1 ; ' THE OREGON SUNDAY; JOURNAL, PORTLAND SUNDAY MORNING. JANUARY ' 24, 1909 ft -V M-i .".-rW l':; Jw, ' fl, 6 - A y n , mm$y wjymmml I . ,' I I v : -J I bodies the purest and most chaste Greek type of f i , ! f J ' ' m ! 'l si , Kty. ( j-,.-'? It f " ' !. 1 0 .'", ' ' lg A small face It in. perfectly oval, the brow 16w. f ipVvi;5V-o I I ? ; ', ," ' - ' ''t - - ''2 " the lips beautifully arched, the nose fine, sensitive I 5 fi.'1.;;:.s. -.V - ' . - t . I 1 V . "r ."'"; A - J and purely Grecian The face embodies beauty in I " 0 : , ' ? ' I J gP, ' r V l Its perfection, unstirred by passion. Such, we are I '', J If I ifTr' 'lit " ' V 'ff led to believe, was the type- of many of the fairest I 11 J ...-ivV. f , I f,1i ' " Vr ' - HI .- women of thai arly period. Ill jA-& A f i , U'i . 3 rr,w"' ' - ' : - V " V"' l7 e are to judge by the Greek statues and the 111 ' ' t' ' ' X 1 I VV" 4 . i", ' " " V V' f'! Impel foa ena.nrls and paintings of the Romans. 7. 7 , ' , 1 v ' V"- t? VvT ' . rt ' rVv 1 ' T,i v' Afl'i the beauties of the Capitol of Caesar did not com- f " " ?, -x " o v a V - fxHi; r yxfl .'' J 4 - k 1 V - . jTl f f Pare favorably with those of Greece The most ar- V -' i ! ' ' ! ? f SVZA J H 1 A ' " "';' '! S'Jyf. dent ldeall8t coulJ lardly;enthase about the paint- ! ,S -''T ; iZyjix "Wv5riVAr -'"i:'''i--'w7 of.taan wy tajini,myCai.in ' :'.;v-. t. ''. ,'t; f V' sV 'VV"-' ''".'V ' 5.' I'1 Ju'lK'nK by thls-aithouKh such Judgment -? i', ' - V V 'T ' f" -in X' ' 4fr. "Vs-i s'l I V . ' . " " V be unfair-beauty ' could not have improved ' ' , : Kf - ' X I0!' IV V; H -'i,-V",V tt-" nrff Her 'na"cr f ores.IB, her hair is like that f; t 4" i-St YAxZ A' I' ' I.a V"' f H- ') ; r IS :ttS f adopted by women of our ... flm. Tf .k. Vv - ' W ff If .iftI V-.ff ' - t ' yy., ard her nose too sharp. A reader of character will XXJ ' S N. " J J . Jt mVi ' . V; ;j i' ee In her a woman who probably enjoyed life, who ' : XNfr!? '' i"' ' jTOJei Pf t lVld XVSt ? - ; - l 0 loved a little gossip, and by no means lacked tem- NI;-' VV ' , - rZ tI Ci Stj00ZrftA y2,-,AT P"- Th'a ,Pe f bfauty' whlch Prevailed in Rome 'CS55? - ,-. ' ' 'i ' " -3WP A I irVJ ' "S. &aCY and Pompeii. Is undistinguished save by its unat- - ' " ' SSSSSSSST-- rsl lei 11 w. rri: jtz r tracvness. , . -sb & m s w s j r s . sv r x las' ,.- - yzzS of THE RESTOREt) CLEOPATRA Compare the with the warm. EGARDING the op-, Women's beauty lias been. perennial. posite sex, a . uit, It comes into being with her birth and more clever than 1 1 riorifies most of the sears of her life. I n true, once said: " The most beautiful xvomen .all times. there Jiave been fair women, and are those that have never lived." r all periods some' tttore noted than the rrom me early days when Adam was : rest. ' charmed by the glamour of hft fair com panion, mankind has been given to extoll ing and idealizing the 'Ibeauty. of , women. Long before Homer wrote-did poets com pare women's eyes to twin stars,. her cheeks to rose petals and her lips to pomegranates; hng before .Helen of Troy inspired men to wur did women wield , the potent', charm that has made history', rather shrunken , Roman v.o.,,t .- radiant loveliness of that nnn of Egypt who loved Mark Antony. Lately there have come audacious ones who claim that Cleo patra was not beautiful; they have ungallantly de clared that her skin was dusky and that her fea tures were negroid. , - " Alma-Tadema, who made' a study lot the bai-IM " has restored the Cleopatra of tradition-a woman '' magnificently made, with foil, lovely face dark flashing- eyes, and a wealth of dark hair. Her ; are slumbrous, but there are smoldering Ores- Jh ' fascinate, too, much as do those of a snake Sh i latilrA Tlit. i . i - time, who compares strikingly. with the clasile Ideal . loved la France. But it is a gentle face, lovely an of old Greece. , Beautiful.! surely' but the Duchees