An original and illustrated physiological and physiognomical chart . y-body and suspect your best friends of wrong-doing; and remember thatyou are too confiding and liable to become the dupe of sharpers by yourextreme confidence; and that undue suspicion is more abject basenesseven than the guilt suspected. B. To Restrain suspicion : —Hand your purse and valuables toanother to keep for you; take everything to be what it seems; doubt noone and imagine no more wrong things of friends or says: * Suspicions are to be suppressed or at least well guarded, forthey cloud the mind.


An original and illustrated physiological and physiognomical chart . y-body and suspect your best friends of wrong-doing; and remember thatyou are too confiding and liable to become the dupe of sharpers by yourextreme confidence; and that undue suspicion is more abject basenesseven than the guilt suspected. B. To Restrain suspicion : —Hand your purse and valuables toanother to keep for you; take everything to be what it seems; doubt noone and imagine no more wrong things of friends or says: * Suspicions are to be suppressed or at least well guarded, forthey cloud the mind. He that dares to doubt, when there is noground, is neither to himself nor others sound. LOCOMOTIVITY. THE DESIRE OF ACTION AND ABILITY OF CHANGING PLACE WHILEPRESERVING IDENTITY. The faculty of locomotion manifests itself pliysiognomicalJy by a longa7id thin nose. The grey-hound and stag-hound are fine examples of loco-Tnotlve construction^ ichile the sloths nose indicates the opposite extreme andthe fact is verified by its motion being only a few feet each Locomotivity smaD. The Sloth. 1. At the moment of your creation the motional principle was for-gotten, hence you are the most dull, inactive, and sluggish compositionthat makes an efiort to move from place to place. 2. Your compeer in sluggishness, the sloth, you resemble strongly;necessity alone, being her own law, has the power to rouse your motion,and she may often be heard complaining of her weary task. Yourlieaven is the paradise of immobility. Gcethe the German poet had no LOCOMOTIVITY. 61 sympathy with you when he wrote : * Nature knows no pause in pro-gress and development, and attaches her curse to all inaction.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectphysiognomy, bookyear