From The Desk of Zelnio: R. Cadwallader Smith's Within the Deep

i-5783df6bf0f051b53240700304b2439b-Fishes2.jpg

As part of the Gutenberg Project to make available copyright-free (i.e. old) books available in print online, I came across Within the Deep by R. Cadwallader Smith as part of Cassell's "Eyes and No Eyes" Series Book VIII. I have no idea to the original print date but I am guessing mid to late 1800s by the look of the plates and figures. I really love and admire old texts, especially those many figures as does this one. The art was so descriptive and inspiring then, before the age of computer animation.

The lessons, or chaptes, include such grand subjects as:

  1. Fish For Breakfast
  2. The Story of the Flatfish
  3. Seals
  4. Some Strange Nurseries
  5. The Ogre of the Deep
  6. The Whale Tigers of the Sea
  7. The Dangers of the Deep
  8. The Fish of Our Rock Pools
  9. Some Curious Fishes
  10. The Garden of the Sea

It is really worth the read and a look at the figures. Also by R. Cadwallader Smith is On the Seashore where you sea hermit crabs with "sea flowers"!

i-8f02526694f04b6080c4445a21fe78fa-octopus.jpg

More like this

Back in November I mentioned that I might possibly follow in Ed's footsteps and put together a "Best of Laelaps" collection. The only problem was that it was difficult to pick out posts I was proud of; I didn't want to put out an embarrassing collection of slapdash essays. By the beginning of…
Summers and the Allston expansion. Latest stats on gender and higher education. And free books! Ladies and Gentlemen start your hard drives. (all quotes+links below the fold) From today's Boston Globe: As Harvard University searches for a new leader, questions loom over its last president's most…
I am concerned about comments on a few websites and in the press over the last year. Most disheartening is a EU memo entitled "Questions and Answers on Destructive Fishing Practices" When scientists talk about vulnerable marine habitats in the context of the deep sea, they are referring to…
I was kind of wondering when they would start something like this. For the uninitiated a Wiki is an online text that anyone can edit. It has links within it to other articles forming a web on constantly changing information -- sort of like an encyclopedia only better. The most famous Wiki is…

Thanks for the link Alexandra!

I am familiar with the site through their anemone descriptions and it is easy to get lost in the all the pages and plates on the website.

Sadly, many folk don't know the importance of these (much) earlier publications and focus what is new, now and in.

By Kevin Zelnio (not verified) on 07 May 2007 #permalink