I found, through many hours of searching and thinking, five wonderful historical examples of true beauty. Mother Teresa, Anne Frank, Queen Esther, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Audrey Hepburn were the five historical examples I told about in my paper. These women are all very well-known and outspoken women who stood for my connotation of beauty. Mother Teresa, Anne Frank, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Audrey Hepburn were ladies that I learned about in school. I learned about Queen Esther in church. I had so much to say about these ladies that I had to split my historical part of the paper into seven parts. The first of seven paragraphs was to introduce the ladies and to introduce the historical section. I then took five small paragraphs to talk about each lady individually. Lastly, the seventh paragraph was to wrap the historical section up. After conquering the historical section, my last problem was listing what beauty was not. The last thing I had trouble with while writing this paper was telling what beauty is not. Although it may seem like an easy task to do, telling what beauty is not was hard for me to do. The reason why it was so hard for me to explain was because beauty means a lot of different things. Beauty can be disguised as several different things such as being kind, being humble, being brave, being honest, and being loving.