Oldalképek
PDF
ePub

BOOK II,

Chap. V.

THE FOUN

DER OF THE

October, 1817, just eleven years after his arrival in London, from Göttingen, with that letter to Sir Joseph BANKS in his pocket which, under Divine Providence, determined his work in life. Another great public service of a like kind, MUSEUM rendered by Sir Joseph BANKS to his country and to mankind, was his zealous encouragement of explorations in Australia.

BANKSIAN

AND

LIBRARY.

TION INTO

THE INSTI-
TUTE OF
FRANCE.

Meanwhile, a new outburst of discord in the Royal Society arose out of a well-merited honour conferred on its President by the Institute of France, in 1802. It was inevitable that a body so eminent and illustrious as the French Institute should not only feel gratitude to Sir Joseph BANKS for that liberality of spirit which had dictated, in the midst of war, his many gracious and generous acts of service to Frenchmen, but should long since have reached the conviction that they would be honouring themselves, not less HIS ELECthan honouring him, by his reception in their midst. During the momentary lull afforded by the Peace of Amiens-when the Institute was reorganized by the hand of the great man who was proud of its badge of fellowship, even when clad in the dalmatica-they placed BANKS at the head of their eight Foreign Members. BANKS' estimate of the honour of membership was much like NAPOLEON'S. 'I consider this mark of your esteem,' said BANKS, in his reply, the highest and most enviable literary distinction. which I could possibly attain. To be the first elected as an Associate of the first Literary Society in the world surpasses my most ambitious hopes.'

Several Fellows of the Royal Society resented these warm acknowledgments. They thought them both unpatriotic, Letter of Miand uncomplimentary to themselves. The mathematical 1802 (primalcontents, with Bishop HORSLEY at their head, eagerly printed).

sogallus,

vately

BOOK II,
Chap. V.

THE FOUN.

DER OF THE

BANKSIAN

MUSEUM
AND
LIBRARY.

SIR JOSEPH

BANKS AS

profited by so favourable an opportunity of renewing the
expression of their old and still lurking dissatisfaction with
the choice of their President. HORSLEY addressed to Sir
Joseph a letter of indignant and angry remonstrance.
Somewhat discreditably, the Bishop chose a pseudonymous
signature instead of manfully affixing his own. 'Misogallus'*
was the mask under which he made an appeal to those
anti-Gallican prejudices which so many of us imbibe almost
with our mother's milk, and have in after-years to get rid
of. He aimed a poisoned dart at his old antagonist,
when pointing one of his many passionate sentences in a
way which he knew would arrest the special attention of
the King. The shaft hit the mark. But the King was
presently appeased. He knew BANKS, and he knew the
Bishop of St. Asaph.

From time to time Sir Joseph BANKS contributed many AN AUTHOR. interesting articles to the Philosophical Transactions, and to the Annals of Agriculture. His able paper on the Blight in Wheat did service in its day, and was separately published. But it is not as an author that this illustrious man will be remembered. He knew how to fructify the thoughts and to disseminate the wisdom of minds more largely gifted than his own. Necessarily, space and prominence in the public eye is-more especially after a man's death— a good deal determined by authorship. Hence, in our Biographical Dictionaries, a crowd of small writers occupy a disproportionate place, and some true and illustrious public benefactors remain almost unnoticed. Undeniably,

* Bishop Horsley certainly forgot the ever-memorable words which he had so often read-Matt. v, 44-when he, a prelate, signed himself 'Misogallus.'

[ocr errors]

BOOK II,

Chap. V.

THE FOUN

DER OF THE

BANKSIAN

the fame of one such benefactor as a Joseph BANKS ought to outweigh, and must, intrinsically, outweigh, that of many scores of minor penmen. His benefactions were worldwide. And by them he, being dead, yet speaks, and will MUSEUM long continue to speak, to very good and lofty purpose. He LIBRARY. died in London on the ninth of May, 1820, at the venerable age of eighty-one years completed.

AND

He died without issue, and was succeeded in his chief Lincolnshire estates by the Honourable James Hamilton DEATH. STANHOPE (afterwards Mr. STANHOPE BANKS), and by Sir Henry HAWLEY. His Kentish estates were bequeathed to BEQUESTS. Sir Edward KNATCHBULL.

