Page images
PDF
EPUB
[blocks in formation]

[Sir Hans Sloane, ever memorable as the actual founder of the British Museum, was born at Killyleagh in the county of Down, on the 16th of April, 1660. His father was collector of taxes for the county, and as such was able to give his son a good education, in the process of which the bent of his genius towards the study of natural history disclosed itself. At sixteen, owing to intense application, he was attacked with a spitting of blood, and for almost three years his life was despaired of. At the end of this time he recovered, and choosing physic for his profession at once plunged into the study of chemistry and botany. To acquire these thoroughly he removed to London, where for four years he attended all the public lectures on chemistry, anatomy, and botany. During this time also he made the acquaintance of Boyle and Ray, to both of whom he gave help, and from them received advice and assistance.

At the end of his four years in London he went to Paris, where he attended the hospitals, and heard the lectures of Tournefort and Duberney. From Tournefort he received letters of introduction to the chancellor of the University of Montpellier; by him he was introduced to M. Magnol, an eminent botanist, who accompanied him in many botanical excursions. After spending a whole year in making collections around Montpellier he made a journey through Languedoc with the same object in view; and in 1684 returned to London, where he intended to settle and follow his profession of physic. In 1685 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society, and in 1687 a Fellow of the College of Physicians. From this time his London practice was very lucrative, and a fortunate speculation in a quantity of cinchona which he imported helped to build up his fortune.

Before long, however, the prospects of making new discoveries in natural history induced him to go out to Jamaica as physician to the Duke of Albemarle, then governor of that island. Although he remained only some fifteen months in Jamaica, yet when he returned to England he brought with him a surprising collection of plants as well as a rich collection of animal specimens. In 1693 he was appointed secretary to the Royal Society, and as his first work

in his new position revived the publication of the Society's Transactions, which had been interrupted. These he continued to edit till 1712, and in the volumes for this period will be found many papers from his pen. In 1694 he was chosen physician to Christ's Hospital, the money from which appointment he devoted entirely to the relief of poor patients in the hospital. In 1695 he married, and in 1697 published his Catalogue of the Native Plants of Jamaica. In 1701 his rich collections were made still richer by a bequest from a friend, Mr. William Courten, who had spent the greater part of his fortune and lifetime in getting together the museum which he left to Sloane. At this time his position not only as a scientific man but also as a physician was very high. He was constantly consulted by Queen Anne, and attended her during her last illness. On the accession of George I. he was created a baronet, and made physician-general; and in 1727 he was appointed physician to George II. In the same year also, on the death of Newton, he was appointed president of the Royal Society; and in 1733, owing to growing years and labours, he resigned the presidentship of the Royal College of Physicians, to which he had been elected in 1719. In 1740, at the age of eighty, he resigned the presidentship of the Royal Society and retired to Chelsea, where he had established a botanic garden. Here he coutinued to receive the visits of learned men, native and foreign, and, says his biographer, "admittance was never refused to the poor, who came to consult him concerning their health." After an illness of only three days, he died on the 11th of January, 1752, in his ninety-second year.

In the will left by Sir Hans Sloane he bequeathed a sum of money to every hospital in London; he gave the Company of the Apothecaries the freehold of the botanical garden at Chelsea, where a marble statue was afterwards erected to his memory; and to the nation he devised his museum, worth at least £80,000, on the condition that £20,000 should be paid to his family. The coins in the collection were worth as bullion some £7000, and indeed "the intrinsic value of the gold and silver medals, the ores and precious stones, that were

found in it" was alone equal to the £20,000. | broken or white, the more you see of them. Besides these rich specimens and the natural I endeavoured with a swab several times history collections, the museum also contained dipped into the water to pull some of those a library of more than 50,000 volumes, 3566 sparkles up, but could not, for they would not of which were manuscripts, and a large num- stick to it, wherefore I had a bucket of water ber very rare and curious. The government drawn, and by moving it up and down with of course accepted the offer contained in the my hand, saw some of them appear now and will, and the museum was removed to Mon- then on its surface, but once had the good tagu House, Bloomsbury. It there formed luck to move it in such a manner that one of the nucleus of one of our noblest institutions, those sparkles hit on the bucket rope, and the British Museum, which was opened in sticking there gave me the opportunity of 1759 to the general public. squatting it with my thumb, and making it by that means give a larger light, which it did for some small time, and then went out. I did not observe that it had any actual heat on touch. Nicolas Papin, who wrote a treatise in French about this, giving it the title of

In addition to his Catalogue of Jamaica Plants, Sir Hans Sloane wrote The Natural History of Jamaica, which appeared in two volumes folio in 1707 and 1725. He also wrote a considerable number of papers, many of which, as we have said, appeared in the Trans-Mer Lumineuse ou Traité de la Lumière de la actions of the Royal Society. The larger work has been highly commended, not only at the time of its appearance, but frequently since then, notably by Dr. Friend in his History of Physic.']

