; MAMMALIA—MAN. 63 
faculties. Jeffery Hudson, to whom Buffon alludes as the dwarf of the 
English court, was a brave and intelligent man. He killed, in a duel, Mr 
Cutts, who had insulted him; and he served as a captain in the royal army. 
In modern times, we have an instance of a dwarf possessed of every 
mental and personal accomplishment. Count Borulawski was the son of a 
Polish nobleman attached to the party of King Stanislaus, and who lost his 
property in consequence of that attachment. His father had six children, 
three dwarfs, and three of the ordinary stature; and it is a singular circum- 
stance, that they were born alternately, a big and a little one. The Count’s 
youngest sister, who died at the age of twenty-three, was of a much more 
diminutive size than he was. He grew till he was thirty, when he was 
three feet two inches in height. The proportions of his figure were perfect- 
ly correct, which is rarely the case with dwarfs, and his look was manly 
and noble. His manners were full of grace and politeness ; his temper was 
good; and he possessed a lively wit, united with an excellent memory and 
a sound judgment. Till the age of forty-one, he lived in the enjoyment 
of perfect health, and of all the comforts of life, under the patronage of a 
lady, who was a friend of the family. He then married a lady, of the mid- 
dle size, by whom he had three children, none of whom were dwarfs. a 
procure the means of subsistence for his family, he at first gave concerts in 
the principal cities of Germany; on which occasions he played upon the 
guitar, of which instrument he was a perfect master. At Vienna he was 
persuaded to turn his thoughts to England, where it was supposed that the 
public curiosity would in a little time benefit him sufficiently to enable him 
to live independent in a country so cheap as Poland. Borulawski accor- 
dingly visited England, where he was admired, and extensively patronized, 
by the nobility and gentry. He exhibited himself in London, Edinburgh, 
Dublin, Bath, and most of the principal cities and towns, and wherever he 
went he gained friends. Borulawski died a few years since. He published 
his own memoirs. 
Of ciants we have several accounts from mariners, that a nation actually 
exists ; and mere speculation should never induce us to doubt their veracity. 
Ferdinand Magellan was the first who discovered this race of people along 
the coast, towards the extremity of South America. Magellan was a Portu- 
guese of noble extraction, who having long behaved with great bravery, 
under Albuquerque, the conqueror of India, he was treated with neglect by 
the court, upon his return. Applying, therefore, to the king of Spain, he 
was entrusted with the command of five ships, to subdue the Molucca 
Islands; upon one of which he was slain. It was in his voyage thither, 
that he happened to winter in St Julian’s Bay, an American harbor, forty- 
nine degrees south of the line. In this desolate region, where nothing was 
seen but objects of terror, where neither trees nor verdure dressed the face 
of the country, they remained for some months without seeing any human 
creature. They had judged the country to be utterly uninhabitable, when 
