« Beauty is an ecstasy ; it is as simple as hunger. There
is really nothing to be said about it. It is like the perfume of
a rose : you can smell it and that is all : that is why the
criticism of art, except in so far as it is unconcerned with
beauty and therefore with art, is tiresome. All the critic can
tell you with regard to Titian's Entombment of
Christ, perhaps of all the pictures in the world that which
has most pure beauty, is to go and look at it. What else he has
to say is history, or biography, or what not. But people add
other qualities to beauty sublimity, human interest,
tenderness, love because beauty does not long content
them. Beauty is perfect, and perfection (such is human nature)
holds our attention but for a little while. The mathematician who
after seeing Phèdre asked : Qu'est-ce que
ça prouve? was not such a fool as he has been
generally made out. No one has ever been able to explain why the
Doric temple of Paestum is more beautiful than a glass of cold
beer except by bringing in considerations that have nothing to do
with beauty. Beauty is a blind alley. It is a mountain peak which
once reached leads nowhere. That is why in the end we find more
to entrance us in El Greco than in Titian, in the incomplete
achievement of Shakespeare than in the consummate success of
Racine. Too much has been written about beauty. That is why I
have written a little more. Beauty is that which satisfies the
aesthetic instinct. But who wants to be satisfied ? It is
only to the dullard that enough is as good as a feast. Let us
face it : beauty is a bit of a bore. »