The Poetry Corner

Bacchanalian

By Victor James Daley

I pity him who has not swung The Thyrsus in the air, And followed Bacchus, blithe and young, "With vine-leaves in his hair; And heard the Maenads sing, And the mad cymbals ring. I pity those who have to walk In sober ways and sad, And keep a guard upon their talk Lest men should think them mad. Or careless speech should show The felon thought below. When in my goblet, blithe and gay, The beaded bubbles wink, For all poor souls like this I pray That they may learn to drink, And, like a rose in rain, Open shut heart and brain. Who does not drink he does not know, And he will never find, What merry fellows live below The surface of his mind: These other men to me Are right good company. If beings of Mythology Could live at my commands Briareus I'd choose to be, Who had a hundred hands: And every hand of mine Would hold a pint of wine And of those beakers ninety-nine With white wine and with red Should brim for dear old friends of mine, The living and the dead. By Pluto there would be A noble revelry! Then let us unto Bacchus sing Evoe! up and down- For Bacchus is the wisest king Who ever wore a crown: His vine leaves hide from view More wit than Plato knew.