mUd.1;' More beautiful, than Marie Antoinette T That Jean's face does not possess, thaf "immobile, flne depends upon taste,, ' chiseled beauty of tfie" Greeks.. Therells soroething' . Compare -wlth Mrs. Langtry the radiant and oriental, too, In her face. In her dark hair and dark regal beauty of Lady Pole-Caraw. one of the -most eyea KK geptle 'spontaneity; a , Sod' hiJngLiv-these jf ; noted of living women. Here one sees an outline are expressed in her countenance. T A approaching the cold perfection of Greece; hut It tsut take. ror: instance, anotner teauty ot about - J a face enlivened by Interest In things, with . :. W. V""", ' latent- fierceness of her nature. This Tis.the Cleona whether .women are more beautiful today ' r we hY? 'l'? mnd whoembodies the aerce a r , ' . J - beauty of the barbariO' age. ' . . than ever.bejoreT 'Loes tne modern beauty , comparc'with Cleopdtra 'and Troy's Helen? f this time Marie Antoinette was regarded as one of the -roost beautiful women of the continent. ' The; patrician face, the noble brow,, the classic sugges- . tlon these mark her as a supreme type of beauty then regarded most nearly the perfect.; ;. Compare the other beautiful women of 'history ' Diana -de-Poitiers. Nell Gwynne. the countess of '-' Gramont. Lady Hamilton, the duchess of . Devon-i shire and try if you can to select -the -most beau tiful. ' To the man who loved her. "Mona Lisa was : dououess regaraea as anomer Heieo. Lucretle Bur- o T THAT perfect beauty of ancient Greece we nave heard ana even seen in the "work of ancient 'artists. , Car-ed in marble the stern and .coldly beautiful face of the Venus of - . . Milo rases from her "ancient time. We have . also .the wonderful Lemnian Athena, which Lucien pronounced the best. work of Phidas. and which. em- . Ditrre8t ttmes, too, have produced various cepted .types. Observ, for instance, the dueb.es. " Gordon who was one of the leading beauties of hr time. Slr Joshua Reynolds painted the brilliant aucneM as arrayeajn a epanish costume. ; which t 'do you -believe they have. grpn more perfect hi women were charming woman dressed less affectedly than her fla was doubtless me, most radiant woman ever orn to the men, who .loved her and whom she -poisoned.--- , . . ' DUl corainrwg in. nunun oeaunes or nistory. ..j .........iul, . . .. lovollnesi picture was pamtea in 1774 or 1 77 S., when Mrs Lily Langtry was conceded as among the most wc' n..aui arm This beautiful living women sisters and was marked at the time for her dellmrv of appearance. . . . Here Is a woman, the- accepted - beauty of hef Her fame snread ovrr ui JW1HBS ueusiuou. t.u fiuiiur . . . i 4 wnrlfl. See her picture at that time. Iter face is leant... bile, placid; her eyes are large and gray. Htr fire is rather large; It rs not the petite face once so' eyes, a suarsrestlon of tha ntim.nril Would LftdT Pf)l-r'.iirw ha Hi.H7-rf ninra tmtr imn Lieopaira: eianaaras ox beauty vary, sour - eyes may. see. in a different light a picture regarded dissimilarly, by a' friend.- Mark these flowers ef - womanhood and decide. -But may it not be. as aa English writer expressed it: - t- JThese beautiful women re wrought of Beauty, Ideal Lore,; Immortality. Their garments are lovely words, their voice is .music, the light upon their . faces is the morning glory of imagination. "These Fair Women kre the Daughter of the Soul- of Man-by the-Beauty of the World, whom he calls Kemlna. They are Immortal, for even if in the passage of years, or through accident, they fade In . the memories of mankind, they live again in the ever new and beautiful births which are the off , spring of -this divine marriage. ' "Time.-however cannot touch their pictured loveliness.- .They are limned. os a canvas beyond the iterb of the moth. Thev are in the mind of men aa the Innumerable stars are in the. firma ment." ... . . ' -.. - - , v .'..-'