| Johann Caspar Lavater - 1804 - 450 páginas
...in as yielding a manner as possible, and that yielding as much as possible concealed. XXXVII. NOSE. A NOSE physiognomonically good is of unspeakable weight...of the countenance. Without gentle archings, slight S52 PHYSIOGNOMONICAL HULES. indentations, or conspicuous undulations, there are no noses which are... | |
| Samuel Roberts Wells - 1871 - 788 páginas
...i^ysJognomieaUy good is of unspeakaV.o weight in the balance of physiognomy ; it can be outweighx-d by nothing whatever.. It is the sum of the forehead, and the mot of the under part of the countenance. Without gentle arehinirs, indvntatioMSk or conspicuous undulatk^os,... | |
| Johann Caspar Lavater - 1878 - 820 páginas
...in as yielding a manner as possible, and that yielding as much as possible concealed. XXXVII. NOSE. A nose physiognomonically good is of unspeakable weight...of the countenance. Without gentle archings, slight indentations, or conspicuous undulations, there are no noses which are physiognomonically good, or... | |
| Mrs. Mary Olmstead Stanton - 1903 - 1396 páginas
...such vast physiognomic importance that Lavater, speaking of it, observes that A nose physiognomically good is of unspeakable weight in the balance of physiognomy. It can be outweighed by nothing whatever.* As the reader progresses in this chapter, I opine he will be quite in accord with the above opinion... | |
| Mary Olmstead Stanton - 1920 - 1256 páginas
...such vast physiognomic importance that Lavater, speaking of it, observes that A nose physiognomically good is of unspeakable weight in the balance of physiognomy. It can be outweighed by nothing whatever.* As the reader progresses in this chapter, I opine he will be quite in accord with the above opinion... | |
| Mary Olmstead Stanton - 1924 - 1290 páginas
...such vast physiognomic importance that Lavater, speaking of it, observes that A nose physiognomically good is of unspeakable weight in the balance of physiognomy. It can be outweighed by nothing whatever.* As the reader progresses in this chapter, I opine he will be quite in accord with the above opinion... | |
| Helen Groth - 2003 - 266 páginas
...argued that: 'A nose physiognomically good is of unspeakable weight in the balance of physiogn^ imy: it can be outweighed by nothing whatever. It is the...of the countenance. Without gentle archings, slight indentations, or conspicuous undulations, there are no noses which are physiognomically good, or intellectually... | |
| Alfred T. story - 1881 - 540 páginas
...A nose physiognomically good, he says, is of unspeakable weight in the balance of physiognomy, and can be outweighed by nothing whatever. It is the sum of the forehead, and the root of the under part of the countenance. Without gentle archings, slight indentations, or conspicuous undulations,... | |
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