Beauty.-Blair. BEAUTY! thou pretty plaything! dear deceit ! What hast thou more to boast of? Will thy lovers T'improve those Charms, and keep them in repair, That transitory Flower: e'en while it lasts OH, what a pure and sacred thing Is Beauty, curtain'd from the sight Of the gross World, illumining One only mansion with her light: Unseen by Man's disturbing eye The Flower, that blooms beneath the Sea Beauty.-Lansdowne. SHE seizes hearts, not waiting for consent, Like sudden death, that snatches unprepared; Like fire from Heav'n, scarce seen so soon as felt. Beauty. Otway. ANGELS were painted fair to look like you : There's in you all that we believe of Heav'nAmazing Brightness, Purity, and Truth, Eternal Joy, and everlasting Peace. D THE Bloom of op'ning Flowers, unsullied Beauty, O HOW I grudge the grave this heav'nly Form! Is she not more than painting can express, O FATAL Beauty! why art thou bestow'd A LAVISH planet reign'd when she was born, Beauty. Dryden. ONE who would change the worship of all climates, To idolize her Face. Beauty. — From the French. BEAUTY, unaccompanied by Virtue, is as a Flower without Perfume. Beauty. St. Pierre. EVERY trait of Beauty may be referred to some virtue, as to Innocence, Candour, Generosity, Modesty, and Heroism. Beauty. From the Italian. SOCRATES called Beauty a short-lived Tyranny; Plato, a Privilege of Nature; Theophrastus, a silent Cheat; Theocritus, a delightful Prejudice; Carneades, a solitary Kingdom; Domitian said, that nothing was more grateful; Aristotle affirmed that Beauty was better than all the letters of recommendation in the World; Homer, that 'twas a glorious gift of Nature; and Ovid, alluding to him, calls it a favour bestowed by the Gods. Beauty. Lord Greville. THE Criterion of true Beauty is, that it increases on examination; of false, that it lessens. There is something, therefore, in true Beauty that corresponds with right reason, and is not merely the creature of Fancy. Beauty. - Dryden. MARK her majestic Fabrick; she's a Temple Her Soul's the Deity that lodges there; Beauty. Anonymous. BEAUTY is spread abroad through earth and sea and sky, and dwells on the face and form, and in the heart of Man; and he will shrink from the thought of its being a thing which he, or any one else, could monopolize. He will deem that the highest and most blessed privilege of his genius is, that it enables him to cherish the widest and fullest sympathy with the hearts and thoughts of his brethren. Beauty. - Dryden. HER Eyes, her Lips, her Cheeks, her Shapes, her Features, All that the blooming Earth can send forth fair; Beauty. Otway. OH! she has Beauty might ensnare A Conqueror's soul, and make him leave his crown Beauty.-Colton. THAT is not the most perfect Beauty, which, in public, would attract the greatest observation; nor even that which the Statuary would admit to be a faultless piece of clay, kneaded up with blood. But that is true Beauty, which has not only a Substance, but a Spirit,-a Beauty that we must intimately know, justly to appreciate,-a Beauty lighted up in conversation, where the Mind shines as it were through its casket, where, in the language of the Poet, "the eloquent blood spoke in her Cheeks, and so distinctly wrought, that we might almost say her Body thought.” An order and a mode of Beauty which, the more we know, the more we accuse ourselves for not having before discovered those thousand Graces which bespeak that their owner has a Soul. This is that Beauty which never cloys, possessing Charms as resistless as those of the fascinating Egyptian, for which Antony wisely paid the bau ble of a World,-a Beauty like the rising of his own Italian Suns, always enchanting, never the same. Beauty. Clarendon. IT was a very proper answer to him who asked, why any man should be delighted with Beauty? that it was a question that none but a blind man could ask; since any beautiful object doth so much attract the sight of all men, that it is in no man's power not to be pleased with it. Beauty. - Steele. TO give pain is the tyranny, to make happy the true empire, of Beauty. Beauty. — Ralph Waldo Emerson. BEAUTY is the mark God sets on virtue. Every natural action is graceful. Every heroic act is also decent, and causes the place and the bystanders to shine. When a noble act is done-perchance in a scene of great natural beauty; when Leonidas and his three hundred martyrs consume one day in dying, and the sun and moon come each and look at them once in the steep defile of Thermopyla; when Arnold Winkelried, in the high Alps, under the shadow of the avalanche, gathers in his side a sheaf of Austrian spears to break the line for his comrades; are not these heroes entitled to add the beauty of the scene to the beauty of the deed? Beauty of Nature.-Dwight. THE beauty and splendour of the objects around us, it is ever to be remarked, are not necessary to their existence, nor to what we commonly intend their usefulness. It is therefore to be regarded as a source of pleasure gratuitously superinduced upon the general nature of the objects themselves, and in this light as a testimony of the Divine Goodness peculiarly affecting. Becoming our own Master.-Anonymous. EVERYBODY is impatient for the time when he shall be his own Master; and if coming of Age were to make one so, if Years could indeed "bring the philosophic Mind," it would rightly be a day of rejoicing to a whole household and neighbourhood. But too often he who is impatient to become his own Master, when the outward checks are removed, merely becomes his own Slave. Behaviour. — La Bruyere. A COLDNESS or an Incivility manifested towards us by a Superior, makes us hate him; but no sooner does he condescend to honour us with a Salute or a Smile, than we forget the former Indignity, and become perfectly reconciled to him. Being Alone.-Byron. To view alone The fairest scenes of land and deep, To thoughts with which my heart beat high, The Village Bells.- Cowper. HOW soft the Music of those Village Bells. In Cadence sweet! now dying all away, 'Tis pity, Bounty had not eyes behind; That Man might ne'er be wretched for his Mind. Benevolence. Mackenzie. THERE is no use of money equal to that of Beneficence; here the enjoyment grows on reflection. Benevolence. — Colton. THERE is nothing that requires so strict an Economy as our Benevolence. We should husband our Means as the Agriculturist his manure, which if he spread over too large a superficies produces no crop, if over too small a surface, exuberates in rankness and in weeds. Benevolence. Kant. BENEFICENCE is a duty. He who frequently practises it, and sees his benevolent intentions realized, at length comes really to love him to whom he has done Good. When, therefore, it is said, "Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself," it is not meant, thou shalt love him first, and do him Good in consequence of that Love, but, thou shalt do Good to thy neighbour; and this thy Beneficence will engender in thee that Love to Mankind which is the fulness and consummation of the Inclination to do Good. Benevolence. Cicero. MEN resemble the gods in nothing so much as in doing Good to their fellow-creatures. Benevolence. - From the French. THE Conqueror is regarded with awe, the wise Man commands our esteem; but it is the benevolent Man who wins our af fections. |