From Joseph Simms 14 September 1874
Summary
Sends copy of one of his books.
Asks for drawing of CD’s right foot.
Author: | Joseph Simms |
Addressee: | Charles Robert Darwin |
Date: | 14 Sept 1874 |
Classmark: | DAR 177: 164 |
Letter no: | DCP-LETT-9637 |
Matches: 1 hit
- … for you, and it is this. While I was travelling in Germany I often heard it from …
To F. C. Donders 7 July 1874
Summary
Asks about the effect of atropine on the eye. Is interested in parallel case: influence of phosphate of ammonia on glands of Drosera.
Author: | Charles Robert Darwin |
Addressee: | Frans Cornelis (Franciscus Cornelius) Donders |
Date: | 7 July 1874 |
Classmark: | DAR 143: 417 |
Letter no: | DCP-LETT-9535 |
Matches: 1 hit
- … Darwin had met Donders in Utrecht while travelling in Europe ( letter from Emma Darwin to …
From J. V. Carus 7 July 1874
Summary
Thanks for proofs [of Descent, 2d English ed.].
Publisher would like better photographs for Expression [2d German ed.].
Author: | Julius Victor Carus |
Addressee: | Charles Robert Darwin |
Date: | 7 July 1874 |
Classmark: | DAR 161: 96 |
Letter no: | DCP-LETT-9536 |
Matches: 1 hit
- … George Howard Darwin was travelling in Europe. CD had asked Carus whether he could provide …
To Edward Frankland 31 August 1874
Summary
Utricularia catch freshwater Crustaceans, which cannot be digested and rot in the bladders. CD is interested to identify any substance produced in the putrefaction before it is resolved into gases and salts of ammonia. He has reason to believe that the plant absorbs such products.
Author: | Charles Robert Darwin |
Addressee: | Edward Frankland |
Date: | 31 Aug 1874 |
Classmark: | The John Rylands Library, The University of Manchester |
Letter no: | DCP-LETT-9614A |
Matches: 1 hit
- … had not answered CD’s letter because he was travelling in Europe (see letter from Edward …
To Leonard Darwin 25 November 1874
Summary
LD’s letter recalled old scenes on board the Beagle.
CD’s "bothering correspondents" seem to increase in number and in folly; has just answered "two precious fools".
Has been working very hard on Droseraceae and can "now see daylight".
Author: | Charles Robert Darwin |
Addressee: | Leonard Darwin |
Date: | 25 Nov 1874 |
Classmark: | DAR 153: 91 |
Letter no: | DCP-LETT-9733 |
Matches: 1 hit
- … February – 1 March 1832 ). Leonard was travelling to New Zealand as part of the scientific …
To Charles Lyell 23 September 1874
Summary
Discusses paper on volcanoes by J. W. Judd.
Comments on volcanoes of the S. American Cordillera.
Mentions paper by T. F. Jamieson ["Glacial period in N. Britain", Q. J. Geol. Soc. Lond. 30 (1874): 317–18].
Author: | Charles Robert Darwin |
Addressee: | Charles Lyell, 1st baronet |
Date: | 23 Sept 1874 |
Classmark: | American Philosophical Society (Mss.B.D25.450) |
Letter no: | DCP-LETT-9654 |
Matches: 1 hit
- … Lyell had been travelling in Scotland ( letter from Charles Lyell, 1 September 1874 ). …
From Ernst Haeckel 26 October 1874
Summary
Thanks CD for Descent, 2d ed.
Comments on German edition of CD’s collected works.
Sales of his Anthropogenie [1874] in various countries.
Anticlericalism and progress of Darwinism in Germany.
Author: | Ernst Philipp August (Ernst) Haeckel |
Addressee: | Charles Robert Darwin |
Date: | 26 Oct 1874 |
Classmark: | DAR 166: 62 |
Letter no: | DCP-LETT-9698 |
Matches: 1 hit
- … I arrived back here after two months of travelling (in Tyrolia and Switzerland), and found …
From Alfred Newton 10 March 1874
Summary
Questions correctness of two statements in Origin: 1. That fulmar petrels are the most numerous birds in the world;
