| Johann Caspar Lavater - Physiognomy - 1800 - 334 pages
...folly. Thofe therefore who maintain that conclufion cannot be drawn from a part, from a fingle fection of the profile, to the whole, would be perfectly right,...Nature patched up countenances like arbitrary Art ; but fo fhe does not. Indeed, when a man, being born with underftanding, becomes a fool, there expreffion... | |
| Thomas Cooke - Physiognomy - 1819 - 438 pages
...still their combination will produce the sign of folly. Those, therefore, who maintain that conclusions cannot be drawn from a part, from a single section...Nature patched up countenances like arbitrary Art. When a man, having been born with understanding, becomes a fool, the expression of heterogeneousness... | |
| Frederic Henry Hedge - English prose literature - 1848 - 672 pages
...their comhination will produce the signs of folly. Those, therefore, who maintain that conclusions cannot be drawn from a part, from a single section...profile, to the whole, would be perfectly right if unarhitrary namre patched up countenances like arhitrary art ; but so she does not. Indeed when a man,... | |
| Frederic Henry Hedge - English prose literature - 1848 - 620 pages
...comhination will produce the signs of folly. Those, therefore, who maintain that conclusions cannoV he drawn from a part, from a single section of the profile, to the whole, would he perfectly right if unarhitrary namre patched up countenances like arhitrary art ; hut so she does... | |
| Johann Caspar Lavater - Physiognomy - 1850 - 820 pages
...Those, therefore, who maintain that conclusion cannot be drawn from a part, from a single section of a profile, to the whole, would be perfectly right if...when a man, being born with understanding, becomes a 184 THE CONGENIALITY OP THE HUMAN FORM. fool, there expression of heterogeneousness is the consequence.... | |
| Johann Caspar Lavater - Physiognomy - 1878 - 820 pages
...Those, therefore, who maintain that conclusion cannot be drawn from a part, from a single section of a profile, to the whole, would be perfectly right if...when a man, being born with understanding, becomes a 184 THE CONGENIALITY OF THE HUMAN FORM. fool, there expression of heterogeneousness is the consequence.... | |
| Frederic Henry Hedge - English prose literature - 1852 - 606 pages
...their comhination will produce the signs of folly. Those, therefore, who maintain that conclusions cannot be drawn from a part, from a single section...profile, to the whole, would .be perfectly right if unarhitrary nature patched up countenances like arhitrary art ; but so she does not. Indeed when a... | |
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