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Darwin Correspondence Project

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Darwin Correspondence Project
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7 Items

'An Appeal' against animal cruelty

Summary

The four-page pamphlet transcribed below and entitled 'An Appeal', was composed jointly by Emma and Charles Darwin (see letter from Emma Darwin to W. D. Fox, [29 September 1863]). The pamphlet, which protested against the cruelty of steel vermin…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … suggestions, addressed to A. B., 6 Mr. Strong, Printer, Bromley, Kent. 7   or to …
  • … ( Letter no. 4282). 7 Edward Strong was a printer and stationer with premises on High …

Darwin in letters, 1867: A civilised dispute

Summary

Charles Darwin’s major achievement in 1867 was the completion of his large work, The variation of animals and plants under domestication (Variation). The importance of Darwin’s network of correspondents becomes vividly apparent in his work on expression in…

Matches: 3 hits

  • … Selection under Domestication’. Having just received the printer’s estimate of the size of the two …
  • … month Darwin promised to send the revised manuscript to the printer as soon as he had marked out …
  • … A week later, Darwin had sent the manuscript to the printer, but without the additional chapter. In …

The Lyell–Lubbock dispute

Summary

In May 1865 a dispute arose between John Lubbock and Charles Lyell when Lubbock, in his book Prehistoric times, accused Lyell of plagiarism. The dispute caused great dismay among many of their mutual scientific friends, some of whom took immediate action…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … note, and within a few days told Huxley that he had sent the printer his manuscript of the addition …
  • … for proofs of the revised preface and note to go to the printer. The instructions for the printer

John Lort Stokes

Summary

John Lort Stokes, naval officer, was Charles Darwin’s cabinmate on the Beagle voyage – not always an enviable position.  After Darwin’s death, Stokes penned a description of their evenings spent working at the large table at the centre, Stokes at his…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … left the letter among the pages when they went back to the printer, and somehow the letter made …

Darwin in letters, 1851-1855: Death of a daughter

Summary

The letters from these years reveal the main preoccupations of Darwin’s life with a new intensity. The period opens with a family tragedy in the death of Darwin’s oldest and favourite daughter, Anne, and it shows how, weary and mourning his dead child,…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … proofs of the last barnacle volume had been returned to the printer, he threw himself into new and …

Journal of researches

Summary

Within two months of the Beagle’s arrival back in England in October 1836, Darwin, although busy with distributing his specimens among specialists for description, and more interested in working on his geological research, turned his mind to the task of…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … told Fox. Proofs Since books were sent to the printer in sections, Darwin still had a …

Orchids

Summary

Why Orchids? Darwin  wrote in his Autobiography, ‘During the summer of 1839, and, I believe, during the previous summer, I was led to attend to the cross-fertilisation of flowers by the aid of insects, from having come to the conclusion in my…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … was a male Cycnoches (swan orchid), with which the printer was evidently unfamiliar since the …
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