My war against germs continues, and I'm losing. Perhaps a discussion of viruses and other natural phenomena is appropriate for my next offering, which is a celebration of the 300th birthday of Georges-Louis Leclerc, the Comte du Buffon. The man in question, explains the NY Times, is largely forgotten, but his legacy is considerable. He wrote, all by his lonesome, a 44-volume encyclopedia about the natural world which was a standard text for over 200 hundred years; he was a contemporary and rival of a Swedish botanist, Carolus Linnaeus, who is still revered. A more familiar part of Buffon's heritage, however, is Paris's Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, which he founded, and the Jardin des Plantes, the acreage of which he was instrumental in expanding. Besides those two landmarks, the Times also takes us to Buffon's country home in Montbard, a small Burgundy town which "is not otherwise particularly picturesque," and then a walk to nearby Buffon, a village which gave the Comte his name and which still maintains a forge that he built. Should you retrace these steps -- and I can't imagine too many people doing that, but whatever -- be prepared not to find much mention of the Comte, so you'll celebrate him alone. For the rest of us, a slideshow may suffice.
And now I have a date with a bowl of chicken soup.




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