Quotations on Beauty - Quotations and Proverbs on Beauty
- A thing of beauty is a joy for ever. - John Keats
- Beauty is eternity gazing at itself in a mirror. – Khalil Gibran
- Beauty is the first present Nature gives to women, and the first it takes away. – Mere
- Beauty is power; a smile is its sword. – Charles Reade
- That which is striking and beautiful is not always good, but that which is good is always beautiful. – Ninon De L’englos
- Beauty in things exists in the mind which contemplates them. – David Hume
- Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. – Margaret Hungerford
- Beauty is only skin deep, but it’s a valuable asset if you are poor and haven’t any sense. – Kin Hubbard
- We are conscious of beauty when there is a harmonious relation between something in our nature and the quality of the object which delights us. – Pascal
- Youth is happy because it had the ability to see beauty. Anyone who keeps the ability to see beauty never grows old. – Franz Kafka
- True beauty consists in purity of heart. – M. K. Gandhi
- Give me but one brief day of perfect beauty, and I will answer for the days that follow. – Rabindranath Tagore
- Remember that the most beautiful things in the world are the most useless; peacocks and lilies, for example. – John Ruskin
- What is beautiful is good and what is good will soon also be beautiful. - Sappho
- ‘Beauty is truth, truth beauty’- that is all ye know on earth, and all ye need to know. – John Keats
- Love built on beauty, soon as beauty, dies. – John Donne
- Exuberance is Beauty. – William Blake
- Beauty and the lust for learning have yet to be allied. – Max Beerbohm
- Beauty is the homage which Nature renders to the Supreme Master of the universe. – The Mother
- Beauty’s tears are lovelier than her smiles. – Thomas Campbell
- Beauty is often worse than wine; intoxicating both the holder and the beholder. – Zimmermann
- Beauty and folly are generally companions. – Baltasar Gracian
- A good face is a letter of recommendation. – Proverb
- If eyes were made for seeing, then beauty is its own excuse for being. - Emerson