A French newspaper story, published on 28 June 1826, reported "a most extraordinary event": a man, around thirty years old, had been discovered buried under a pile of ice in the Alps. On pulling the body out and bathing it in warm water, the man woke up, and declared himself to be Roger Dodsworth, son of the antiquarian
Roger Dodsworth, born in 1629 and buried under an avalanche in 1660. The story appeared in translation in a London paper a week later, and from there was widely picked up by the British press. The story circulated through various newspapers, gaining embellishments on the way, with
The Scotsman suggesting bathing in milk as an antidote to century-old stiff joints, and
John Bull reporting that Dodsworth himself had arrived in London. In mid-July, the story gained a satirical dimension, with a poem by
Thomas Moore published in
The Times characterising the long-dead Dodsworth as a perfect Tory, "a good obsolete man, who never of Locke or Voltaire has been a reader". In
The Sun,
William Cobbett contributed a spurious story of a man who had fallen into a coma in a frozen pond in Westmoreland for three hours. In September, by which time the story was widely understood to be a hoax, a series of letters were published in
John Bull claiming to be from Dodsworth, written in a deliberately archaic style. Other letters included a "correction" in the
New Monthly Magazine. The third and final letter was published in November, at which point the hoax disappeared from the press. ==Short story==