Synopses & Reviews
Catharine Parr Traill (1802-99) was a writer, botanist and settler who emigrated from England to Canada with her husband in 1832. Both she and her sister, Susanna Moodie, became well known for their writing on settler life: Traill is also the author of The Backwoods of Canada and The Canadian Settler's Guide. This 1885 publication is the most comprehensive of her botanical works. Plants are grouped together by family and the book is divided into four sections: native flowers, flowering shrubs, forest trees and native ferns. Written to inspire the Canadian public to share her passion for the plant life of their country, the book has an engaging style where anecdotes and literary quotations appear alongside detailed descriptions and classification information. Traill's niece, Agnes Chamberlin, is the book's illustrator. A beautiful example of nineteenth-century popular botany, this book will appeal to anyone interested in the history of the subject.
Synopsis
Popular botany from 1885, written by an English writer and botanist who emigrated to become a settler in Canada.
Synopsis
This popular botany book from 1885 was written by Catharine Parr Traill (1802-99), an English writer and botanist who became a settler in Canada. This is an engaging botanical work where anecdotes and literary quotations are found alongside detailed descriptions and classification information. It is illustrated by Agnes Chamberlin.
Table of Contents
Preface; Wild, or native flowers; The flowering shrubs of central Canada; Forest trees; Native ferns; Index.