Now brim your glass and plant it well Beneath your nose on the table, And you will find what philosophers tell Of I and non-I is no fable. Now listen to wisdom, my son! Myself am the subject, This wine is the object; These things are two; But I'll prove to you That subject and object are one. I take this glass in my hand, and stand Upon my legs, if I can, And look and smile, benign and bland, And feel that I am a man. Now stretch all the strength of your brains! I drinkand the object Is lost in the subject; Making one entity In the identity Of me and the wine in my veins! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LINES ON OBSERVING A BLOSSOM [ON THE FIRST OF FEBRUARY 1796] by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE THE PARTY by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR AMY WENTWORTH; FOR WILLIAM BRADFORD by JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER DRINKING SONG (2) by ALCAEUS OF MYTILENE LAURENCE BLOOMFIELD IN IRELAND: 9. GOING TO THE FAIR by WILLIAM ALLINGHAM EMBLEMS OF LOVE: 37. LOVE'S MY POLE-STAR by PHILIP AYRES PRAYER by EVGENY ABRAMOVICH BARATYNSKY THE DOOMED OAK; IN IMITATION OF ANATOLE FRANCE by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN |