BEAUTY QUOTES VIII

quotations about beauty

At some point in life the world's beauty becomes enough. You don't need to photograph, paint or even remember it. It is enough. No record of it needs to be kept and you don't need someone to share it with or tell it to. When that happens -- that letting go -- you let go because you can.

TONI MORRISON

Tar Baby


What can still that hunger of the heart which sickens the eye for beauty, and makes sweet-scented ease an oppression?

GEORGE ELIOT

Daniel Deronda


Beauty itself soon fades, and when a woman has beauty and nothing else, well, it's like putting all the goods in the shop window, isn't it? And the moment she loses her good looks--poor creature! what is she? Just a mere bit of faded finery to be thrown aside.

HENRY ARTHUR JONES

Her Tongue


Arguments out of a pretty mouth are unanswerable.

JOSEPH ADDISON

The Freeholder, Jan. 2, 1716


A woman who has never been pretty has never been young.

MADAME SWETCHINE

"Airelles,", The Writings of Madame Swetchine


True love survives all shocks: an affection originally produced by admiration for unusual beauty may not only survive the loss of that beauty, but may become more intense if the beauty has changed into ugliness through causes that bind the lovers together in tender associations.

ARTHUR LYNCH

Moods of Life


Let us reflect, what most powerfully attracts the eyes of beholders, and seizes the spectator with rapturous delight; for if we can find what this is, we may perhaps use it as a ladder, enabling us to ascend into the region of beauty, and survey its immeasurable extent.

PLOTINUS

"Concerning the Beautiful"


So audacious has Beauty become in these latter days, so proudly she walks abroad, making so superb an appeal to the desire of the eye, thighed like Artemis, and bosomed like Aphrodite, or at whiles a fairy creature of ivory and gossamer and fragrance, with a look in her eyes of secret gardens; and so much is the wide world at her feet, and one with her in the vanity of her fairness--that I sometimes fear an impending dies irae, when the dormant spirit of Puritanism will reassert itself, and some stern priests thunder from the pulpit of worldly vanities and the wrath to come.

RICHARD LE GALLIENNE

"The Persecutions of Beauty", Vanishing Roads and Other Essays


Sculptors, poets, painters, musicians--they're the traditional purveyors of Beauty. But it can as easily be created by a gardener, a farmer, a plumber, a careworker.

CHARLES DE LINT

The Onion Girl


Incapacity to appreciate certain types of beauty may be the condition sine qua non for the appreciation of another kind; the greatest capacity both for enjoyment and creation is highly specialized and exclusive, and hence the greatest ages of art have often been strangely intolerant. The invectives of one school against another, perverse as they are philosophically, are artistically often signs of health, because they indicate a vital appreciation of certain kinds of beauty, a love of them that has grown into a jealous passion.

GEORGE SANTAYANA

The Sense of Beauty


Beauty is a terrible and awful thing! It is terrible because it has not been fathomed, for God sets us nothing but riddles. Here the boundaries meet and all contradictions exist side by side.

FYODOR DOSTOEVSKY

The Brothers Karamazov


Ask me where beauty is, I'll say
'Tis in sweet maiden's witchery;
Amid the beams of her flashing eye
When pleasure's cup is sparkling high,
And new-born love's first artless glances
Illume her brow,
And joy within her young heart dances
For the first vow;
When she knows not of blighting care,
And all is bright, and fresh, and fair;
And fancy's banner is unfurled,
Tinting with rose her future world;
Nor cloud, nor mist dims in her eye
The sunshine of life's morning sky,
That, with such gay and golden beams,
Colours her happy youth with dreams.

C. B. LANGSTON

"Where Is Beauty?"


The creator and arbiter of beauty is the heart; to the male rattlesnake the female rattlesnake is the loveliest thing in nature.

AMBROSE BIERCE

"Epigrams of a Cynic"


Beauty is the gift from God.

ARISTOTLE


Beauty for the most part, consists in objects of sight; but it is also received through the ears, by the skilful composition of words, and the consonant proportion of sounds; for in every species of harmony, beauty is to be found.

PLOTINUS

"Concerning the Beautiful"


In life, as in art, the beautiful moves in curves.

EDWARD BULWER LYTTON

What Will He Do With It?


Beautiful people lived in a different world, had different relations with people. From the beginning they were raised for love.

ELIF BATUMAN

The Idiot


Beautiful peaches are not always the best flavored; neither are handsome women the most amiable.

WILLIAM SCOTT DOWNEY

Proverbs


Judge nothing by the appearance. The more beautiful the serpent, the more fatal its sting.

WILLIAM SCOTT DOWNEY

Proverbs


The yoke of beauty is easy to bear
Since I need not lay it down.

KARLE WILSON BAKER

"The Marching Mountains", Burning Bush