To Ben De Casseres Drinking, I doze, and see the gods go by; They wave to me the hand of comradeship, For I am one with them, and at my lip The cup of wisdom bubbles ... up the sky A blur of moondust drifts to dull mine eye, But through the veil my romping visions slip To dance among the careless stars, outstrip The racing planets where they swoop and fly, And then . . . from somewhere east of Mars a keen Thin wind whines for a Dime; I drop one in A sad Salvation Army tambourine And hear a weary homily on Sin . . . “Sister,” I say, “you're right, and yet the Truth Sometimes sits near me in this tavern booth.”
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