While showing the Researching the Archive seminar some examples of manuscript receipt books a couple of weeks ago (randomly selected after doing a quick “form/genre” in Hamnet on the genre terms “Medical formularies” and “Cookbooks”), I was tickled to come across a section of Folger MS V.a.438 devoted to physiognomical characteristics; that is, an analysis of physical features of the face and head as they relate to a person’s character. The handwriting and orthography are pretty difficult in this ca. 1570 miscellany, so I’ve provided some transcriptions as well as modernized versions, in case you think you might need to get plucking.
Straight brows
The first entry describes someone with “strayghte browes”: “he ys good and wyse trewe in harte worde and deed kepe thow in his companye,” or with modern spelling, “he is good and wise, true in heart, word, and deed. Keep thou in his company.”
Beetle brows
“Byttell browes,” or beetle brows, are another story: “that man that ys byttell browed be ware of hyme for he ys lyke vnto the gogell yed man he ys a shrowe in in all manner of companye he ys deseuable and lyme handed be ware of hym.”
Modernized, this reads: “That man that is beetle-browed, beware of him, for he is like unto the goggle-eyed man. He is a shrew in all manner of company. He is deceivable and lime-handed. Beware of him.” Beetle-browed refers to very prominent and shaggy eyebrows; goggle-eyed refers to prominent eyes; and lime-handed refers to someone prone to pilfering.
Unibrows
Next we have a description of “the here betwine the browes and the nose,” or what we would think of as the unibrow. The unibrowed person has “the sygne of the graye yes he ys vnstedfaste and hontethe far and [comtethe?] good meates and drinkes nor he will not depart yf he maye.” 1
Thomas Hill’s The contemplation of mankinde, contayning a singuler discourse after the art of phisiognomie (London, 1571) [STC 13482] includes a helpful image of a unibrow (Folger STC 13482, copy 1):
The passage connected to this illustration explains:
The Phisiognomer Cocles reporteth, that when the ouerbrowes appeare thicke of heares, and so plentifull or aboundaunt, that these (as the Philosopher writeth) doe discende to the beginning of the nose, and appear through the same whole formed togither: doe then signifie great adustion: and such hauing like ouerbrowes, are melancholicke, and of an euill nature: yea wicked persons, and sometimes theeues, rauishers of maydens, Murderers, but deceyuers allwayes: and to bee briefe, all vices, and wickednesse, are comprehended and knowne in those persons.
Red brows, hanging brows, and more
Further down this same leaf, red brows indicate someone who is lime-handed and deceivable. Brown hair and straight brows, “not hangen but mesurable”—that is, not drooping but of moderate thickness—indicate someone of good of manners and true of heart, word, and deed. The reader is advised to remain in the fellowship of such men.
And the final eyebrow description, on fol. 201v: “hangen browes with yellow yes blacke here on his browes with white here;” that is, “hanging brows with yellow eyes, black hair on his brows, with white hair”:
That man is a stronge theff and shall be hanged
or elce slayne other eles he shall dye some
shamfull dethe for hathe of all planattes a signe
as saynte Austen sayethe, and godwyne the abbote
for the men that be borne in suche a tyme that
he shall have hys desceuynge but that clerkes
sayethe that over all thynges all mysdedes and
good prayers destroyethe wyked desceuynges.
Other entries refer to forehead types, head size, ear and nose features, hair color and length, and lack of hair altogether (“balled” men). The section ends on fol. 206v.
It might be easy to laugh at the idea that eyebrows and other facial features could be indicative of one’s character, but physiognomy, in combination with astrology and humoral theory, was a popular pseudo-science in the early modern period, leading people to evaluate past actions and predict future behavior based on one’s visage.
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Comments
nothing to offer by way of interpretation, but a small transcription edit: the unibrow passage says “signs of the graye yes”, not “nes” — note the hook of the y cutting down into the giant reverse terminal e of “comtethe” in the line below.
and now to get cracking on my eyebrows…
Simran Thadani — March 11, 2015
I’ve just corrected it in the text! (Usual practice is to indicate changes with a strikethrough, but I didn’t want the strikethrough to appear as a word that was struck through in the manuscript, so I just silently swapped out the “nes” for “yes.”) Thanks!
Sarah Werner — March 11, 2015
Good yes, I mean, good eyes! We’ll correct that one in the post. Bill Ingram had the same reading of that word, which appears elsewhere in the section as well.
Heather Wolfe — March 11, 2015
How about [comtethe] in the same entry, which looks to me like “courtethe”?
William Ingram — March 11, 2015
I had initially thought “courtethe” as well, but the other “r” forms on the page are either the bucket-like twin-stemmed “r” or the squiggly “r.” If this is an “r” then it is a real outlier. I also wondered if he might have had some minim trouble and accidently made three minims instead of four, so that it could be “countethe”?
Heather Wolfe — March 11, 2015
No, it’s “comtethe” all right, ie. ‘counts’: cf. “accompt” for ‘account’. The OED gives the following senses of count, v.:
3. To esteem, account, reckon, consider, regard, hold (a thing) to be (so and so).
4. To reckon, estimate, esteem (at such a price or value); †to esteem, value, hold of account (obs.).
..so Mr Unibrow likes his meat and drink!
samklai — March 15, 2015
In a footnote, you invite thoughts about what the passage in question might mean. I take “nor he will not depart yf he maye” to suggest that he doesn’t have the sense to know when to leave.
William Ingram — March 11, 2015
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