English Nobleman Who Had An Extra Face On The Back Of His Head. -Edward Mordrake_
Edward Mordrake was reportedly the 19th century
heir to an English peerage. He supposedly had an extra face on the back of his
head, which could neither eat nor speak, although it could laugh or cry. Edward
begged doctors to have his “demon head” removed, because, supposedly, it
whispered horrible things to him at night, but no doctor would attempt it. He
committed suicide at the age of 23. |
The true tale of Edward Mordake (Mordrake) has been lost to
history. His unusual case occurred early in medical history and is referenced
only in tales handed down. The tale of his life has become so muddled through
the passage of time that no solid date of birth or death is evident to modern
researchers.
The story always begins the same way. Edward is said be have
been heir to one of the noblest families in England.He was considered a bright
and charming man – a scholar, a musician and a young man in possession of
profound grace. He was said to be quite handsome when viewed from the front –
yet, on the back of his head there was a second face, twisted and evil.
In some versions of the story, the second face of Edward is
a beautiful girl.This is an impossibility as all parasitic twins are of the
same sex. Often it was said that it possessed its own intelligence and was
quite malignant in its intentions.It has been said that the eyes would follow
spectators and its lips would ‘gibber’ relentlessly and silently. According to legend
it would smile and sneer as Edward wept over his condition.While no voice was
ever audible, Edward swore that often he would be kept awake by the hateful
whispers of his ‘evil twin’.
The story has always concluded with young Edward committing
suicide at the age of twenty-three.The method of his death also differs,
sometimes poison does him in and in other versions a bullet ‘between the eyes
of his devil-twin’ puts him out of his misery. In both versions Edward leaves
behind a letter requesting that the ‘demon face’ be destroyed before his
burial, ‘lest it continues its dreadful whisperings in my grave.’
Is the story of Edward true?The 1896 textAnomolies and Curiosities of Medicinementions a
version of the story and Edward has been featured in many texts, plays and even
music as the Tom Waits song ‘Poor Edward’ is based on the story. However, the
tale was considered false for quite some time. It was simply too fantastic to
believe and, obviously, many parts of the story simply do not make medical sense
– years of retelling warped what was likely a very real occurrence.
Chang Tzu Ping was discovered in China in the late 70’s or
early 80’s. In his 40′s, Chang had been born with a second face consisting of a
mouth, a malformed tongue, several teeth, a patch of scalp, and the vestige of
other facial constructs. The throat and the lips of the second face could not
move independently, but the mouth did reacted in tandem to Chang opening his.
Shortly after being discovered he was brought to the United States to have the
second face surgically removed.The entire case was documented – including the
surgery – on the 80’s televison program ‘That’s Incredible’ – and yet there
exists almost no secondary evidence of his existence. The operation was
considered successful and Chang likely went home to his villiage to live the
remainder of his life without his ‘devil face’.
It does not require a great leap of faith to conclude that
the tale of Edward is based on some nugget of fact, perhaps he had something
similar Chang’s condition – mutated by storytellers over time.Consider that the
case of Chang Tzu Ping is relatively unknown despite only occurring a few
decades ago or the strange tale of The Boy of Bengal These are indeed very rare
cases and the human mind has a tendency to classify the unusual as impossible –
it often helps us sleep well at night.
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