Sex in Relation to Society
CHAPTER VII.
16331 words | Chapter 20
ANOMALIES OF STATURE, SIZE, AND DEVELOPMENT.
Giants.--The fables of mythology contain accounts of horrible monsters,
terrible in ferocity, whose mission was the destruction of the life of
the individuals unfortunate enough to come into their domains. The
ogres known as the Cyclops, and the fierce anthropophages, called
Lestrygons, of Sicily, who were neighbors of the Cyclops, are pictured
in detail in the "Odyssey" of Homer. Nearly all the nations of the
earth have their fairy tales or superstitions of monstrous beings
inhabiting some forest, mountain, or cave; and pages have been written
in the heroic poems of all languages describing battles between these
monsters and men with superhuman courage, in which the giant finally
succumbs.
The word giant is derived indirectly from the old English word "geant,"
which in its turn came from the French of the conquering Normans. It is
of Greek derivation, "gigas", or the Latin, "gigas." The Hebrew
parallel is "nophel," or plural, "nephilim."
Ancient Giants.--We are told in the Bible a that the bedstead of Og,
King of Basham, was 9 cubits long, which in English measure is 16 1/2
feet. Goliath of Gath, who was slain by David, stood 6 cubits and a
span tall--about 11 feet. The body of Orestes, according to the Greeks,
was 11 1/2 feet long. The mythical Titans, 45 in number, were a race of
Giants who warred against the Gods, and their descendants were the
Gigantes. The height attributed to these creatures was fabulous, and
they were supposed to heap up mountains to scale the sky and to help
them to wage their battles. Hercules, a man of incredible strength, but
who is said to have been not over 7 feet high, was dispatched against
the Gigantes.
Pliny describes Gabbaras, who was brought to Rome by Claudius Caesar
from Arabia and was between 9 and 10 feet in height, and adds that the
remains of Posio and Secundilla, found in the reign of Augustus Caesar
in the Sallustian Gardens, of which they were supposed to be the
guardians, measured 10 feet 3 inches each. In common with Augustine,
Pliny believed that the stature of man has degenerated, but from the
remains of the ancients so far discovered it would appear that the
modern stature is about the same as the ancient. The beautiful
alabaster sarcophagus discovered near Thebes in 1817 and now in Sir
John Soane's Museum in Lincoln's Inn Fields in London measures 9 feet 4
inches long. This unique example, the finest extant, is well worth
inspection by visitors in London.
Herodotus says the shoes of Perseus measured an equivalent of about 3
feet, English standard. Josephus tells of Eleazar, a Jew, among the
hostages sent by the King of Persia to Rome, who was nearly 11 feet
high. Saxo, the grammarian, mentions a giant 13 1/2 feet high and says
he had 12 companions who were double his height. Ferragus, the monster
supposed to have been slain by Roland, the nephew of Charlemagne, was
said to have been nearly 11 feet high. It was said that there was a
giant living in the twelfth century under the rule of King Eugene II of
Scotland who was 11 1/2 feet high.
There are fabulous stories told of the Emperor Maximilian. Some
accounts say that he was between 8 1/2 and 9 feet high, and used his
wife's bracelet for a finger-ring, and that he ate 40 pounds of flesh a
day and drank six gallons of wine. He was also accredited with being a
great runner, and in his earlier days was said to have conquered
single-handed eight soldiers. The Emperors Charlemagne and Jovianus
were also accredited with great height and strength.
In the olden times there were extraordinary stories of the giants who
lived in Patagonia. Some say that Magellan gave the name to this
country because its inhabitants measured 5 cubits. The naturalist
Turner says that on the river Plata near the Brazilian coast he saw
naked savages 12 feet high; and in his description of America, Thevenot
confirms this by saying that on the coast of Africa he saw on a boat
the skeleton of an American giant who had died in 1559, and who was 11
feet 5 inches in height. He claims to have measured the bones himself.
He says that the bones of the leg measured 3 feet 4 inches, and the
skull was 3 feet and 1 inch, just about the size of the skull of
Borghini, who, however, was only of ordinary height. In his account of
a voyage to the Straits of Magellan, Jacob Lemaire says that on
December 17, 1615, he found at Port Desire several graves covered with
stones, and beneath the stones were skeletons of men which measured
between 10 and 11 feet. The ancient idea of the Spaniards was that the
men of Patagonia were so tall that the Spanish soldiers could pass
under their arms held out straight; yet we know that the Patagonians
exhibit no exaggeration of height--in fact, some of the inhabitants
about Terra del Fuego are rather diminutive. This superstition of the
voyagers was not limited to America; there were accounts of men in the
neighborhood of the Peak of Teneriffe who had 80 teeth in their head
and bodies 15 feet in height.
Discoveries of "Giants' Bones."--Riolan, the celebrated anatomist, says
that there was to be seen at one time in the suburbs of Saint Germain
the tomb of the giant Isoret, who was reputed to be 20 feet tall; and
that in 1509, in digging ditches at Rouen, near the Dominicans, they
found a stone tomb containing a monstrous skeleton, the skull of which
would hold a bushel of corn; the shin-bone measured about 4 feet,
which, taken as a guide, would make his height over 17 feet. On the
tomb was a copper plate which said that the tomb contained the remains
of "the noble and puissant lord, the Chevalier Ricon de Vallemont."
Plater, the famous physician, declares that he saw at Lucerne the true
human bones of a subject that must have been at least 19 feet high.
Valence in Dauphine boasted of possessing the bones of the giant
Bucart, the tyrant of the Vivarias, who was slain by his vassal, Count
de Cabillon. The Dominicans had the shin-bone and part of the
knee-articulation, which, substantiated by the frescoes and
inscriptions in their possession, showed him to be 22 1/2 feet high.
They claimed to have an os frontis in the medical school of Leyden
measuring 9.1 X 12.2 X .5 inches, which they deduce must have belonged
to a man 11 or 12 feet high.
It is said that while digging in France in 1613 there was disinterred
the body of a giant bearing the title "Theutobochus Rex," and that the
skeleton measured 25 feet long, 10 feet across the shoulders, and 5
feet from breast to back. The shin-bone was about 4 feet long, and the
teeth as large as those of oxen. This is likely another version of the
finding of the remains of Bucart.
Near Mezarino in Sicily in 1516 there was found the skeleton of a giant
whose height was at least 30 feet; his head was the size of a hogshead,
and each tooth weighed 5 ounces; and in 1548 and in 1550 there were
others found of the height of 30 feet. The Athenians found near their
city skeletons measuring 34 and 36 feet in height. In Bohemia in 758 it
is recorded that there was found a human skeleton 26 feet tall, and the
leg-bones are still kept in a medieval castle in that country. In
September, 1691, there was the skull of a giant found in Macedonia
which held 210 pounds of corn.
General Opinions.--All the accounts of giants originating in the
finding of monstrous bones must of course be discredited, as the
remains were likely those of some animal. Comparative anatomy has only
lately obtained a hold in the public mind, and in the Middle Ages
little was known of it. The pretended giants' remains have been those
of mastodons, elephants, and other animals. From Suetonius we learn
that Augustus Caesar pleased himself by adorning his palaces with
so-called giants' bones of incredible size, preferring these to
pictures or images. From their enormous size we must believe they were
mastodon bones, as no contemporary animals show such measurements.
Bartholinus describes a large tooth for many years exhibited as the
canine of a giant which proved to be nothing but a tooth of a
spermaceti whale (Cetus dentatus), quite a common fish. Hand described
an alleged giant's skeleton shown in London early in the eighteenth
century, and which was composed of the bones of the fore-fin of a small
whale or of a porpoise.
The celebrated Sir Hans Sloane, who treated this subject very
learnedly, arrived at the conclusion that while in most instances the
bones found were those of mastodons, elephants, whales, etc., in some
instances accounts were given by connoisseurs who could not readily be
deceived. However, modern scientists will be loath to believe that any
men ever existed who measured over 9 feet; in fact, such cases with
authentic references are extremely rare Quetelet considers that the
tallest man whose stature is authentically recorded was the "Scottish
Giant" of Frederick the Great's regiment of giants. This person was not
quite 8 feet 3 inches tall. Buffon, ordinarily a reliable authority,
comes to a loose conclusion that there is no doubt that men have lived
who were 10, 12, and even 15 feet tall; but modern statisticians cannot
accept this deduction from the references offered.
From the original estimation of the height of Adam (Henrion once
calculated that Adam's height was 123 feet and that of Eve 118) we
gradually come to 10 feet, which seemed to be about the favorite height
for giants in the Middle Ages. Approaching this century, we still have
stories of men from 9 to 10 feet high, but no authentic cases. It was
only in the latter part of the last century that we began to have
absolutely authentic heights of giants, and to-day the men showing
through the country as measuring 8 feet generally exaggerate their
height several inches, and exact measurement would show that but few
men commonly called giants are over 7 1/2 feet or weigh over 350
pounds. Dana says that the number of giants figuring as public
characters since 1700 is not more than 100, and of these about 20 were
advertised to be over 8 feet. If we confine ourselves to those
accurately and scientifically measured the list is surprisingly small.
Topinard measured the tallest man in the Austrian army and found that
he was 8 feet 4 1/2 inches. The giant Winckelmeyer measured 8 feet 6
inches in height. Ranke measured Marianne Wehde, who was born in
Germany in the present century, and found that she measured 8 feet 4
1/4 inches when only sixteen and a half years old.
In giants, as a rule, the great stature is due to excessive growth of
the lower extremities, the size of the head and that of the trunk being
nearly the same as those of a man or boy of the same age. On the other
hand, in a natural dwarf the proportions are fairly uniform, the head,
however, being always larger in proportion to the body, just as we find
in infants. Indeed, the proportions of "General Tom Thumb" were those
of an ordinary infant of from thirteen to fifteen months old.
Figure 156 shows a portrait of two well-known exhibitionists of about
the same age, and illustrates the possible extremes of anomalies in
stature.
