A Treatise on Painting/Chapter 75
Appearance
Chap. LXXV.—Of the Balance of a Figure resting upon its Feet.
The man who rests upon his feet, either bears the weight of his body upon them equally, or unequally. If equally, it will be with some accidental weight, or simply with his own; if it be with an additional weight, the opposite extremities of his members will not be equally distant from the perpendicular of his feet. But if he simply carries his own weight, the opposite extremities will be equally distant from the perpendicular of his feet: and on this subject of gravity I shall write a separate book[1].
- ↑ See in this work from chap. lx. to lxxxi.