Sing yourself far down the street
Sing yourself right off your feet
Sing yourself away from victory and of defeat
Sing yourself with fife and drum
Sing yourself to overcome
the darkness of one's lost and someone else has won"
Same as someone posted earlier, but I reckon one word in the first line is different if you listen.
I think the last line is "the thought that someone's lost and someone else has won" and the first probably "on down the street"
Could be wrong, but I like it better that way. Especially the last line.
It's sort of a call to become less attached and simplistic, to stop thinking of everything in terms of winners and losers. This fits with "sing yourself away from victory and from defeat"