The like force has the passion over all his nature. It expands the sentiment; it
makes the clown gentle and gives the coward heart. Into the most pitiful and
abject it will infuse a heart and courage to defy the world, so only it have the
countenance of the beloved object. In giving him to another it still more gives
him to himself. He is a new man, with new perceptions, new and keener purposes,
and a religious solemnity of character and aims. He does not longer appertain to
his family and society; he is somewhat; he is a person; he is a soul.
And here let us examine a little nearer the nature of that influence which is
thus potent over the human youth. Beauty, whose revelation to man we now
celebrate, welcome as the sun wherever it pleases to shine, which pleases
everybody with it and with themselves, seems sufficient to itself. The lover
cannot paint his maiden to his fancy poor and solitary. Like a tree in flower,
so much soft, budding, informing loveliness is society for itself; and she
teaches his eye why Beauty was pictured with Loves and Graces attending her
steps. Her existence makes the world rich. Though she extrudes all other persons
from his attention as cheap and unworthy, she indemnifies him by carrying out
her own being into somewhat impersonal, large, mundane, so that the maiden
stands to him for a representative of all select things and virtues. For that
reason the lover never sees personal resemblances in his mistress to her kindred
or to others. His friends find in her a likeness to her mother, or her sisters,
or to persons not of her blood. The lover sees no resemblance except to summer
evenings and diamond mornings, to rainbows and the song of birds.
The ancients called beauty the flowering of virtue. Who can analyze the nameless
charm which glances from one and another face and form? We are touched with
emotions of tenderness and complacency, but we cannot find whereat this dainty
emotion, this wandering gleam, points. It is destroyed for the imagination by
any attempt to refer it to organization. Nor does it point to any relations of
friendship or love known and described in society, but, as it seems to me, to a
quite other and unattainable sphere, to relations of transcendent delicacy and
sweetness, to what roses and violets hint and foreshow. We cannot approach
beauty. Its nature is like opaline doves'-neck lustres, hovering and evanescent.
Herein it resembles the most excellent things, which all have this rainbow
character, defying all attempts at appropriation and use. What else did Jean
Paul Richter signify, when he said to music, "Away! away! thou speakest to me of
things which in all my endless life I have not found, and shall not find." The
same fluency may be observed in every work of the plastic arts. The statue is
then beautiful when it begins to be incomprehensible, when it is passing out of
criticism and can no longer be defined by compass and measuring-wand, but
demands an active imagination to go with it and to say what it is in the act of
doing. The god or hero of the sculptor is always represented in a transition
from that which is representable to the senses, to that which is not. Then first
it ceases to be a stone. The same remark holds of painting. And of poetry the
success is not attained when it lulls and satisfies, but when it astonishes and
fires us with new endeavors after the unattainable. Concerning it Landor
inquires "whether it is not to be referred to some purer state of sensation and
existence."
In like manner, personal beauty is then first charming and itself when it
dissatisfies us with any end; when it becomes a story without an end; when it
suggests gleams and visions and not earthly satisfactions; when it makes the
beholder feel his unworthiness; when he cannot feel his right to it, though he
were Caesar; he cannot feel more right to it than to the firmament and the
splendors of a sunset.
Hence arose the saying, "If I love you, what is that to you?" We say so because
we feel that what we love is not in your will, but above it. It is not you, but
your radiance. It is that which you know not in yourself and can never know.
This agrees well with that high philosophy of Beauty which the ancient writers
delighted in; for they said that the soul of man, embodied here on earth, went
roaming up and down in quest of that other world of its own out of which it came
into this, but was soon stupefied by the light of the natural sun, and unable to
see any other objects than those of this world, which are but shadows of real
things. Therefore the Deity sends the glory of youth before the soul, that it
may avail itself of beautiful bodies as aids to its recollection of the
celestial good and fair; and the man beholding such a person in the female sex
runs to her and finds the highest joy in contemplating the form, movement, and
intelligence of this person, because it suggests to him the presence of that
which indeed is within the beauty, and the cause of the beauty.
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |