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History of Gesture Language
There is ample evidence of record, besides
that derived from other sources, that the systematic use of
gesture speech was of great antiquity. Livy so declares, and
Quintilian specifies that the "lex gestus ... ab illis
temporibus heroicis orta est." Plato classed its
practice among civil virtues, and Chrysippus gave it place
among the proper education of freemen. Athenĉus tells that
gestures were even reduced to distinct classification with
appropriate terminology. The class suited to comedy was
called Cordax, that to tragedy Eumelia, and that for satire
Sicinnis, from the inventor Sicinnus. Bathyllus from these
formed a fourth class, adapted to pantomime. This system
appears to have been particularly applicable to theatrical
performances. Quintilian, later, gave most elaborate rules
for gestures in oratory, which are specially noticeable from
the importance attached to the manner of disposing the
fingers. He attributed to each particular disposition a
significance or suitableness which are not now obvious. Some
of them are retained by modern orators, but without the
same, or indeed any, intentional meaning, and others are
wholly disused.
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The value of these digital arrangements is,
however, shown by their use among the modern
Italians, to whom they have directly
descended. From many illustrations of this
fact the following is selected. Fig. 61 is
copied from Austin's |
| Chironomia
as his graphic execution of the
gesture described by Quintilian:
"The fore finger of the right hand
joining the middle of its nail to
the extremity of its own thumb, and
moderately extending the rest of the
fingers, is graceful in approving." Fig. 62 is taken
from De
Jorio's plates and descriptions of the
gestures among modern Neapolitans,
with the same idea of
approbation"good." Both of these
may be compared |
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with Fig. 63, a
common sign among the North American
Indians to express affirmation and
approbation. With the knowledge of
these details it is possible to
believe the story of Macrobius that Cicero
used to vie with Roscius, the celebrated
actor, as to which of them could
express a sentiment in the greater
variety of ways, the one by gesture
and the other by speech, with the
apparent result of victory to the
actor who was so satisfied with the
superiority of his art that he wrote
a book on the subject. |
| Gestures were treated of with
still more distinction as connected with pantomimic dances and
representations. Ĉschylus appears to have
brought theatrical gesture to a high degree
of perfection, but Telestes, a dancer
employed by him, introduced the
dumb show, a dance without marked dancing
steps, and subordinated to motions of the
hands, arms, and body, which is dramatic
pantomime. He was so great an artist, says
Athenĉus, that when he represented the Seven
before Thebes he rendered every
circumstance manifest by his
gestures alone. From Greece, or
rather from Egypt, the art was
brought to Rome, and in the reign of
Augustus was the great delight of
that Emperor and his friend Mĉcenas. Bathyllus, of Alexandria, was the
first to introduce it to the Roman public,
but he had a dangerous rival in Pylades. The
latter was magnificent, pathetic, and
affecting, while Bathyllus was gay and
sportive. All Rome was split into factions
about their respective merits. Athenĉus
speaks of a distinguished performer of his
own time (he died A.D. 194) named Memphis,
whom he calls the "dancing philosopher,"
because he showed what the Pythagorean
philosophy could do by exhibiting in silence
everything with stronger evidence than they
could who professed to teach the arts of
language. In the reign of Nero, a celebrated
pantomimist who had heard that the cynic
philosopher Demetrius spoke of the art with
contempt, prevailed upon him to witness his
performance, with the result that the cynic,
more and more astonished, at last cried out
aloud, "Man, I not only see, but I hear what
you do, for to me you appear to speak with
your hands!" Lucian, who narrates this in his work De Saltatione, gives another tribute to the
talent of, perhaps, the same performer. A
barbarian prince of Pontus (the story is
told elsewhere of Tyridates, King of
Armenia), having come to Rome to do homage
to the Emperor Nero, and been taken to see
the pantomimes, was asked on his departure
by the Emperor what present he would have as
a mark of his favor. The barbarian begged
that he might have the principal pantomimist,
and upon being asked why he made such an odd
request, replied that he had many neighbors
who spoke such various and discordant
languages that he found it difficult to
obtain any interpreter who could understand
them or explain his commands; but if he had
the dancer he could by his assistance easily
make himself intelligible to all.
While the general effect of these pantomimes
is often mentioned, there remain but few
detailed descriptions of them. Apuleius,
however, in the tenth book of his
Metamorphosis or "Golden Ass," gives
sufficient details of the performance of the
Judgment of Paris to show that it strongly
resembled the best form of ballet opera
known in modern times. These exhibitions
were so greatly in favor that, according to Ammianus Marcellinus, there were in Rome in
the year 190 six thousand persons devoted to
the art, and that when a famine raged they
were all kept in the city, though besides
all the strangers all the philosophers were
forced to leave. Their popularity continued
until the sixth century, and it is evident
from a decree of Charlemagne that they were
not lost, or at least, had been revived in
his time. Those of us who have enjoyed the
performance of the original Ravel troupe
will admit that the art still survives,
though not with the magnificence or
perfection, especially with reference to
serious subjects, which it exhibited in the
age of imperial Rome.
Early and prominent among the post-classic
works upon gesture is that of the venerable
Bede (who flourished A.D. 672-735) De Loquelâ per Gestum Digitorum, sive de
Indigitatione. So much discussion had indeed
been carried on in reference to the use of
signs for the desideratum of a universal
mode of communication, which also was
designed to be occult and mystic, that
Rabelais, in the beginning of the sixteenth
century, who, however satirical, never spent
his force upon matters of little importance,
devotes much attention to it. He makes his
English philosopher, Thaumast "The
Wonderful" declare, "I will dispute by signs
only, without speaking, for the matters are
so abstruse, hard, and arduous, that words
proceeding from the mouth of man will never
be sufficient for unfolding of them to my
liking."
