book detail
DARWIN, Erasmus
The Botanic Garden; a Poem, in Two Parts...
Printed for J. Johnson, London,, 1791. Two parts in one volume, quarto, with separate title-pages to each part, two frontispieces, one engraved vignette in Part II, and 18 engraved plates, of which nine in Part I (four folding) and nine in Part II; some slight offsetting from the plates and very light foxing to a few leaves; an excellent copy in a handsome contemporary binding of polished crimson calf with a gilt border, spine lettered and ruled in gilt. A beautiful copy of Erasmus Darwin's verse epic. Erasmus Darwin, grandfather of Charles, was a physician, philosopher and poet; Coleridge called him the 'first literary character in Europe'. This book is best known as a precursor to the work of his famous grandson in propounding a theory of evolution. It was issued in two parts "The Economy of Vegetation" and "The Loves of the Plants". It is less well-known for its connection to the first settlement at Botany Bay.
It was Erasmus Darwin who wrote the poem "Visit of Hope to Sydney Cove, near Botany Bay" published in 1789 in The Voyage of Governor Phillip To Botany Bay. The first four lines of the long sentimental work read:
Where Sydney Cove her lucid Bosom swells,
Courts her young naivies, and the storm repels;
High on a rock amid the troubled air
HOPE stood sublime, and wav'd her golden hair...
The poem was written to accompany the celebrated medallion made by Joshua Wedgwood from clay sent by Joseph Banks from Botany Bay. An engraving made of the medallion was then used to adorn the title-page of Phillip's Voyage.
Wedgwood 'asked his friend Erasmus Darwin the poet to write a short verse to be used to accompany the medallion...'. He also sent a copy to Erasmus: 'I have received great pleasure from your excellent medallion of Hope. The figures are all finely beautiful, and speak for themselves...' (Smith, The Sydney Medallion).
Both the medallion and Darwin's poem portray, in allegorical form, Hope, encouraging Art and Labour, under the influence of Peace, to give security and happiness to an infant settlement.
The Wedgwood medallion makes another appearance in this book, appearing as an engraving opposite a new reference in verse to Botany Bay, while a note describes how the Wedgwood medallion was 'made of clay from Botany Bay; to which place he sent many of them to shew the inhabitants what their material would do, and to encourage their industry...' (p. 87).
While it was Erasmus' grandson Charles who shook the world with evolutionary theory, his grandfather Erasmus had actually been an earlier explorer in the subject - 'to elaborate upon the implications of the 'promiscuous' animals of New South Wales [and to use] the idea of this promiscuity as the basis for his theory that all life derived from primeval filaments, such promiscuous intercourse between different filaments giving rise to the extant species of animals...' (Finney, To Sail Beyond the Sunset). Darwin's scientific speculations, including his ideas on the generation of life, influenced Mary Shelley, and through her, science fiction writing.
This fine copy of the book comprises the first edition of Part I and the third edition of Part II, the make-up in which the complete work is most often seen as the second part was first published two years earlier than the first in 1789. William Blake seems to have engraved at least five of the plates (see Bentley, p. 547), although only one of them - the striking "Fertilisation of Egypt" after Fuseli - is signed. Blake was probably also responsible for the four engravings of the Portland Vase.
Not recorded by Ferguson, despite its obvious Australian relevance.
Hayward, 198; Henrey, 468; Nissen BBI, 551 (different edition).
- AUD 6,500.00 > otras divisas
- nº de pedido: 202_196
- librero: Hordern House (AUSTRALIA)
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Hordern House (ANZAAB, ABA)
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