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The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals

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520 (return)

[ See on this subject, 'Descent of Man,' vol. i. p. 20.]

521 (return)

[ 'Descent of Man,' vol, i. p, 43.]

522 (return)

[ 'Anatomy of Expression,' 3rd edit. 1844, pp. 138, 121.]

601 (return)

[ The best photographs in my collection are by Mr. Rejlander, of Victoria Street, London, and by Herr Kindermann, of Hamburg. Figs. 1, 3, 4, and 6 are by the former; and figs. 2 and 5, by the latter gentleman. Fig. 6 is given to show moderate crying in an older child.]

602 (return)

[ Henle ('Handbuch d. Syst. Anat. 1858, B. i. s. 139) agrees with Duchenne that this is the effect of the contraction of the pyramidalis nasi.]

603 (return)

[ These consist of the levator labii superioris alaeque nasi, the levator labii proprius, the malaris, and the zygomaticus minor, or little zygomatic. This latter muscle runs parallel to and above the great zygomatic, and is attached to the outer part of the upper lip. It is represented in fig. 2 (I. p. 24), but not in figs. 1 and 3. Dr. Duchenne first showed ('Mecanisme de la Physionomie Humaine,' Album, 1862, p. 39) the importance of the contraction of this muscle in the shape assumed by the features in crying. Henle considers the above-named muscles (excepting the malaris) as subdivisions of the quadratus labii superioris.]

604 (return)

[ Although Dr. Duchenne has so carefully studied the contraction of the different muscles during the act of crying, and the furrows on the face thus produced, there seems to be something incomplete in his account; but what this is I cannot say. He has given a figure (Album, fig. 48) in which one half of the face is made, by galvanizing the proper muscles, to smile; whilst the other half is similarly made to begin crying. Almost all those (viz. nineteen out of twenty-one persons) to whom I showed the smiling half of the face instantly recognized the expression; but, with respect to the other half, only six persons out of twenty-one recognized it, – that is, if we accept such terms as "grief," "misery," "annoyance," as correct; – whereas, fifteen persons were ludicrously mistaken; some of them saying the face expressed "fun," "satisfaction," "cunning," "disgust," &c. We may infer from this that there is something wrong in the expression. Some of the fifteen persons may, however, have been partly misled by not expecting to see an old man crying, and by tears not being secreted. With respect to another figure by Dr. Duchenne (fig. 49), in which the muscles of half the face are galvanized in order to represent a man beginning to cry, with the eyebrow on the same side rendered oblique, which is characteristic of misery, the expression was recognized by a greater proportional number of persons. Out of twenty-three persons, fourteen answered correctly, "sorrow," "distress," "grief," "just going to cry," "endurance of pain," &c. On the other hand, nine persons either could form no opinion or were entirely wrong, answering, "cunning leer," "jocund," "looking at an intense light," "looking at a distant object," &c.]

605 (return)

[ Mrs. Gaskell, 'Mary Barton,' new edit. p. 84.]

606 (return)

[ 'Mimik und Physiognomik,' 1867, s. 102. Duchenne, Mecanisme de la Phys. Humaine, Album, p. 34.]

607 (return)

[ Dr. Duchenne makes this remark, ibid. p. 39.]

608 (return)

[ 'The Origin of Civilization,' 1870, p. 355.]

609 (return)

[ See, for instance, Mr. Marshall's account of an idiot in Philosoph. Transact. 1864, p. 526. With respect to cretins, see Dr. Piderit, 'Mimik und Physiognomik,' 1867, s. 61.]

610 (return)

[ 'New Zealand and its Inhabitants,' 1855, p. 175.]

611 (return)

[ 'De la Physionomie,' 1865, p. 126.]

612 (return)

[ 'The Anatomy of Expression,' 1844, p. 106. See also his paper in the 'Philosophical Transactions,' 1822, p. 284, ibid. 1823, pp. 166 and 289. Also 'The Nervous System of the Human Body,' 3rd edit. 1836, p. 175.]

613 (return)

[ See Dr. Brinton's account of the act of vomiting, in Todd's Cyclop. of Anatomy and Physiology, 1859, vol. v. Supplement, p. 318.]

