Abstract
ABSTRACTHistorians have commonly described John Evelyn's pamphlet about London smoke pollution, Fumifugium,as a precocious example of environmental concern. This paper argues that such an interpretation is too simple. Evelyn's proposals are shown to be closely related to political allegory and the panegyrics written to welcome the newly restored Charles II. However, the paper also shows thatFumifugiumwas not simply a literary conceit; rather it exemplified the mid-seventeenth-century Ėnglish interest in the properties of air that is visible in both the Hartlib circle and the early Royal Society.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
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