| Johann Caspar Lavater - 1826 - 380 pages
...manner, lose their consistency: all becomes discord ; and folly, in such a countenance, is very manifest. Let him who would study physiognomy, study the relation...not having studied these, he has studied nothing. He only is an accurate physiognomist, and has the true spirit of physiognomy, who possesses sense, feeling,... | |
| Johann Caspar Lavater - 1827 - 394 pages
...manner, lose their consistency: all becomes di.cord ; and folly, in such a countenance, is very manifest. Let him who would study physiognomy, study the relation...not having studied these, he has studied nothing. He only is an accurate physiognomist, and has the true spirit of physiognomy, who possesses sense, feeling,... | |
| Frederic Henry Hedge - English prose literature - 1848 - 618 pages
...art ; but so she does not. Indeed when a man, being born with understanding, becomes a fool, there an expression of heterogeneousness is the consequence....physiognomy, who possesses sense, feeling, and sympathetic perception of the congeniality and harmony of nature; and who hath a similar sense and feeling for... | |
| Frederic Henry Hedge - English prose literature - 1848 - 672 pages
...the forehead be seen alone, it can only be said: "So much c«n or could, this countenance, by namre, unimpeded by accident." But if the whole be seen,...general character may be determined. Let him who would smdy physiognomy, smdy the relation of the constiment parts of the countenance ; not having smdied... | |
| Frederic Henry Hedge - English prose literature - 1852 - 606 pages
...countenance, is very manifest. If the forehead be seen alone, it can only be said: "So much can or ruulil, this countenance, by nature, unimpeded by accident."...physiognomy, study the relation of the constituent paru of the countenance ; not having studied these he has studied nothing. He, and he alone, is an... | |
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