614 (return)

[ I am greatly indebted to Mr. Bowman for having introduced me to Prof. Donders, and for his aid in persuading this great physiologist to undertake the investigation of the present subject. I am likewise much indebted to Mr. Bowman for having given me, with the utmost kindness, information on many points.]

615 (return)

[ This memoir first appeared in the 'Nederlandsch Archief voor Genees en Natuurkiinde,' Deel 5, 1870. It has been translated by Dr. W. D. Moore, under the title of "On the Action of the Eyelids in determination of Blood from expiratory effort," in 'Archives of Medicine,' edited by Dr. L. S. Beale, 1870, vol. v. p. 20.]

616 (return)

[ Prof. Donders remarks (ibid. p. 28), that, "After injury to the eye, after operations, and in some forms of internal inflammation, we attach great value to the uniform support of the closed eyelids, and we increase this in many instances by the application of a bandage. In both cases we carefully endeavour to avoid great expiratory pressure, the disadvantage of which is well known." Mr. Bowman informs me that in the excessive photophobia, accompanying what is called scrofulous ophthalmia in children, when the light is so very painful that during weeks or months it is constantly excluded by the most forcible closure of the lids, he has often been struck on opening the lids by the paleness of the eye, – not an unnatural paleness, but an absence of the redness that might have been expected when the surface is somewhat inflamed, as is then usually the case; and this paleness he is inclined to attribute to the forcible closure of the eyelids.]

617 (return)

[ Donders, ibid. p. 36.]

618 (return)

[ Mr. Hensleigh Wedgwood (Dict. of English Etymology, 1859, vol. i. p. 410) says, "the verb to weep comes from Anglo-Saxon wop, the primary meaning of which is simply outcry."]

619 (return)

[ 'De la Physionomie,' 1865, p. 217.]

620 (return)

[ 'Ceylon,' 3rd edit. 1859, vol. ii. pp. 364, 376. I applied to Mr. Thwaites, in Ceylon, for further information with respect to the weeping of the elephant; and in consequence received a letter from the Rev. Mr Glenie, who, with others, kindly observed for me a herd of recently captured elephants. These, when irritated, screamed violently; but it is remarkable that they never when thus screaming contracted the muscles round the eyes. Nor did they shed tears; and the native hunters asserted that they had never observed elephants weeping. Nevertheless, it appears to me impossible to doubt Sir E. Tennent's distinct details about their weeping, supported as they are by the positive assertion of the keeper in the Zoological Gardens. It is certain that the two elephants in the Gardens, when they began to trumpet loudly, invariably contracted their orbicular muscles. I can reconcile these conflicting statements only by supposing that the recently captured elephants in Ceylon, from being enraged or frightened, desired to observe their persecutors, and consequently did not contract their orbicular muscles, so that their vision might not be impeded. Those seen weeping by Sir E. Tennent were prostrate, and had given up the contest in despair. The elephants which trumpeted in the Zoological Gardens at the word of command, were, of course, neither alarmed nor enraged.]

621 (return)

[ Bergeon, as quoted in the 'Journal of Anatomy and Physiology,' Nov. 1871, p. 235.]

622 (return)

[ See, for instance, a case given by Sir Charles Bell, 'Philosophical Transactions,' 1823, p. 177.]

623 (return)

[ See, on these several points, Prof. Donders 'On the Anomalies of Accommodation and Refraction of the Eye,' 1864, p. 573.]

624 (return)

[ Quoted by Sir J. Lubbock, 'Prehistoric Times,' 1865, p. 458.]

701 (return)

[ The above descriptive remarks are taken in part from my own observations, but chiefly from Gratiolet ('De la Physionomie,' pp. 53, 337; on Sighing, 232), who has well treated this whole subject. See, also, Huschke, 'Mimices et Physiognomices, Fragmentum Physiologi-cum,' 1821, p. 21. On the dulness of the eyes, Dr. Piderit, 'Mimik und Physiognomik,' 1867, s. 65.]

702 (return)

[ On the action of grief on the organs of respiration, see more especially Sir C. Bell, 'Anatomy of Expression,' 3rd edit. 1844, p. 151.]

