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Hide Their Scars!

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A painter, high in worldy fame,     Was sought to reproduce by art     A likeness of the man whose name     Sent darts of anguish through the heart     Of mighty monarchs in his day;     For he by arms subdued the world.     Kingdoms and empires owned his sway     And bowed beneath his flag unfurled.     But Alexander bore a scar,     Deep marked upon his royal brow;     To paint him thus would greatly mar     The monarch's beauty; as a slough     Would mar the beauty of a lawn,     Where queenly feet are wont to tread;     Or like the cloud at early dawn,     Which hides some glory 'neath its spread.     To leave it out would not be true,     For Alexander bore the scar;     The painter this resolved to do,     Which would be true, yet would not mar:     To paint the monarch's head reclined,     With his fore-finger on his brow;     And thus much grace with art combined,     Like ornament on vessel's prow.     The finger rested on the scar,     As if mere chance had placed it there;     And hid from sight this fruit of war,     And left a likeness true and fair.     So let us try, as best we can,     To cover o'er each ugly scar     Upon the brow of mortal man,     So none may see it, near nor far.

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"A painter, high in worldy fame,..."

"Hide Their Scars!" is a quintessential example of Joseph Horatio Chant's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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