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An essay by Joseph Addison |
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No. 086 [from The Spectator] |
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Title: No. 086 [from The Spectator] Author: Joseph Addison [More Titles by Addison] No. 86 'Heu quam difficile est crimen non prodere vultu!' Ovid.
Every Passion gives a particular Cast to the Countenance, and is apt to discover itself in some Feature or other. I have seen an Eye curse for half an Hour together, and an Eye-brow call a Man Scoundrel. Nothing is more common than for Lovers to complain, resent, languish, despair, and die in dumb Show. For my own part, I am so apt to frame a Notion of every Man's Humour or Circumstances by his Looks, that I have sometimes employed my self from _Charing-Cross_ to the _Royal-Exchange_ in drawing the Characters of those who have passed by me. When I see a Man with a sour rivell'd Face, I cannot forbear pitying his Wife; and when I meet with an open ingenuous Countenance, think on the Happiness of his Friends, his Family, and Relations. I cannot recollect the Author of a famous Saying to a Stranger who stood silent in his Company, _Speak that I may_ see thee:_ [4] But, with Submission, I think we may be better known by our Looks than by our Words; and that a Man's Speech is much more easily disguised than his Countenance. In this Case, however, I think the Air of the whole Face is much more expressive than the Lines of it: The Truth of it is, the Air is generally nothing else but the inward Disposition of the Mind made visible. Those who have established Physiognomy into an Art, and laid down Rules of judging Mens Tempers by their Faces, have regarded the Features much more than the Air. _Martial_ has a pretty Epigram on this Subject: (Epig. 54, 1. 12) Thy Beard and Head are of a diff'rent Dye;
_Socrates_ was an extraordinary Instance of this Nature. There chanced to be a great Physiognomist in his Time at _Athens_, [9] who had made strange Discoveries of Mens Tempers and Inclinations by their outward Appearances. _Socrates's_ Disciples, that they might put this Artist to the Trial, carried him to their Master, whom he had never seen before, and did not know [he was then in company with him. [10]] After a short Examination of his Face, the Physiognomist pronounced him the most lewd, libidinous, drunken old Fellow that he had ever [met with [11]] in his [whole] Life. Upon which the Disciples all burst out a laughing, as thinking they had detected the Falshood and Vanity of his Art. But _Socrates_ told them, that the Principles of his Art might be very true, notwithstanding his present Mistake; for that he himself was naturally inclined to those particular Vices which the Physiognomist had discovered in his Countenance, but that he had conquered the strong Dispositions he was born with by the Dictates of Philosophy. We are indeed told by an ancient Author, that _Socrates_ very much resembled _Silenus_ in his Face; [12] which we find to have been very rightly observed from the Statues and Busts of both, [that [13]] are still extant; as well as on several antique Seals and precious Stones, which are frequently enough to be met with in the Cabinets of the Curious. But however Observations of this Nature may sometimes hold, a wise Man should be particularly cautious how he gives credit to a Man's outward Appearance. It is an irreparable Injustice [we [14]] are guilty of towards one another, when we are prejudiced by the Looks and Features of those whom we do not know. How often do we conceive Hatred against a Person of Worth, or fancy a Man to be proud and ill-natured by his Aspect, whom we think we cannot esteem too much when we are acquainted with his real Character? Dr. _Moore_, [15] in his admirable System of Ethicks, reckons this particular Inclination to take a Prejudice against a Man for his Looks, among the smaller Vices in Morality, and, if I remember, gives it the Name of a _Prosopolepsia_.
[Footnote 2: Master] [Footnote 3: unknown Persons] [Footnote 4: Socrates. In Apul. 'Flor'.] [Footnote 5: that] [Footnote 6: The idea is as old as Aristotle who, in treating of arguing from signs in general, speaks under the head of Physiognomy of conclusions drawn from natural signs, such as indications of the temper proper to each class of animals in forms resembling them. The book Addison refers to is Baptista della Porta 'De Human, Physiognomia'] [Footnote 7: 'Histoire du Louis de Bourbon II. du Nom Prince de Conde,' Englished by Nahum Tate in 1693.] [Footnote 8: that the] [Footnote 9: Cicero, 'Tusc. Quaest.' Bk. IV. near the close. Again 'de Fato', c. 5, he says that the physiognomist Zopyrus pronounced Socrates stupid and dull, because the outline of his throat was not concave, but full and obtuse.] [Footnote 10: who he was.] [Footnote 11: seen] [Footnote 12: Plato in the 'Symposium'; where Alcibiades is made to draw the parallel under the influence of wine and revelry. He compares the person of Socrates to the sculptured figures of the Sileni and the Mercuries in the streets of Athens, but owns the spell by which he was held, in presence of Socrates, as by the flute of the Satyr Marsyas.] [Footnote 13: which] [Footnote 14: that we] [Footnote 15: Dr Henry More.] [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |