The Elegance of the Hedgehog
I’ve read the most amazing book, one of my all time favorites – The Elegance Of The Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery. A gentle story full of philosophy, references to literature, art and I could not put it down–although I wanted to savor it. A bit of a dilemma.
A quote from the book knocked me off my chair, metaphorically speaking:
“Yet how exhausting it is to be constantly desiring…We soon aspire to pleasure without the quest, to a blissful state without beginning or end, where beauty would no longer be an aim or a project but the very proof of our nature. And that state is Art.
…When we gaze at a still life, when–even though we did not pusue it–we delight in its beauty, a beauty borne away by the magnified and immoble figuration of things, we find pleasure in the fact there was no need for longing, we may contemplate something we need not want, may cherish something we need not desire.
So this still life, because it embodies a beauty that speaks to our desire but given birth by some else’ s desire, because it cossets our pleasure without in any way being part of our own projects, because it is offered to us without requiring the effort of desiring on our part: this still life incarnates the quintessence of Art, the certainty of timelessness.
In the scene before our eyes–silent, without life or motion–a time exempt from projects is incarnated, perfection purloined from duration and its weary greed–pleasure without desire, existence without duration, beauty without will.
For art is emotion without desire.”
The Elegance of the Hedgehog (L’élégance du hérisson) is a novel by the French novelist and professor of philosophy Muriel Barbery.
Have you read it, did you love it?


