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Title: L


1
Linfinita varietà della natura umana
2
Variety
  • 'The Figures which excite in us the Ideas of
    Beauty, seem to be those in which there is
    uniformity amidst variety (Francis Hutcheson,
    Inquiry Concerning Beauty, Order, Harmony, and
    Design, 1725)
  • "Beauty belongs to objects possessed of
    uniformity, variety and proportion. Each of these
    qualities pleases in some degree but all of them
    united give exquisite satisfaction." (Alexander
    Gerard, An Essay on Taste, 1759)
  • How great a share variety has in producing
    beauty may be seen in the ornamental part of
    nature. () All the senses delight in it, and
    equally are averse to sameness. () I mean here,
    and every where indeed, a composed variety for
    variety uncomposed, and without design, is
    confusion and deformity (William Hogarth, The
    Analysis of Beauty, 1753)

3
Variety and the novel
  • It is a pleasing labour of the mind to solve
    the most difficult problems allegories and
    riddles, trifling as they are, afford the mind
    amusement and with what delight does it follow
    the well-connected thread of a play, or novel,
    which ever increases as the plot thickens, and
    ends most pleasd, when that is most distinctly
    unravelld? (Of Intricacy in The Analysis of
    Beauty)

4
  • la pittura cercherà la linea serpentina, la
    bellezza teorizzata da Hogarth e capace di
    scardinare lordine specchiato e meccanico della
    simmetria. () Quando lideale grafico classico
    luomo e la correlata svalutazione del
    paesaggio lascerà spazio a ciò che si era
    eliminato, quando cioè alla natura naturans
    lidealizzazione si aggiungerà la natura
    naturata in tutti i suoi aspetti, sia
    naturalistici (i dirupi, le eruzioni vulcaniche,
    lasperità delle Alpi e la voga dei Northern
    Tours) sia antropomorfi (i personaggi umili ed
    idiosincratici, si pensi ai characters di
    Fielding, di Hogarth o di Smollett), allora si
    compirà il passo dal generale al particolare.
    (Yvonne de Bezrucka, Genio e immaginazione nel
    Settecento inglese)

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() to see with our own eyes
  • It is also evident that the painters eye may
    not be a bit better fitted to receive these new
    impressions, who is in like manner too much
    captivated with the works of art for he also is
    apt to pursue the shadow, and drop the substance.
    This mistakes happens chiefly to those who go to
    Rome for the accomplishment of their studies, as
    they naturally will, without the utmost care,
    take the infectious turn of the connoisseur,
    instead of the painter (Introduction to The
    Analysis of Beauty)

8
W. Hogarth, Captain Coram, 1740
9
William Hogarth. David Garrick in Richard III
10
William Hogarth Portrait of David Garrick And
his Wife, 1757
11
Sir Joshua Reynolds, Mrs Siddons as the Tragic
Muse, 1789
12
Gainsborough, Portrait of Mrs Siddons, 1785
13
So necessary is this to the understanding of the
characters of men
  • Again, there is another sort of knowledge,
    beyond the power of learning to bestow, and this
    is to be had by conversation. So necessary is
    this to the understanding the characters of men,
    that none are more ignorant of them than those
    learned pedants whose lives have been entirely
    consumed in colleges, and among books for
    however exquisitely human nature may have been
    described by writers, the true practical system
    can be learnt only in the world. () Such
    characters are only the faint copy of a copy, and
    can have neither the justness nor spirit of an
    original. (Tom Jones, Book IX, Ch. I)

14
  • Writing () is but a different name for
    conversation
  • (L. Sterne, Tristram Shandy)

15
HOGARTHSCONVERSATION PIECESAND CYCLES
16
W. Hogarth, A Midnight Modern Conversation
17
W. Hogarth, The Staymaker
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Of faces
  • It is an observation, that, out of the great
    number of faces that have been formd since the
    creation of the world, no two have been so
    exactly alike, but the usual and common
    discernment of the eye would discover a
    difference between them. (W. Hogarth, The
    Analysis of Beauty)

25
To diversify their operations, is one talent of
a good writer
  • Another caution we would give thee, my good
    Reptile, is, that thou dost not find out too near
    a resemblance between certain characters here
    introduced as, for instance, between the
    landlady who appears in the seventh book and her
    in the ninth. Thou art to know, friend, that
    there are certain characteristics in which most
    individuals of every profession and occupation
    agree. To be able to preserve these
    characteristics, and at the same time to
    diversify their operations, is one talent of a
    good writer Henry Fielding, Tom Jones, Book X,
    Ch. I)

