Darwin, C. R. to Hancock, Albany
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Discusses mollusc specimens and related notes sent to AH. Thanks him for cirripede specimens. Discusses various cirripede species.
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Transcription
Down Farnborough Kent.
Saturday
My dear Sir
I am ashamed at myself to think how long I have taken to send you my Mollusca: I have now got them in a Bottle, & will send with them a
catalogue of localities; there about 60 packets, though some are
duplicates— I send with them the rudest notes of colour &
size made at time. The colours are given by comparison with
Pat. Symes' nomenclature. The notes are those of an
ignorant
schoolboy as I was almost then, & shamefully written; I
w
Very many thanks for the Clitia: it has astonished me
& convinced me of my ignorance.— I entirely give up the burrowing of
your Alcippe & my Arthrobalanus, I only do not give up Lithotrya from its large mishapen cup being so ill-formed for burrowing
& from its having a beautiful rasping apparatus. How difficult it is to discuss
any point by letter; I now see that I omitted to mention to you, that all round
the base (& therefore widest part) of the head or shell on the top of the
peduncle, there is a beautiful rasping rim or circular toothed saw;—renewed
moreover, during every moult when the shell & animal increases in size,
& as the peduncle has great power to lengthen & shorten & twist
itself about, I cannot doubt if you were to fix a young Lithotrya at the bottom of a
deep hole of the diameter of a pin or straw, during growth the animal w
You ask me about Goodsir's male Balanus; it is quite a mistake— his male Balanus is a female crustacean allied to Bopyrus & his parasite is the male of this female.— But now comes the odd case, I have found two genera of cirripedes with males separate & parasitic on the females; in these cases I am sure there can be no mistake, though I will not take up your time with details.—
I have not yet!! looked at Alcippe for ever since writing last to you, my two-hour-per day-work has been occupied with a tiresome set of fossils.— I have the curious Alepas squalicola sent me from Copenhagen, but I have not looked at it yet.—
Yours very sincerely | C. Darwin
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- f1 1311.f1
The first possible date is the Saturday following CD's receipt of Alepas squalicola, as mentioned in the letter to J. J. S. Steenstrup, 25 January [1850]. However, the letter could have been written at any time up to the date of CD's next letter to Hancock (letter to Albany Hancock, [31 March or 7 April 1850]). - +
- f2 1311.f2
See letter to Albany Hancock, 29 September [1849], in which CD offered his collection of nudibranchs to Hancock. - +
- f3 1311.f3
CD evidently sent his original manuscript list of shells collected during the Beagle voyage, since the only full lists remaining in the Cambridge collection are copies in the hand of Syms Covington. The copies are of CD's ‘Shells’ (DAR 29.3: 4–8) and ‘Shells in Spirits of Wine’ (DAR 29.1 (last series): 1–8). There are, however, two sheets in CD's hand in DAR 29.3: 31–2 listing specimens of molluscs, including some nudibranchs, with brief notes on their locations and colours, that may be a part of his original manuscript (see Porter 1985, in which this fragment of CD's Mollusca list is not mentioned). - +
- f4 1311.f4
During the Beagle voyage CD used Patrick Syme's edition of Werner's nomenclature of colours to identify the colours of specimens at the time they were taken. The second edition, Syme 1821, is in the Darwin Library–CUL. - +
- f5 1311.f5
See letter to Albany Hancock, 25 December [1849]. This cirripede was eventually classified as Verruca str'{omia} (Living Cirripedia (1854): 496, 512, 518–20). - +
- f6 1311.f6
See CD's letters to Albany Hancock, 29 September [1849] and [29 or 30 October 1849]. CD was convinced that Lithotrya burrowed by mechanical means. See Living Cirripedia (1851): 344–8. Hancock thought it inhabited pre-existing cavities because the basal cup was not fitted for burrowing (A. Hancock 1849b, p. 313, and Living Cirripedia (1851): 346 n.). - +
- f7 1311.f7
CD finally concluded that Verruca excavated using a solvent (Living Cirripedia (1854): 512–18). - +
- f8 1311.f8
Goodsir 1843. See also letters to Henri Milne-Edwards, 18 November [1847], n. 3, and to J. D. Dana, 24 February [1850]. - +
- f9 1311.f9
Ibla and Scalpellum. - +
- f10 1311.f10
Anelasma squalicola (see letter to Sven Lovén, 12 November 1849).