Recently, the association of acromegaly with gigantism has been
noticed, and in these instances there seems to be an acquired uniform
enlargement of all the bones of the body. Brissaud and Meige describe
the case of a male of forty-seven who presented nothing unusual before
the age of sixteen, when he began to grow larger, until, having reached
his majority, he measured 7 feet 2 inches in height and weighed about
340 pounds. He remained well and very strong until the age of
thirty-seven, when he overlifted, and following this he developed an
extreme deformity of the spine and trunk, the latter "telescoping into
itself" until the nipples were on a level with the anterior superior
spines of the ilium. For two years he suffered with debility, fatigue,
bronchitis, night-sweats, headache, and great thirst. Mentally he was
dull; the bones of the face and extremities showed the hypertrophies
characteristic of acromegaly, the soft parts not being involved. The
circumference of the trunk at the nipples was 62 inches, and over the
most prominent portion of the kyphosis and pigeon-breast, 74 inches.
The authors agree with Dana and others that there is an intimate
relation between acromegaly and gigantism, but they go further and
compare both to the growth of the body. They call attention to the
striking resemblance to acromegaly of the disproportionate growth of
the boy at adolescence, which corresponds so well to Marie's terse
description of this disease: "The disease manifests itself by
preference in the bones of the extremities and in the extremities of
the bones," and conclude with this rather striking and aphoristic
proposition: "Acromegaly is gigantism of the adult; gigantism is
acromegaly of adolescence."
The many theories of the cause of gigantism will not be discussed here,
the reader being referred to volumes exclusively devoted to this
subject.
Celebrated Giants.--Mention of some of the most famous giants will be
made, together with any associate points of interest.
Becanus, physician to Charles V, says that he saw a youth 9 feet high
and a man and a woman almost 10 feet. Ainsworth says that in 1553 the
Tower of London was guarded by three brothers claiming direct descent
from Henry VIII, and surnamed Og, Gog, and Magog, all of whom were over
8 feet in height. In his "Chronicles of Holland" in 1557 Hadrianus
Barlandus said that in the time of John, Earl of Holland, the giant
Nicholas was so large that men could stand under his arms, and his shoe
held 3 ordinary feet. Among the yeoman of the guard of John Frederick,
Duke of Hanover, there was one Christopher Munster, 8 1/2 feet high,
who died in 1676 in his forty-fifth year. The giant porter of the Duke
of Wurtemberg was 7 1/2 feet high. "Big Sam," the porter at Carleton
Palace, when George IV was Prince of Wales, was 8 feet high. The porter
of Queen Elizabeth, of whom there is a picture in Hampton Court,
painted by Zucchero, was 7 1/2 feet high; and Walter Parson, porter to
James I, was about the same height. William Evans, who served Charles
I, was nearly 8 feet; he carried a dwarf in his pocket.
In the seventeenth century, in order to gratify the Empress of Austria,
Guy-Patin made a congress of all the giants and dwarfs in the Germanic
Empire. A peculiarity of this congress was that the giants complained
to the authorities that the dwarfs teased them in such a manner as to
make their lives miserable.
Plater speaks of a girl in Basle, Switzerland, five years old, whose
body was as large as that of a full-grown woman and who weighed when a
year old as much as a bushel of wheat. He also mentions a man living in
1613, 9 feet high, whose hand was 1 foot 6 inches long. Peter van den
Broecke speaks of a Congo negro in 1640 who was 8 feet high. Daniel,
the porter of Cromwell, was 7 feet 6 inches high; he became a lunatic.
Frazier speaks of Chilian giants 9 feet tall. There is a chronicle
which says one of the Kings of Norway was 8 feet high. Merula says
that in 1538 he saw in France a Flemish man over 9 feet. Keysler
mentions seeing Hans Brau in Tyrol in 1550, and says that he was nearly
12 feet high.
Jonston mentions a lad in Holland who was 8 feet tall. Pasumot mentions
a giant of 8 feet.
Edmund Mallone was said to have measured 7 feet 7 inches. Wierski, a
Polander, presented to Maximilian II, was 8 feet high. At the age of
thirty-two there died in 1798 a clerk of the Bank of England who was
said to have been nearly 7 1/2 feet high. The Daily Advertiser for
February 23, 1745, says that there was a young colossus exhibited
opposite the Mansion House in London who was 7 feet high, although but
fifteen years old. In the same paper on January 31, 1753, is an account
of MacGrath, whose skeleton is still preserved in Dublin. In the reign
of George I, during the time of the Bartholomew Fair at Smithfield,
there was exhibited an English man seventeen years old who was 8 feet
tall.
Nicephorus tells of Antonius of Syria, in the reign of Theodosius, who
died at the age of twenty-five with a height of 7 feet 7 inches.
Artacaecas, in great favor with Xerxes, was the tallest Persian and
measured 7 feet. John Middleton, born in 1752 at Hale, Lancashire,
humorously called the "Child of Hale," and whose portrait is in
Brasenose College, Oxford, measured 9 feet 3 inches tall. In his
"History of Ripton," in Devonshire, 1854, Bigsby gives an account of a
discovery in 1687 of a skeleton 9 feet long. In 1712 in a village in
Holland there died a fisherman named Gerrit Bastiaansen who was 8 feet
high and weighed 500 pounds. During Queen Anne's reign there was shown
in London and other parts of England a most peculiar anomaly--a German
giantess without hands or feet who threaded a needle, cut gloves, etc.
About 1821 there was issued an engraving of Miss Angelina Melius,
nineteen years of age and 7 feet high, attended by her page, Senor Don
Santiago de los Santos, from the Island of Manilla, thirty-live years
old and 2 feet 2 inches high. "The Annual Register" records the death
of Peter Tuchan at Posen on June 18, 1825, of dropsy of the chest. He
was twenty-nine years old and 8 feet 7 inches in height; he began to
grow at the age of seven. This monster had no beard; his voice was
soft; he was a moderate eater. There was a giant exhibited in St.
Petersburg, June, 1829, 8 feet 8 inches in height, who was very thin
and emaciated.
Dr. Adam Clarke, who died in 1832, measured a man 8 feet 6 inches tall.
Frank Buckland, in his "Curiosities of Natural History," says that
Brice, the French giant, was 7 feet 7 inches. Early in 1837 there was
exhibited at Parma a young man formerly in the service of the King of
the Netherlands who was 8 feet 10 inches high and weighed 401 pounds.
Robert Hale, the "Norfolk Giant," who died in Yarmouth in 1843 at the
age of forty-three, was 7 feet 6 inches high and weighed 452 pounds.
The skeleton of Cornelius McGrath, now preserved in the Trinity College
Museum, Dublin, is a striking example of gigantism. At sixteen years he
measured 7 feet 10 inches.
O'Brien or Byrne, the Irish giant, was supposed to be 8 feet 4 inches
in height at the time of his death in 1783 at the age of twenty-two.
The story of his connection with the illustrious John Hunter is quite
interesting. Hunter had vowed that he would have the skeleton of
O'Brien, and O'Brien was equally averse to being boiled in the
distinguished scientist's kettle. The giant was tormented all his life
by the constant assertions of Hunter and by his persistence in locating
him. Finally, when, following the usual early decline of his class of
anomalies, O'Brien came to his death-bed, he bribed some fishermen to
take his body after his death to the middle of the Irish Channel and
sink it with leaden weights. Hunter, it is alleged, was informed of
this and overbribed the prospective undertakers and thus secured the
body. It has been estimated that it cost Hunter nearly 500 pounds
sterling to gain possession of the skeleton of the "Irish Giant." The
kettle in which the body was boiled, together with some interesting
literature relative to the circumstances, are preserved in the Museum
of the Royal College of Surgeons in London, and were exhibited at the
meeting of the British Medical Association in 1895 with other Hunterian
relics. The skeleton, which is now one of the features of the Museum,
is reported to measure 92 3/4 inches in height, and is mounted
alongside that of Caroline Crachami, the Sicilian dwarf, who was
exhibited as an Italian princess in London in 1824. She did not grow
after birth and died at the age of nine.
Patrick Cotter, the successor of O'Brien, and who for awhile exhibited
under this name, claiming that he was a lineal descendant of the famous
Irish King, Brian Boru, who he declared was 9 feet in height, was born
in 1761, and died in 1806 at the age of forty-five. His shoe was 17
inches long, and he was 8 feet 4 inches tall at his death.
In the Museum of Madame Tussaud in London there is a wax figure of
Loushkin, said to be the tallest man of his time. It measures 8 feet 5
inches, and is dressed in the military uniform of a drum-major of the
Imperial Preobrajensky Regiment of Guards. To magnify his height there
is a figure of the celebrated dwarf, "General Tom Thumb," in the palm
of his hand. Figure 158 represents a well-known American giant, Ben
Hicks who was called "the Denver Steeple."
Buffon refers to a Swedish giantess who he affirms was 8 feet 6 inches
tall. Chang, the "Chinese Giant," whose smiling face is familiar to
nearly all the modern world, was said to be 8 feet tall. In 1865, at
the age of nineteen, he measured 7 feet 8 inches. At Hawick, Scotland,
in 1870, there was an Irishman 7 feet 8 inches in height, 52 inches
around the chest, and who weighed 22 stone. Figure 159 shows an
American giantess known as "Leah, the Giantess." At the age of nineteen
she was 7 feet 2 inches tall and weighed 165 pounds.
On June 17, 1871, there were married at Saint-Martins-in-the-Field in
London Captain Martin Van Buren Bates of Kentucky and Miss Anna Swann
of Nova Scotia, two celebrated exhibitionists, both of whom were over 7
feet. Captain Bates, familiarly known as the "Kentucky Giant," years
ago was a familiar figure in many Northern cities, where he exhibited
himself in company with his wife, the combined height of the two being
greater than that of any couple known to history. Captain Bates was
born in Whitesburg, Letcher County, Ky., on November 9, 1845. He
enlisted in the Southern army in 1861, and though only sixteen years
old was admitted to the service because of his size. At the close of
the war Captain Bates had attained his great height of 7 feet 2 1/2
inches. His body was well proportioned and his weight increased until
it reached 450 pounds. He traveled as a curiosity from 1866 to 1880,
being connected with various amusement organizations. He visited nearly
all the large cities and towns in the United States, Canada, Great
Britain, France, Spain, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, and Russia.
While in England in 1871 the Captain met Miss Anna H. Swann, known as
the "Nova Scotia Giantess," who was two years the junior of her giant
lover. Miss Swann was justly proud of her height, 7 feet 5 1/2 inches.
The two were married soon afterward. Their combined height of 14 feet
8 inches marked them as the tallest married couple known to mankind.
