Darwin, C. R. to Walsh, B. D.
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CD has followed Lyell's advice and avoided controversy over Origin but encourages BDW to attack S. H. Scudder and others who argue foolishly or misquote him.
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Transcription
Down. | Bromley. | Kent. S.E.
April 20
My dear Sir
I forwarded the paper at once to Wallace ``9 St. Mark's Terrace Regents Park, London. N.W.'' & pray at any time use me in the same way.
I have been much interested by your remarks on Halesidota & especially on the 18 spots on Doryphora.— What an indefatigable worker you are!
I know nothing about M
I see that you have been attacking M
My health is considerably improved so that I work 2--3 hours daily; but all my new work has been stopped since the 1
My dear Sir | Yours most sincerely | Ch. Darwin
You will have seen an account of poor Whewell's death from a fall from a Horse.
My second son is now at your old College of Trinity, & has just gained a Scholarship, being the second man of his year, which pleases me much.—
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- f1 5061.f1
CD evidently misdated the letter: the cover is postmarked 19 April 1866. - +
- f2 5061.f2
CD refers to the second part of Walsh 1864--5 and to Alfred Russel Wallace (see letter from B. D. Walsh, 13 March 1866). - +
- f3 5061.f3
Walsh had observed four stable colour variants in the gall insect, Halesidota tessellaris; the differences in colour were distinguishable at a certain stage in the development of the larvae, but not at the imago stage. On this basis, Walsh proposed a new species, H. Harrissii, arguing that species distinctions should not be made solely on the basis of comparisons between adult forms (Walsh 1864--5, pp. 197--200). He drew an analogy between the gall insects and the `alternate generations' of certain Radiata, in which distinct hydroids produce similar jellyfish (ibid., p. 203); this passage is scored in CD's copy (Darwin Pamphlet Collection--CUL). - +
- f4 5061.f4
Walsh described eighteen spots, arranged in a particular pattern, on the thorax of two species of Doryphora. He remarked that the presence of such identical markings was explicable if the two species had arisen from a common ancestor, whereas there was no reason for `Nature to plagiarize from herself a merely ornamental design' when millions of other patterns were available (Walsh 1864--5, pp. 207--8); this section is scored in CD's copy. - +
- f5 5061.f5
See letter from B. D. Walsh, 13 March 1866 and n. 8. CD had received galls from George Henry Kendrick Thwaites, director of the Peradiniya botanic gardens in Ceylon, in 1863 (see Correspondence vol. 11, letter to G. H. K. Thwaites, 30 March [1863] and n. 10). The galls are described in Variation 2: 282. - +
- f6 5061.f6
No correspondence between CD and Armistead has been found. - +
- f7 5061.f7
In the postscript to Walsh 1864--5, Walsh criticised a recent paper by Samuel Hubbard Scudder, in which a passage from Origin was misquoted (Walsh 1864--5, p. 216; see also Scudder 1866, pp. 26--7). Walsh concluded: `A theory must be strong indeed, when, as would seem from the practice of certain Naturalists, it can only be refuted by misstating it.' - +
- f8 5061.f8
Charles Lyell. - +
- f9 5061.f9
Following long periods of illness in 1864 and 1865, CD began to report improvement in his health in September 1865 (see Correspondence vol. 12, and Correspondence vol. 13, letter to J. D. Hooker, 27 [or 28 September 1865]). - +
- f10 5061.f10
CD had agreed to produce a fourth edition of Origin in February (see letter to John Murray, 22 February [1866]). - +
- f11 5061.f11
CD added two references to Walsh in the fourth edition of Origin, citing his work on phytophagic forms (Walsh 1864--5), and his `law of equable variability', according to which characters highly variable in one species tend to be variable in allied species (Walsh 1863, p. 213). See Origin 4th ed., pp. 55, 187. - +
- f12 5061.f12
Walsh's name appears on CD's presentation list for the fourth edition of Origin (see Correspondence vol. 14, Appendix IV); the book was not published until November 1866 (see letter from John Murray, 18 July [1866]). On the use of stereotypes in the production of the American edition of Origin in 1860, see the letter to Asa Gray, 16 April [1866] and n. 11. - +
- f13 5061.f13
CD considerably revised his account of Richard Owen's work in his historical sketch to Origin 4th ed., pp. xvii--xviii (Peckham ed. 1959, pp. 64--6). See letter to J. D. Hooker, 31 May [1866] and n. 11. CD quotes from Walsh 1864--5, p. 215. - +
- f14 5061.f14
William Whewell, an acquaintance of CD's since his undergraduate days at Cambridge, had died on 6 March 1866 (DNB). Walsh had been a student and fellow at Trinity College, Cambridge, while Whewell was fellow and junior tutor there (Alum. Cantab.). - +
- f15 5061.f15
CD refers to George Howard Darwin. See letter to J. D. Hooker, [16 April 1866] and n. 3.