A Natural History of Nevis, and the Rest of the English Leeward Charibee Islands in America
With Many Other Observations on Nature and Art
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:25th Sep '14
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The discursive recollections of an English clergyman of his time on the Caribbean island of Nevis, first published in 1745.
Several years after his return from the Caribbean island of Nevis, the English clergyman William Smith wrote a series of letters to Charles Mason, the Woodwardian Professor of Fossils at Cambridge. Published in 1745, they discuss the island's flora and fauna as well as Smith's various other interests, including cryptography.During his five years in the 1730s as rector of St John's parish on the Caribbean island of Nevis, William Smith collected a number of remarkable seashells, which he presented to the Woodwardian Museum of Fossils at the University of Cambridge nine years after his return to England. When the incumbent Woodwardian Professor, Charles Mason, asked Smith for 'some account' of the Nevis shells, Smith wrote him a series of eleven undated letters, published as this book in 1745, containing observations on the island's flora and fauna, and details relating to the neighbouring islands. Mason and Smith became friends, and the content of the letters gradually diverged from pure recollection to larger digressions on subjects as varied as cryptography, diseases common to slaves, tarantulas, and the Great Wall of China. The result is an idiosyncratic snapshot of the mind of an educated and slightly eccentric cleric in eighteenth-century England.
ISBN: 9781108076999
Dimensions: 216mm x 140mm x 19mm
Weight: 430g
338 pages