Samuel Goodenough, Berners Street, [London], to Sir James Edward Smith
Compliments Smith's "Grammar of Botany"; believes Smith, CorrĂȘa, and [Robert] Brown only botanists skilled enough to tackle the subject and and Smith the only one to successfully tackle it. [Francisco Antonio] Zea and General Cortes attended the most recent Linnean dinner, "both...
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Online Access: | http://linnean-online.org/62720/ http://linnean-online.org/62720/1/JES-COR-12-67_001.tif http://linnean-online.org/62720/2/JES-COR-12-67_002.tif http://linnean-online.org/62720/3/JES-COR-12-67_003.tif http://linnean-online.org/62720/4/JES-COR-12-67_004.tif |
Summary: | Compliments Smith's "Grammar of Botany"; believes Smith, CorrĂȘa, and [Robert] Brown only botanists skilled enough to tackle the subject and and Smith the only one to successfully tackle it. [Francisco Antonio] Zea and General Cortes attended the most recent Linnean dinner, "both rather mean looking men". Attended Sir Humphry Davy's conversazione, Captain [William] Parry [(1790-1855), Arctic explorer] also attended, he is writing his book in the country ["Journal of a Voyage to Discover the Northwest Passage" (1821)]. Attended Royal Society dinner and beginning of Antiquarian Society meeting; there was "a ponderous dull paper upon weights and measures" by Captain Kater. Davy a clearer orator than the Antiquarians' president, Lord Aberdeen [George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen (1784-1860)], whose election Goodenough thinks was an error of judgement. |
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