703 (return)

[ In the foregoing remarks on the manner in which the eyebrows are made oblique, I have followed what seems to be the universal opinion of all the anatomists, whose works I have consulted on the action of the above-named muscles, or with whom I have conversed. Hence throughout this work I shall take a similar view of the action of the corrugator supercilii, orbicularis, pyramidalis nasi, and frontalis muscles. Dr. Duchenne, however, believes, and every conclusion at which he arrives deserves serious consideration, that it is the corrugator, called by him the sourcilier, which raises the inner corner of the eyebrows and is antagonistic to the upper and inner part of the orbicular muscle, as well as to the pyramidalis nasi (see Mécanisme de la Phys. Humaine, 1862, folio, art. v., text and figures 19 to 29: octavo edit. 1862, p. 43 text). He admits, however, that the corrugator draws together the eyebrows, causing vertical furrows above the base of the nose, or a frown. He further believes that towards the outer two-thirds of the eyebrow the corrugator acts in conjunction with the upper orbicular muscle; both here standing in antagonism to the frontal muscle. I am unable to understand, judging from Henle's drawings (woodcut, fig. 3), how the corrugator can act in the manner described by Duchenne. See, also, on this subject, Prof. Donders' remarks in the 'Archives of Medicine,' 1870, vol. v. p. 34. Mr. J. Wood, who is so well known for his careful study of the muscles of the human frame, informs me that he believes the account which I have given of the action of the corrugator to be correct. But this is not a point of any importance with respect to the expression which is caused by the obliquity of the eyebrows, nor of much importance to the theory of its origin.]

 

704 (return)

[ I am greatly indebted to Dr. Duchenne for permission to have these two photographs (figs. 1 and 2) reproduced by the heliotype process from his work in folio. Many of the foregoing remarks on the furrowing of the skin, when the eyebrows are rendered oblique, are taken from his excellent discussion on this subject.]

705 (return)

[ Mecanisme de la Phys. Humaine, Album, p. 15.]

706 (return)

[ Henle, Handbuch der Anat. des Menschen, 1858, B. i. s. 148, figs. 68 and 69.]

707 (return)

[ See the account of the action of this muscle by Dr. Duchenne, 'Mecanisme de la Physionomie Humaine, Album (1862), viii. p. 34.]

801 (return)

[ Herbert Spencer, 'Essays Scientific,' &c., 1858, p. 360.]

802 (return)

[ F. Lieber on the vocal sounds of L. Bridgman, 'Smithsonian Contributions,' 1851, vol. ii. p. 6.]

803 (return)

[ See, also, Mr. Marshall, in Phil. Transact. 1864, p. 526.]

804 (return)

[ Mr. Bain ('The Emotions and the Will,' 1865, p. 247) has a long and interesting discussion on the Ludicrous. The quotation above given about the laughter of the gods is taken from this work. See, also, Mandeville, 'The Fable of the Bees,' vol. ii. p. 168.]

805 (return)

[ 'The Physiology of Laughter,' Essays, Second Series, 1863, p. 114.]

806 (return)

[ J. Lister in 'Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science,' 1853, vol. 1. p. 266.]

807 (return)

[ 'De la Physionomie,' p. 186.]

808 (return)

[ Sir C. Bell (Anat. of Expression, p. 147) makes some remarks on the movement of the diaphragm during laughter.]

809 (return)

[ 'Mecanisme de la Physionomie Humaine,' Album, Legende vi.]

810 (return)

[ Handbuch der System. Anat. des Menschen, 1858, B. i. s. 144. See my woodcut (H. fig. 2).]

811 (return)

[ See, also, remarks to the same effect by Dr. J. Crichton Browne in 'Journal of Mental Science,' April, 1871, p. 149.]

812 (return)

[ C. Vogt, 'Memoire sur les Microcephales,' 1867, p. 21.]

813 (return)

[ Sir C. Bell, 'Anatomy of Expression,' p. 133.]

814 (return)

[ 'Mimik und Physiognomik,' 1867, s. 63-67.]