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He who should call the ingenious Hogarth a
burlesque painter, would, in my opinion, do him
very little honour for sure it is much easier,
much less the subject of admiration, to paint a
man with a nose, or any other feature, of a
preposterous size, or to expose him in some
absurd or monstrous attitude, than to express
the affections of men on canvas. It hath been
thought a vast commendation of a painter to say
his figures seem to breathe but surely it is a
much greater and nobler applause, that they
appear to think. (Henry Fielding, Joseph
Andrews, Authors preface, 1742)
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J. Reynolds, Laurence Sterne 1760
30
Joshua Reynolds, Mrs. Abington
31
Gainsborough, Portrait of Viscountess Folkestone,
detail
32
  • The cutis is composed of tender threads, like
    network, filled with different colourd juices.
    () These different colourd juices, together
    with the different mashes of the network, and the
    size of its threads in this or that part, causes
    the variety of complexions (W. Hogarth, Of
    Colouring, AB)

33
  • the general hue of the performance will be a
    seeming uniform prime tint, at any little
    distance, that is a very fair, transparent and
    pearl-like complexion but never quite uniform as
    snow, ivory, marble or wax, like a poets
    mistress, for either of these in living-flesh,
    would in truth be hideous. (Of Colouring, AB)

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Beauty does no longer equal virtue
  • The lock () serves Hogarth as the contingency
    that distinguishes the real from Shaftesburys
    ideal, the living woman from a sculpted
    simulacrum or the perfect geometrical figure.
    (Ronald Paulson, Introduction to Hogarths AB)

36
W. Hogarth, Mrs Salter, 1741
37
conversation of character
  • In the last place, the actions should be such
    as may not only be within the compass of human
    agency, and which human agents may probably be
    supposed to do but they should be likely for the
    very actors and characters themselves to have
    performed for what may be only wonderful and
    surprizing in one man, may become improbable, or
    indeed impossible, when related of another. This
    last requisite is what the dramatic critics call
    conversation of character and it requires a very
    extraordinary degree of judgment, and a most
    exact knowledge of human nature.
  • (Tom Jones, Book VIII, Ch. I)

38
Mr Thwackum and Mr Square
  • This gentleman and Mr Thwackum scarce ever met
    without a disputation for their tenets were
    indeed diametrically opposite to each other.
    Square held human nature to be the perfection of
    all virtue, and that vice was a deviation from
    our nature, in the same manner as deformity of
    body is. Thwackum, on the contrary, maintained
    that the human mind, since the fall, was nothing
    but a sink of iniquity, till purified and
    redeemed by grace. In one point only they agreed,
    which was, in all their discourses on morality
    never to mention the word goodness. The favourite
    phrase of the former, was the natural beauty of
    virtue that of the latter, was the divine power
    of grace. The former measured all actions by the
    unalterable rule of right, and the eternal
    fitness of things (). (Tom Jones, Book III, Ch.
    III)

39
If thou dost delight in these models of
perfection, there are books enow written to
gratify thy taste
  • In the next place, we must admonish thee, my
    worthy friend () not to condemn a character as a
    bad one, because it is not perfectly a good one.
    If thou dost delight in these models of
    perfection, there are books enow written to
    gratify thy taste () nor do I, indeed, conceive
    the good purposes served by inserting characters
    of such angelic perfection, or such diabolical
    depravity, in any work of invention since, from
    contemplating either, the mind of man is more
    likely to be overwhelmed with sorrow and shame
    than to draw any good uses from such patterns
    for in the former instance he may be both
    concerned and ashamed to see a pattern of
    excellence in his nature, which he may reasonably
    despair of ever arriving at (). (Tom Jones,
    Book X, Ch. I)

40
Henry Fielding, To John Hayes Esq.
  • And see how various men at once will seem/How
    passions blended on each other fix./How vice with
    virtues, faults with graces mix /How passions
    opposite, as sour to sweet, / Shall in one bosom
    at one moment meet. / With various luck for
    victory contend. / And now shall carry, and now
    lose their end.
  • ()
  • But as the diff'ring colours blended lie/When
    Titian variegates his clouded sky/Where white
    and black, the yellow and the green,/Unite and
    undistinguish'd form the scene./So the great
    artist diff'ring passions joins,/And love with
    hatred, fear with rage combines.