THE LIGHT OF THE SEA.2

I had very often heard of, but never observed before, the sparkling light of sea-water, which appears thus. In a dark night (the darker the better will you observe it) if you look attentively on the surface of the sea you shall see now and then a little sparkling light,

sometimes broader and at other time narrower, which presently vanishes. If you row in the same you see it very plain where the oars touch the water. On a part of the sea where the wave breaks or curls you see it much plainer, and by the ship side or bow, where the water is more broken, you see it most of all. Sometimes you shall see as it were a spark of fire leap up into the air as if a flint and steel were struck together, which nevertheless vanishes very soon, though sometimes I have seen a sparkle left by the water on the entering ladder of a ship's side which has continued there shining for some half a minute's time, like the icy noctiluca or phosphorus, the light of this being as to colour, &c., like that of the other; the seamen told me that they were more ordinarily to be seen in southerly winds than any other, how true I know not, but I am sure the more the sea is

1 For an amusing description of Sir Hans, written by Mrs. Pilkington when disappointed of receiving his patronage, see page 211.

2 This and the three following extracts are from The Natural History of Jamaica.

VOL. I.

Mer, tells us that agitation without froth produces it even at bottom; how true I cannot tell.

THE COCO TREE.

Pyrara de la Val, who lived several years in the Maldive Islands, and by his own exwriter I know of, tells that there it is called perience knew more of this tree than any Roul, in Malabar Tengua, in Guzaratte Narquilly, by the Portuguese Palermo and fruit Cocos; it grows only in the torrid zone, tho' there not everywhere; more in the Maldives than in any other part; they are forced to cut them down to make room for houses, which they suffer them not near, because the winds sometimes blow them down on their houses and kill the inhabitants in them. Rats eat holes in them when green for meat and drink, whereby they dry and fall, often killing those about them, because of the height, with their weight, so that in the desert isles the ground is covered with them, but not so where the isles are inhabited, because when so dried they their feet, and carry the earth from them, make good fuel. Ants make their tracks at whence they fall. They grow twenty toises high. The under half of the tree is good for building and shipping. The under part, three foot high where 'tis thickest, makes a trough for honey or water. Cocos are sometimes in a bunch; a bunch comes every month; it loves moist and sandy ground, and does not come well within land; if no water be in it and it be too dry it will not grow. The whole fruit must be planted, otherwise it corrupts; when water shakes on striking on it or not it is a sign of its being ripe or not. The middle rib

13

cleaves and makes laths and palisades; the leaves serve for thatch; with stiles they write on them as paper. They are used for sails, mats, hats, panniers, and parasols, and everything usually in Europe made of osier or willow; little baskets, brooms, and coffers are made of the middle ribs of it. Javelins are made of the middle ribs tied together and lacquered. They make pins of them likewise, and steep the bark of the fruit or husk somewhat green peel'd from the nuts to make ropes or oakum. It is to lie three weeks in the seawater covered with sand, then the inhabitants beat it as hemp or flax with wooden mallets, make match of it when the fruit is ripe, which is not soaked and beat but spun with all its substance, when they boil it with ashes and use it for match all over the Indies, except where cocos are scarce, where they use cotton. Pots, spoons, and cups are made of the shell, and forge coal. The kernel is eat as bread with other victuals, and grated and pressed; it gives milk, as sugared milk or almond milk, and with honey or sugar is drank fasting, and is their only purging medicine. This milk boiled thickens and turns into oil fit for fricasees, &c., for lamps, and for curing ulcers. The author was cured with it; it is also good for the itch. From a yellow oil it grows a white butter, being kept three months to be used as oil. The marc or dry part of the kernel, pressed with honey or sugar, is used to make preserves; when very young husk and all is eat like an apple, but this is only one kind, which is not good when ripe. They make quarts or measures of the spathes and conserves of the flowers. The membrane between the leaves is good to make sacks and also sieves to strain things through. The Indians cut the flowering footstalk a foot high, and get a sort of wine, a quart a day for six months; they boil it with some clear white stones found in the sea, and make it into honey or sugar, and with other stones it is made whiter; they make good arrack and good vinegar of it. The drawing this liquor spoils the fruit of the tree. The tender top, three foot in length, is good to eat. The ripe fruit, left in moist places or in the ground three weeks or a month, the sprout or germen is good meat and very tender. They dry the kernel to send it to Arabia, by dividing the nut in two and exposing it to the sun to dry, and use for sauces, pottage, and oil, which oil is better and keeps longer than that drawn from the fresh fruit; a black colour is given by the sawings of the wood, its own sugar, and

water, left for some days in the sun. in. Infinite numbers of ships of a hundred or a hundredand-twenty tons are made of it, without the help of any iron or other wood but what comes from this tree. The natives make drums of this tree, hollowed and covered with large ray skins, and furbish their arms with the wood. The inhabitants write on the leaves with a bodkin; they are as white as paper. The natives eat one half ripe and drink the water of it at the beginning of a meal, saying it is wholesome and laxative.