815 (return)

[ Sir T. Reynolds remarks ('Discourses,' xii. p. 100), "it is curious to observe, and it is certainly true, that the extremes of contrary passions are, with very little variation, expressed by the same action." He gives as an instance the frantic joy of a Bacchante and the grief of a Mary Magdalen.]

816 (return)

[ Dr. Piderit has come to the same conclusion, ibid. s. 99.]

817 (return)

[ 'La Physionomie,' par G. Lavater, edit. of 1820, vol. iv. p. 224. See, also, Sir C. Bell, 'Anatomy of Expression,' p. 172, for the quotation given below.]

818 (return)

[ A 'Dictionary of English Etymology,' 2nd edit. 1872, Introduction, p. xliv.]

819 (return)

[ Crantz, quoted by Tylor, 'Primitive Culture,' 1871, Vol. i. P. 169.]

820 (return)

[ F. Lieber, 'Smithsonian Contributions,' 1851, vol. ii. p. 7.]

821 (return)

[ Mr. Bain remarks ('Mental and Moral Science,' 1868, p. 239), "Tenderness is a pleasurable emotion, variously stimulated, whose effort is to draw human beings into mutual embrace."]

822 (return)

[ Sir J. Lubbock, 'Prehistoric Times,' 2nd edit. 1869, p. 552, gives full authorities for these statements. The quotation from Steele is taken from this work.]

823 (return)

[ See a full acount,{sic} with references, by E. B. Tylor, 'Researches into the Early History of Mankind,' 2nd edit. 1870, p. 51.]

824 (return)

[ 'The Descent of Man,' vol. ii. p. 336.]

825 (return)

[ Dr. Mandsley has a discussion to this effect in his 'Body and Mind,' 1870, p. 85.]

826 (return)

[ 'The Anatomy of Expression,' p. 103, and 'Philosophical Transactions,' 1823, p. 182.]

827 (return)

[ 'The Origin of Language,' 1866, p. 146. Mr. Tylor ('Early History of Mankind,' 2nd edit. 1870, p. 48) gives a more complex origin to the position of the hands during prayer.]

901 (return)

[ 'Anatomy of Expression,' pp. 137, 139. It is not surprising that the corrugators should have become much more developed in man than in the anthropoid apes; for they are brought into incessant action by him under various circumstances, and will have been strengthened and modified by the inherited effects of use. We have seen how important a part they play, together with the orbiculares, in protecting the eyes from being too much gorged with blood during violent expiratory movements. When the eyes are closed as quickly and as forcibly as possible, to save them from being injured by a blow, the corrugators contract. With savages or other men whose heads are uncovered, the eyebrows are continually lowered and contracted to serve as a shade against a too strong light; and this is effected partly by the corrugators. This movement would have been more especially serviceable to man, as soon as his early progenitors held their heads erect. Lastly, Prof. Donders believes ('Archives of Medicine,' ed. by L. Beale, 1870, vol. v. p. 34), that the corrugators are brought into action in causing the eyeball to advance in accommodation for proximity in vision.]

902 (return)

[ 'Mecanisme de la Physionomie Humaine,' Album, Legende iii.]

903 (return)

[ 'Mimik und Physiognomik,' s. 46.]

904 (return)

[ 'History of the Abipones,' Eng. translat. vol. ii. p. 59, as quoted by Lubbock, 'Origin of Civilisation,' 1870, p. 355.]

905 (return)

[ 'De la Physionomie,' pp. 15, 144, 146. Mr. Herbert Spencer accounts for frowning exclusively by the habit of contracting the brows as a shade to the eyes in a bright light: see 'Principles of Physiology,' 2nd edit. 1872, p. 546.]

906 (return)

[ Gratiolet remarks (De la Phys. p. 35), "Quand l'attention est fixee sur quelque image interieure, l'oeil regarde dons le vide et s'associe automatiquement a la contemplation de l'esprit." But this view hardly deserves to be called an explanation.]

907 (return)

[ 'Miles Gloriosus,' act ii. sc. 2.]

908 (return)

[ The original photograph by Herr Kindermann is much more expressive than this copy, as it shows the frown on the brow more plainly.]

909 (return)

[ 'Mecanisme de la Physionomie Humaine,' Album, Legende iv. figs. 16-18.]

