Darwin, C. R. to Müller, J. F. T.
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Thanks for information on orchids
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and facts on coastal flora and fauna.
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Asks FM to look out for dimorphic aquatic and marsh plants.
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Has read pamphlets "in our favour" by Carl v. Nägeli and Oscar Schmidt.
Summary Add
Transcription
Down Bromley Kent
May 23. 1866
My dear Sir
I thank you sincerely for your two letters of Mar. 6 &
Ap. 3
I am very much obliged for all the facts which you give me in your former letter on the changes in the flora & fauna in your ditches & especially on the sea coast. If ever I have strength to publish my larger work these facts will come in very useful. The only analogous facts which I have met with refer to frequent changes in the Fuci growing on the same part on our shores.
That is a singular fact of which you tell me about the male Orchestia externally like a female.
I have rec
With sincere thanks for all your kindness pray believe me | yours very truly | Ch. Darwin
P.S. I will keep safely your note on the curious Orchis & can return
it to you if you sh
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- f1 5097.f1
Müller's letter of 6 March 1866 is incomplete (see letter from Fritz Müller, 6 March 1866 and n. 1); the letter of 3 April 1866 has not been found. - +
- f2 5097.f2
Müller's account of the orchid was contained in his letter of 3 April 1866 (see n. 1, above; see also letter from Fritz Müller, 2 August 1866). He also discussed the orchid in letters to Max Johann Sigismund Schultze, 2 June 1866, and Hermann Müller, 1 July 1866; the letters are reproduced in Möller ed. 1915--21, 2: 83--4, 86--9. Müller described the orchid as similar to Cephalanthera in form and foliage but with flowers closely resembling Vanilla. He thought the flower was noteworthy in that the two stamens of the outer whorl were not merged with the labellum as CD had described (see Orchids, p. 294), but were clearly present in rudimentary form, though infertile (see Möller ed. 1915--21, 2: 84, 87). Müller did not mention Glossodia in the letters to Schultze and Hermann Müller. - +
- f3 5097.f3
Hermann Crüger had argued that the `production and multiplication of vascular cords and their distribution' was related to `physiologic activity' (Crüger 1864, p. 132), and cast doubt on CD's claim in Orchids, p. 290, that tracing the spiral vessels of orchids could help determine the homologies of the parts relative to other flowers. CD added a reference to Crüger 1864 to Orchids 2d ed., p. 235, while maintaining his former claim. - +
- f4 5097.f4
The drawings have not been found. - +
- f5 5097.f5
See letter from Fritz Müller, 6 March 1866. - +
- f6 5097.f6
The `larger work' was presumably the `second work' referred to in Variation 1: 4, in which CD planned to `discuss the variability of organic beings in a state of nature'. This work was never written. - +
- f7 5097.f7
Fucus is a genus of seaweed with species known to occur in all three intertidal zones. CD had written about the geographical range of F. giganteus in Journal of researches, p. 304. In his `big book' on species (Natural selection, p. 284), CD quoted William Henry Harvey on environmentally induced changes in F. vesiculosus. - +
- f8 5097.f8
The information on the external similarity of the male and female forms of this amphipod must have been contained either in the missing portion of Müller's letter of 6 March 1866 or in his missing letter of 3 April 1866 (see n. 1, above). Müller had earlier discussed dimorphism in males within the genus (see F. Müller 1864c, pp. 16--17). - +
- f9 5097.f9
Müller's paper (F. Müller 1864b) was a critique of the generic diagnosis of a type of sea-pen (Pennatulacea) in the family Renilla (now Renillidae), given by John Edward Gray. Gray had proposed that the species Renilla edwardsii should be put into a new genus, which he called Herklotsia (see J. E. Gray 1860). Müller argued that Gray's diagnosis was severely flawed, partly because of the disparity between live and preserved specimens of the organism, but also because of Gray's use of inaccurate terminology (see F. Müller 1864b, p. 353). Herklotsia is now considered to be an invalid genus, and is placed in synonymy with Renilla (see Williams 1995, p. 101). Müller's paper is not in the Darwin Pamphlet Collection--CUL. - +
- f10 5097.f10
Gray was keeper of the zoological collections at the British Museum. He had facilitated CD's classificatory work on barnacles by arranging access to the museum's specimens, providing CD with his own collection, and advising him on procuring other collections (see Correspondence vol. 4, Appendix II). - +
- f11 5097.f11
Müller had prefaced his paper with a quotation from Living Cirripedia (1851), p. 216, in which CD claimed that the `inordinate multiplication of genera' destroyed `the main advantages of classification'. The statement was made in the context of a critique of Gray's adoption of generic names for four species that CD included in a single genus, Scalpellum. - +
- f12 5097.f12
Friedrich Hildebrand had written a paper on trimorphism in Oxalis that he had promised to send to CD when it was published (Hildebrand 1866c). See letter from Friedrich Hildebrand, 11 May 1866 and nn. 2 and 3, and letter to Friedrich Hildebrand, 16 May [1866] and n. 10. - +
- f13 5097.f13
CD had earlier speculated whether there might be an unusual proportion of aquatic plants with separate sexes (see Correspondence vol. 11, letter to Daniel Oliver, 20 [January 1863]). See also Forms of flowers, p. 257 n. - +
- f14 5097.f14
CD had begun preparing the fourth edition of Origin on 1 March 1866 (see CD's `Journal', Appendix II). - +
- f15 5097.f15
CD's German publisher had recently informed CD that he had asked Gustav von Leonhard to undertake the translation of the third German edition of Origin (see letter from E. Schweizerbart'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, 10 May 1866 and nn. 6 and 7). - +
- f16 5097.f16
CD refers to Oskar Schmidt and Carl Wilhelm von Nägeli, and to Schmidt and Unger 1866, pp. 3--36, and Nägeli 1865, both of which are in the Darwin Pamphlet Collection--CUL. CD's copy of Nägeli 1865 is heavily annotated and there is a partial manuscript translation, beginning on page 15, of the German text, along with a page of notes by CD, in the Darwin Pamphlet Collection--CUL. For more on Schmidt and Unger 1866, see the letter from Rudolf Suchsland, 16 April 1866 and n. 4. - +
- f17 5097.f17
CD refers to Ludwig Rütimeyer and to Müller's paper on prawns, F. Müller 1863 (translated into English as F. Müller 1864a; the modern German spelling is `Garnelen'). No reference to F. Müller 1863 has been found in any of Rütimeyer's publications. - +
- f18 5097.f18
Müller's note on the orchid was contained in the letter of 3 April 1866 (see nn. 1 and 2, above). It has not been found.