Captain Bates' parents were of medium size. His father, a native of
Virginia, was 5 feet 10 inches high and weighed 160 pounds. His mother
was 5 feet 3 inches tall and weighed 125 pounds. The height of the
father of Mrs. Anna Swann Bates was 6 feet and her mother was 5 feet
and 2 inches high, weighing but 100 pounds.
A recent newspaper dispatch says: "Captain M. V. Bates, whose
remarkable height at one time attracted the attention of the world, has
recently retired from his conspicuous position and lives in comparative
obscurity on his farm in Guilford, Medina County, O., half a mile east
of Seville."
In 1845 there was shown in Paris Joachim Eleiceigui, the Spanish giant,
who weighed 195 kilograms (429 pounds) and whose hands were 42 cm. (16
1/2 inches) long and of great beauty. In 1882 at the Alhambra in London
there was a giantess by the name of Miss Marian, called the "Queen of
the Amazons," aged eighteen years, who measured 2.45 meters (96 1/2
inches). William Campbell, a Scotchman, died at Newcastle in May 1878.
He was so large that the window of the room in which the deceased lay
and the brick-work to the level of the floor had to be taken out, in
order that the coffin might be lowered with block and tackle three
stories to the ground. On January 27, 1887, a Greek, although a Turkish
subject, recently died of phthisis in Simferopol. He was 7 feet 8
inches in height and slept on three beds laid close together.
Giants of History.--A number of persons of great height, particularly
sovereigns and warriors, are well-known characters of history, viz.,
William of Scotland, Edward III, Godefroy of Bouillon, Philip the Long,
Fairfax, Moncey, Mortier, Kleber; there are others celebrated in modern
times. Rochester, the favorite of Charles II; Pothier, the jurist;
Bank, the English naturalist; Gall, Billat-Savarin, Benjamin Constant,
the painter David, Bellart, the geographer Delamarche, and Care, the
founder of the Gentleman's Magazine, were all men of extraordinary
stature.
Dwarfs.--The word "dwarf" is of Saxon origin (dwerg, dweorg) and
corresponds to the "pumilio" or "nanus" of the Romans. The Greeks
believed in the pygmy people of Thrace and Pliny speaks of the
Spithamiens. In the "Iliad" Homer writes of the pygmies and Juvenal
also describes them; but the fantasies of these poets have given these
creatures such diminutive stature that they have deprived the
traditions of credence. Herodotus relates that in the deserts of Lybia
there were people of extreme shortness of stature. The Bible mentions
that no dwarf can officiate at the altar. Aristotle and Philostratus
speak of pygmy people descended from Pygmaeus, son of Dorus. In the
seventeenth century van Helmont supposed that there were pygmies in the
Canary Islands, and Abyssinia, Brazil, and Japan in the older times
were repeatedly said to contain pygmy races. Relics of what must have
been a pygmy race have been found in the Hebrides, and in this country
in Kentucky and Tennessee.
Dr. Schweinfurth, the distinguished African traveler, confirms the
statements of Homer, Herodotus, and Aristotle that there was a race of
pygmies near the source of the Nile. Schweinfurth says that they live
south of the country occupied by the Niam-Niam, and that their stature
varies from 4 feet to 4 feet 10 inches. These people are called the
Akkas, and wonderful tales are told of their agility and cunning,
characteristics that seem to compensate for their small stature.
In 1860 Paul DuChaillu speaks of the existence of an African people
called the Obongos, inhabiting the country of the Ashangos, a little to
the south of the equator, who were about 1.4 meters in height. There
have been people found in the Esquimaux region of very diminutive
stature. Battel discovered another pygmy people near the Obongo who are
called the Dongos. Kolle describes the Kenkobs, who are but 3 to 4
feet high, and another tribe called the Reebas, who vary from 3 to 5
feet in height. The Portuguese speak of a race of dwarfs whom they call
the Bakka-bakka, and of the Yogas, who inhabit territory as far as the
Loango. Nubia has a tribe of dwarfs called the Sukus, but little is
known of them. Throughout India there are stories of dwarf tribes
descended from the monkey-God, or Hoonuman of the mythologic poems.
In the works of Humboldt and Burgoa there is allusion to the tradition
of a race of pygmies in the unexplored region of Chiapas near the
Isthmus of Tehuantepec in Central America. There is an expedition of
anthropologists now on the way to discover this people. Professor Starr
of Chicago on his return from this region reported many colonies of
undersized people, but did not discover any pygmy tribes answering to
the older legendary descriptions. Figure 160 represents two dwarf
Cottas measuring 3 feet 6 inches in height.
The African pygmies who were sent to the King of Italy and shown in
Rome resembled the pygmy travelers of Akka that Schweinfurth saw at the
court of King Munza at Monbuttu. These two pygmies at Rome were found
in Central Africa and were respectively about ten and fifteen years
old. They spoke a dialect of their own and different from any known
African tongue; they were partly understood by an Egyptian sergeant, a
native of Soudan, who accompanied them as the sole survivor of the
escort with which their donor, Miani, penetrated Monbuttu. Miani, like
Livingstone, lost his life in African travel. These dwarfs had grown
rapidly in recent years and at the time of report, measured 1.15 and
1.02 meters. In 1874 they were under the care of the Royal Geographical
Society of Italy. They were intelligent in their manner, but resented
being lionized too much, and were prone to scratch ladies who attempted
to kiss them.
The "Aztec Children" in 1851, at the ages of seven and six years,
another pair of alleged indigenous pygmies, measured 33 3/4 and 29 1/2
inches in height and weighed 20 3/4 and 17 pounds respectively. The
circumference of their heads did not equal that of an ordinary infant
at birth.
It is known that at one time the ancients artificially produced dwarfs
by giving them an insufficient alimentation when very young. They soon
became rachitic from their deprivation of lime-salts and a great number
perished, but those who survived were very highly prized by the Roman
Emperors for their grotesque appearance. There were various recipes for
dwarfing children. One of the most efficient in the olden times was
said to have been anointing the backbone with the grease of bats,
moles, dormice, and such animals; it was also said that puppies were
dwarfed by frequently washing the feet and backbone, as the consequent
drying and hardening of the parts were alleged to hinder their
extension. To-day the growth of boys intended to be jockeys is kept
down by excessive sweating.
Ancient Popularity of Dwarfs.--At one time a dwarf was a necessary
appendage of every noble family. The Roman Emperors all had their
dwarfs. Julia, the niece of Augustus, had a couple of dwarfs, Conopas
and Andromeda, each of whom was 2 feet 4 inches in height. It was the
fashion at one time to have dwarfs noted for their wit and wisdom.
Philos of Cos, tutor of Ptolemy Philadelphus, was a dwarf, as were
Carachus, the friend of Saladin; Alypius of Alexandria, who was only 2
feet high; Lucinus Calvus, who was only 3 feet high, and aesop, the
famous Greek fabulist. Later in the Middle Ages and even to the last
century dwarfs were seen at every Court. Lady Montagu describes the
dwarfs at the Viennese Court as "devils bedaubed with diamonds." They
had succeeded the Court Jester and exercised some parts of this ancient
office. At this time the English ladies kept monkeys for their
amusement. The Court dwarfs were allowed unlimited freedom of speech,
and in order to get at truths other men were afraid to utter one of the
Kings of Denmark made one of his dwarfs Prime Minister.
Charles IX in 1572 had nine dwarfs, of which four had been given to him
by King Sigismund-Augustus of Poland and three by Maximilian II of
Germany. Catherine de Medicis had three couples of dwarfs at one time,
and in 1579 she had still five pygmies, named Merlin, Mandricart,
Pelavine, Rodomont, and Majoski. Probably the last dwarf in the Court
of France was Balthazar Simon, who died in 1662.
Sometimes many dwarfs were present at great and noble gatherings. In
Rome in 1566 the Cardinal Vitelli gave a sumptuous banquet at which the
table-attendants were 34 dwarfs. Peter the Great of Russia had a
passion for dwarfs, and in 1710 gave a great celebration in honor of
the marriage of his favorite, Valakoff, with the dwarf of the Princess
Prescovie Theodorovna. There were 72 dwarfs of both sexes present to
form the bridal party. Subsequently, on account of dangerous and
difficult labor, such marriages were forbidden in Russia.
In England and in Spain the nobles had the portraits of their dwarfs
painted by the celebrated artists of the day. Velasquez has represented
Don Antonio el Ingles, a dwarf of fine appearance, with a large dog,
probably to bring out the dwarf's inferior height. This artist also
painted a great number of other dwarfs at the Court of Spain, and in
one of his paintings he portrays the Infanta Marguerite accompanied by
her male and female dwarfs. Reproductions of these portraits have been
given by Garnier. In the pictures of Raphael, Paul Veronese, and
Dominiquin, and in the "Triumph of Caesar" by Mantegna, representations
of dwarfs are found, as well as in other earlier pictures representing
Court events. At the present time only Russia and Turkey seem to have
popular sympathy for dwarfs, and this in a limited degree.
Intellectual Dwarfs.--It must be remarked, however, that many of the
dwarfs before the public have been men of extraordinary-intelligence,
possibly augmented by comparison. In a postmortem discussed at a
meeting of the Natural History Society at Bonn in 1868 it was
demonstrated by Schaufhausen that in a dwarf subject the brain weighed
1/19 of the body, in contradistinction to the average proportion of
adults, from 1 to 30 to 1 to 44. The subject was a dwarf of sixty-one
who died in Coblentz, and was said to have grown after his thirtieth
year. His height was 2 feet 10 inches and his weight 45 pounds. The
circumference of the head was 520 mm. and the brain weighed 1183.33 gm.
and was well convoluted. This case was one of simple arrest of
development, affecting all the organs of the body; he was not virile.
He was a child of large parents; had two brothers and a sister of
ordinary size and two brothers dwarfs, one 6 inches higher and the
other his size.
Several personages famous in history have been dwarfs. Attila, the
historian Procopius, Gregory of Tours, Pepin le Bref, Charles III, King
of Naples, and Albert the Grand were dwarfs. About the middle of the
seventeenth century the French episcopacy possessed among its members a
dwarf renowned for his intelligence. This diminutive man, called
Godeau, made such a success in literature that by the grace of
Richelieu he was named the Archbishop of Grasse. He died in 1672. The
Dutch painter Doos, the English painter Gibson (who was about 3 feet in
height and the father of nine infants by a wife of about the same
height), Prince Eugene, and the Spanish Admiral Gravina were dwarfs.
Fleury and Garry, the actors.
