[ 35 1 ] 
under it, his right eye comes in fight, with which 
he fees very well, . and the eye is clear and found ; 
but the under lid is pulled down, and flretched to 
fix or feven inches long, to which a tumor hung 
alfo, as large as that anterior one at the chin, the 
loweft of the three ; befides feveral daps and ruga. r 
of fkin, and fmaller tumors. 
The hairy fcalp is fo ftretched by the vertical tu- 
mor, that the hairs are driven afunder • fo that the 
tumor is in fome places bald, and the whole is rugged 
and uneven. At its bafis, all round, till we come 
to the extended part that goes away to the right 
fhoulder, a bony edge may be diftindtly felt, as if the 
fkull was deprefied at the top : and yet I cannot but 
believe, that there is no depreffion of the arch of the 
inner table, becaufe the man was from his childhood 
ever very healthy > being never troubled with thofe 
fymptoms, which ufually attend a depreffion of the 
cranium. From this feeming edge the os front is 
jfhoots out a great way over the ojja nafi , perhaps to 
two or three inches beyond the frontal finus’s ; and 
is the bafis, from which the great pendulous tumor 
hangs downwards and forwards. 
From the root of the nofe, under the upper of the 
three fmaller tumors, arifes a large trunk of a vein, 
which ramifies up to the vertical tumor, and to the 
right over the upper part of the great pendulous one : 
thefe are very confpieuous, and ferve to bring back 
the refidual blood from the tumors : nor is it unlikely 
that the arteries bear a proportion with thefe veins in 
their fize, in order to fupply the tumors with the 
matter, which has given them their great increafe j 
but thefe, lying concealed, cannot be ipoken to with 
any certainty.. 