The earliest contributions of practical
value connected with the subject were made
by George Dalgarno, of Aberdeen, in two
works, one published in London, 1661,
entitled Ars Signorum, vulgo character
universalis et lingua philosophica, and the
other printed at Oxford, 1680, entitled,
Didascalocophus, or the Deaf and Dumb Man's
Tutor. He spent his life in obscurity, and
his works, though he was incidentally
mentioned by Leibnitz under the name of "M.
Dalgarus," passed into oblivion. Yet he
undoubtedly was the precursor of Bishop
Wilkins in his Essay toward a Real Character
and a Philosophical Language, published in
London, 1668, though indeed the first idea
was far older, it having been, as reported
by Piso, the wish of Galen that some way
might be found out to represent things by
such peculiar signs and names as should
express their natures. Dalgarno's ideas
respecting the education of the dumb were
also of the highest value, and though they
were too refined and enlightened to be
appreciated at the period when he wrote,
they probably were used by Dr. Wallis if not
by Sicard. Some of his thoughts should be
quoted: "As I think the eye to be as docile
as the ear; so neither see I any reason but
the hand might be made as tractable an organ
as the tongue; and as soon brought to form,
if not fair, at least legible characters, as
the tongue to imitate and echo back
articulate sounds." A paragraph prophetic of
the late success in educating blind
deaf-mutes is as follows: "The soul can
exert her powers by the ministry of any of
the senses: and, therefore, when she is
deprived of her principal secretaries, the
eye and the ear, then she must be contented
with the service of her lackeys and
scullions, the other senses; which are no
less true and faithful to their mistress
than the eye and the ear; but not so quick
for dispatch."
In his division of the modes of "expressing
the inward emotions by outward and sensible
signs" he relegates to physiology cases
"when the internal passions are expressed by
such external signs as have a natural
connection, by way of cause and effect, with
the passion they discover, as laughing,
weeping, frowning, &c., and this way of
interpretation being common to the brute
with man belongs to natural philosophy. And
because this goes not far enough to serve
the rational soul, therefore, man has
invented Sematology." This he divides into
Pneumatology, interpretation by sounds
conveyed through the ear; Schematology, by
figures to the eye, and Haptology, by mutual
contact, skin to skin. Schematology is
itself divided into Typology or
Grammatology, and Cheirology or Dactylology.
The latter embraces "the transient motions
of the fingers, which of all other ways of
interpretation comes nearest to that of the
tongue."
As a phase in the practice of gestures in
lieu of speech must be mentioned the code of
the Cistercian monks, who were vowed to
silence except in religious exercises. That
they might literally observe their vows they
were obliged to invent a system of
communication by signs, a list of which is
given by Leibnitz, but does not show much
ingenuity.
A curious description of the speech of the
early inhabitants of the world, given by
Swedenborg in his Arcana Clestia, published
1749-1756, may be compared with the present
exhibitions of deaf-mutes in institutions
for their instruction. He says it was not
articulate like the vocal speech of our
time, but was tacit, being produced not by
external respiration, but by internal. They
were able to express their meaning by slight
motions of the lips and corresponding
changes of the face.
Austin's comprehensive work, Chironomia, or
a Treatise on Rhetorical Delivery, London,
1806, is a repertory of information for all
writers on gesture, who have not always
given credit to it, as well as on all
branches of oratory. This has been freely
used by the present writer, as has also the
volume by the canon Andrea de Jorio, La Mimica degli Antichi investigata nel Gestire
Napoletano, Napoli, 1832. The canon's chief
object was to interpret the gestures of the
ancients as shown in their works of art and
described in their writings, by the modern
gesticulations of the Neapolitans, and he
has proved that the general system of
gesture once prevailing in ancient Italy is
substantially the same as now observed. With
an understanding of the existing language of
gesture the scenes on the most ancient Greek
vases and reliefs obtain a new and
interesting significance and form a
connecting link between the present and
prehistoric times. Two of De Jorio's plates
are here reproduced, Figs. 64 and 67, with
such explanation and further illustration as
is required for the present subject. |
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Group from an ancient Greek vase
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The spirited figures upon
the ancient vase, Fig. 64, are red upon a
black ground and are described in the
published account in French of the
collection of Sir John Coghill, Bart., of
which the following is a free translation:
Dionysos or Bacchus is represented with a
strong beard, his head girt with the
credemnon, clothed in a long folded tunic,
above which is an ample cloak, and holding a
thyrsus. Under the form of a satyr, Comus,
or the genius of the table, plays on the
double flute and tries to excite to the
dance two nymphs, the companions of BacchusGalené,
Tranquility, and Eudia, Serenity. The first
of them is dressed in a tunic, above which
is a fawn skin, holding a tympanum or
classic drum on which she is about to
strike, while her companion marks the time
by a snapping of the fingers, which custom
the author of the catalogue wisely states is
still kept up in Italy in the dance of the
tarantella. The composition is said to
express allegorically that pure and serene
pleasures are benefits derived from the god
of wine.
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Sign Language
Among North American Indians Compared with
that Among Other Peoples and Deaf-Mutes,
1881
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