Hay, a member of Parliament from Sussex in the last century;
Hussein-Pasha, celebrated for his reforms under Selim III; the Danish
antiquarian and voyager, Arendt, and Baron Denon were men far below the
average size Varro says that there were two gentlemen of Rome who from
their decorations must have belonged to an Equestrian Order, and who
were but 2 Roman cubits (about 3 feet) high. Pliny also speaks of them
as preserved in their coffins.
It may be remarked that perhaps certain women are predisposed to give
birth to dwarfs. Borwilaski had a brother and a sister who were dwarfs.
In the middle of the seventeenth century a woman brought forth four
dwarfs, and in the eighteenth century a dwarf named Hopkins had a
sister as small as he was. Therese Souvray, the dwarf fiancee of Bebe,
had a dwarf sister 41 inches high. Virey has examined a German dwarf
of eight who was only 18 inches tall, i.e., about the length of a
newly-born infant. The parents were of ordinary size, but had another
child who was also a dwarf.
There are two species of dwarfs, the first coming into the world under
normal conditions, but who in their infancy become afflicted with a
sudden arrest of development provoked by some malady; the second are
born very small, develop little, and are really dwarfs from their
birth; as a rule they are well conformed, robust, and intelligent.
These two species can be distinguished by an important characteristic.
The rachitic dwarfs of the first class are incapable of perpetuating
their species, while those of the second category have proved more than
once their virility. A certain number of dwarfs have married with women
of normal height and have had several children, though this is not, it
is true, an indisputable proof of their generative faculties; but we
have instances in which dwarfs have married dwarfs and had a family
sometimes quite numerous. Robert Skinner (25 inches) and Judith (26
inches), his wife, had 14 infants, well formed, robust, and of normal
height.
Celebrated Dwarfs.--Instances of some of the most celebrated dwarfs
will be cited with a short descriptive mention of points of interest in
their lives:--
Vladislas Cubitas, who was King of Poland in 1305, was a dwarf, and was
noted for his intelligence, courage, and as a good soldier. Geoffrey
Hudson, the most celebrated English dwarf, was born at Oakham in
England in 1619. At the age of eight, when not much over a foot high,
he was presented to Henriette Marie, wife of Charles I, in a pie; he
afterward became her favorite. Until he was thirty he was said to be
not more than 18 inches high, when he suddenly increased to about 45
inches. In his youth he fought several duels, one with a turkey cock,
which is celebrated in the verse of Davenant. He became a popular and
graceful courtier, and proved his bravery and allegiance to his
sovereign by assuming command of a royalist company and doing good
service therein. Both in moral and physical capacities he showed his
superiority. At one time he was sent to France to secure a midwife for
the Queen, who was a Frenchwoman. He afterward challenged a gentleman
by the name of Croft to fight a duel, and would accept only deadly
weapons; he shot his adversary in the chest; the quarrel grew out of
his resentment of ridicule of his diminutive size. He was accused of
participation in the Papist Plot and imprisoned by his political
enemies in the Gate House at Westminster, where he died in 1682 at the
advanced age of sixty-three. In Scott's "Peveril of the Peak" Hudson
figures prominently. This author seemed fond of dwarfs.
About the same epoch Charles I had a page in his court named Richard
Gibson, who was remarkable for his diminutive size and his ability as a
miniature painter. This little artist espoused another of his class,
Anne Shepherd, a dwarf of Queen Henriette Marie, about his size (45
inches). Mistress Gibson bore nine children, five of whom arrived at
adult age and were of ordinary proportions. She died at the age of
eighty; her husband afterward became the drawing master of Princesses
Mary and Anne, daughters of James II; he died July 23, 1690, aged
seventy-five years.
In 1730 there was born of poor fisher parents at Jelst a child named
Wybrand Lokes. He became a very skilful jeweler, and though he was of
diminutive stature he married a woman of medium height, by whom he had
several children. He was one of the smallest men ever exhibited,
measuring but 25 1/2 inches in height. To support his family better, he
abandoned his trade and with great success exhibited himself throughout
Holland and England. After having amassed a great fortune he returned
to his country, where he died in 1800, aged seventy. He was very
intelligent, and proved his power of paternity, especially by one son,
who at twenty-three was 5 feet 3 inches tall, and robust.
Another celebrated dwarf was Nicolas Ferry, otherwise known as Bebe. He
was born at Plaine in the Vosges in 1741; he was but 22 cm. (8 1/2
inches) long, weighed 14 ounces at birth, and was carried on a plate to
the church for baptism. At five Bebe was presented to King Stanislas of
Poland. At fifteen he measured 29 inches. He was of good constitution,
but was almost an idiot; for example, he did not recognize his mother
after fifteen days' separation. He was quite lax in his morals, and
exhibited no evidences of good nature except his lively attachment for
his royal master, who was himself a detestable character. He died at
twenty-two in a very decrepit condition, and his skeleton is preserved
in the Museum of Natural History in Paris. Shortly before his death
Bebe became engaged to a female dwarf named Therese Souvray, who at one
time was exhibited in Paris at the Theatre Conti, together with an
older sister. Therese lived to be seventy-three, and both she and her
sister measured only 30 inches in height. She died in 1819.
Aldrovandus gives a picture of a famous dwarf of the Duc de Crequi who
was only 30 inches tall, though perfectly formed; he also speaks of
some dwarfs who were not over 2 feet high.
There was a Polish gentleman named Joseph Borwilaski, born in 1739 who
was famed all over Europe. He became quite a scholar, speaking French
and German fairly well. In 1860, at the age of twenty-two, and 28
inches in height, he married a woman of ordinary stature, who bore him
two infants well conformed. He was exhibited in many countries, and
finally settled at Durham, England, where he died in 1837 at the almost
incredible age of ninety-eight, and is buried by the side of the
Falstaffian Stephen Kemble. Mary Jones of Shropshire, a dwarf 32 inches
tall and much deformed, died in 1773 at the age of one hundred. These
two instances are striking examples of great age in dwarfs and are
therefore of much interest. Borwilaski's parents were tall in stature
and three of his brothers were small; three of the other children
measured 5 feet 6 inches. Diderot has written a history of this family.
Richeborg, a dwarf only 23 inches in height, died in Paris in 1858 aged
ninety years. In childhood he had been a servant in the House of
Orleans and afterward became their pensioner. During the Revolution he
passed in and out of Paris as an infant in a nurse's arms, thus
carrying dispatches memorized which might have proved dangerous to
carry in any other manner.
At St. Philip's, Birmingham, there is the following inscription on a
tomb: "In memory of Mannetta Stocker, who quitted this life on the 4th
day of May, 1819, at the age of thirty-nine years, the smallest woman
in the kingdom, and one of the most accomplished." She was born in
Krauma, in the north of Austria, under normal conditions. Her growth
stopped at the age of four, when she was 33 inches tall. She was shown
in many villages and cities over Europe and Great Britain; she was very
gay, played well on the piano, and had divers other accomplishments.
In 1742 there was shown in London a dwarf by the name of Robert
Skinner, .63 meters in height, and his wife, Judith, who was a little
larger. Their exhibition was a great success and they amassed a small
fortune; during twenty-three years they had 14 robust and well-formed
children. Judith died in 1763, and Robert grieved so much after her
that he himself expired two years later.
Figure 161 shows a female dwarf with her husband and child, all of whom
were exhibited some years since in the Eastern United States. The
likeness of the child to the mother is already noticeable.
Buffon speaks of dwarfs 24, 21, and 18 inches high, and mentions one
individual, aged thirty-seven, only 16 inches tall, whom he considers
the smallest person on record. Virey in 1818 speaks of an English child
of eight or nine who was but 18 inches tall. It had the intelligence of
a child of three or four; its dentition was delayed until it was two
years old and it did not walk until four. The parents of this child
were of ordinary stature.
At the "Cosmorama" in Regent Street in 1848 there was a Dutch boy of
ten exhibited. He was said to be the son of an apothecary and at the
time of his birth weighed nine pounds. He continued to grow for six
months and at the expiration of that time weighed 12 pounds; since
then, however, he had only increased four pounds. The arrest of
development seemed to be connected with hydrocephalus; although the
head was no larger than that of a child of two, the anterior fontanelle
was widely open, indicating that there was pressure within. He was
strong and muscular; grave and sedate in his manner; cheerful and
affectionate; his manners were polite and engaging; he was expert in
many kinds of handicraft; he possessed an ardent desire for knowledge
and aptitude for education.
Rawdon described a boy of five and a half, at the Liverpool Infirmary
for Children, who weighed 10 1/2 pounds and whose height was 28 or 29
inches. He uttered no articulate sound, but evidently possessed the
sense of hearing. His eyes were large and well formed, but he was
apparently blind. He suckled, cut his teeth normally, but had tonic
contractions of the spine and was an apparent idiot.
Hardie mentions a girl of sixteen and a half whose height was 40 inches
and weight 35 1/2 pounds, including her clothes. During intrauterine
life her mother had good health and both her parents had always been
healthy. She seemed to stop growing at her fourth year. Her intellect
was on a par with the rest of her body. Sometimes she would talk and
again she would preserve rigid silence for a long time. She had a
shuffling walk with a tendency to move on her toes. Her temporary teeth
were shed in the usual manner and had been replaced by canines and
right first molar and incisors on the right side. There was no
indication of puberty except a slight development of the hips. She was
almost totally imbecile, but could tell her letters and spell short
words. The circumference of the head was 19 inches, and Ross pointed
out that the tendon-reflexes were well marked, as well as the
ankle-clonus; he diagnosed the case as one of parencephalus. Figure
162 represents a most curious case of a dwarf named Carrie Akers, who,
though only 34 inches tall, weighed 309 pounds.
In recent years several dwarfs have commanded the popular attention,
but none so much as "General Tom Thumb," the celebrated dwarf of
Barnum's Circus. Charles Stratton, surnamed "Tom Thumb," was born at
Bridgeport, Conn., on January 11, 1832; he was above the normal weight
of the new-born. He ceased growing at about five months, when his
height was less than 21 inches. Barnum, hearing of this phenomenon in
his city, engaged him, and he was shown all over the world under his
assumed name. He was presented to Queen Victoria in 1844, and in the
following year he was received by the Royal Family in France. His
success was wonderful, and even the most conservative journals
described and commented on him. He gave concerts, in which he sang in a
nasal voice; but his "drawing feat" was embracing the women who visited
him. It is said that in England alone he kissed a million females; he
prided himself on his success in this function, although his features
were anything but inviting. After he had received numerous presents and
had amassed a large fortune he returned to America in 1864, bringing
with him three other dwarfs, the "Sisters Warren" and "Commodore Nutt."
