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5 - Currency

Deirdre Coleman
Affiliation:
University of Melbourne
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Summary

Poor Berlin is ill & I am afraid in a very hopeless way … To have two assistants & neither of them sober, is rather unfortunate

Henry Smeathman, letter to James Lee, 10 June 1773

Smeathman need not have felt so inadequate about his ‘ignorance in botany’. The immense variety of unknown tropical specimens would soon constitute a dramatic epistemic challenge to Eurocentric classification systems, including that devised by Linnaeus. Twenty years after Smeathman's residence on the coast, Adam Afzelius, Linnaeus's last student and a highly talented botanist, wrote to Banks from Sierra Leone about the increasingly ‘great number of nondescripts’ spotted daily. Privately he conceded defeat in his journal, the words ‘planta ignota’ appearing frequently. Berlin too, when he landed on Bunce Island, was astonished by what he saw around him. It was as though he had landed on a new planet: ‘I am like a blind person who, having just had his eyes opened, sees the sun for the first time; he falls down in wonder, but knows not why, he looks without being able to see’. The illegibility of Africa's book of nature did not, however, stop him from promptly identifying three new plant specimens and several new genera of insects as soon as he reached the Bananas. He promised Linnaeus that, as soon as some boxes arrived from London, he and Smeathman would send a collection of plants to Sweden. Smeathman followed this up by promising Linnaeus at least one specimen of everything they collected in exchange for a ‘loan of necessary books’, having run through his small stock already. Despite Fothergill's assurance to Berlin that Smeathman had sailed from England with ‘Kempfer, Rumphius and Seba’, he could only find Adanson's Voyage to Senegal, Ellis's tract on corals, and ‘a few travel books by sea captains, the rest was useless trivia’. Luckily, he had brought with him Linnaeus's ‘guiding lights of 1764 and 1766’ but he was still ‘uncertain of the names of specimens, making mistakes, getting on to the wrong track and stopping halfway because of a lack of necessary manuals’. His letter to Linnaeus ends with begging pleas for the latest edition of the Systema, as well as the Genera Plantarum. By way of postscript he added that he was unhappy with his low salary.

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Henry Smeathman, the Flycatcher
Natural History, Slavery, and Empire in the late Eighteenth Century
, pp. 137 - 159
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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  • Currency
  • Deirdre Coleman, University of Melbourne
  • Book: Henry Smeathman, the Flycatcher
  • Online publication: 27 November 2019
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  • Currency
  • Deirdre Coleman, University of Melbourne
  • Book: Henry Smeathman, the Flycatcher
  • Online publication: 27 November 2019
Available formats
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To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Currency
  • Deirdre Coleman, University of Melbourne
  • Book: Henry Smeathman, the Flycatcher
  • Online publication: 27 November 2019
Available formats
×