Buffon's Natural History: History of man continued

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Proprietor, and sold, 1797
 

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Сторінка 200 - They all have the head shaven, except a lock of hair, on the top, which they let grow sufficiently long to form into tresses, on each side of the face. The women, who are as ugly as the men, wear their hair, which they bind up with bits of copper and other ornaments of a like nature. The majority of these nations have no religion, no settled notions of morality, no decency of behaviour. They are chiefly robbers ; and the natives of Dagestan, who live near their more polished neighbours, make a traffic...
Сторінка 79 - ... talons, of other animals, are found to be produced. The neck supports the head, and unites it to the body. This part is much more considerable in the generality of quadrupeds, than in man. But fishes, and other animals that want lungs similar to ours, have no neck whatsoever. Birds, in general, have the neck longer than any other kind of animals ; those of them which have short claws, have also short necks ; those, on the contrary, that have them long, are found to have the neck in proportion.
Сторінка 252 - ... they dwell in countries, of which the woolly-haired Negro is the native, but have not acquired, in six centuries of exposure to the same causes, any of his characters. The intelligent and accurate SHAW informs us that most of the Moorish women would be reckoned handsome even in Europe; that the skin of their children is exceedingly fair and delicate ; and though the boys, by being exposed to the sun, soon grow swarthy, yet the girls, who keep more within doors, preserve their beauty till the...
Сторінка 347 - From every circumstance, therefore, we may obtain a proof that mankind are not composed of species essentially different from each other; that, on the contrary, there was originally but one individual species of men, which, after being' multiplied and diffused over the whole surface of the earth, underwent divers changes, from the influence of the climate, from the difference of food, and of the mode of living, from epidemical distempers, as also from the intermixture, varied ad...
Сторінка 210 - ... mention, that in China, when a girl has passed her third year, they break the foot in such a manner, that the toes are made to come under the sole; that they apply to it a strong water, which burns away the flesh; and, that they wrap it up in a number of bandages, till it has assumed a certain fold. They add, that the women feel the pain of this operation all their lives; that they walk with great difficulty; and that their gait is to the last degree ungraceful. Other travellers...
Сторінка 181 - On opening my eyelids, what an addition to my surprise ! The light of day, the azure vault of heaven, the verdure of the earth, the crystal of the waters, all employed, all animated, and filled me with inexpressible delight.
Сторінка 265 - ... that the women are also beautiful, well proportioned, and free from blemishes ; that they are very fair, because they seldom stir from home ; and that, when they do go abroad, they are always veiled. Before the Czar Peter I., we are told, the MUSCOVITES had not merged from barbarism. Born in slavery, they were ignorant, brutal, cruel, without courage, and without manners. Men and women bathed promiscuously in bagnios, heated to a degree intolerable to all persons but themselves ; and on quitting...
Сторінка 163 - This disorder, also, sometimes proceeds from a stoppage of the wax, which art may easily remedy. In order to know whether the defect be an internal or an external one, let the deaf person put a repeating watch into his mouth, and if he hears it strike, he may be assured that his disorder proceeds from an external cause, and...
Сторінка 183 - I had experienced from the other senses, that I employed myself for some time in repeating its enjoyments. Every part of my body which I touched...
Сторінка 161 - Now, in the comparing between all those sounds, it is obvious that the difference between one and two is more easily perceived, than between two and three, three and four, or any numbers succeeding in the same proportion. The succession of sounds will be, therefore, pleasing in proportion to the ease with which they may be distinguished. That sound which is double the former, or, in other words, the octave to the preceding tone, will, of all others, be the most pleasing harmony.

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