910 (return)

[ Hensleigh Wedgwood on 'The Origin of Language,' 1866, p. 78.]

911 (return)

[ Muller, as quoted by Huxley, 'Man's Place in Nature,' 1863, p. 38.]

912 (return)

[ I have given several instances in my 'Descent of Man,' vol. i. chap. iv.]

913 (return)

[ 'Anatomy of Expression.' p. 190.]

914 (return)

[ 'De la Physionomie,' pp. 118-121.]

915 (return)

[ 'Mimik und Physiognomik,' s. 79.]

1001 (return)

[ See some remarks to this effect by Mr. Bain, 'The Emotions and the Will,' 2nd edit. 1865, p. 127.]

1002 (return)

[ Rengger, Naturgesch. der Saugethiere von Paraguay, 1830, s. 3.]

1003 (return)

[ Sir C. Bell, 'Anatomy of Expression,' p. 96. On the other hand, Dr. Burgess ('Physiology of Blushing,' 1839, p. 31) speaks of the reddening of a cicatrix in a negress as of the nature of a blush.]

1004 (return)

[ Moreau and Gratiolet have discussed the colour of the face under the influence of intense passion: see the edit. of 1820 of Lavater, vol. iv. pp. 282 and 300; and Gratiolet, 'De la Physionomie,' p. 345.]

1005 (return)

[ Sir C. Bell 'Anatomy of Expression,' pp. 91, 107, has fully discussed this subject. Moreau remarks (in the edit. of 1820 of 'La Physionomie, par G. Lavater,' vol. iv. p. 237), and quotes Portal in confirmation, that asthmatic patients acquire permanently expanded nostrils, owing to the habitual contraction of the elevatory muscles of the wings of the nose. The explanation by Dr. Piderit ('Mimik und Physiognomik,' s. 82) of the distension of the nostrils, namely, to allow free breathing whilst the mouth is closed and the teeth clenched, does not appear to be nearly so correct as that by Sir C. Bell, who attributes it to the sympathy (i. e. habitual co-action) of all the respiratory muscles. The nostrils of an angry man may be seen to become dilated, although his mouth is open.]

1006 (return)

[ Mr. Wedgwood, 'On the Origin of Language,' 1866, p. 76. He also observes that the sound of hard breathing "is represented by the syllables puff, huff, whiff, whence a huff is a fit of ill-temper."]

1007 (return)

[ Sir C. Bell 'Anatomy of Expression,' p. 95) has some excellent remarks on the expression of rage.]

1008 (return)

[ 'De la Physionomie,' 1865, p. 346.]

1009 (return)

[ Sir C. Bell, 'Anatomy of Expression,' p. 177. Gratiolet (De la Phys. p. 369) says, 'les dents se decouvrent, et imitent symboliquement l'action de dechirer et de mordre.'I If, instead of using the vague term symboliquement, Gratiolet had said that the action was a remnant of a habit acquired during primeval times when our semi-human progenitors fought together with their teeth, like gorillas and orangs at the present day, he would have been more intelligible. Dr. Piderit ('Mimik,' &c., s. 82) also speaks of the retraction of the upper lip during rage. In an engraving of one of Hogarth's wonderful pictures, passion is represented in the plainest manner by the open glaring eyes, frowning forehead, and exposed grinning teeth.]

 

1010 (return)

[ 'Oliver Twist,' vol. iii. p. 245.]

1011 (return)

[ 'The Spectator,' July 11, 1868, p. 810.]

1012 (return)

[ 'Body and Mind,' 1870, pp. 51-53.]

1013 (return)

[ Le Brun, in his well-known 'Conference sur l'Expression' ('La Physionomie, par Lavater,' edit. of 1820, vol. lx. p. 268), remarks that anger is expressed by the clenching of the fists. See, to the same effect, Huschke, 'Mimices et Physiognomices, Fragmentum Physiologicum,' 1824, p. 20. Also Sir C. Bell, 'Anatomy of Expression,' p. 219.]

1014 (return)

[ Transact. Philosoph. Soc., Appendix, 1746, p. 65.]

1015 (return)

[ 'Anatomy of Expression,' p. 136. Sir C. Bell calls (p. 131) the muscles which uncover the canines the snarling muscles.]

