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Good Humour, Good Health

2 bytes added, 09:47, 25 September 2020
<nomobile>[[File:4 fazy EN.png|thumb|The influence of one's age and season of the year on one's temperament]]</nomobile>
As for the emotional side of the temperaments (which is what "temperaments" will still mean in the 21st century), they can be distinguished by the rate at which emotions rise and recede in a given person. In sanguine people, emotions are quick to rise, but just as quick to recede, which makes them a well-balanced extrovertextroverts, jovial and sociable. This is usually the most socially acceptable temperament, which is not surprising, as the predominance of blood, the most important of humours, is the least noxious. In cholerics, feelings rise quickly, but take time to recede, so if they lose their temper, as they often do, they're not going to calm down anytime soon. The cholerics are extroverts, but unstable ones, impatient, bold and expansive. Their explosive personality may be irritating, but they often exhibit good leadership skills. For phlegmatics, it's the other way around; emotions are slow to rise, but quick to recede, which makes them dull, calm, patient and introverted. As for melancholics, they're unlikely to lose their cool, but once they do, it's very hard for them to get it back. Their emotions tend to pile up faster than they recede, which results in their propensity to depression or a kind of distress known as spleen (after the organ which secretes the black bile).
<nomobile>[[File:A_peeping-tom_spying_on_a_fashionable_lady_receiving_an_enem_Wellcome_L0006476.jpg|thumb|upright|left|— Oh, hi! So nice you've dropped by, do come in! I'm having an enema just now, but pay no mind.]]</nomobile>

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