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Darwin Correspondence Project

To A. R. Wallace   10 January 1881

Down, | Beckenham, Kent. | (Railway Station | Orpington. S.E.R.)

Jan 10th 1881

My dear Wallace

I am heartily glad that you are pleased about the Memorial.1 I do not feel that my opinion is worth much on the points which you mention. A relation who is in a Government Office2 & whose judgment, I think, may be fully trusted, felt sure that if you received an Official announcement without any private note, it ought to be answered officially, but if the case were mine, I would express whatever I thought & felt in an official document. His reason was that Gladstone gives or recommends the pension on public grounds alone.—3

If the case were mine I wd not write to signers of the Memorial,4 because I believe that they acted like so many Jurymen in a claim against the Government. Nevertheless if I met any of them or was writing to them on any other subject, I shd take the opportunity of expressing my feelings.— I think you might with propriety write to Huxley, as he entered so heartily into the scheme & aided in the most important manner in many ways.—5

Sir J. Lubbock called here yesterday & Mr F. Balfour came here with one of my sons, & it wd. have pleased you to see how unfeignedly delighted they were at my news of the success of the Memorial.—6 I wrote also to tell the D. of Argyll of the success, & he in answer expressed very sincere pleasure.—7

My dear Wallace | Yours very sincerely | Ch. Darwin

Footnotes

See letter from A. R. Wallace, 8 January 1881. CD had circulated a memorial for a civil list pension for Wallace (see letter to W. E. Gladstone, [4 January 1881]).
Probably Thomas Henry Farrer, secretary of the Board of Trade.
As prime minister and first lord of the Treasury, William Ewart Gladstone could recommend persons to the Crown for civil list pensions (see MacLeod 1970).
For a list of the persons who signed the memorial, see the letter to A. B. Buckley,  4 January 1881, enclosure.
For Thomas Henry Huxley’s role in drafting the memorial, see Correspondence vol. 28, Appendix VI.
John Lubbock; Francis Maitland Balfour and William Erasmus Darwin visited Down on 8 January 1880 (Emma Darwin’s diary (DAR 242)).
See letter to G. D. Campbell, [7 January 1881]. CD had asked George Douglas Campbell, eighth duke of Argyll, to write a separate letter of support for Wallace (see Correspondence vol. 28, letter to G. D. Campbell, [before 27 December 1880] and n. 4). Campbell’s letter to CD has not been found.

Bibliography

MacLeod, Roy M. 1970. Science and the civil list, 1824–1914. Technology + Society 6: 47–55.

Summary

On the proprieties of thanking Gladstone and the signers of the memorial.

Letter details

Letter no.
DCP-LETT-12997
From
Charles Robert Darwin
To
Alfred Russel Wallace
Sent from
Down
Source of text
The British Library (Add MS 46434)
Physical description
ALS 4pp

Please cite as

Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 12997,” accessed on 20 April 2024, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-12997.xml

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