Beauty is in the eye of the beholder

Дата публикации: Feb 21, 2016 6:7:9 AM

Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Prov. - Different people have different ideas about what is beautiful.

Bob: I can't believe Ted bought that ugly old car.

Fred: He loves it. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

Jill: Have you seen Mary's pictures of her new baby?

He looks pretty ugly, to my eyes.

Jane: Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

Personally, I can't understand why she finds him attractive, but they do say beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

This saying first appeared in the 3rd century BC in Greek. It didn't appear in its current form in print until the 19th century, but in the meantime there were various written forms that expressed much the same thought. In 1588, the English dramatist John Lyly, in his Euphues and his England, wrote:

"...as neere is Fancie to Beautie, as the pricke to the Rose, as the stalke to the rynde, as the earth to the roote."

Shakespeare expressed a similar sentiment in Love's Labours Lost, 1588:

Good Lord Boyet, my beauty, though but mean,

Needs not the painted flourish of your praise:

Beauty is bought by judgement of the eye,

Not utter'd by base sale of chapmen's tongues

Benjamin Franklin, in Poor Richard's Almanack, 1741, wrote:

Beauty, like supreme dominion

Is but supported by opinion

David Hume's Essays, Moral and Political, 1742, include:

"Beauty in things exists merely in the mind which contemplates them."

The person who is widely credited with coining the saying in its current form is Margaret Wolfe Hungerford (née Hamilton), who wrote many books, often under the pseudonym of 'The Duchess'. In Molly Bawn, 1878, there's the line "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder", which is the earliest citation that I can find in print.

Touch but my lips with those fair lips of thine,

(Though mine be not so fair, yet are they red)

The kiss shall be thine own as well as mine;—

What seest thou in the ground? hold up thy head;

Look in mine eyeballs; there thy beauty lies;

Then why not lips on lips, since eyes in eyes?

Shakespeare