Unbelievable
Facts - Strange Facts - Animals
Barking Mad
Prussian Field Marshal Prince Gebhard Leberecht von
Blücher, a hero at Waterloo, was convinced that
she was pregnant with an elephant, fathered on him by
a French soldier.
French poet Gérard de Nerval used to take a
lobster for a walk on the end of a length of ribbon
through the Palais Royal gardens in Paris. Not surprisingly,
he ended up hanging himself from a lamp-post.
Terrified of meeting people, the fifth Duke of Portland
built an elaborate network of tunnels beneath Welbeck
Abbey in Nottinghamshire through which his carriage
could pass in secret. So that he wouldn’t have
to talk to anybody, each door in his house was fitted
with two letter-boxes – one for incoming mail
and on for outgoing messages. Only his valet was allowed
near him. In the event of illness, the Duke’s
physician had to wait outside while the valet took his
master’s pulse.
In the 10th century, the Grand Vizier of Persia took
his entire library with him wherever he went. The 117,000-volume
library was carried by camels trained to walk in alphabetical
order.
Motor manufacturer Henry Ford was obsessed with diet.
He campaigned for synthetic milk, insisting that cows
were on the verge of obsolescence because they were
unhygienic. He maintained that eating sugar was tantamount
to committing suicide since its sharp crystals would
cut a person’s stomach to shreds. And he was such
an advocate of soya beans that he once wore a suit and
tie made from soya-based products.
In the later years of his life, Sir Ralph Richardson
used to ride to the theatre on his motorcycle with his
pet parrot, Jose, perched on his shoulder.
Wealthy English landowner William Beckford took a flock
of sheep with him on a trip to Portugal – to improve
the view from his window.
Henrietta Howland Green was the meanest woman in the
world. She inherited a $6 million fortune from her father
and became such a successful money-lender that she kept
a balance of over $31,400,000 in one bank alone. Yet
she lived in a seedy Brooklyn apartment in which the
heating remained switched off even in the depths of
winter. She never bothered to wash and for lunch ate
nothing more than a tine of dry oatmeal which she heated
on a bank’s radiators. Her meanness extended to
her family. Her son had to have his leg amputated because
of her delay in finding a free medical clinic. When
she died in 1916, she left an estate worth $95 million.
Father Denham of Warleggan in Cornwall positively hated
people. He surrounded the rectory with a high, barbed-wire
fence and further alienated his flock by painting the
church red and blue. When parishioners stopped attending
his services, he replaced them with cardboard cut-outs
and continued to preach to those each week. He led a
Spartan life. There was no furniture in the rectory
and, right up until his death in 1953, his diet consisted
of just nettles and porridge.
Roman Emperor Caligula made his horse Incitatus a consul.
Eminent scientist Henry Cavendish was painfully shy.
He built a private entrance to his London house so that
he could come and go without meeting anyone, and used
to communicate with his servants by notes only. On one
occasion, he was so disturbed after bumping into a maid
on the staircase that he immediately ordered the building
of another staircase.
Frenchman Michel Lotito, known as Monsieur Mangetout,
specialises in eating glass and metal. His diet included
supermarket trolley, TV sets, aluminium skis, bicycles,
beds, plates, razor blades, a coffin, and even a Cessna
150 light aircraft.
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