His Library, Herbarium, Manuscripts, Drawings, Engravings, and all his other subsisting Collections, he bequeathed to the Trustees of the British Museum, for public use for ever, subject to a life-use and a life-interest in them which, together with an annuity, he specifically bequeathed to the eminent botanist, Robert BROWN, who was, for many years, both his friend and his librarian. He also gave an annuity of three hundred pounds a year to Mr. BAUER, an eminent botanical draughtsman; and he added, largely, to the innumerable benefactions he had made in his lifetime to the Botanical Gardens at Kew. To Mr. BROWN he also left the use, for life, of his town house in Soho Square, subject to the life-interest, or the voluntary concession, of the testator's widow.

In his first Codicil, Sir Joseph BANKS made a proviso that, if it should be the desire of the Trustees of the British Museum-and if that desire should also receive the approval of Mr. BROWN-the life-possessor should be at full liberty to cause the Collections to be transferred to the Museum during his lifetime. That, in fact, was the course which, by mutual consent, was eventually taken, to the manifest

7

and

Codicils, Jan.

and 21; and

March 7,

1820.

BOOK II,
Chap. V.

THE FOUN

DER OF THE

BANKSIAN

MUSEUM

AND

LIBRARY.

OTHER BE

QUESTS.

THE

TRANSFER

OF THE BANKSIAN

COLLEC

MUSEUM.

advantage of the British Public and the promotion of Science.

Part of Sir Joseph's personal Manuscripts were bequeathed to the Royal Society; another portion to the British Museum; and a third portion (connected with the Coinage of the Realm) to the Royal Mint. A minor part of his Collections in Natural History had been given to the British Museum in his own lifetime, and he had personally superintended their selection and arrangement. He had also been a benefactor to the Hunterian Museum at Glasgow, to the Museum of the London College of Surgeons, and to that, also in London, formerly known as Bullock's Museum.' He was, throughout life, as eager to give, as he was diligent to get.

About the year 1825, negotiations were opened by the Trustees of the British Museum with Mr. Robert BROWN, with the view of obtaining for the Public the immediate use TIONS TO THE of the Banksian Library and the other Collections, and, along with them, the public services of the eminent botanist under whose charge they then were. The then President of the Royal Society, Sir Humphrey DAVY, acted for the Public in that negotiation; but some delays intervened, so that it was not brought to a close until nearly the end of the year 1827.

At that date, the transfer was effected. Mr. BROWN became the head of the Botanical Department of the Museum, and his accession to the Staff added honour to the institution in the eyes of all scientific Europe-as well as eminent advantage to the public service. Mr. BROWN acted as Keeper until nearly the time of his decease. He died in the year 1858, full of years and of botanical fame.

BOOK II,

Chap. V.

THE FOUN

DER OF THE

AND

The Library of Sir Joseph BANKS comprised the finest collection of books on natural history which had ever been gathered into one whole in England. It was also pre-emi- BANKSIAN nently rich in the transactions, generally, of learned MUSEUM societies in all parts of the world; and there is a masterly LIBRARY. Catalogue of the Collection, by Jonas DRYANDER, which was THE printed, at Sir Joseph's cost, in the years 1798-1800. That LIBRARY. Catalogue, I venture to hope, will, some day, become—with due modification-the precedent for a printed Catalogue of the whole Museum Library-vast as it already is, and vaster as it must needs become before that day shall have arrived.

BANKSIAN

BANKSIAN

HERBARIA.

The Banksian Herbaria comprise BANKS' own botanical THE collections in his travels, and those of CLIFFORT, HERMANN, CLAYTON, AUBLET, MILLER, JACQUIER, and LOUREIRO, together with part of those made by TOURNEFORT, the friend and fellow-botanizer of SLOANE, and the author of the Corollarium. They also include many valuable plants gathered during those many English Voyages of Discovery which, from time to time, BANKS' example and his liberal encouragement so largely fostered. From the Collections now seen in the Botanical Room of the British Museum not a few of the great works of LINNEUS, GRONOVIUS, and other famous botanists, derived some of their best materials. These Collections are at present under the zealous and faithful care of Mr. John Joseph BENNETT, long the assistant and the friend of BROWN.

NOTICE OF

SOME OTHER

Among nearly contemporaneous accessions which would BRIEF well merit some detailed notice, were the space for it available, are a valuable assemblage of Marbles from Persepolis, which had been collected by Sir Gore OUSELEY, and were RANEOUS given to the Museum by the Collector, and a small but

NEARLY
CONTEMPO-

ACCESSIONS.

« ElőzőTovább »