Page:A Treatise on Painting.djvu/140

  painter who has obtained a perfect knowledge of the nature of the tendons and muscles, and of those parts which contain the most of them, will know to a certainty, in giving a particular motion to any part of the body, which, and how many of the muscles give rise and contribute to it; which of them, by swelling, occasion their shortening, and which of the cartilages they surround.

He will not imitate those who, in all the different attitudes they adopt, or invent, make use of the same muscles, in the arms, back, or chest, or any other parts.

 

non-existence of motion in any animal resting on its feet, is owing to the equality of weight distributed on each side of the line of gravity.   is created by the loss of due equipoise, that is, by inequality of weight; for nothing can

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