New Physiognomy : or signs of character, as manifested through temperament and external forms, and especially in the "the human face divine." . Do joy and grief, pleasure and pain, love and hatred, allexhibit themselves under the same traits—that is to say, no traits at all — onthe exterior man ?Do prize-fightersand preachers lookalike ? or butchersand poets ? Butwe may as wellask whether truthis ever at variancewith itself, or eter-nal order but the Fig. 94.—Eev. Dr. B )Nd. |-j.^^,]^ ^f .^ iuo-crler ^° ^^--Yankee Sullivan. whose purpose is to deceive! As the soul, so the body. IT.—The Law of
New Physiognomy : or signs of character, as manifested through temperament and external forms, and especially in the "the human face divine." . Do joy and grief, pleasure and pain, love and hatred, allexhibit themselves under the same traits—that is to say, no traits at all — onthe exterior man ?Do prize-fightersand preachers lookalike ? or butchersand poets ? Butwe may as wellask whether truthis ever at variancewith itself, or eter-nal order but the Fig. 94.—Eev. Dr. B )Nd. |-j.^^,]^ ^f .^ iuo-crler ^° ^^--Yankee Sullivan. whose purpose is to deceive! As the soul, so the body. IT.—The Law of Homogeneousness. Closely related to the foregoing is the law of homogeneous-ness, conformably to which Misery part of a thing corresponds with every other partand with the whole—in other words, and paradoxicallv—thewhole is in every i^art. Lay before Professor Owen asino-le bone of an unknown animal, and he will construct for youits entire osseous framework, andif need be, clothe it with Agassiz is able to do thesame from a single scale of a power to do this dependsupon a law of comparative anat-
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, booksubjectphrenology, booksubjectphysiognomy