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Re: "Beauty is only skin deep, but...."Posted by R. Berg on October 01, 2007 In Reply to: Re: "Beauty is only skin deep, but...." posted by Smokey Stover on October 01, 2007 : : : : I have always heard my father use this phrase - "Beauty is only skin deep, but ugliness is to the bone." The first part of this phrase, "Beauty is only skin deep" is listed in your archives but I could not find the last part of the phrase, "...but ugliness is to the bone". Can you tell me what the origin of this phrase is? : : : The Trivia library (http://www.trivia-library.com/b/origins-of-sayings-beauty-is-skin-deep.htm) has the original saying and say the other version ("an old jingle") is "author unknown": : : : "Beauty is but skin deep, : : : I don't know whether the "ugly lies the bone" is a typo (something seems to be missing). Pamela : : ............................................................. : : There's our old friend Anonymous once again. When a beautiful person dies, the beauty is the first to decay, leaving the bone, ugly by comparison. "Lies" is a usefully one-syllable verb meaning to remain behind, if you stretch it a little. : : I can't help thinking of Marc Antony's famous speech in Shakepeare's Julius Caesar: : : Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears; "Ugly lies the bone." The bone lies under the skin and flesh as a mineral deposit might lie under the earth's surface. It just sits there in place, being ugly. That's my interpretation. ~rb
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