He married one of the Warrens, and by her had one child, Minnie, who
died some months after birth of cerebral congestion. In 1883 Tom Thumb
and his wife, Lavinia, were still living, but after that they dropped
from public view and have since died.
In 1895 the wife of a dwarf named Morris gave birth to twins at
Blaenavon, North Wales. Morris is only 35 inches in height and his wife
is even smaller. They were married at Bartholmey Church and have since
been traveling through England under the name of "General and Mrs.
Small," being the smallest married couple in the world. At the latest
reports the mother and her twins were doing well.
The Rossow Brothers have been recently exhibited to the public. These
brothers, Franz and Carl, are twenty and eighteen years respectively.
Franz is the eldest of 16 children and is said to weigh 24 pounds and
measure 21 inches in height; Carl is said to weigh less than his
brother but is 29 inches tall. They give a clever gymnastic exhibition
and are apparently intelligent. They advertise that they were examined
and still remain under the surveillance of the Faculty of Gottingen.
Next to the success of "Tom Thumb" probably no like attraction has been
so celebrated as the "Lilliputians," whose antics and wit so many
Americans have in late years enjoyed. They were a troupe of singers and
comedians composed entirely of dwarfs; they exhibited much talent in
all their performances, which were given for several years and quite
recently in all the large cities of the United States. They showed
themselves to be worthy rivals for honors in the class of
entertainments known as burlesques. As near as could be ascertained,
partly from the fact that they all spoke German fluently and originally
gave their performance entirely in German, they were collected from the
German and Austrian Empires.
The "Princess Topaze" was born near Paris in 1879. According to a
recent report she is perfectly formed and is intelligent and vivacious.
She is 23 1/2 inches tall and weighs 14 pounds. Her parents were of
normal stature.
Not long since the papers recorded the death of Lucia Zarete, a Mexican
girl, whose exact proportions were never definitely known; but there is
no doubt that she was the smallest midget ever exhibited In this
country. Her exhibitor made a fortune with her and her salary was among
the highest paid to modern "freaks."
Miss H. Moritz, an American dwarf, at the age of twenty weighed 36
pounds and was only 22 inches tall.
Precocious development is characterized by a hasty growth of the
subject, who at an early period of life attains the dimensions of an
adult. In some of these instances the anomaly is associated with
precocious puberty, and after acquiring the adult growth at an early
age there is an apparent cessation of the development. In adult life
the individual shows no distinguishing characters.
The first to be considered will be those cases, sometimes called
"man-boys," characterized by early puberty and extraordinary
development in infancy. Histories of remarkable children have been
transmitted from the time of Vespasian. We read in the "Natural
History" of Pliny that in Salamis, Euthimedes had a son who grew to 3
Roman cubits (4 1/2 feet) in three years; he was said to have little
wit, a dull mind, and a slow and heavy gait; his voice was manly, and
he died at three of general debility. Phlegon says that Craterus, the
brother of King Antigonus, was an infant, a young man, a mature man, an
old man, and married and begot children all in the space of seven
years. It is said that King Louis II of Hungary was born so long before
his time that he had no skin; in his second year he was crowned, in his
tenth year he succeeded, in his fourteenth year he had a complete
beard, in his fifteenth he was married, in his eighteenth he had gray
hair, and in his twentieth he died. Rhodiginus speaks of a boy who when
he was ten years impregnated a female. In 1741 there was a boy born at
Willingham, near Cambridge, who had the external marks of puberty at
twelve months, and at the time of his death at five years he had the
appearance of an old man. He was called "prodigium Willinghamense." The
Ephemerides and some of the older journals record instances of penile
erection immediately after birth.
It was said that Philip Howarth, who was born at Quebec Mews, Portman
Square, London, February 21, 1806, lost his infantile rotundity of form
and feature after the completion of his first year and became pale and
extremely ugly, appearing like a growing boy. His penis and testes
increased in size, his voice altered, and hair grew on the pubes. At
the age of three he was 3 feet 4 1/2 inches tall and weighed 51 1/4
pounds. The length of his penis when erect was 4 1/2 inches and the
circumference 4 inches; his thigh-measure was 13 1/2 inches, his
waist-measure 24 inches, and his biceps 7 inches. He was reported to be
clever, very strong, and muscular. An old chronicle says that in
Wisnang Parish, village of Tellurge, near Tygure, in Lordship Kiburge,
there was born on the 26th of May, 1548, a boy called Henry Walker, who
at five years was of the height of a boy of fourteen and possessed the
genitals of a man. He carried burdens, did men's work, and in every way
assisted his parents, who were of usual size.
There is a case cited by the older authors of a child born in the Jura
region who at the age of four gave proof of his virility, at seven had
a beard and the height of a man. The same journal also speaks of a boy
of six, 1.62 meters tall, who was perfectly proportioned and had
extraordinary strength. His beard and general appearance, together with
the marks of puberty, gave him the appearance of a man of thirty.
In 1806 Dupuytren presented to the Medical Society in Paris a child 3
1/2 feet high, weighing 57 pounds, who had attained puberty.
There are on record six modern cases of early puberty in boys, one of
whom died at five with the signs of premature senility; at one year he
had shown signs of enlargement of the sexual organs. There was another
who at three was 3 feet 6 3/4 inches high, weighed 50 pounds, and had
seminal discharges. One of the cases was a child who at birth resembled
an ordinary infant of five months. From four to fifteen months his
penis enlarged, until at the age of three it measured when erect 3
inches. At this age he was 3 feet 7 inches high and weighed 64 pounds.
The last case mentioned was an infant who experienced a change of voice
at twelve months and showed hair on the pubes. At three years he was 3
feet 4 1/2 inches tall and weighed 51 1/4 pounds. Smith, in Brewster's
Journal, 1829, records the case of a boy who at the age of four was
well developed; at the age of six he was 4 feet 2 inches tall and
weighed 74 pounds; his lower extremities were extremely short
proportionally and his genitals were as well developed as those of an
adult. He had a short, dark moustache but no hair on his chin, although
his pubic hair was thick, black, and curly. Ruelle describes a child of
three and a quarter years who was as strong and muscular as one at
eight. He had full-sized male organs and long black hair on the pubes.
Under excitement he discharged semen four or five times a day; he had a
deep male voice, and dark, short hair on the cheek and upper lip.
Stone gives an account of a boy of four who looked like a child of ten
and exhibited the sexual organs of a man with a luxuriant growth of
hair on the pubes. This child was said to have been of great beauty and
a miniature model of an athlete. His height was 4 feet 1/4 inch and
weight 70 pounds; the penis when semiflaccid was 4 1/4 inches long; he
was intelligent and lively, and his back was covered with the acne of
puberty. A peculiar fact as regards this case was the statement of the
father that he himself had had sexual indulgence at eight. Stone
parallels this case by several others that he has collected from
medical literature. Breschet in 1821 reported the case of a boy born
October 20, 1817, who at three years and one month was 3 feet 6 3/4
inches tall; his penis when flaccid measured 4 inches and when erect 5
1/4 inches, but the testicles were not developed in proportion. Lopez
describes a mulatto boy of three years ten and a half months whose
height was 4 feet 1/2 inch and weight 82 pounds; he measured about the
chest 27 1/2 inches and about the waist 27 inches; his penis at rest
was 4 inches long and had a circumference of 3 1/2 inches, although the
testes were not descended. He had evidences of a beard and his axillae
were very hairy; it is said he could with ease lift a man weighing 140
pounds. His body was covered with acne simplex and had a strong
spermatic odor, but it was not known whether he had any venereal
appetite.
Johnson mentions a boy of seven with severe gonorrhea complicated with
buboes which he had contracted from a servant girl with whom he slept.
At the Hopital des Enfans Malades children at the breast have been
observed to masturbate. Fournier and others assert having seen
infantile masturbators, and cite a case of a girl of four who was
habitually addicted to masturbation from her infancy but was not
detected until her fourth year; she died shortly afterward in a
frightful state of marasmus. Vogel alludes to a girl of three in whom
repeated attacks of epilepsy occurred after six months' onanism. Van
Bambeke mentions three children from ten to twenty months old, two of
them females, who masturbated.
Bidwell describes a boy of five years and two months who during the
year previous had erections and seminal emissions. His voice had
changed and he had a downy moustache on his upper lip and hair on the
pubes; his height was 4 feet 3 1/2 inches and his weight was 82 1/2
pounds. His penis and testicles were as well developed as those of a
boy of seventeen or eighteen, but from his facial aspect one would take
him to be thirteen. He avoided the company of women and would not let
his sisters nurse him when he was sick.
Pryor speaks of a boy of three and a half who masturbated and who at
five and a half had a penis of adult size, hair on the pubes, and was
known to have had seminal emissions. Woods describes a boy of six years
and seven months who had the appearance of a youth of eighteen. He was
4 feet 9 inches tall and was quite muscular. He first exhibited signs
of precocious growth at the beginning of his second year and when three
years old he had hair on the pubes. There is an instance in which a boy
of thirteen had intercourse with a young woman at least a dozen times
and succeeded in impregnating her. The same journal mentions an
instance in which a boy of fourteen succeeded in impregnating a girl of
the same age. Chevers speaks of a young boy in India who was sentenced
to one year's imprisonment for raping a girl of three.
Douglass describes a boy of four years and three months who was 3 feet
10 1/2 inches tall and weighed 54 pounds; his features were large and
coarse, and his penis and testes were of the size of those of an adult.
He was unusually dull, mentally, quite obstinate, and self-willed. It
is said that he masturbated on all opportunities and had vigorous
erections, although no spermatozoa were found in the semen issued. He
showed no fondness for the opposite sex. The history of this rapid
growth says that he was not unlike other children until the third year,
when after wading in a small stream several hours he was taken with a
violent chill, after which his voice began to change and his sexual
organs to develop.
