Essays on Physiognomy: For the Promotion of the Knowledge and the Love of Mankind, Volume 2C. Whittingham, 1804 |
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Página 1
... 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 as never to act foolishly ? VOL ...
... 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 as never to act foolishly ? VOL ...
Página 3
... speak from experience : The good which I , as a physiognomist , have observed in people round me , has more than compen- sated that mass of evil which , though I ap- peared blind , I could not avoid seeing . The more I have studied man ...
... speak from experience : The good which I , as a physiognomist , have observed in people round me , has more than compen- sated that mass of evil which , though I ap- peared blind , I could not avoid seeing . The more I have studied man ...
Página 57
... speak , write , or perform ; but what he can , or cannot . How a man will , in general , act in given circumstances ; his manner and tone . Thus shall the student be enabled to describe the circle by which the form he studied is ...
... speak , write , or perform ; but what he can , or cannot . How a man will , in general , act in given circumstances ; his manner and tone . Thus shall the student be enabled to describe the circle by which the form he studied is ...
Página 77
... speak my thoughts will offend , yet to give offence is far from my intention . I wish to aid , to teach that art which is the imitation of the works of God ; I wish im- provement . And how is improvement pos- sible without a frank and ...
... speak my thoughts will offend , yet to give offence is far from my intention . I wish to aid , to teach that art which is the imitation of the works of God ; I wish im- provement . And how is improvement pos- sible without a frank and ...
Página 79
... speak . Let us confine observa- tion to the mouth , having previously studied infants , boys , youth , manhood , old age , maidens , wives , matrons , with respect to the general properties of the mouth ; and , hav- ing discovered these ...
... speak . Let us confine observa- tion to the mouth , having previously studied infants , boys , youth , manhood , old age , maidens , wives , matrons , with respect to the general properties of the mouth ; and , hav- ing discovered these ...
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Essays on Physiognomy: For the Promotion of the Knowledge and the ..., Volume 2 Johann Caspar Lavater Visualização completa - 1804 |
Essays On Physiognomy: For The Promotion Of The Knowledge And The Love Of ... Johann Caspar Lavater Prévia não disponível - 2023 |
Termos e frases comuns
accident accurate acute anatomist animal appear arching Aristotle beasts beautiful benevolence betoken body bones capable capacity cartilage cerning certainly character Charles XII chin Cicero compared coun COUNT THUN define deformed denote determinate discover draw enquire especially examine excellent expression external eye-bones eyebrows feeling firm flat fore forehead genius head horse human countenance internal knowledge lence less lips mind monical monkey motion mouth nance nature neck neral ness never noble nomonical nose observation original ossification outline painting passion pathognomy paullo peculiar penetration perfect perpendicular person philanthropy phlegm physiog physiogno portrait painters precision proportion racter remark render resemblance scull sensation sensibility shades shew signs sions soul speak student study of physiognomy stupid Suetonius tenance ther thing thou tion Titian traits true truth tural understanding upper Vandyck Vesalius virtue visible weak Whoever whole wisdom wise
Passagens mais conhecidas
Página 170 - 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. 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...
Página 170 - 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.
Página 94 - She labours from one to all. Hers is not disjointed organization ; not mosaic work. The more of the mosaic there is in the works of artists, orators, or poets, the less are they natural ; the less do they resemble the copious streams of the fountain, the stem extending itself to the remotest branch. The more there is of progression, the more is there of truth, power, and nature ; the more extecsive.
Página 93 - When the head is long, all is long ; or round when the head is round; and square when it is square. One form, one mind, one root, appertain to all. Therefore is each organized body so much a whole that, without discord, destruction, or deformity, nothing can be added or diminished. Every thing in man is progressive ; every thing congenial ; form, stature, complexion, hair, skin, veins, nerves, bones, voice, walk, manner, style, passion, love, hatred. One and the same spirit is manifest in all. He...
Página 12 - Therefore, 0 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...
Página 92 - OF THE HUMAN FORM. IN organization nature continually acts from within to without, from the centre to the circumference. The same vital powers that make the heart beat give the finger motion : that which roofs the scull arches the finger nail. Art is at variance with itself; not so nature. 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...
Página 245 - 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.
Página 32 - 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. Paul is here applicable. " There is nothing common of itself, but to him only that esteemeth any thing to be common.
Página 93 - ... determinate effects. The finger of one body is not adapted to the hand of another body. Each part of an organized body is an image of the whole, has the character of the whole. The blood in the extremity of the finger has the character of the blood in1 the heart.
Página 198 - Il est donc animal, et malgré sa ressemblance à l'homme, bien loin d'être le second dans notre espèce, il n'est pas le premier dans l'ordre des animaux, puisqu'il n'est pas le plus intelligent.