"Had I been free to get down from the carriage and to speak to the girl whom we were passing, I might perhaps have been disillusioned by some blemish on her skin which from the carriage I had not distinguished. (Whereupon any attempt to penetrate into her life would have seemed suddenly impossible. For beauty is a sequence of hypotheses which ugliness cuts short when it bars the way that we could already see opening into the unknown). Perhaps a single word which she might have uttered, or a smile, would have furnished me with an unexpected key or clue with which to read the expression on her face, to interpret her bearing, which would at once have become commonplace. It is possible, for I have never in real life met any girls so desirable as on days when I was with some solemn person from whom, despite the myriad pretexts that I had invented, I could not tear myself away: some years after the one in the course of which I went for the first time to Balbec, as I was driving through Paris with a friend of my father, and had caught sight of a woman walking quickly along the dark street, I felt that it was unreasonable to forfeit, for a purely conventional scruple, my share of happiness in what may very well be the only life there is, and jumping from the carriage without a word of apology I went in search of the stranger, lost her at the junction of two streets, caught up with her again in a third, and arrived at last, breathless, beneath a street lamp, face to face with Mme Verdruin whom I had been carefully avoiding for years, and who, in her delight and surprise, exclaimed: 'But how very nice of you to have run all this way just to say how d'ye do to me!'"
Marcel Proust, Within a Budding Grove, pp. 766-767
"For beauty is a sequence of hypotheses which ugliness cuts short when it bars the way that we could already see opening into the unknown."
I'll be teaching an Aesthetic Expression class starting Monday in our summer session. One of our initial discussions will What is Art?, which then segues into What is Beauty? They are both great topics, and only partially because you can use them to start arguments (not that I ever would, obviously). The question of defining beauty, and especially Beauty, is especially fraught with danger. As the Daoists would tell us, once you define something as beautiful you create ugliness. I love Proust's proposal that "beauty is a sequence of hypotheses" and it reminded me of two of my favorite people and two of my favorite shows.
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