41
Tiziano Vecellio , Il ratto d'Europa (1559-62)
42
The variety of human nature
  • (Containing references to and passages from
    Defoe, Fielding, Hogarth, Choderlos de Laclos,
    Sterne)

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  • From Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra, 1606
  • Age cannot wither her, nor custom staleHer
    infinite variety other women cloyThe appetites
    they feed but she makes hungryWhere most she
    satisfies
  • From Miltons Paradise Lost, 1667
  • So varyd he, and of his tortuous Traine Curld
    many a wanton wreath in sight of Eve, To lure her
    Eye

45
  • It is strange that nature has afforded us so
    many lines and shapes to indicate the
    deficiencies and blemishes of the mind, whilst
    there are none at all that point out the
    perfections of it beyond the appearance of common
    sense and placidity. Deportment, words, and
    actions, must speak for the good, the wise, the
    witty, the humane, the generous, the merciful and
    the brave. (AB, Of the face)

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  • It is by the natural and unaffected movements
    of the muscles, caused by the passions of the
    mind, that evry mans character would in some
    measure be written in his face. (Analysis of
    Beauty, Of the face)

49
The hypocrite
  • Many handsom faces of almost any age, will hide
    a foolish or wicked mind till they betray
    themselves by their actions or their words yet
    the frequent aukward movements of the muscles of
    the fools face, th ever so handsom, is apt in
    time to leave such traces up and down it, as will
    distinguish a defect of mind upon examination
    but the bad man, if he be a hypocrite, may so
    manage his muscles, by teaching them to
    contradict his heart, that little of his mind can
    be gatherd from his countenance, so that the
    character of an hypocrite is entirely out of the
    power of the pencil, without some adjoining
    circumstances to discover him, as smiling and
    stabing at the same time. (BA, Of the face)

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  • () and I will say boldly, that both religion
    and virtue have received more real discredit from
    hypocrites than the wittiest profligates or
    infidels could ever cast upon them nay, farther,
    as these two, in their purity, are rightly called
    the bands of civil society, and are indeed the
    greatest of blessings so when poisoned and
    corrupted with fraud, pretence, and affectation,
    they have become the worst of civil curses, and
    have enabled men to perpetrate the most cruel
    mischiefs to their own species. (Tom Jones, Book
    III, CH. IV)

53
Credulity, Superstition, and Fanaticism1761Will
iam Hogarthb. Nov. 10, 1697
54
  • Here Allworthy concluded his Sermon, to which
    Blifil had listened with the profoundest
    attention, though it cost him some pain to
    prevent now and then a small discomposure of his
    muscles. He now praised every period of what he
    had heard, with the warmth of a young divine, who
    hath the honour to dine with a bishop the same
    day in which his lordship hath mounted the
    pulpit. (Tom Jones, Book I, Ch. XII)

55
Maîtrise de soiself-control or
de-textualization of the Self?
  • "Entrée dans le monde dans le temps où, fille
    encore, j'étais vouée par état au silence et à
    l'inaction, j'ai su en profiter pour observer et
    réfléchir. Tandis qu'on me croyait étourdie ou
    distraite, écoutant peu à la vérité les discours
    qu'on s'empressait de me tenir, je recueillais
    avec soin ceux qu'on cherchait à me cacher.Cette
    utile curiosité, en servant à m'instruire,
    m'apprit encore à dissimuler forcée souvent de
    cacher les objets de mon attention aux yeux qui
    m'entouraient, j'essayai de guider les miens à
    mon gré j'obtins dès lors de prendre à volonté
    ce regard distrait que depuis vous avez loué si
    souvent. Encouragée par ce premier succès, je
    tâchai de régler de même les divers mouvements de
    ma figure. Ressentais-je quelque chagrin, je
    m'étudiais à prendre l'air de la sécurité, même
    celui de la joie j'ai porté le zèle jusqu'à me
    causer des douleurs volontaires, pour chercher
    pendant ce temps l'expression du plaisir. Je me
    suis travaillée avec le même soin et plus de
    peine pour réprimer les symptômes d'une joie
    inattendue. C'est ainsi que j'ai su prendre sur
    ma physionomie cette puissance dont je vous ai vu
    quelquefois si étonné.(Choderlos de Laclos, Le
    liaisons dangéreuses, Lettre LXXXI)

