登陆注册
4281000000155

第155章

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 (739pounds), and measured over 3 yards around the body and over 1yard 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 1815there 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 1822there 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 diseasesFournier 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 13pounds, at six months 42, and at four years 150 pounds. He was 5feet 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 728pounds. 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.

同类推荐
  • 黄帝内经素问校义

    黄帝内经素问校义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 玉泉其白富禅师语录

    玉泉其白富禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 情楼迷史霞笺记

    情楼迷史霞笺记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 庄子内篇注

    庄子内篇注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 盛京奉天般若古林禅师语录

    盛京奉天般若古林禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • Cat in Glass

    Cat in Glass

    The eight tales in this collection by Nancy Etchemendy weave great suspense with interesting plots and unusual characters. "Lunch at Etienne's" is a story narrated by a woman who is surrounded by death but doesn't seem to realize it. "Cat in Glass" is about a mysterious, malevolent sculpted cat that commits gruesome murders and is told from the point of view of the sculpture's frightened and bewildered owner. There is also "The Sailor's Bargain", a captivating story about an orphan whose haunting dreams lead to a stark revelation of another life, and "The Lily and the Weaver's Heart", in which a one-eyed Jacinth dares to take her place in a cruel world by risking a journey that is usually reserved for the most able-bodied men of the culture.
  • 吴郡志

    吴郡志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 与校草的公车之吻

    与校草的公车之吻

    哇,好帅!呜,双唇就这样相撞了,还是在公交车上,众目睽睽,丢人啊!恨意就在这时熊熊燃烧着!刘致远:我们打赌,赌你一个月后会接受我!林思烟:不可能,那只是个奇迹!刘致远:我就是你的奇迹!
  • 斩龙头

    斩龙头

    世传粤西之龙神生于周秦之世,载庙碑斑斑可考。西江上下游千载,沿途村寨若立庙祀,鳞甲辉煌必极显应,利泽天下。端州府衙门,后刑堂。灯下,一个少年的身躯在盐水皮鞭下血肉横飞,随着“噼啪”声溅起的一串串红沫子,纷纷贴到霉迹斑驳的墙上。行刑的弓兵抽完鞭子,便熟练地挽回鞭花,托起那少年的下颚。
  • 竹马谋婚青梅

    竹马谋婚青梅

    他们因为一起商业新闻相识,却发现两人的关系不仅仅那么简单。曾经引起的舆论逼死了他的父亲的新闻是她所谓?悉心调查,却不想她却住进他的心里。他将她锁在自己怀里,“要报道我的新闻,你需要付出代价!”她拍开在她身上作乱的手,瞪大双眼看着他,“我靠笔吃饭,卖艺不卖身!”他挑唇邪恶一笑,与她更为贴近,“哦?我接受采访,要人不要钱。”她推拒他坚实的胸膛,“如果你再对我动手动脚,我就将你的恶行公布于众。”
  • 武圣门(上)

    武圣门(上)

    大唐开国,以武立宗,武风盛行,太宗赐姓,各大世家在数百年间争雄江湖。直至唐宋,开国四大武者绝学现世,以致天下群雄纷争,酿就乱世……一位自幼身中剧毒的少年,在求助各派宗主无望之下,终以生命为赌注,跃下华山之顶。然而上天却没有遗弃这位无助的少年,机缘巧合,万毒自解,红颜相助,智武并存,阴阳互调,共悟魔经,由魔入道,终至大成。
  • 你是淡雅的诗,生活是华丽的油彩

    你是淡雅的诗,生活是华丽的油彩

    再美丽的油彩,也不应过分浓烈;再华丽的生活,也需要淡然处之。这本书的心灵故事深入浅出,用每个精致细微的生活小事让我们直面自己的内心世界。当你看到别人在熠熠发光,当你因为生活而被迫滋生坚强,当你因为五光十色的世界而暂停前行,你都要学会淡然处之,让心中多一些柔软的力量,才能担当更华丽的生活。
  • 蕉窗雨话

    蕉窗雨话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 超级优等生:优等生最高效的学习方法(超值金版)

    超级优等生:优等生最高效的学习方法(超值金版)

    有很多学生对学习没有信心,不感兴趣,进而厌烦学习,表面上看来是学生没有领会知识,没有学懂,没有学会,成绩差,实质上是这些学生不会学习,不会运用正确有效的学习方法,不会调控自己的心理状态和学习活动造成的。由于缺乏正确的学习方法,越到高年级,知识越多,他们就越来越难,一门课程一门课程地垮下去,最后导致对学习完全丧失信心,厌恶学习,逃避学习。实际上,我们身边那些轻易取得骄人成绩的超级优等生,无不使用了科学有效的适合自己的学习方法。所以,我们学习不仅要学习知识,还要学会学习。
  • 武逆苍生

    武逆苍生

    意外穿越,成鬼才?天才?尽然不是。苍穹眷顾,赐九转天虚雷,雷脉开启,复仇之路,万古谜团,生死同行。吾墨岂是池中物,气吞山河亿万里。甘愿血洒灵武陆,傲视草木皆苍生。异世界居然再次遇到前世的女友,与此同时自己身份居然是这般的变故!究竟是何谜团笼罩了他!!