THE COTTON TREE.

When this tree first grows up it has a very round stem, green, and almost covered over with short prickles, being very thick where they stick to the stalk, sometimes shaped like a cock's-comb and blunt. The leaves are then small and of a very deep green colour. After some few years the trunk, when it is come to its due growth, is large to a wonder, even to that degree as to be fit to be hollowed into the figure of a boat or made into a canoe, able to carry many tons on the water. The wood is white and very soft, the bark is gray, smooth, without any prickles or sulci, and the trunk rises usually to about sixty foot high, being towards its top bellied, or larger than it is at bottom. This, as several other trees, at its coming out of the earth has several spurs, that is, on every hand very broad plain roots supporting the tree (like buttresses to old buildings), running themselves on and into the surface of the earth; the larger the tree the larger are these buttresses towards the roots, so that sometimes they are made into large tables. The branches towards the top are spread on every hand all round, making with its leaves a very fine shade. About the beginning of January its leaves wither and fall off, and there come at the ends of the twigs several tufts or bunches of flowers, every one of which stands on an inch-long green round footstalk. It is made up of five three quarters of an inch long purplish brown satined petala, enclosing as many stamina with purple and yellow heads; on the outside of them is a green five-pointed capsula, within which is a round green knob, which as soon as the flower is opened thrusts it and its stamina (being all joined at the bottom) off together, so that being under the tree in a hot day one would wonder to see what numbers fall every minute. After the flowers

follows an oblong, round, pointed membranaceous pod or capsula, almost as big as one's fist, made up of several pieces, containing a great deal of very soft or silken gray down, and in it some almost round brown seeds near as large as peas, much of the shape of cotton seeds. When the fruit is ripe the wind carries the down away, filling whole fields with it. The leaves come after the fruit is ripe; they are figured like those of the horse-chestnut, there being seven or nine very long green smooth sections standing always on the same common long footstalks.

ON THE RETURN VOYAGE.

Though I foresaw the difficulties, yet I had an intention to try and bring with me from Jamaica some uncommon creatures alive, such as a large yellow snake seven foot long, a guana or great lizard, a crocodile, &c. I had the snake tamed by an Indian, whom it would follow as a dog would his master, and after it was delivered to me, I kept it in a large earthen jar, such as are for keeping the best water for commanders of ships during their voyages, covering its mouth with two boards, and laying weights upon them. I had it fed every day by the guts and garbage of fowl, &c., put into the jar from the kitchen. Thus it lived for some time, when, being weary of its confinement, it shoved asunder the two boards on the mouth of the jar, and got up to the top of a large house wherein lay footmen and other domestics of her grace the Duchess of Albemarle, who, being afraid to lie down in such company, shot my snake dead. It seemed before this disaster to be very well pleased with its situation, being in a part of the house which was filled with rats, which are the most pleasing food for these sort of serpents. 'Tis upon this account that the European nations inhabiting the countries producing sugar do not molest these creatures, because they destroy the rats which came originally from ships cast away on the coast, and multiply strangely there and do infinite mischief to the sugar canes, not only by eating them, but spoiling the juice of those they gnaw.

The guana used to feed on calabash-pulp, and lived very well aboard of the yacht, till one day when it was running along the gunwale of the vessel a seaman frightened it, and it leaped overboard and was drowned.

The crocodile or alligator I kept in a tub of salt-water towards the forecastle, and fed it with the same sort of food as the snake, but it died on the 14th of May. It had five toes joined with a web. The armour he was defended with, or large thick scales, were quadrangular over the upper part of his body and sides. The ribs were cartilaginous, and towards the abdomen were crooked, and made one with another the figure of lozenges.

[ocr errors][ocr errors]

May 29th, 1689.-We had fifty-five fathoms of water, and soon saw Scilly; the dangerous rocks called the Bishop and his Clerks, the Landsend, Lizard, and in the morning came in towards Plymouth, to get intelligence whether there was peace or war, and with whom, lest going up the Channel we might be taken as prizes. This we the rather did because some days before we had seen boards, chests, &c., floating on the sea, which were guessed to have been thrown overboard to clear ships for a fight, and which was concluded afterwards to have been really from that between the English and French in Bantry Bay.

