Page:Biographia Hibernica volume 2.djvu/557

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

SLOANE. 553 contributed so largely to extend the knowledge of nature, while they laid the foundation of his own future fame and fortune. It i s , however, t o be remarked, that Dr. Sloane was the first man o f learning who had taken s o long a voyage for the sole purpose o f improving his favourite science; and that the botanists o f Europe were s o com pletely ignorant o f the productions o f America, that until his return from Jamaica, i t was a doubt with Ray himself, with which, t o use his own words, h e had long been tor mented, whether the new world presented any species o f plants i n common with the old; a doubt, which was removed b y Dr. Sloane, who furnished him with a cata logue o f the indigenous plants o f Jamaica, likewise natives o f England, which h e published i n his Synopsis. Add t o this, that Dr. Sloane was well acquainted with the disco veries o f the age, that h e had a n enthusiasm for his object, and was a t a n age when both activity o f body, and ardour o f mind concur t o vanquish difficulties; and i t will hardly appear strange, that h e returned home with eight hundred species o f plants, besides a proportionate number o f sub jects from the animal kingdom, o r that such a collection made i n s o short a time, was regarded with wonder and astonishment. He returned t o London i n May 1689; but i t was not till 1696, that h e published the Prodromus o f his History o f Jamaica plants, preparatory t o the publication o f his large work, o f which i t may b e considered a s the index, under the title o f “Catalogus Plantarum quae i n Insulā Jamaică sponte proveniunt,” arranged nearly according t o the method o f Ray. I n 1707, appeared the first volume o f his “Voyage t o Madeira, Barbadoes, Nevis, St. Christopher's, and Ja maica; with the Natural History o f the Herbs and Trees, four-footed Beasts, Fishes, Birds,” &c. &c. containing the first part o f the vegetable kingdom. The second volume, containing the remainder o f the vegetable and the animal kingdom, and making the whole number o f plates two hundred and seventy-four, was not published t i l l 1725. The