1016 (return)

[ Hensleigh Wedgwood, 'Dictionary of English Etymology,' 1865, vol. iii. pp. 240, 243.]

1017 (return)

[ 'The Descent of Man,' 1871, vol. L p. 126.]

1101 (return)

[ 'De In Physionomie et la Parole,' 1865, p. 89.]

1102 (return)

[ 'Physionomie Humaine,' Album, Legende viii. p. 35. Gratiolet also speaks (De la Phys. 1865, p. 52) of the turning away of the eyes and body.]

1103 (return)

[ Dr. W. Ogle, in an interesting paper on the Sense of Smell ('Medico-Chirurgical Transactions,' vol. liii. p. 268), shows that when we wish to smell carefully, instead of taking one deep nasal inspiration, we draw in the air by a succession of rapid short sniffs. If "the nostrils be watched during this process, it will be seen that, so far from dilating, they actually contract at each sniff. The contraction does not include the whole anterior opening, but only the posterior portion." He then explains the cause of this movement. When, on the other hand, we wish to exclude any odour, the contraction, I presume, affects only the anterior part of the nostrils.]

1104 (return)

[ 'Mimik und Physiognomik,' ss. 84, 93. Gratiolet (ibid. p. 155) takes nearly the same view with Dr. Piderit respecting the expression of contempt and disgust.]

1105 (return)

[ Scorn implies a strong form of contempt; and one of the roots of the word 'scorn' means, according to Mr. Wedgwood (Dict. of English Etymology, vol. iii. p. 125), ordure or dirt. A person who is scorned is treated like dirt.]

1106 (return)

[ 'Early History of Mankind,' 2nd edit. 1870, p. 45.]

1107 (return)

[ See, to this effect, Mr. Hensleigh Wedgwood's Introduction to the 'Dictionary of English Etymology,' 2nd edit. 1872, p. xxxvii.]

1108 (return)

[ Duchenne believes that in the eversion of the lower lip, the corners are drawn downwards by the depressores anguli oris. Henle (Handbuch d. Anat. des Menschen, 1858, B. i. s. 151) concludes that this is effected by the musculus quadratus menti.]

1109 (return)

[ As quoted by Tylor, 'Primitive Culture,' 1871, vol. i. p. 169.]

1110 (return)

[ Both these quotations are given by Mr. H. Wedgwood, 'On the Origin of Language,' 1866, p. 75.]

1111 (return)

[ This is stated to be the case by Mr. Tylor (Early Hist. of Mankind, 2nd edit. 1870, p. 52); and he adds, "it is not clear why this should be so."]

1112 (return)

[ 'Principles of Psychology,' 2nd edit. 1872, p. 552.]

1113 (return)

[ Gratiolet (De la Phys. p. 351) makes this remark, and has some good observations on the expression of pride. See Sir C. Bell ('Anatomy of Expression,' p. 111) on the action of the musculus superbus.]

1114 (return)

[ 'Anatomy of Expression,' p. 166.]

1115 (return)

[ 'Journey through Texas,' p. 352.]

1116 (return)

[ Mrs. Oliphant, 'The Brownlows,' vol. ii. p. 206.]

1117 (return)

[ 'Essai sur le Langage,' 2nd edit. 1846. I am much indebted to Miss Wedgwood for having given me this information, with an extract from the work.]

1118 (return)

[ 'On the Origin of Language,' 1866, p. 91.]

1119 (return)

[ 'On the Vocal Sounds of L. Bridgman;' Smithsonian Contributions, 1851, vol. ii. p. 11.]

1120 (return)

[ 'Memoire sur les Microcephales,' 1867, p. 27.]

1121 (return)

[ Quoted by Tylor, 'Early History of Mankind,' 2nd edit. 1870, p. 38.]

1122 (return)

[ Mr. J. B. Jukes, 'Letters and Extracts,' &c. 1871, p. 248.]

1123 (return)

[ F. Lieber, 'On the Vocal Sounds,' &c. p. 11. Tylor, ibid. p. 53.]

1124 (return)

[ Dr. King, Edinburgh Phil. Journal, 1845, p. 313.]