Blanc quotes the case described by Cozanet in 1875 of Louis Beran, who
was born on September 29, 1869, at Saint-Gervais, of normal size. At
the age of six months his dimensions and weight increased in an
extraordinary fashion. At the age of six years he was 1.28 meters high
(4 feet 2 1/3 inches) and weighed 80 pounds. His puberty was
completely manifested in every way; he eschewed the society of children
and helped his parents in their labors. Campbell showed a lad of
fourteen who had been under his observation for ten years. When fifteen
months old this prodigy had hair on his pubes and his external genitals
were abnormally larger end at the age of two years they were fully
developed and had not materially changed in the following years. At
times he manifested great sexual excitement. Between four and seven
years he had seminal discharges, but it was not determined whether the
semen contained spermatozoa. He had the muscular development of a man
of twenty-five. He had shaved several years. The boy's education was
defective from his failure to attend school.
The accompanying illustration represents a boy of five years and three
months of age whose height at this time was 4 feet and his physical
development far beyond that usual at this age, his external genitals
resembling those of a man of twenty. His upper lip was covered by a
mustache, and the hirsute growth elsewhere was similarly precocious.
The inscription on the tombstone of James Weir in the Parish of
Carluke, Scotland, says that when only thirteen months old he measured
3 feet 4 inches in height and weighed 5 stone. He was pronounced by the
faculty of Edinburgh and Glasgow to be the most extraordinary child of
his age. Linnaeus saw a boy at the Amsterdam Fair who at the age of
three weighed 98 pounds. In Paris, about 1822, there was shown an
infant Hercules of seven who was more remarkable for obesity than
general development. He was 3 feet 4 inches high, 4 feet 5 inches in
circumference, and weighed 220 pounds. He had prominent eyebrows, black
eyes, and his complexion resembled that of a fat cook in the heat.
Borellus details a description of a giant child. There is quoted from
Boston a the report of a boy of fifteen months weighing 92 pounds who
died at Coney Island. He was said to have been of phenomenal size from
infancy and was exhibited in several museums during his life.
Desbois of Paris mentions an extraordinary instance of rapid growth in
a boy of eleven who grew 6 inches in fifteen days.
Large and Small New-born Infants.--There are many accounts of new-born
infants who were characterized by their diminutive size. On page 66 we
have mentioned Usher's instance of twins born at the one hundred and
thirty-ninth day weighing each less than 11 ounces; Barker's case of a
female child at the one hundred and fifty-eighth day weighing 1 pound;
Newinton's case of twins at the fifth month, one weighing 1 pound and
the other 1 pound 3 1/2 ounces; and on page 67 is an account of Eikam's
five-months' child, weighing 8 ounces. Of full-term children Sir
Everard Home, in his Croonian Oration in 1824, speaks of one borne by a
woman who was traveling with the baggage of the Duke of Wellington's
army. At her fourth month of pregnancy this woman was attacked and
bitten by a monkey, but she went to term, and a living child was
delivered which weighed but a pound and was between 7 and 8 inches
long. It was brought to England and died at the age of nine, when 22
inches high. Baker mentions a child fifty days' old that weighed 1
pound 13 ounces and was 14 inches long. Mursick describes a living
child who at birth weighed but 1 3/4 pounds. In June, 1896, a baby
weighing 1 3/4 pounds was born at the Samaritan Hospital, Philadelphia.
Scott has recorded the birth of a child weighing 2 1/2 pounds, and
another 3 1/4 pounds. In the Chicago Inter-Ocean there is a letter
dated June 20, 1874, which says that Mrs. J. B. McCrum of Kalamazoo,
Michigan, gave birth to a boy and girl that could be held in the palm
of the hand of the nurse. Their aggregate weight was 3 pounds 4 ounces,
one weighing 1 pound 8 ounces, the other 1 pound 12 ounces. They were
less than 8 inches long and perfectly formed; they were not only alive
but extremely vivacious.
There is an account of female twins born in 1858 before term. One
weighed 22 1/2 ounces, and over its arm, forearm, and hand one could
easily pass a wedding-ring. The other weighed 24 ounces. They both
lived to adult life; the larger married and was the mother of two
children, which she bore easily. The other did not marry, and although
not a dwarf, was under-sized; she had her catamenia every third week.
Post describes a 2-pound child.
On the other hand, there have been infants characterized by their
enormous size at birth. Among the older writers, Cranz describes an
infant which at birth weighed 23 pounds; Fern mentions a fetus of 18
pounds; and Mittehauser speaks of a new-born child weighing 24 pounds.
Von Siebold in his "Lucina" has recorded a fetus which weighed 22 1/2
pounds. It is worthy of comment that so great is the rarity of these
instances that in 3600 cases, in the Rotunda Hospital, Dublin, only one
child reached 11 pounds.
There was a child born in Sussex in 1869 which weighed 13 1/2 pounds
and measured 26 1/2 inches. Warren delivered a woman in Derbyshire of
male twins, one weighing 17 pounds 8 ounces and the other 18 pounds.
The placenta weighed 4 pounds, and there was an ordinary pailful of
liquor amnii. Both the twins were muscular and well formed; the parents
were of ordinary stature, and at last reports the mother was rapidly
convalescing. Burgess mentions an 18-pound new-born child; end Meadows
has seen a similar instance. Eddowes speaks of the birth of a child at
Crewe, a male, which weighed 20 pounds 2 ounces and was 23 inches long.
It was 14 1/2 inches about the chest, symmetrically developed, and
likely to live. The mother, who was a schoolmistress of thirty-three,
had borne two previous children, both of large size. In this instance
the gestation had not been prolonged, the delivery was spontaneous, and
there was no laceration of the parts.
Chubb says that on Christmas Day, 1852, there was a child delivered
weighing 21 pounds. The labor was not severe and the other children of
the family were exceptionally large. Dickinson describes a woman, a
tertipara, who had a most difficult labor and bore an extremely large
child. She had been thirty-six hours in parturition, and by
evisceration and craniotomy was delivered of a child weighing 16
pounds. Her first child weighed 9 pounds, her second 20, and her third,
the one described, cost her her life soon after delivery.
There is a history of a Swedish woman in Boston who was delivered by
the forceps of her first child, which weighed 19 3/4 pounds and which
was 25 3/4 inches long. The circumference of the head was 16 3/4
inches, of the neck 9 3/4, and of the thigh 10 3/4 inches.
Rice speaks of a child weighing 20 1/4 pounds at birth. Johnston
describes a male infant who was born on November 26, 1848, weighing 20
pounds, and Smith another of the same weight. Baldwin quotes the case
of a woman who after having three miscarriages at last had a child that
weighed 23 pounds. In the delivery there was extensive laceration of
the anterior wall of the vagina; the cervix and perineum, together with
an inch of the rectum, were completely destroyed.
Beach describes a birth of a young giant weighing 23 3/4 pounds. Its
mother was Mrs. Bates, formerly Anna Swann, the giantess who married
Captain Bates. Labor was rather slow, but she was successfully
delivered of a healthy child weighing 23 3/4 pounds and 30 inches long.
The secundines weighed ten pounds and there were nine quarts of
amniotic fluid.
There is a recent record of a Cesarian section performed on a woman of
forty in her twelfth pregnancy and one month beyond term. The fetus,
which was almost exsanguinated by amputation, weighed 22 1/2 pounds.
Bumm speaks of the birth of a premature male infant weighing 4320 gm.
(9 1/2 pounds) and measuring 54 cm. long. Artificial labor had been
induced at the thirty-fifth week in the hope of delivering a living
child, the three preceding infants having all been still-born on
account of their large size. Although the mother's pelvis was wide, the
disposition to bear huge infants was so great as to render the woman
virtually barren.
Congenital asymmetry and hemihypertrophy of the body are most peculiar
anomalies and must not be confounded with acromegaly or myxedema, in
both of which there is similar lack of symmetric development. There
seems to be no satisfactory clue to the causation of these
abnormalisms. Most frequently the left side is the least developed, and
there is a decided difference in the size of the extremities.
Finlayson reports a case of a child affected with congenital unilateral
hypertrophy associated with patches of cutaneous congestion. Logan
mentions hypertrophy in the right half of the body in a child of four,
first noticed shortly after birth; Langlet also speaks of a case of
congenital hypertrophy of the right side. Broca and Trelat were among
the first observers to discuss this anomaly.
Tilanus of Munich in 1893 reported a case of hemihypertrophy in a girl
of ten. The whole right half of the body was much smaller and better
developed than the left, resulting in a limping gait. The electric
reaction and the reflexes showed no abnormality. The asymmetry was
first observed when the child was three. Mobius and Demme report
similar cases.
Adams reports an unusual case of hemihypertrophy in a boy of ten.
There was nothing noteworthy in the family history, and the patient had
suffered from none of the diseases of childhood. Deformity was
noticeable at birth, but not to such a degree relatively as at a later
period. The increased growth affected the entire right half of the
body, including the face, but was most noticeable in the leg, thigh,
and buttock. Numerous telangiectatic spots were scattered irregularly
over the body, but most thickly on the right side, especially on the
outer surface of the leg. The accompanying illustration represents the
child's appearance at the time of report.
Jacobson reports the history of a female child of three years with
nearly universal giant growth (Riesenwuchs). At first this case was
erroneously diagnosed as acromegaly. The hypertrophy affected the face,
the genitals, the left side of the trunk, and all the limbs.
Milne records a case of hemihypertrophy in a female child of one year.
The only deviation from uniform excess of size of the right side was
shown in the forefinger and thumb, which were of the same size as on
the other hand; and the left side showed no overgrowth in any of its
members except a little enlargement of the second toe. While
hypertrophy of one side is the usual description of such cases, the
author suggests that there may be a condition of defect upon the other
side, and he is inclined to think that in this case the limb, hand, and
foot of the left side seemed rather below the average of the child's
age. In this case, as in others previously reported, there were
numerous telangiectatic spots of congestion scattered irregularly over
the body. Milne also reported later to the Sheffield Medico-Chirurgical
Society an instance of unilateral hypertrophy in a female child of
nineteen months. The right side was involved and the anomaly was
believed to be due to a deficiency of growth of the left side as well
as over-development of the right. There were six teeth on the right
side and one on the left.
Obesity.--The abnormality of the adipose system, causing in consequence
an augmentation of the natural volume of the subject, should be
described with other anomalies of size and stature. Obesity may be
partial, as seen in the mammae or in the abdomen of both women and men,
or it may be general; and it is of general obesity that we shall
chiefly deal. Lipomata, being distinctly pathologic formations, will be
left for another chapter.
