On Oct 1, 2010, at 1:43 PM, Stan wrote:
Lolita no doubt had flirty, flirty eyes (for the flirty, flirty guys) but off-hand, I can’t recall their colour
Actually from HH's Wanted poem:
My Dolly, my folly! Her eyes were vair,
And never closed when I kissed her.
[256]
My dictionary gives vair as:
1 fur, typically bluish-gray, obtained from a variety of squirrel, used in the 13th and 14th centuries as a trimming or lining for garments.
Appel gives vair as gray: the pale color of miniver fur.
My dictionary gives miniver as
noun
plain white fur for lining or trimming clothes.
ORIGIN Middle english : from Old French menu vair 'littl vair' from menu 'little'+vair 'squirrel fur' ( see vair)
I remember, vaguely, from a footnote somewhere, that the Brits from Chaucer down to Shakespeare considered gray eyes as particularly attractive.
From Chaucer's portrait of the Prioresse, Madame Eglentyne:
Hir nose tretys, hir eyen greye_as glas,
Hir mouth ful smal, and therto softe_and reed.
[tretys=small, I think]
Also Friar Laurence's little soliloquy from Romeo(A2S3), (which also happens to be in heroic couplets) begins:
The grey-eyed morn smiles on the frowning night, Chequering the eastern clouds with streaks of light,
My eyes are hazel.
ps. all colors make me happy!