Notes and Queries, Number 50, October 12, 1850 by Various
page 41 of 68 (60%)
page 41 of 68 (60%)
|
stature. This _Parsons_ is produced for proof, that all ages
afford some of extraordinary height, and that there is no general decay of mankind in their _dimensions_, which, if there were, we had ere this time shrunk to be lower than _Pigmyes_, not to instance in a lesse proportion. This _Parsons_ died Anno Dom. 1620."--Fuller's _History of the Worthies of England_, 1662 (_Staffordshire_), p. 48. "WILLIAM EVANS was born in this county [Monmouthshire], and may justly be accounted the _Giant_ of our age for his stature, being, full two yards and a half in height. He was porter to King _Charles I._, succeeding, _Walter Persons_ [sic] in his place, and exceeding him two inches in height, but far beneath him in an equal proportion of body; for he was not onely what the _Latines_ call _compernis_, knocking his knees together, and going out squalling with his feet, but also haulted a little; yet made a shift to dance in an antimask at court, where he drew little Jeffrey, the dwarf, out of his pocket, first to the wonder, then to the laughter, of the beholders. He dyed _Anno Dom_. 1630." _Ibid. (Monmouthshire)_, p. 54. From these extracts it will be seen that the Christian name of Parsons was _Walter_, not William, as stated by Harwood. _William_ was the Christian name of Evans, Parsons' successor. The bas-relief mentioned by the same writer represents William Evans and Jeffrey Hudson, his diminutive fellow-servant. It is over the entrance of _Bull-head Court_, Newgate Street; not "a bagnio-court," which is nonsense. On the stone these words are cut: "The King's Porter, and the Dwarf," with the date 1660. This bas-relief is engraved in Pennant. |
|