[personal profile] tamaranth
I was going through old notebooks the other day, and found an account of my visit to the Herbarium at Kew: I'd meant to type it up, but never quite got around to it. And that, of course, is what unemployment is for!
The Herbarium at Kew was built before the advent of electrical light. Much expanded over the years, it's now a hollow square of a building, designed to admit as much daylight as possible. Each window is tall, and opens onto a deep alcove with wide tables on both sides: this is where the work of the Herbarium, the examination and drawing and coding and classification, was -- and still is -- done.

Away from the windows, towards the interior, the specimens are stored. There are rows of lockers -- cupboards, really, in the sense that none of them have locks -- painted glossy white, each bearing a polished brass knob and a typed label. Each locker is divided horizontally by four thick shelves, and on each shelf there's a bundle of manila folders. Each folder holds a sheaf of paper, onto which are taped -- with age-dark, peeling tape -- pressed leaves and flowers. There's a note on each sheet documenting the provenance of the specimens, and these are the original paperwork that accompanied the pressed samples on their arrival at Kew. They are typed, or hand-written, on lined paper, or headed stationery, on index cards, on pages still ragged where they were torn from notebooks.

This folder in my hand documents a single species, though not one I recognise. The red cardboard marker indicates the particular specimen that defines that species: the definitive type. I open it to that page. The florets and stems are taped to the page with narrow gummed strips of white paper, all equally faded and spotted and indistinct with age. This is the work (proclaims bold, elegant copperplate script, written in dark blue ink) of Coll. José Steinbach. He collected the samples in Bolivia in April 1917.

I try to imagine him. German on his father's side, but possibly generations back: his forename is Hispanic. Perhaps his mother is Bolivian. His writing is neat and educated, and free of corrections: he's writing on his own headed notepaper. Is 'Coll' an abbreviation for Colonel? What does the First World War mean, down in the sticky tropical year-round heat of Bolivia? What do his neighbours, family, friends think of his botanising? [EDIT: I wonder if this is the same man noted as collecting paratypes of boas in 1932?]

There's a library here too. Books dating back to 1490. Multiple editions of Gerard's Herbal. There are botanical prints on the wall: but this is a public place, and the books are locked behind glass. There are thousands of volumes, some too big to lift, of painstakingly accurate drawings, exact and meticulous, whose beauty is incidental to their usefulness.

On the wall there's a poster of Banks, Solander and Cook. Joseph Banks founded Kew. Without him, none of this -- none of the desiccated leaves and petals, none of the books, none of the prints, none of the riotous greenery that presses against the walls from the gardens beyond -- would be here.

Now, typing this up, I want to go back and look for William Dampier. I believe his samples, collected in Australia and the Pacific more than three centuries ago, are still stored somewhere at Kew. Perhaps I walked past the locker that held them. Perhaps I could open up a folder, and see his writing, small and neat and faded, and have in my hands something that he had made.

Date: Thursday, February 17th, 2005 02:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ajshepherd.livejournal.com
Very nice. Hope you find the Dampier on your next visit, that would be quite cool.

Date: Thursday, February 17th, 2005 02:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] del-c.livejournal.com
When I lived in Hanwell and worked in Brentford, over the river at Kew Bridge where the old pumping station is, I somehow blagged myself a pass to the Herbarium library, where I would go during lunch breaks and look up biology stuff for alien design. I was on the ladder one day, when through the rungs I spotted a volume on Carnivorous Plants. And knowing Terry Pratchett is an old fan of carnivorous plants, I looked around the library with a wild surmise...

I do still wonder sometimes if the Herbarium library was an inspiration for the Unseen University library.

Date: Thursday, February 17th, 2005 02:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] moral-vacuum.livejournal.com
Ooh lovely!

I've been meaning to go to Kew (and the Chelsea Physic Garden) for years, but have never got round to it.

Date: Thursday, February 17th, 2005 09:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladymoonray.livejournal.com
Kew is one of the places on the 2-for-one attractions offer with a valid rail ticket. It runs until the end of May. I'll pick up a leaflet for you if you don't have one at your station.

Date: Friday, February 18th, 2005 12:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] moral-vacuum.livejournal.com
To be honest, any of the two-for-one leaflets would be wonderful, thanks. My station doesn't tend to have much of that sort of thing, and I don't think Bromley South do huge amounts (mind you I'm normally late for my train so they may well do).

January 2026

S M T W T F S
     1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags