Be every thought that would destroy

A charm of that simplicity!”

Gibbon and Deyverdun were remarkably congenial; interested in the same studies and the same people. Which was the more indolent of the two it would be hard to say. But by this time Gibbon had grown into the comically grotesque figure which somehow adds to his fascination. He had become excessively stout; his little “potato-nose” was lost between his bulbous cheeks; his chin was bolstered up by the flying buttress of much superfluous throat. He had red hair. A contemporary poem describes him:—

“His person looked as funnily obese

As if a pagod, growing large as man,

Had rashly waddled off its chimney-piece,

To visit a Chinese upon a fan.

Such his exterior; curious ’twas to scan!

And oft he rapped his snuff-box, cocked his snout,