56
Personality is a mask you believe in
  • I was not averse to a tradesman, but then I
    would have a tradesman, forsooth, that was
    something of a gentleman too that when my
    husband had a mind to carry me to the court, or
    to the play, he might become a sword, and look as
    like a gentleman as another man and not be one
    that had the mark of his apron-strings upon his
    coat, or the mark of his hat upon his periwig
    that should look as if he was set on to his
    sword, when his sword was put on to him, and that
    carried his trade in his countenance. (D. Defoe,
    Moll Flanders)

57
  • Some have considered the larger part of mankind
    in the light of actors, as personating characters
    no more their own, and to which in fact they have
    no better title, than the player hath to be in
    earnest thought the king or emperor whom he
    represents. Thus the hypocrite may be said to be
    a player and indeed the Greeks called them both
    by one and the same name. (Tom Jones, Book VII,
    Ch. I)

58
Physiognomy can be deceiveing
  • () there are pretty frowns and disagreable
    smiles the lines that form a pleasing smile
    about the corners of the mouth have gentle
    windings () but lose their beauty in the full
    laugh (), the expression of excessive laughter,
    oftener than any other, gives a sensible face a
    silly or disagreable look, as it is apt to form
    regular plain lines about the mouth, like a
    parenthesis, which sometimes appears like crying
    as, on the contrary, I remember to have seen a
    beggar who had clouted up his head very artfully,
    and whose visage was thin and pale enough to
    excite pity, but his features were otherwise so
    unfortunately formd for his purpose, that what
    he intended for a grin of pain and misery, was
    rather a joyous laugh (AB, Of the face)

59
One century later, George Eliot would write on
the subject
  • If any had noticed her blush as significant,
    they had certainly not interpreted it by the
    secret windings and recesses of her feelings. A
    blush is no language only a dubious flag-signal
    which may mean either of two contradictories
    (George Eliot, Daniel Deronda)

60
Tristram Shandy
  • Here are two senses () And here are two roads
    () which shall we take?
  • God only knows who is a hypocrite and who is
    not

61
The artist as anatomist
  • The artist must beside a delicate taste and
    quick apprehension possess an accurate knowledge
    of the internal fabric (Hume, Philosophical
    Essays Concerning Human Understanding, 1748)
  • In order to my being well understood, let every
    object under our consideration, be imagined to
    have its inward contents scoopd up so nicely, as
    to have nothing of it left but a thin shell,
    exactly corresponding both in its inner and outer
    surface, to the shape of the object itself (BA,
    Introduction)
  • Human faculties are not fitted to penetrate into
    the internal Fabrick and real Essences of Bodies
    (John Locke, Essay Concerning Human Understanding
    4.12.11)

62
  • () our minds shine not through the body but
    are wrapt up here in a dark covering of
    uncrystalized flesh and blood so that if we
    would come to the specifick cha- racters of
    them, we must go some other way to work.
    (Tristram Shandy, vol. I, ch. XXIII)

63
In Tristram Shandy la teoria fisiognomica può
funzionare solo se il narratore
  • assume un atteggiamento sentimentale, registrando
    emozioni e gesti
  • sposta lattenzione dalla complessità
    dellindividuo alla complessità del mondo che lo
    circonda, in modo che lenigma della natura umana
    possa essere rappresentata anche attraverso la
    presenza inquietante delle cose
  • riesce a creare dei centri di coscienza ingenui
    in modo da evitare dei fraintendimenti assoluti
    solo così, visto che gli uomini non hanno una
    finestra sul petto, si può leggere il gioco delle
    passioni sul volto.

64
We live among riddles and mysteries
  • But mark, madam, we live amongst riddles and
    mysteries the most obvious things, which come
    in our way, have dark sides, which the quickest
    sight cannot penetrate into and even the
    clearest and most exalted understandings amongst
    us find ourselves puzzled and at a loss in almost
    every cranny on natures works (TS)

65
  • I have left Trim my bowling-green, cried my
    uncle Toby My father smiled I have left him
    moreover a pension, continued my uncle Toby my
    father looked grave. (TS, Vol IV, Ch. IV)

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W. Hogarth After
68
Body language
  • Action is a sort of language which perhaps one
    time or other may come to be taught by a kind of
    grammar rules. (AB, Of action)

69
  • There are some traits of certain ideas which
    leave prints of themselves about our eyes and
    eye-brows and there is a consciousness of it,
    somewhere about the heart, which serves but to
    make the etchings the stronger we see, spell,
    and put them together without a dictionary (TS,
    Vol. V, Ch. I)

