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Erasmus Darwin
![Sex and Science in Robert Thornton’s Temple of Flora](https://the-public-domain-review.imgix.net/essays/sex-and-science-in-robert-thornton-s-temple-of-flora/flora-carnations.jpg?w=600&h=1200&auto=format,compress)
Sex and Science in Robert Thornton’s Temple of Flora
Bridal beds, blushing captives, and swollen trunks - Carl Linnaeus' taxonomy of plants heralded a whole new era in 18th-century Europe of plants being spoken of in sexualised terms. Martin Kemp explores* how this association between the floral and erotic reached its visual zenith in Robert Thornton's exquisitely illustrated Temple of Flora. more
![Visions of Algae in Eighteenth-Century Botany](https://the-public-domain-review.imgix.net/essays/visions-of-algae-in-eighteenth-century-botany/conferva-zoom.jpg?w=600&h=1200&auto=format,compress)
Visions of Algae in Eighteenth-Century Botany
Although not normally considered the most glamorous of Mother Nature's offerings, algae has found itself at the heart of many a key moment in the last few hundred years of botanical science. Ryan Feigenbaum traces the surprising history of one particular species — Conferva fontinalis — from the vials of Joseph Priestley's laboratory to its possible role as inspiration for Shelley's Frankenstein. more
![The Revolutionary Colossus](https://the-public-domain-review.imgix.net/essays/revolutionary-colossus/Destruction_of_the_French_collossus-feature.jpg?w=600&h=1200&auto=format,compress)
As the French Revolution entered its most radical years, there emerged in print a recurring figure, the collective power of the people expressed as a single gigantic body — a king-eating Colossus. Samantha Wesner traces the lineage of this nouveau Hercules, from Erasmus Darwin’s Bastille-breaking giant to a latter incarnation in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. more