Essays on Physiognomy: For the Promotion of the Knowledge and the Love of Mankind, Volume 2C. Whittingham, 1804 - Facial expression |
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Page 1
... accurately known . I do not here speak of those who can only gain by being accurately known ; I speak of those who would lose much were the knowledge of the heart to become more accurate , and more general . VOL . II . B Who is so wise ...
... accurately known . I do not here speak of those who can only gain by being accurately known ; I speak of those who would lose much were the knowledge of the heart to become more accurate , and more general . VOL . II . B Who is so wise ...
Page 2
... - ness , so active , at present , immediately dis- appear when an accurate knowledge of man should be obtained ? Would not com- passion succeed to condemnation , and frater- nal lenity to 2 UNION BETWEEN THE KNOWLEDGE.
... - ness , so active , at present , immediately dis- appear when an accurate knowledge of man should be obtained ? Would not com- passion succeed to condemnation , and frater- nal lenity to 2 UNION BETWEEN THE KNOWLEDGE.
Page 5
... accurate , of so many excellent men , and have had such fre- quent occasion to rejoice my heart in the dis- coveries I have made concerning such men , that this , as I may say , has reconciled me to the whole human race . What I here ...
... accurate , of so many excellent men , and have had such fre- quent occasion to rejoice my heart in the dis- coveries I have made concerning such men , that this , as I may say , has reconciled me to the whole human race . What I here ...
Page 14
... accurately , and intelligibly , as is requisite for the promotion of the study of true physiognomy . I know that when I shall have , with all possible attention , writ- ten On the study of physiognomy, addressed to Count Thun of Vienna.
... accurately , and intelligibly , as is requisite for the promotion of the study of true physiognomy . I know that when I shall have , with all possible attention , writ- ten On the study of physiognomy, addressed to Count Thun of Vienna.
Page 15
... accurate , still , to many , I shall appear inaccurate . This science cannot perfectly be taught by book , and no reason- able person will expect perfection in these fragments . What I am able to do shall be done . I pretend not to give ...
... accurate , still , to many , I shall appear inaccurate . This science cannot perfectly be taught by book , and no reason- able person will expect perfection in these fragments . What I am able to do shall be done . I pretend not to give ...
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Common terms and phrases
accident accurate acute anatomist animal appear arching Aristotle beasts beautiful benevolence betoken body bones capable capacity cartilage cerning certainly character chin Cicero compared coun COUNT THUN define deformed denote discover draw enquire especially examine excellent expression external eye-bones eyebrows feeling firm flat fore forehead genius hair head horse human countenance insects internal knowledge Lavater lence less lion lips mind monical monkey mouth nance nature neck neral ness never noble nomonical nomy nose observation original ossification outline painting passion pathognomy paullo peculiar penetration perfect perpendicular person philanthropy phlegm physiog physiogno portrait painters position proportion racter remark render resemblance scull sensation sensibility shades shew signs speak study of physiognomy stupid Suetonius Sutura tenance ther thing thou tion Titian traits true truth tural understanding upper Vandyck Vesalius virtue visible weak Whoever whole wisdom wise
Popular passages
Page 176 - Hast thou given the horse strength ? Hast thou clothed his neck with thunder ? Canst thou make him afraid as a grasshopper ? The glory of his nostrils is terrible. He paweth in the valley, and rejoiceth in his strength : He goeth on to meet the armed men. He mocketh at fear, and is not affrighted ; Neither turneth he back from the sword.
Page 176 - The glory of his nostrils is terrible. He paweth in the valley and rejoiceth in his strength; He goeth on to meet the armed men. He mocketh at fear and is not affrighted; Neither turneth he back from the sword. The quiver rattleth against him, The glittering spear and the shield. He swalloweth the ground with fierceness and rage; Neither believeth he that it is the sound of the trumpet. He saith among the trumpets, "Ha, Ha!" And he smelleth the battle afar off, The thunder of the captains, and the...
Page 12 - Therefore, man, be man, in all thy researches; form not to thyself ideal beings, for thy standard of comparison. Wherever power is there is subject of admiration ; and human, or, if so you would rather, divine power, is in all men. Man is a part of the family- of men : thou art man, and every other man is a branch of the same tree, a member of the same body, — is, what thou art, and...
Page 251 - I once happened to see a criminal condemned to the wheel, who, with satanic wickedness, had murdered his benefactor, and who yet had the benevolent and open countenance of an angel of Guido. It is not impossible to discover the head of a Regulus among guilty criminals, or of a vestal in the house of correction.
Page 32 - To us, indeed, one speaks with a. louder, another with a more gentle, voice ; but the language of all is the same. It is the harmony of innumerable voices proclaiming truth. — There are some moments in which the whispers of nature are more intelligible than her loudest cries. Frequently the passage of an author which shall seem widest of meaning, explains something the most essential. A trifling, inferior trait in the countenance shall often be the key to the whole. The solemn testimony of St....
Page 99 - But if the whole be seen, the past and present general character may be determined. Let him who would study physiognomy, study the relation of the constituent parts of the countenance ; not having studied these he has studied nothing. He, and he alone, is an accurate physiognomist, has the true spirit of physiognomy, who possesses sense, feeling, and sympathetic perception of the congeniality and harmony of nature; and who hath a similar sense and feeling for all emendations and additions of art...
Page 112 - ... where possible, nor simple enough. A seat purposely contrived would be more convenient. The shade should be taken on post paper, or rather on thin oiled paper, well dried. Let the head and back be supported by a chair, and the shade fall on the oil paper behind a clear, flat, polished glass. Let the drawer sit behind the glass, holding the frame with his left hand, and, having a sharp black-lead pencil, draw with the right. The glass in a detached slidingframe, may be raised, or lowered, according...
Page 92 - Her creation is progressive. From the head to the back, from the shoulder to the arm, from the arm to the hand, from the hand to the finger, from the root to the stem, the stem to the branch, the branch to the twig, the twig to the blossom and fruit, each depends on the other, and all on the root ; each is similar in nature and form.
Page 95 - It is therefore that I find the greatest incongruities in the heads of the greatest masters. I know no painter of whom I can say he has thoroughly studied the harmony of the human outline, not even Poussin ; no, not even Raphael himself. Let any one class the forms of their...
Page 99 - Those, therefore, who maintain that conclusion cannot be drawn from a part, from a single section of the profile, to the whole, would be perfectly right if unarbitrary nature patched up countenances like arbitrary art ; but so she does not. Indeed when a man, being born with understanding, becomes a fool, there expression of heterogeneousness is the consequence.