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If I Could Glimpse Him

Topics: classic

When in the Scorpion circles low                 The sun with fainter, dreamier light,              And at a far-off hint of snow                 The giddy swallows take to flight,              And droning insects sadly know                 That cooler falls the autumn night;              When airs breathe drowsily and sweet,                 Charming the woods to colors gay,              And distant pastures send the bleat                 Of hungry lambs at break of day,              Old Hermes' wings grow on my feet,                 And, good-by, home!    I'm called away!              There on the hills should I behold,                 Sitting upon an old gray stone              That humps its back up through the mold,                 And piping in a monotone,              Pan, as he sat in days of old,                 My joy would bid surprise begone!              Dear Pan!    'Tis he that calls me out;                 He, lying in some hazel copse,              Where lazily he turns about                 And munches each nut as it drops,              Well pleased to see me swamped in doubt                 At sound of his much-changing stops.              If I could glimpse him by the vine                 Where purple fox-grapes hang their store,              I'd tell him, in his leafy shrine,                 How poets say he lives no more.              He'd laugh, and pluck a muscadine,                 And fall to piping, as of yore!

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"When in the Scorpion circles low..."

John Charles McNeill's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "If I Could Glimpse Him"... ### 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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"Not long the living weep above their dead,        ..."

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