In the first place, the accident marked to the line of life denotes a more immediate danger as follows:
When, from an island on Saturn, a line falls downward and enters the lifeline, serious, if not fatal, danger is indicated.
When such a line ends by a small cross, either on the line of life or without it, it tells that the subject will have some narrow escape from serious accident.
Any straight line from Saturn to the lifeline means danger of some kind. But the danger is not as serious as from a line possessing the island either on Saturn or lower down.
The same rules apply to the line of head, with the difference that the danger will be direct to the head itself, but, unless the accident-line cut or break the head-line, it denotes, as it were, that the person has time to foresee the dangers that approach, and such a mark indicates a fright and shock to the brain, but no serious results unless the line is injured or broken.