1125 (return)

[ Tylor, 'Early History of Mankind,' 2nd edit. 1870, p. 53.]

1126 (return)

[ Lubbock, 'The Origin of Civilization,' 1870, p. 277. Tylor, ibid. p. 38. Lieber (ibid. p. 11) remarks on the negative of the Italians.]

1201 (return)

[ 'Mecanisme de la Physionomie,' Album, 1862, p. 42.]

1202 (return)

[ 'The Polyglot News Letter,' Melbourne, Dec. 1858, p. 2.]

1203 (return)

[ 'The Anatomy of Expression,' p. 106.]

1204 (return)

[ Mecanisme de la Physionomie,' Album, p. 6.]

1205 (return)

[ See, for instance, Dr. Piderit ('Mimik und Physiognomik,' s. 88), who has a good discussion on the expression of surprise.]

1206 (return)

[ Dr. Murie has also given me information leading to the same conclusion, derived in part from comparative anatomy.]

1207 (return)

[ 'De la Physionomie,' 1865, p. 234.]

1208 (return)

[ See, on this subject, Gratiolet, ibid. p. 254.]

1209 (return)

[ Lieber, 'On the Vocal Sounds of Laura Bridgman,' Smithsonian Contributions, 1851, vol. ii. p. 7.]

1210 (return)

[ 'Wenderholme,' vol. ii. p. 91.]

1211 (return)

[ Lieber, 'On the Vocal Sounds,' &c., ibid. p. 7.]

1212 (return)

[ Huschke, 'Mimices et Physiognomices,' 1821, p. 18. Gratiolet (De la Phys. p. 255) gives a figure of a man in this attitude, which, however, seems to me expressive of fear combined with astonishment. Le Brun also refers (Lavater, vol. ix. p. 299) to the hands of an astonished man being opened.]

1213 (return)

[ Huschke, ibid. p. 18.]

1214 (return)

[ 'North American Indians,' 3rd edit. 1842, vol. i. p. 105.]

1215 (return)

[ H. Wedgwood, Dict. of English Etymology, vol. ii. 1862, p. 35. See, also, Gratiolet ('De la Physionomie,' p. 135) on the sources of such words as 'terror, horror, rigidus, frigidus,' &c.]

1216 (return)

[ Mr. Bain ('The Emotions and the Will,' 1865, p. 54) explains in the following manner the origin of the custom "of subjecting criminals in India to the ordeal of the morsel of rice. The accused is made to take a mouthful of rice, and after a little time to throw it out. If the morsel is quite dry, the party is believed to be guilty, – his own evil conscience operating to paralyse the salivating organs."]

1217 (return)

[ Sir C. Bell, Transactions of Royal Phil. Soc. 1822, p. 308. 'Anatomy of Expression,' p. 88 and pp. 164-469.]

1218 (return)

[ See Moreau on the rolling of the eyes, in the edit. of 1820 of Lavater, tome iv. p. 263. Also, Gratiolet, De la Phys. p. 17.]

1219 (return)

[ 'Observations on Italy,' 1825, p. 48, as quoted in 'The Anatomy of Expression,' p. 168.]

1220 (return)

[ Quoted by Dr. Maudsley, 'Body and Mind,' 1870, p. 41.]

1221 (return)

[ 'Anatomy of Expression,' p. 168.]

1222 (return)

[ Mecanisme de la Phys. Humaine, Album, Legende xi.]

1223 (return)

[ Ducheinne takes, in fact, this view (ibid. p. 45), as he attributes the contraction of the platysma to the shivering of fear (frisson de la peur); but he elsewhere compares the action with that which causes the hair of frightened quadrupeds to stand erect; and this can hardly be considered as quite correct.]

1224 (return)

[ 'De la Physionomie,' pp. 51, 256, 346.]

1225 (return)

[ As quoted in White's 'Gradation in Man,' p. 57.]

1226 (return)

[ 'Anatomy of Expression,' p. 169.]

1227 (return)

[ 'Mecanisme de la Physionomie,' Album, pl. 65, pp. 44, 45.]

