to rise upon airs that melt
 Into song as they pass by.
 
Millennial rounds of bliss I live,
 Withdrawn from my cumbrous clay,
   As I sweep and sweep
   Through infinite deep
 On deep of that starry spray;
Myself a sound on its world-wide round,
 A tone on its spheral way.
 
And wheresoe’er through the wondrous space
 My soul wings its noiseless flight,
 
   On their astral rounds
   Float divinest sounds,
 Unseen, save by spirit-sight,
Obeying some wise, eternal law,
 As fixed as the law of light.
 
But, oh, when my cup of dainty bliss
 Is drained of the wine of Song,
   How I fall and fall
   At the sober call
 Of the body that waiteth long
To hurry me back to its cares terrene,
 And earth’s spiritless human throng!
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