{"id":1953,"date":"2014-01-29T11:00:16","date_gmt":"2014-01-29T16:00:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=1953"},"modified":"2021-07-23T10:33:02","modified_gmt":"2021-07-23T14:33:02","slug":"how-to-read-personal-character","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2014\/01\/29\/how-to-read-personal-character\/","title":{"rendered":"How To…Read Personal Character"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Michael Sappol<\/em><\/p>\n If you live in the 19th century, as I do, and want to know how to read people like a book, then read this book. Which is on \u201cPhysiognomy\u201d\u2014 \u201cthe art, or science, by which the characteristics of the mind are discovered in the general configuration of the body, and particularly in the features of the face.\u201d<\/p>\n You will first encounter \u201cForms of the Human Body\u201d, the \u201cAbdominal Form\u201d, \u201cMuscular or Fibrous Form\u201d, \u201cThoracic Form\u201d, \u201cOsseous or Bony Form\u201d, \u201cBrain and Nerve Form\u201d, and go through the major organs of the body, the color and texture of the body, the healthiness of the body and the relative \u201cactivity of the mind.\u201d Don\u2019t worry if you\u2019re confused, there are lots of illustrations to show what the author is talking about.<\/p>\n You will then take a tour of emotional and intellectual dispositions, which the author terms \u201cpowers\u201d and \u201cabilities\u201d, exemplified by portraits of people, but also some animals, using categories gleaned from an allied and overlapping field of study: the science of phrenology. It\u2019s all a bit technical, and you may have trouble following me, but here\u2019s a sample. There are \u201cSupplyant Powers,\u201d which include \u201ccontentment or acquiesciveness\u201d, \u201canimal imitation or animalimitationality\u201d, \u201clove of liquids, or aquasorbitiveness\u201d, \u201cphysical hope or physioelpidicity\u201d, \u201crapacity or graspativeness\u201d, \u201cappetite for food or appetitiveness\u201d, \u201crevengefulness or retaliativeness\u201d (why not \u201cretaliativity\u201d?). There are \u201cProtective Abilities,\u201d which are \u201can ascendancy of the thoracic form\u201d, and which include \u201cdesire to be sentinelled or sentinelativeness\u201d, \u201cmoral courage or morivalorosity\u201d (how morivalorous!), \u201ctendency for elevation of mind or body, or elevativeness\u201d, \u201csense of smell or olfactiveness\u201d (these types tend to have large noses). I could go through more categories and subcategories, but you get the idea\u2026<\/p>\n I guarantee that you will learn a lot. Dr Simms provides many examples of the curious variations to which humans are prey\u2014tall\/short, fat\/thin, smart\/stupid, savage\/civilized, and so on. You will learn about well-known figures from history and the present day (1880s), and named and unnamed people drawn from phrenology and ethnology, which is the study of races, especially non-European races. For some reason, Dr Simms generally finds that these non-European races do not exhibit morally beneficial or appealing traits. Try not to be like them!<\/p>\n People are hard to read, it\u2019s tough going, and you have to know how. Dr Simms, a \u201crenowned and eloquent lecturer\u201d who has lectured all across America for more than 30 years, is an expert who has studied this subject seriously and really knows his stuff. As an added bonus, in the back of the book, Dr Simms provides blank forms which you can fill in to evaluate people you meet, along with a long list of \u201cprofessions, trades, occupations, and callings,\u201d so that you have standardized categories when you fill in the blanks. That makes things easier. Finally\u2014and this is a real help\u2014there is a section entitled \u201cChoice of a Companion for Life\u201d which lists all of the good qualities you may want to find in a mate. As is obvious from all of the above, this book is morally instructive and answers a lot of questions. But if you\u2019re feeling a bit sentinelative<\/i> and want to go further, you may seek to consult a longer, more technical work, Mary O. Stanton\u2019s How to Read Faces; or Practical and Scientific Physiognomy<\/i><\/a>, published by the same (dare I say it, elevative<\/i>) publisher. That will set you back $2, a day\u2019s wages or so, depending on your calling.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n [Disclosure<\/strong>: This blog post is facetious and ironic, and really by someone who lives in the 21st century, Michael Sappol, a historian in the History of Medicine Division of the National Library of Medicine, who has only crossed the Atlantic Ocean 20 times or so, and has lost lots of days\u2019 work by sickness. Sappol does not endorse the opinions or advice of Dr Simms. He wants to add that, although phrenology and physiognomy were taken quite seriously as sciences of character and mind earlier in the 19th century (and a residue of their doctrines was carried over into late 19th-century fine art, and academic psychology and anthropology), by the late 1880s works such as this were generally dismissed by the well- educated. Even so, phrenology and physiognomy continued to be popular among working-and lower-middle-class people who aspired to be better educated. Strangely, works on the subject were usually printed in small type and to be understood required a fairly high degree of literacy and knowledge of history and the world.\u00a0 At the same time, phrenology and physiognomy contributed to their readers\u2019 stock of knowledge by giving faces to historical names and exotic peoples, and providing brief references to historical events, anatomy and geography. Of course, we should neither overlook nor forget that phrenology and physiognomy also contributed to racial, cultural and social stereotypes and biases against native peoples, people of color, and individuals who were challenged physically and mentally.]<\/p>\n Read other How To… features from the NLM Collections here<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\nHuman Faces, What They Mean! How to Read Personal Character, 1872<\/h3>\n
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<\/a>T. Glover, a dry goods merchant of Quebec, is 52 years of age, has crossed the Atlantic Ocean upwards of 70 times, never taken five shillings worth of medicine, and never lost a day\u2019s work by sickness.<\/i><\/p>\n<\/div>\n
<\/a>Joseph Simms, MD, Human Faces, What They Mean! How to Read Personal Character<\/i><\/a> (London, 1872; reprint New York: Murray Hill Publishing Company, 1887); \u201cillustrated by upwards of 200 engravings and\u2026several hundred signs of character, forming an original system\u2026.\u201d<\/p>\n