1228 (return)

[ See remarks to this effect by Mr. Wedgwood, in the Introduction to his 'Dictionary of English Etymology,' 2nd edit. 1872, p. xxxvii. He shows by intermediate forms that the sounds here referred to have probably given rise to many words, such as ugly, huge, &c.]

1301 (return)

[ 'The Physiology or Mechanism of Blushing,' 1839, p. 156. I shall have occasion often to quote this work in the present chapter.]

1302 (return)

[ Dr. Burgess, ibid. p. 56. At p. 33 he also remarks on women blushing more freely than men, as stated below.]

1303 (return)

[ Quoted by Vogt, 'Memoire sur les Microcephales,' 1867, p. 20. Dr. Burgess (ibid. p. 56) doubts whether idiots ever blush.]

1304 (return)

[ Lieber 'On the Vocal Sounds,' &c.; Smithsonian Contributions, 1851, vol. ii. p. 6.]

1305 (return)

[ Ibid. p. 182.]

1306 (return)

[ Moreau, in edit. of 1820 of Lavater, vol. iv. p. 303.]

1307 (return)

[ Burgess. ibid. p. 38, on paleness after blushing, p. 177.]

1308 (return)

[ See Lavater, edit. of 1820, vol. iv. p. 303.]

1309 (return)

[ Burgess, ibid. pp. 114, 122. Moreau in Lavater, ibid. vol. iv. p. 293.]

1310 (return)

[ 'Letters from Egypt,' 1865, p. 66. Lady Gordon is mistaken when she says Malays and Mulattoes never blush.]

1311 (return)

[ Capt. Osborn ('Quedah,' p. 199), in speaking of a Malay, whom he reproached for cruelty, says he was glad to see that the man blushed.]

1312 (return)

[ J. R. Forster, 'Observations during a Voyage round the World,' 4to, 1778, p. 229. Waitz gives ('Introduction to Anthropology,' Eng. translat. 1863, vol. i. p. 135) references for other islands in the Pacific. See, also, Dampier 'On the Blushing of the Tunquinese' (vol. ii. p. 40); but I have not consulted this work. Waitz quotes Bergmann, that the Kalmucks do not blush, but this may be doubted after what we have seen with respect to the Chinese. He also quotes Roth, who denies that the Abyssinians are capable of blushing. Unfortunately, Capt. Speedy, who lived so long with the Abyssinians, has not answered my inquiry on this head. Lastly, I must add that the Rajah Brooke has never observed the least sign of a blush with the Dyaks of Borneo; on the contrary under circumstances which would excite a blush in us, they assert "that they feel the blood drawn from their faces."]

1313 (return)

[ Transact. of the Ethnological Soc. 1870, vol. ii. p. 16.]

1314 (return)

[ Humboldt, 'Personal Narrative,' Eng. translat. vol. iii. p. 229.]

1315 (return)

[ Quoted by Prichard, Phys. Hist. of Mankind, 4th edit 1851, vol. i. p. 271.]

1316 (return)

[ See, on this head, Burgess, ibid. p. 32. Also Waitz, 'Introduction to Anthropology,' Eng. edit. vol. i. p. 139. Moreau gives a detailed account ('Lavater,' 1820, tom. iv. p. 302) of the blushing of a Madagascar negress-slave when forced by her brutal master to exhibit her naked bosom.]

1317 (return)

[ Quoted by Prichard, Phys. Hist. of Mankind, 4th edit. 1851, vol. i. p. 225.]

1318 (return)

[ Burgess, ibid. p. 31. On mulattoes blushing, see p. 33. I have received similar accounts with respect to, mulattoes.]

1319 (return)

[ Barrington also says that the Australians of New South Wales blush, as quoted by Waitz, ibid. p. 135.]

1320 (return)

[ Mr. Wedgwood says (Dict. of English Etymology, vol. iii. 1865, p. 155) that the word shame "may well originate in the idea of shade or concealment, and may be illustrated by the Low German scheme, shade or shadow." Gratiolet (De la Phys. pp. 357-362) has a good discussion on the gestures accompanying shame; but some of his remarks seem to me rather fanciful. See, also, Burgess (ibid. pp. 69, 134) on the same subject.]