The virtues of masculine bristles
From Ovid:
the giant, Polyphemus of Homeric fame, tries to woo the recalcitrant Galatea:
A forest of hair towers over my strong stern features and shades my magnificent shoulders.
Don't think me ugly because my body's a bristling thicket of prickly hair.
A tree is ugly without any foliage; so is a horse, if a mane doesn't cover his tawny neck;
birds are bedecked in plumage, and sheep are clothed in their own wool.
Men look well with a beard and a carpet of hair on their chests.
Metamorphoses 13: 845-850
the giant, Polyphemus of Homeric fame, tries to woo the recalcitrant Galatea:
A forest of hair towers over my strong stern features and shades my magnificent shoulders.
Don't think me ugly because my body's a bristling thicket of prickly hair.
A tree is ugly without any foliage; so is a horse, if a mane doesn't cover his tawny neck;
birds are bedecked in plumage, and sheep are clothed in their own wool.
Men look well with a beard and a carpet of hair on their chests.
Metamorphoses 13: 845-850
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