, the well-known author of''
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland'', had a stammer, as did his siblings. Because of the unusual-sounding speech that is produced and the behaviors and attitudes that accompany a stutter, it has long been a subject of scientific interest and speculation as well as discrimination and ridicule. People who stutter can be traced back centuries to
Demosthenes, who tried to control his disfluency by speaking with pebbles in his mouth. The
Talmud interprets
Bible passages to indicate that
Moses also stuttered, and that placing a burning coal in his mouth had caused him to be "slow and hesitant of speech" (Exodus 4, v.10). Partly due to a perceived lack of intelligence because of his stutter, the man who became the
Roman emperor Claudius was initially shunned from the public eye and excluded from public office. A royal Briton who stammered was King
George VI. He went through years of speech therapy, most successfully under Australian speech therapist
Lionel Logue, for his stammer. The Academy Award-winning film ''
The King's Speech'' (2010) in which
Colin Firth plays George VI, tells his story. The film is based on an original screenplay by
David Seidler, who also stuttered until age 16. Another British case was that of Prime Minister
Winston Churchill. Churchill claimed, perhaps not directly discussing himself, that "[s]ometimes a slight and not unpleasing stammer or impediment has been of some assistance in securing the attention of the audience ..." However, those who knew Churchill and commented on his stutter believed that it was or had been a significant problem for him. His secretary
Phyllis Moir commented that "Winston Churchill was born and grew up with a stutter" in her 1941 book ''I was Winston Churchill's Private Secretary''. She related one example, "'It's s-s-simply s-s-splendid,' he stuttered—as he always did when excited." Louis J. Alber, who helped to arrange a lecture tour of the United States, wrote in Volume 55 of
The American Mercury (1942) that "Churchill struggled to express his feelings but his stutter caught him in the throat and his face turned purple" and that "born with a stutter and a
lisp, both caused in large measure by a defect in his palate, Churchill was at first seriously hampered in his public speaking. It is characteristic of the man's perseverance that, despite his staggering handicap, he made himself one of the greatest orators of our time." For centuries "cures" such as consistently drinking water from a snail shell for the rest of one's life, "hitting a stutterer in the face when the weather is cloudy", strengthening the tongue as a muscle, and various
herbal remedies were tried. Similarly, in the past people subscribed to odd theories about the causes of stuttering, such as
tickling an infant too much, eating improperly during
breastfeeding, allowing an infant to look in the mirror, cutting a child's hair before the child spoke his or her first words, having too small a tongue, or the "work of the devil". ==Society and culture==