2. That the increase of one form of thrush in Scotland has been concomitant with the decline of another form.
Author: | Alfred Newton |
Addressee: | Charles Robert Darwin |
Date: | 10 Mar 1874 |
Classmark: | DAR 172: 49 |
Letter no: | DCP-LETT-9348 |
Matches: 1 hit
- … to Iceland in 1858 and again in 1864, when travelling to Spitzbergen (see Wollaston 1921 , …
letter | (8) |
Darwin, C. R. | (4) |
Carus, J. V. | (1) |
Haeckel, Ernst | (1) |
Newton, Alfred | (1) |
Simms, Joseph | (1) |
Darwin, C. R. | (4) |
Darwin, Leonard | (1) |
Donders, F. C. | (1) |
Frankland, Edward | (1) |
Lyell, Charles | (1) |
Darwin, C. R. | (8) |
Carus, J. V. | (1) |
Darwin, Leonard | (1) |
Donders, F. C. | (1) |
Frankland, Edward | (1) |
Darwin’s earthquakes
Summary
Darwin experienced his first earthquake in 1834, but it was a few months later that he was really confronted with their power. Travelling north along the coast of Chile, Darwin and Robert FitzRoy, captain of HMS Beagle, were confronted with a series of…
Matches: 3 hits
- … months later that he was really confronted with their power. Travelling north along the coast of …
- … phenomena, began to conceive a grand geological theory. Travelling inland, Darwin concluded that all …
- … he made and the mineral samples he collected. Travelling on from South America and crossing …
Alfred Russel Wallace
Summary
Wallace was a leading Victorian naturalist, with wide-ranging interests from biogeography and evolutionary theory to spiritualism and politics. He was born in 1823 in Usk, a small town in south-east Wales, and attended a grammar school in Hertford. At the…
Matches: 1 hits
- … year started work as a land surveyor with another brother, travelling to different parts of England …
Darwin’s introduction to geology
Summary
Darwin collected minerals as a child and was introduced to the science of geology at the University of Edinburgh, but he only became actively interested in the subject as he was completing his degree at Cambridge.
Matches: 1 hits
- … Stevens Henslow, Darwin became fascinated by the thought of travelling to the tropics in emulation …
Marianne North
Summary
Marianne North was born in Hastings where her father became a Liberal MP. Her family supported Marianne’s attempts at singing and painting as suitable activities for a Victorian lady. After her parents died, Marianne sold the family home and began…
Matches: 1 hits
- … her parents died, Marianne sold the family home and began travelling with the aim of painting the …
Arthur Mellersh
Summary
Arthur Mellersh was a midshipman (promoted to mate during the voyage) serving on the Beagle at the time when Darwin was travelling around the world. One account suggests an inauspicious start to their friendship; apparently Mellersh introduced himself…
Matches: 1 hits
- … serving on the Beagle at the time when Darwin was travelling around the world. One account …
Frances Power Cobbe
Summary
Cobbe was born in Dublin, Ireland, and educated at home, at Newbridge House, county Dublin, except for two years at a school in Brighton: she hated the school. After she left, she kept house for her mother and father, and after her mother's death for…
Matches: 1 hits
- … brother inherited the house). She spent some time travelling, then returned to England and …
Darwin in letters, 1844–1846: Building a scientific network
Summary
The scientific results of the Beagle voyage still dominated Darwin's working life, but he broadened his continuing investigations into the nature and origin of species. Far from being a recluse, Darwin was at the heart of British scientific society,…
Matches: 1 hits
- … naturalist at the heart of British scientific society, travelling often to London and elsewhere to …
Florence Caroline Dixie
Summary
On October 29th 1880, Lady Florence Dixie wrote a letter to Charles Darwin from her home in the Scottish Borders; “Whilst reading the other day your very interesting account of A Naturalist’s Voyage round the world,” she said, “I came across a passage…of…
Matches: 1 hits
- … previous year Lady Florence Dixie had spent six months travelling around Patagonia where she had …
Fritz Müller
Summary
Fritz Müller, a German who spent most of his life in political exile in Brazil, described Darwin as his second father, and Darwin's son, Francis, wrote that, although they never met 'the correspondence with Müller, which continued to the close of…
Matches: 2 hits
- … in government, Müller was appointed to the position of travelling naturalist for the national musem …
- … Janiero, a move that resulted in the wholesale dismissal of travelling naturalists. He refused …
