Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- ABBREVIATIONS
- Chapter I Boyhood and Youth
- Chapter II At Cambridge University
- Chapter III First Studies in Science
- Chapter IV The Cambridge Catalogue
- Chapter V The Years of Travel
- Chapter VI The English Catalogue
- Chapter VII The Years of Varied Output
- Chapter VIII The Structure and Classification of Plants
- Chapter IX The History of Plants
- Chapter X The Flora of Britain
- Chapter XI Last Work in Botany
- Chapter XII The Ornithology
- Chapter XIII The History of Fishes
- Chapter XIV Of Mammals and Reptiles
- Chapter XV The History of Insects
- Chapter XVI Of Fossils and Geology
- Chapter XVII The Wisdom of God
- Conclusion
- Index
Chapter I - Boyhood and Youth
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- ABBREVIATIONS
- Chapter I Boyhood and Youth
- Chapter II At Cambridge University
- Chapter III First Studies in Science
- Chapter IV The Cambridge Catalogue
- Chapter V The Years of Travel
- Chapter VI The English Catalogue
- Chapter VII The Years of Varied Output
- Chapter VIII The Structure and Classification of Plants
- Chapter IX The History of Plants
- Chapter X The Flora of Britain
- Chapter XI Last Work in Botany
- Chapter XII The Ornithology
- Chapter XIII The History of Fishes
- Chapter XIV Of Mammals and Reptiles
- Chapter XV The History of Insects
- Chapter XVI Of Fossils and Geology
- Chapter XVII The Wisdom of God
- Conclusion
- Index
Summary
He is a person of great worth; and yet humble, and far from conceitedness and self-admiring…a conscientious Christian; and that's much said in little.
John Worthington to Samuel Hartlib, Diary, i, p. 333.In these days when we all realise the importance of heredity and early environment in determining and in interpreting character, the student or John Ray will deplore more strongly than did any of his biographers our almost total ignorance of his parents and childhood. To Derham or to Dale the fact that he was the son of a village blacksmith had to be stated but should then be forgotten. It was unconventional if not indecent. They knew it; but neither they nor their successors thought it necessary to amplify it. For more than a century the year of his birth, though correctly given in at least one of his books, was wrongly stated as 1628; until 1847 no one had taken the trouble to search the parish register, and even then he was sometimes identified with the wrong John Ray. W.H. Mullens, who discovered that he had been baptised twelve months before the traditional time, did not prosecute his researches further or spend the few hours needed to run through the long vellum pages that form the scanty annals of Black Notley in the first half of the seventeenth century.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- John Ray, NaturalistHis Life and Works, pp. 1 - 20Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1942