skip to content

Darwin Correspondence Project

To Francis Darwin   [16 June 1881]1

[Glenridding House, Patterdale.]

My dear F.

Some of these seeds wind up into spire very quickly after being dipped in water & some move very slowly.— I am surprised that they can bury themselves in the ground, They all seem a little bowed naturally, before being wetted.— I have thanked Payne.—2

George arrived last night in pretty good trim, but he looks very thin.— He has sent in his paper to R. Soc. which will, I think, interest geologists.3

I have read Wortmann’s article in Bot. Zeitung with much interest.4 He seems to have proved his case well. It is very odd that we could not see Cieselkys case of the roots, not entering water, though I tried them with all temperatures.5 We ought to have had more perseverance.—

yours affectionately | C. Darwin

The essay on Växtformations is on geographical distribution of Plants!!6

Footnotes

The date is established by the relationship between this letter and the letter from George Payne, 14 June 1881, and by the date of George Howard Darwin’s arrival at Patterdale (see nn. 2 and 3, below).
See letter from George Payne, 14 June 1881 and n. 1. Payne had sent seeds of Anemone pulsatilla (pasque flower). CD’s reply to Payne has not been found.
According to Emma Darwin’s diary (DAR 242), George arrived at the Darwin holiday home at Patterdale in the Lake District on 15 June 1881. George’s paper, ‘On the stresses caused in the interior of the earth by the weight of continents and mountains’, was received at the Royal Society of London on 11 June 1881 (G. H. Darwin 1881b).
Julius Wortmann’s paper, ‘Ein Beitrag zur Biologie der Mucorineen’ (A contribution on the biology of Mucorales; Wortmann 1881), appeared in parts in Botanische Zeitung, 10 and 17 June 1881. CD had evidently read the first part, in which Wortmann described experiments with Phycomyces nitens that demonstrated the movement of sporophores away from moisture.
In Wortmann 1881, pp. 373–4, Wortmann had cited Theophil Ciesielski’s paper on roots bending away from water (Ciesielski 1872).
See letter to Francis Darwin, 27 May 1881 and n. 4. CD had mistakenly thought that Ragnar Hult’s essay ‘Försök bis analytisk behandling af växtformationerna’ (Attempt at an analytical approach to plant formations; Hult 1881) was about bloom. George, who understood Swedish, had evidently translated the title for CD.

Bibliography

Ciesielski, Theophil. 1872. Untersuchungen über die Abwärtskrümmung der Wurzel. Beiträge zur Biologie der Pflanzen 1 (1870–5) Heft 2: 1–30.

Darwin, George Howard. 1881b. On the stresses caused in the interior of the earth by the weight of continents and mountains. [Read 16 June 1881.] Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 173 (1882): 187–230.

Hult, Ragnar. 1881. Försök till analytisk behandling af växtformationerna. Meddelanden af Societas pro Fauna et Flora Fennica 8: 1–155.

Wortmann, Julius. 1881. Ein Beitrag zur Biologie der Mucorineen. Botanische Zeitung, 10 June 1881, pp. 368–74, 17 June 1881, pp. 383–7.

Summary

Describes seeds sent by George Payne [see 13205]. Is surprised that they bury themselves.

Letter details

Letter no.
DCP-LETT-13206
From
Charles Robert Darwin
To
Francis Darwin
Sent from
Patterdale
Source of text
DAR 211: 98v
Physical description
ALS 2pp

Please cite as

Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 13206,” accessed on 18 April 2024, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-13206.xml

letter