| Great Britain. Parliament - 1813 - 746 páginas
...distinction between individuals ia the human species, is more discernable than in other animals. A man may survey ten thousand people before he sees two faces perfectly alike ; and in an army of a hundred thousand men, every one may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of features,... | |
| John Ayrton Paris, John Samuel Martin Fonblanque - 1823 - 556 páginas
...distinction between individuals " in the human species is more discernible than other " animals (a): a man may survey ten thousand people " before he sees two faces perfectly alike ; and in an " army of a hundred thousand men every one maybe " known from another. If there should be a likeness " of feature,... | |
| 1842 - 528 páginas
...distinction between individuals of the human species is more discernible than in other animals : a man may survey ten thousand people before he sees two faces perfectly alike ; and in an army of a hundred thousand men, every one may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of feature,... | |
| Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas - 1836 - 634 páginas
...and the rather, as the distinction is more discernible in the human species than other animals: a man may survey ten thousand people before he sees two faces perfectly alike; and in an army of a hundred thousand men, every one may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of feature,... | |
| Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas - 1836 - 628 páginas
...and the rather, as the distinction is more discernible in the human species than other animals: a man may survey ten thousand people before he sees two faces perfectly alike; and in an army of a hundred thousand men, every one may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of feature,... | |
| William Wills - 1838 - 332 páginas
...distinction between individuals in the human species is more discernible than in other animals ; a man may survey ten thousand people before he sees two faces perfectly alike, and in an army of a hundred thousand men every one may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of feature,... | |
| William Wills - 1838 - 338 páginas
...distinction between individuals in the human species is more discernible than in other animals ; a man may survey ten thousand people before he sees two faces perfectly alike, and in an army of a hundred thousand men every one may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of feature,... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament. House of Lords - 1841 - 820 páginas
...the distinction is more discernible in the human species than other animals; a man may survey 10,000 people before he sees two faces perfectly alike; and in an army of 100,000 men, every one may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of feature there may... | |
| Leonard Shelford - 1841 - 532 páginas
...persons who have watched *them never to ■■ * have come together; if direct evidence can be proved one may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of feature, there may be discriminacy of voice, a difference in the gesture, the smile, and various other... | |
| Lundsford Pitts Yandell, Theodore S. Bell - 1845 - 564 páginas
...thousand people before he sees two faces exactly alike, and in an army of ten thousand men every man may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of feature, there may be a difference in the voice, gesture or other characters; whereas a family likeness... | |
| |