I Asked Him Why He Was Interested In Sibthorpe's Memorial.
"Well, you see, I'm a great botanist myself," he explained,
"and have been familiar with his name and work all my life.
Of course," he added, "I don't mean I'm great in the sense
that Sibthorpe was.
I'm only a little local botanist, quite
unknown outside my own circle; I only mean that I'm a great
lover of botany."
I left him there, and had the curiosity to look up the great
man's life, and found some very curious things in it. He was
a son of Humphrey Sibthorpe, also a great botanist, who
succeeded the still greater Dillenius as Sherardian Professor
of Botany at Oxford, a post which he held for thirty-six
years, and during that time he delivered one lecture, which
was a failure. John, if he did not suck in botany with his
mother's milk, took it quite early from his father, and on
leaving the University went abroad to continue his studies.
Eventually he went to Greece, inflamed with the ambition to
identify all the plants mentioned by Dioscorides. Then he set
about writing his Flora Graeca; but he had a rough time of it
travelling about in that rude land, and falling ill he had to
leave his work undone. When nearing his end he came to Bath,
like so many other afflicted ones, only to die, and he was
very properly buried in the abbey. In his will he left an
estate the proceeds of which were to be devoted to the
completion of his work, which was to be in ten folio volumes,
with one hundred plates in each. This was done and the work
finished forty-four years after his death, when thirty copies
were issued to the patient subscribers at two hundred and
forty guineas a copy. But the whole cost of the work was set
down at 30,000 pounds! A costlier work it would be hard to
find; I wonder how many of us have seen it?
But I must go back to my subject. I was not in Bath just to
die and lie there, like poor Sibthorpe, with all those strange
bedfellows of his, nor was I in search of a vacant space the
size of my hand on the walls to bespeak it for my own
memorial. On the contrary, I was there, as we have seen, to
knock five years off my age. And it was very pleasant, as I
have said, so long as I confined my attention to Bath, the
stone-built town of old memories and associations - so long as
I was satisfied to loiter in the streets and wide green places
and in the Pump Room and the abbey. The bitter came in only
when, going from places to faces, I began to seek out the
friends and acquaintances of former days. The familiar faces
seemed not wholly familiar now. A change had been wrought; in
some cases a great change, as in that of some weedy girl who
had blossomed into fair womanhood.
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