The cases of obesity in infancy and childhood are of considerable
interest, and we sometimes see cases that have been termed examples of
"congenital corpulency." Figure 167 represents a baby of thirteen
months that weighed 75 pounds. Figure 168 shows another example of
infantile obesity, known as "Baby Chambers." Elliotson describes a
female infant not a year old which weighed 60 pounds. There is an
instance on record of a girl of four who weighed 256 pounds Tulpius
mentions a girl of five who weighed 150 pounds and had the strength of
a man. He says that the acquisition of fat did not commence until some
time after birth. Ebstein reports an instance given to him by Fisher
of Moscow of a child in Pomerania who at the age of six weighed 137
pounds and was 46 inches tall; her girth was 46 inches and the
circumference of her head was 24 inches. She was the offspring of
ordinary-sized parents, and lived in narrow and sometimes needy
circumstances. The child was intelligent and had an animated expression
of countenance.
Bartholinus mentions a girl of eleven who weighed over 200 pounds.
There is an instance recorded of a young girl in Russia who weighed
nearly 200 pounds when but twelve. Wulf, quoted by Ebstein, describes a
child which died at birth weighing 295 ounces. It was well proportioned
and looked like a child three months old, except that it had an
enormous development of fatty tissue. The parents were not excessively
large, and the mother stated that she had had children before of the
same proportions. Grisolles mentions a child who was so fat at twelve
months that there was constant danger of suffocation; but, marvelous to
relate, it lost all its obesity when two and a half, and later was
remarkable for its slender figure. Figure 169 shows a girl born in
Carbon County, Pa., who weighed 201 pounds when nine years old.
McNaughton describes Susanna Tripp, who at six years of age weighed 203
pounds and was 3 feet 6 inches tall and measured 4 feet 2 inches around
the waist. Her younger sister, Deborah, weighed 119 pounds; neither of
the two weighed over 7 pounds at birth and both began to grow at the
fourth month. On October, 1788, there died at an inn in the city of
York the surprising "Worcestershire Girl" at the age of five. She had
an exceedingly beautiful face and was quite active. She was 4 feet in
height and larger around the breast and waist; her thigh measured 18
inches and she weighed nearly 200 pounds. In February, 1814, Mr. S.
Pauton was married to the only daughter of Thomas Allanty of Yorkshire;
although she was but thirteen she was 13 stone weight (182 pounds). At
seven years she had weighed 7 stone (98 pounds). Williams mentions
several instances of fat children. The first was a German girl who at
birth weighed 13 pounds; at six months, 42 pounds; at four years, 150
pounds; and at twenty years, 450 pounds. Isaac Butterfield, born near
Leeds in 1781, weighed 100 pounds in 1782 and was 3 feet 13 inches
tall. There was a child named Everitt, exhibited in London in 1780, who
at eleven months was 3 feet 9 inches tall and measured around the loins
over 3 feet. William Abernethy at the age of thirteen weighed 22 stone
(308 pounds) and measured 57 inches around the waist. He was 5 feet 6
inches tall. There was a girl of ten who was 1.45 meters (4 feet 9
inches) high and weighed 175 pounds. Her manners were infantile and her
intellectual development was much retarded. She spoke with difficulty
in a deep voice; she had a most voracious appetite.
At a meeting of the Physical Society of Vienna on December 4, 1894,
there was shown a girl of five and a half who weighed 250 pounds. She
was just shedding her first teeth; owing to the excess of fat on her
short limbs she toddled like an infant. There was no tendency to
obesity in her family. Up to the eleventh month she was nursed by her
mother, and subsequently fed on cabbage, milk, and vegetable soup. This
child, who was of Russian descent, was said never to perspire.
Cameron describes a child who at birth weighed 14 pounds, at twelve
months she weighed 69 pounds, and at seventeen months 98 pounds. She
was not weaned until two years old and she then commenced to walk. The
parents were not remarkably large. There is an instance of a boy of
thirteen and a half who weighed 214 pounds. Kaestner speaks of a child
of four who weighed 82 pounds, and Benzenberg noted a child of the same
age who weighed 137. Hildman, quoted by Picat, speaks of an infant
three years and ten months old who had a girth of 30 inches. Hillairet
knew of a child of five which weighed 125 pounds. Botta cites several
instances of preternaturally stout children. One child died at the age
of three weighing 90 pounds, another at the age of five weighed 100
pounds, and a third at the age of two weighed 75 pounds.
Figure 170 represents Miss "Millie Josephine" of Chicago, a recent
exhibitionist, who at the reputed age of thirteen was 5 feet 6 inches
tall and weighed 422 pounds.
General Remarks.--It has been chiefly in Great Britain and in Holland
that the most remarkable instances of obesity have been seen,
especially in the former country colossal weights have been recorded.
In some countries corpulency has been considered an adornment of the
female sex. Hesse-Wartegg refers to the Jewesses of Tunis, who when
scarcely ten years old are subjected to systematic treatment by
confinement in narrow, dark rooms, where they are fed on farinaceous
foods and the flesh of young puppies until they are almost a shapeless
mass of fat. According to Ebstein, the Moorish women reach with
astonishing rapidity the desired embonpoint on a diet of dates and a
peculiar kind of meal.
In some nations and families obesity is hereditary, and generations
come and go without a change in the ordinary conformation of the
representatives. In other people slenderness is equally persistent, and
efforts to overcome this peculiarity of nature are without avail.
Treatment of Obesity.--Many persons, the most famous of whom was
Banting, have advanced theories to reduce corpulency and to improve
slenderness; but they have been uniformly unreliable, and the whole
subject of stature-development presents an almost unexplored field for
investigation. Recently, Leichtenstein, observing in a case of myxedema
treated with the thyroid gland that the subcutaneous fat disappeared
with the continuance of the treatment, was led to adopt this treatment
for obesity itself and reports striking results. The diet of the
patient remained the same, and as the appetite was not diminished by
the treatment the loss of weight was evidently due to other causes than
altered alimentation. He holds that the observations in myxedema, in
obesity, and psoriasis warrant the belief that the thyroid gland
eliminates a material having a regulating influence upon the
constitution of the panniculus adiposus and upon the nutrition of the
skin in general. There were 25 patients in all; in 22 the effect was
entirely satisfactory, the loss of weight amounting to as much as 9.5
kilos (21 pounds). Of the three cases in which the result was not
satisfactory, one had nephritis with severe Graves' disease, and the
third psoriasis. Charrin has used the injections of thyroid extract
with decided benefit. So soon as the administration of the remedy was
stopped the loss of weight ceased, but with the renewal of the remedy
the loss of weight again ensued to a certain point, beyond which the
extract seemed powerless to act. Ewald also reports good results from
this treatment of obesity.
Remarkable Instances of Obesity.--From time immemorial fat men and
women have been the object of curiosity and the number who have
exhibited themselves is incalculable. Nearly every circus and dime
museum has its example, and some of the most famous have in this way
been able to accumulate fortunes.
Athenaeus has written quite a long discourse on persons of note who in
the olden times were distinguished for their obesity. He quotes a
description of Denys, the tyrant of Heraclea, who was so enormous that
he was in constant danger of suffocation; most of the time he was in a
stupor or asleep, a peculiarity of very fat people. His doctors had
needles put in the back of his chairs to keep him from falling asleep
when sitting up and thus incurring the danger of suffocation. In the
same work Athenaeus speaks of several sovereigns noted for their
obesity; among others he says that Ptolemy VII, son of Alexander, was
so fat that, according to Posidonius, when he walked he had to be
supported on both sides. Nevertheless, when he was excited at a
repast, he would mount the highest couch and execute with agility his
accustomed dance.
According to old chronicles the cavaliers at Rome who grew fat were
condemned to lose their horses and were placed in retirement. During
the Middle Ages, according to Guillaume in his "Vie de Suger," obesity
was considered a grace of God.
Among the prominent people in the olden time noted for their embonpoint
were Agesilas, the orator Licinius Calvus, who several times opposed
Cicero, the actor Lucius, and others. Among men of more modern times we
can mention William the Conqueror; Charles le Gros; Louis le Gros;
Humbert II, Count of Maurienne; Henry I, King of Navarre; Henry III,
Count of Champagne; Conan III, Duke of Brittany; Sancho I, King of
Leon; Alphonse II, King of Portugal; the Italian poet Bruni, who died
in 1635; Vivonne, a general under Louis XIV; the celebrated German
botanist Dillenius; Haller; Frederick I, King of Wurtemberg, and Louis
XVIII.
Probably the most famous of all the fat men was Daniel Lambert, born
March 13, 1770, in the parish of Saint Margaret, Leicester. He did not
differ from other youths until fourteen. He started to learn the trade
of a die-sinker and engraver in Birmingham. At about nineteen he began
to believe he would be very heavy and developed great strength. He
could lift 500 pounds with ease and could kick seven feet high while
standing on one leg. In 1793 he weighed 448 pounds; at this time he
became sensitive as to his appearance. In June, 1809, he weighed 52
stone 11 pounds (739 pounds), and measured over 3 yards around the body
and over 1 yard around the leg. He had many visitors, and it is said
that once, when the dwarf Borwilaski came to see him, he asked the
little man how much cloth he needed for a suit. When told about 3/4 of
a yard, he replied that one of his sleeves would be ample. Another
famous fat man was Edward Bright, sometimes called "the fat man of
Essex." He weighed 616 pounds. In the same journal that records
Bright's weight is an account of a man exhibited in Holland who weighed
503 pounds.
Wadd, a physician, himself an enormous man, wrote a treatise on obesity
and used his own portrait for a frontispiece. He speaks of Doctor
Beddoes, who was so uncomfortably fat that a lady of Clifton called him
a "walking feather bed." He mentions Doctor Stafford, who was so
enormous that this epitaph was ascribed to him:--
"Take heed, O good traveler! and do not tread hard, For here lies Dr.
Stafford, in all this churchyard."
Wadd has gathered some instances, a few of which will be cited. At
Staunton, January 2, 1816, there died Samuel Sugars, Gent., who weighed
with a single wood coffin 50 stone (700 pounds). Jacob Powell died in
1764, weighing 660 pounds. It took 16 men to carry him to his grave.
Mr. Baker of Worcester, supposed to be larger than Bright, was interred
in a coffin that was larger than an ordinary hearse. In 1797 there was
buried Philip Hayes, a professor of music, who was as heavy as Bright
(616 pounds).
Mr. Spooner, an eminent farmer of Warwickshire, who died in 1775, aged
fifty-seven, weighed 569 pounds and measured over 4 feet across the
shoulders. The two brothers Stoneclift of Halifax, Yorkshire, together
weighed 980 pounds.
Keysler in his travels speaks of a corpulent Englishman who in passing
through Savoy had to use 12 chairmen; he says that the man weighed 550
pounds. It is recorded on the tombstone of James Parsons, a fat man of
Teddington, who died March 7, 1743, that he had often eaten a whole
shoulder of mutton and a peck of hasty pudding. Keysler mentions a
young Englishman living in Lincoln who was accustomed to eat 18 pounds
of meat daily. He died in 1724 at the age of twenty-eight, weighing 530
pounds. In 1815 there died in Trenaw, in Cornwall, a person known as
"Giant Chillcot." He measured at the breast 6 feet 9 inches and weighed
460 pounds. One of his stockings held 6 gallons of wheat. In 1822 there
was reported to be a Cambridge student who could not go out in the
daytime without exciting astonishment. The fat of his legs overhung his
shoes like the fat in the legs of Lambert and Bright. Dr. Short
mentions a lady who died of corpulency in her twenty-fifth year
weighing over 50 stone (700 pounds). Catesby speaks of a man who
weighed 500 pounds, and Coe mentions another who weighed 584 pounds.
Fabricius and Godart speak of obesity so excessive as to cause death.
There is a case reported from the French of a person who weighed 800
pounds. Smetius speaks of George Fredericus, an office-holder in
Brandenburgh, who weighed 427 pounds.
Dupuytren gives the history of Marie Francoise-Clay, who attained such
celebrity for her obesity. She was born in poverty, reached puberty at
thirteen, and married at twenty-five, at which age she was already the
stoutest woman of her neighborhood notwithstanding her infirmity. She
followed her husband, who was an old-clothes dealer, afoot from town to
town. She bore six children, in whom nothing extraordinary was noticed.
The last one was born when she was thirty-five years old. Neither the
births, her travels, nor her poverty, which sometimes forced her to beg
at church doors, arrested the progress of the obesity. At the age of
forty she was 5 feet 1 inch high and one inch greater about the waist.
Her head was small and her neck was entirely obliterated. Her breasts
were over a yard in circumference and hung as low as the umbilicus. Her
arms were elevated and kept from her body by the fat in her axillae.
Her belly was enormous and was augmented by six pregnancies. Her thighs
and haunches were in proportion to her general contour. At forty she
ceased to menstruate and soon became afflicted with organic heart
diseases.
Fournier quotes an instance of a woman in Paris who at twenty-four, the
time of her death, weighed 486 pounds. Not being able to mount any
conveyance or carriage in the city, she walked from place to place,
finding difficulty not in progression, but in keeping her equilibrium.
Roger Byrne, who lived in Rosenalis, Queen's County, Ireland, died of
excessive fatness at the age of fifty-four, weighing 52 stone. Percy
and Laurent speak of a young German of twenty who weighed 450 pounds.
At birth he weighed 13 pounds, at six months 42, and at four years 150
pounds. He was 5 feet 5 inches tall and the same in circumference.
William Campbell, the landlord of the Duke of Wellington in
Newcastle-on-Tyne, was 6 feet 4 inches tall and weighed 728 pounds. He
measured 96 inches around the shoulders, 85 inches around the waist,
and 35 inches around the calf. He was born at Glasgow in 1856, and was
not quite twenty-two when last measured. To illustrate the rate of
augmentation, he weighed 4 stone at nine months and at ten years 18
stone. He was one of a family of seven children. His appetite was not
more than the average, and he was moderate as regards the use of
liquors, but a great smoker Notwithstanding his corpulency, he was
intelligent and affable.
Miss Conley, a member of an American traveling circus, who weighed 479
pounds, was smothered in bed by rolling over on her face; she was
unable to turn on her back without assistance.
There was a girl who died at Plaisance near Paris in 1890 who weighed
470 pounds or more. In 1889 an impresario undertook to exhibit her; but
eight men could not move her from her room, and as she could not pass
through the door the idea was abandoned.
There was a colored woman who died near Baltimore who weighed 850
pounds, exceeding the great Daniel Lambert by 120 pounds. The journal
reporting this case quotes the Medical Record as saying that there was
a man in North Carolina, who was born in 1798, who was 7 feet 8 inches
tall and weighed over 1000 pounds, probably the largest man that ever
lived. Hutchison says that he Saw in the Infirmary at Kensington, under
Porter's care, a remarkable example of obesity. The woman was only just
able to walk about and presented a close resemblance to Daniel Lambert.
Obesity forced her to leave her occupation. The accumulation of fat on
the abdomen, back, and thighs was enormous.
According to a recent number of La Liberte, a young woman of
Pennsylvania, although only sixteen years old, weighs 450 pounds. Her
waist measures 61 inches in circumference and her neck 22 inches. The
same paper says that on one of the quays of Paris may be seen a
wine-shop keeper with whom this Pennsylvania girl could not compare. It
is said that this curiosity of the Notre-Dame quarter uses three large
chairs while sitting behind her specially constructed bar. There is
another Paris report of a man living in Switzerland who weighs more
than 40 stone (560 pounds) and eats five times as much as an ordinary
person. When traveling he finds the greatest difficulty in entering an
ordinary railway carriage, and as a rule contents himself in the
luggage van. Figure 171 represents an extremely fat woman with a
well-developed beard. To end this list of obese individuals, we mention
an old gentleman living in San Francisco who, having previously been
thin, gained 14 pounds in his seventieth year and 14 pounds each of
seven succeeding years.
Simulation of Obesity.--General dropsy, elephantiasis, lipomata,
myxedema, and various other affections in which there is a hypertrophic
change of the connective tissues may be mistaken for general obesity;
on the other hand, a fatty, pendulous abdomen may simulate the
appearances of pregnancy or even of ovarian cyst.
Dercum of Philadelphia has described a variety of obesity which he has
called "adiposis dolorosa," in which there is an enormous growth of
fat, sometimes limited, sometimes spread all over the body, this
condition differing from that of general lipomatosis in its rarity, in
the mental symptoms, in the headache, and the generally painful
condition complained of. In some of the cases examined by Dercum he
found that the thyroid was indurated and infiltrated by calcareous
deposits. The disease is not myxedema because there is no peculiar
physiognomy, no spade-like hands nor infiltrated skin, no alteration of
the speech, etc. Dercum considers it a connective-tissue dystrophy--a
fatty metamorphosis of various stages, possibly a neuritis. The first
of Dercum's cases was a widow of Irish birth, who died both alcoholic
and syphilitic. When forty-eight or forty-nine her arms began to
enlarge. In June, 1887, the enlargement affected the shoulders, arms,
back, and sides of the chest. The parts affected were elastic, and
there was no pitting. In some places the fat was lobulated, in others
it appeared as though filled with bundles of worms. The skin was not
thickened and the muscles were not involved. In the right arm there was
unendurable pain to the touch, and this was present in a lesser degree
in the left arm. Cutaneous sensibility was lessened. On June 13th a
chill was followed by herpes over the left arm and chest, and later on
the back and on the front of the chest. The temperature was normal.
The second case was a married Englishwoman of sixty-four. The enlarged
tissue was very unevenly distributed, and sensibility was the same as
in the previous case. At the woman's death she weighed 300 pounds, and
the fat over the abdomen was three inches thick. The third case was a
German woman in whom were seen soft, fat-like masses in various
situations over either biceps, over the outer and posterior aspect of
either arm, and two large masses over the belly; there was excessive
prominence of the mons veneris. At the autopsy the heart weighed 8 1/2
ounces, and the fat below the umbilicus was seven inches thick.
Abnormal Leanness.--In contrast to the fat men are the so-called
"living skeletons," or men who have attained notice by reason of
absence of the normal adipose tissue. The semimythical poet Philotus
was so thin that it was said that he fastened lead on his shoes to
prevent his being blown away,--a condition the opposite of that of
Dionysius of Heraclea, who, after choking to death from his fat, could
hardly be moved to his grave.
In March, 1754, there died in Glamorganshire of mere old age and
gradual decay a little Welshman, Hopkin Hopkins, aged seventeen years.
He had been recently exhibited in London as a natural curiosity; he had
never weighed over 17 pounds, and for the last three years of his life
never more than 12 pounds. His parents still had six children left, all
of whom were normal and healthy except a girl of twelve, who only
weighed 18 pounds and bore marks of old age.
There was a "living skeleton" brought to England in 1825 by the name of
Claude Seurat. He was born in 1798 and was in his twenty-seventh year.
He usually ate in the course of a day a penny roll and drank a small
quantity of wine. His skeleton was plainly visible, over which the skin
was stretched tightly. The distance from the chest to the spine was
less than 3 inches, and internally this distance was less. The
pulsations of the heart were plainly visible. He was in good health and
slept well. His voice was very weak and shrill. The circumference of
this man's biceps was only 4 inches. The artist Cruikshank has made
several drawings of Seurat.
Calvin Edson was another living skeleton. In 1813 he was in the army at
the battle of Plattsburg, and had lain down in the cold and become
benumbed. At this time he weighed 125 pounds and was twenty-five years
old. In 1830 he weighed but 60 pounds, though 5 feet 4 inches tall. He
was in perfect health and could chop a cord of wood without fatigue; he
was the father of four children.
Salter speaks of a man in 1873 who was thirty-two years of age and only
weighed 49 pounds. He was 4 feet 6 inches tall: his forehead measured
in circumference 20 1/2 inches and his chest 27 inches. His genitals,
both internal and external, were defectively developed. Figure 175
represents the well-known Ohio "living skeleton," J. W. Coffey, who has
been exhibited all over the Continent. His good health and appetite
were proverbial among his acquaintances.
In some instances the so-called "living skeletons" are merely cases of
extreme muscular atrophy. As a prominent example of this class the
exhibitionist, Rosa Lee Plemons at the age of eighteen weighed only 27
pounds. Figure 177 shows another case of extraordinary atrophic
condition of all the tissues of the body associated with
nondevelopment. These persons are always sickly and exhibit all the
symptoms of progressive muscular atrophy, and cannot therefore be
classed with the true examples of thinness, in which the health is but
slightly affected or possibly perfect health is enjoyed.
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