Visiting the Darwins
Summary
'As for Mr Darwin, he is entirely fascinating…' In October 1868 Jane Gray and her husband spent several days as guests of the Darwins, and Jane wrote a charming account of the visit in a sixteen-page letter to her sister. She described Charles…
Matches: 2 hits
- … from a journey in Switzerland with Miss Bonham Carter, travelling alone, no doubt to the surprise of …
- … from a journey in Switzerland with Miss Bonham Carter, travelling alone, no doubt to the surprise of …
4.16 Joseph Simms, physiognomy
Summary
< Back to Introduction In September 1874, the American doctor Joseph Simms, then on a three-year lecture tour of Britain, sent Darwin a copy of his book, Nature’s Revelations of Character; Or, Physiognomy Illustrated. He was seeking a public…
Matches: 1 hits
- … a naively patronising ‘compliment’: ‘While I was travelling in Germany I often heard it from …
Dining at Down House
Summary
Sources|Discussion Questions|Experiment Dining, Digestion, and Darwin's Domestic Life While Darwin is best remembered for his scientific accomplishments, he greatly valued and was strongly influenced by his domestic life. Darwin's…
Matches: 1 hits
- … In this chatty letter to her daughter Henrietta, who was travelling in the south of France at the …
Books on the Beagle
Summary
The Beagle was a sort of floating library. Find out what Darwin and his shipmates read here.
Matches: 1 hits
- … was used almost exclusively in the field notebooks when travelling ashore. On board, or when he was …
Volume 28 (1880) now published
Summary
1880 opened and closed with an irksome controversy with Samuel Butler, prompted by the publication of Erasmus Darwin the previous year. Darwin became fully devoted to earthworms in the spring of the year, just after finishing the manuscript of Movement in…
Matches: 1 hits
- … Darwin admitted that he suffered very much from cold when travelling: ‘The coat, however, will never …
Rewriting Origin - the later editions
Summary
For such an iconic work, the text of Origin was far from static. It was a living thing that Darwin continued to shape for the rest of his life, refining his ‘one long argument’ through a further five English editions. Many of his changes were made in…
Matches: 1 hits
- … response to discussions with Henry Walter Bates, friend and travelling companion of Alfred Russel …
Darwin in letters, 1879: Tracing roots
Summary
Darwin spent a considerable part of 1879 in the eighteenth century. His journey back in time started when he decided to publish a biographical account of his grandfather Erasmus Darwin to accompany a translation of an essay on Erasmus’s evolutionary ideas…
Matches: 1 hits
- … Francis Darwin, [before 31 July 1879] ). Darwin advised travelling by train, although it took eight …
Darwin in letters, 1865: Delays and disappointments
Summary
The year was marked by three deaths of personal significance to Darwin: Hugh Falconer, a friend and supporter; Robert FitzRoy, captain of the Beagle; and William Jackson Hooker, director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and father of Darwin’s friend…
Matches: 1 hits
- … was evidently attending school, and spent some time travelling in Europe (Emma Darwin’s diary (DAR …
Darwin in letters, 1871: An emptying nest
Summary
The year 1871 was an extremely busy and productive one for Darwin, with the publication in February of his long-awaited book on human evolution, Descent of man. The other main preoccupation of the year was the preparation of his manuscript on expression.…
Matches: 1 hits
- … and the boys were away from August to October 1871, travelling from Boston to Niagara Falls to the …
Darwin in letters,1866: Survival of the fittest
Summary
The year 1866 began well for Charles Darwin, as his health, after several years of illness, was now considerably improved. In February, Darwin received a request from his publisher, John Murray, for a new edition of Origin. Darwin got the fourth…
Matches: 1 hits
- … the distraction of the British public with ‘gaieties travelling & War Bulletins’ ( letter from …
Darwin’s reading notebooks
Summary
In April 1838, Darwin began recording the titles of books he had read and the books he wished to read in Notebook C (Notebooks, pp. 319–28). In 1839, these lists were copied and continued in separate notebooks. The first of these reading notebooks (DAR 119…
Matches: 2 hits
- … Sydney Smith life [S. Smith 1855] Galtons Art of Travelling [Galton 1855] March 13 th …
- … 119: 11a ——. 1759. An oration concerning travelling in one’s own country. In Stillingfleet, …