Jamaica Kincaid explores the idea of naming things in a historical context through various anecdotes. Kincaid makes a purposeful choice to tell her story non chronologically, beginning with the tale of Columbus, putting her own reflection on plant nomenclature in the middle, and ending with an overview of Carl Linnaeus, the inventor of the plant naming system. This choice gives Kincaid the opportunity to fully vet out each point that she makes, an opportunity she wouldn’t have gotten had she written
Extraordinary blooms, wild glades and a stroll among the treetops in verdant west London The Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew are 250 years of age, however there's bounty here for the cutting edge open air globe-trotter. You can at present meander the old Victorian Palm House and enjoy somewhat out-dated promenading like somebody in a BBC ensemble dramatization, however these patio nurseries, initially created in the back yard of the illustrious royal residence supported most by George III, are one
identification, nomenclature,