When we came within some leagues of Plymouth I was sent in an armed long-boat to get certain knowledge of the situation of public affairs, and to give a speedy account of it to the fleet, who were to stand off of that port till they were assured of their safety or danger. We had a sight first of a boat which was fishing some leagues from the land, whose master did what he could to fly from us; but coming up with him, asking what news and where the king was, he asked what king we meant, for that King William was well at Whitehall, and King James in France, that there was war with France, and that the Channel was full of privateers, who had taken many prizes. He went again to his fishing, and I gave notice to the ships to come into Plymouth, which we did that day, and soon after her Grace the Duchess of Albemarle landed with most of us her plate, jewels, &c., and came up, thanks be to God, with safety by land to

London.

THOMAS SOUTHERNE.

BORN 1660 - DIED 1746.

criticism can desire," and he points out several passages in it which he considers "eminently beautiful." In 1700 his Siege of Capua was produced, and in 1713 a complete edition of his then works appeared in two volumes, including The Spartan Dame, which was not acted till 1719. Finally, in 1726 appeared the last of his plays, Money is the Mistress, and an edition of his works, including this last play, was published some time after in three vols. 12mo.

As we have indicated, Southerne's career as a dramatist was a successful one. In his preface to The Spartan Dame he acknowledges having received £150 for it from the booksellers, a price then thought very extraordinary. To Dryden he once owned that he had made £700 altogether by one of his plays, but it must be confessed he had a business faculty for pushing his wares that Dryden did not possess, and might have thought it beneath him to exercise. Pope speaks of him in his kindly Epistle in 1742 as

[Thomas Southerne, whom one of his bio- | says that "as a poem it is nearly all that graphers calls "the great founder of our modern school of dramatic production," was born at Oxmanstown near Dublin, in, according to Cibber, the year 1660. He was educated for a short time at the university in that city, and in his eighteenth year quitted Ireland and went to Oxford. From Oxford he removed to Middle Temple, London, where, instead of law, he studied poetry, and devoted himself to the Muses. Soon after this he made the acquaintance of Dryden, and in 1682, when in his twenty-third year, his first play, The Persian Prince, or Loyal Brothers, appeared, with a prologue by the mighty John. It was highly successful, and so pleased the Duke of York, that on his accession to the throne he gave Southerne a commission as captain under himself. On James's abdication the poet retired to his studies, and commenced anew a successful career of play-writing. Before this, however, he had in 1684 produced The Disappointment, which was, like his first play, a great success. His first work now to appear was The Rambling Lady, or Sir Anthony Love, produced in 1690, and favoured by the public like the others. In 1692 appeared The Wives' Excuse, generally reckoned a better play than any of the three previous ones, yet it was badly received. On this Southerne | immediately printed the play with a copy of commendatory verses by Dryden prefixed to it. In these verses Dryden attributes the failure of the play to the bad taste of the audience and not to any defect in Southerne's work; and Southerne in his remarks stated that Dryden, in speaking of it, had said that "the public had been kind to Sir Anthony Love and were only required to be just to this."

"Tom, whom Heaven sent down to raise The price of prologues and of plays."

Southerne's position as a writer is a pretty safe one, notwithstanding the fact that he is little heard of just now. In his own time and afterwards he was ranked very highly by competent critics. Dryden thought him "such another poet as Otway;" Gray "thought highly of his pathetic powers;" a writer in the General Biographical Dictionary says of Oroonoko that "besides the tender and delicate strokes of passion in this play there are many shining and manly sentiments; and some have gone so far beyond the truth as to say, that the most celebrated even of Shakspere's plays However, Southerne was not to be dis- cannot furnish so many striking thoughts and heartened, but rather learned a lesson by the such a glow of animated poetry." The editor comparative failure of The Wives' Excuse, and of Cumberland's Theatre, whom we have in 1693 appeared The Maid's Last Prayer. already quoted, says, in speaking of this same In 1694 he produced his Isabella, or the Fatul play, "To his style belong many of the pathetic Marriage, a play which to this day keeps the graces of the old age-he employs the most stage, and which, with his Oroonoko, must be obvious thoughts and clothes them in the ranked among the first-class plays in our lan- simplest language: his approaches to the guage. Oroonoko appeared in 1696, and is heart are by truth and nature- hence, the said by some to be the very best of his plays. impression he makes is powerful and lasting." The editor of Cumberland's British Theatre | In his "Remarks on Isabella the same writer

« EelmineJätka »