70
  • There are certain combined looks of simple
    subtlety where whim, and sense, and
    seriousness, and nonsense, are so blended, that
    all the languages of Babel set loose together
    could not express them they are communicated
    and caught so instantaneously, that you can
    scarce say which party is the infecter. I leave
    it to your men of words to swell pages about it
    (A Sentimental Journey, The gloves)

71
  • The old officer was reading attentively a small
    pamphlet (). As soon as I sat down, he took his
    spectacles off (). Translate this into any
    civilized language in the world

72
  • There is not a secret so aiding in the process
    of sociality, as to get master of this short
    hand, and be quick in rendering the several turns
    of looks and limbs, with all their inflections
    and delineations, into plain words. For my own
    part, by long habitude, I do it so mechanically,
    that when I walk the streets of London, I go
    translating all the way and have more than once
    stood behind in the circle, where not three words
    have been said, and have brought off twenty
    different dialogues with me, which I could have
    fairly wrote down and sworn to. (SJ, The
    translation)

73
  • to shew how few lines are necessary to express
    the first thoughts, as to different attitudes
    (W. Hogarth, AB)

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  • The two parts of curves next to 71, served for
    the figures of the old woman and her partner at
    the farther end of the room. The curve and two
    straight lines at right angle, gave the hint for
    the fat mans sprawling posture. I next resolved
    to keep a figure within the bounds of a circle,
    which produced the upper part of the fat woman,
    between the fat man and the aukward one in the
    bag wig, for whom I had made a sort of X. The
    prim lady, his partner, in the riding-habit, by
    pecking back her elbows, as they call it, from
    the waste upwards, made a tolerable D, with a
    straight line under it, to signify the scanty
    stiffness of her petticoat and a Z stood for the
    angular position the body makes with the legs and
    thighs of the affected fellow in the tye-wig the
    upper parts of this plump partner were confind
    to a O .. (AB, Of attitude)

76
  • My Lord A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, K, M, N, O,
    P, Q, and so on, all of a row, mounted upon their
    several horses some with large stirrups, getting
    on in a more grave and sober pace others on the
    contrary, tucked up to their chins, with whips
    across their mouths, scouring and scampering it
    away like so many little party-coloured devils
    astride a mortgage, - and as if some of them were
    resolved to break their necks. (TS)

77
  •    ---- But before the Corporal begins, I must
    first give you a description of his attitude
    ---- otherwise he will naturally stand
    represented, by your imagination, in an uneasy
    posture, -- stiff, -- perpendicular, -- dividing
    the weight of his body equally upon both legs
    -- his eye fix'd, as if on duty -- his look
    determined -- clinching the sermon in his left
    hand, like his firelock -- In a word, you would
    be apt to paint Trim, as if he was standing in
    his platoon ready for action -- His attitude
    was as unlike all this as you can conceive.
               

78
  • He stood before them with his body swayed, and
    bent forwards just so far, as to make an angle of
    85 degrees and a half upon the plain of the
    horizon -- which sound orators, to whom I
    address this, know very well, to be the true
    persuasive angle of incidence -- in any other
    angle you may talk and preach -- 'tis certain,
    -- and it is done every day -- but with what
    effect, -- I leave the world to judge !

79
  • The necessity of this precise angle of 85
    degrees and a half to a mathematical exactness,
    -- does it not shew us, by the way, -- how the
    arts and sciences mutually befriend each other ?

80
  • He stood, ---- for I repeat it, to take the
    picture of him in at one view, with his body
    sway'd, and somewhat bent forwards, --- his
    right leg firm under him, sustaining
    seven-eighths of his whole weight, -- the foot
    of his left leg, the de-fect of which was no
    disadvantage to his attitude, advanced a little,
    -- not lateral-ly, nor forwards, but in a line
    betwixt them -- his knee bent, but that not
    vio-lently, -- but so as to fall within the
    li-mits of the line of beauty

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  • ---- And possibly, gentle reader, with such a
    temptation -- so wouldst thou For never did
    thy eyes behold, or thy concupiscence covet any
    thing in this world, more concupiscible than
    widow Wadman.
  • TO conceive this right, -- call for pen and ink
    -- here's paper ready to your hand. ---- Sit
    down, Sir, paint her to your own mind ---- as
    like your mistress as you can ---- as unlike
    your wife as your conscience will let you --
    'tis all one to me ---- please but your own
    fancy in it. (Vol. 6, Ch XXXVIII)

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