From J. D. Hooker 29 March 1864
Royal Gardens Kew
March 29/64.
Dear Darwin
I am delighted to hear of the blessed 52 hours immunity from Sickness,1 & am buoyed up with the hope of soon being able to run down & seeing you, which I am able to do at any time—but not till you can entirely stand seeing me for a few minutes.
I have heard nothing of Scott’s leaving the Edh. Bot Gardens—2 his election for L.S. cannot come in I believe till next year, as we elect only one a year, when the time comes I will let you know & ask you for half a dozen lines apropos addressed to the Council.3
It is all settled that Jn. Smith of Sion shall succeed Jn. Smith of Kew4—but the lazy Treasury have not yet settled the pension for old Smith, which they have had 3 months to think over. They propose to give the new man £180, rising by 10 annually to £250 & house.— We have seen a good deal of him & are vastly pleased with him— My only fear is his breaking down— he is one of those thorough characters who will neglect nothing & try too much at once.
I go to Isle of Wight tomorrow with Charlie to meet Tyndall & return on Saturday, my chief object is to take Charlie away whilst Willie comes home for the rest his holiday.—5 We had to send the poor boy off on arrival last week to St. Albans to a friend to take care of him! I was near seeing your boys on Sunday, at old Wards with whom I dined, & who would have asked the boys but they had gone home.6 I must ask your Willy7 to come to me when we are settled again.
I think Huxley had much better have let the Anthropologicals alone— it was a vicious undignified response of his, which did him harm.8 I entirely agree about old Jukes, I quite warmed to his letter & his side.9 Falconer is one of the 2 classes of Scotchmen that Crawfurd distinguishes as “Scotsman”—& “d——d Scotsman”—10 There are two most curiously antagonistic sides to his character. I cannot approve either his or Prestwiches conduct to themselves or or one-another or to Lyell—nor can I accord to Falconer the credit he demands as a great discoverer in this bone cave affair—nor to Prestwich the credit F. gives him of being a great philosophic Geologist—11 I suppose you have seen Prestwichs resume of his R. Inst. lecture—12 I utterly disbelieve his whole theory of River & Ice being the causes— the total length of these wonderful rivers which, according to him, covered many hundreds of square miles with 30–60 ft of deposits, at elevations of 1–300 ft. above the present river bottoms,—& which transported tons of sandstone on ice, was 50 miles13—& he quotes my note on the floods of the Soane in corroboration—not reflecting that the Soane drains a county equal to all France & is fed by tropical rains, & that it does not give rise to similar deposits either.14 Then all his reasoning anent man & the Quaternary period is weak as water—neither absolutely false, nor well made out.15 I agree with you as to Prestwich’s value as a geological observer &c methodizer of difficult strata &c but doubt at his powers of abstract reasoning & generalization—16 I think his Loess is a myth, & feel confident that the deposits of the Somme valley are comparable as to origin & age with those of the Norfolk coast—& that a tidal ocean in a glacial period had most to do with them both.17 But these Cave discoveries half way up the Rock of: Gibraltar18 must modify extensively all our views of the outline & condition of Europe during the early period of man’s history: & it now becomes most important to know what was its configuration before 30 feet of deposits were heaped up over the works of man & spread over so large an area of N. France. that the existing rivers terraced the valleys as we now find them I quite believe, but not that they first spread this enormous deposit over both the hills & valleys.
I know nothing of Blyth nor where he intends to take up his quarters.— unfortunately he drinks.19
Owens Lecture is published but I have not seen it,20 I will enquire about it.
Siphomeris is a synonym of Lecontea—Rubiaceæ the species is a nondescript.21
Thanks many for A Grays letter— how doucely he takes the changed aspect of affairs.22
I am very glad that you have had Jenners opinion, he seems to be an extraordinarily able man— glad enough I am that he finds nothing organic the matter—23
As to Veitch we find him the closest-fisted fellow we have anything to do with—24 he sends to us for any plant he & the trade have not in cultivation, & sells it at enormous prices & professing to give us in exchange—he sends the shabbiest morsels imaginable— if he sends a plant to be figured in Bot Mag. he mutilates it lest we should grow it!—25 My Father treated his son when he went to Japan,26 like his own, got him an autograph circular from Lord John Russell to the powers that be27—& gave him private letters to all his correspondents: besides giving him Botanical outfit &c.—but he has not had the grace even to call on my father since his return, nor given him a dried plant for his collection or live one for the Garden or pine-cone for the Museum.— Yet he perpetually sends me plants to name! I am very glad that the father treats you better than us, his is the only firm of nurserymen who we do not get on with.
I surely told you that Vanilla climbs by rootlets alone.28 I do not think that it even twists its shoots—but will look.
I will look to Nepenthes if I can.29 You have it I suppose.
We are all pretty well—& have no news— I like the Reader much, but am hard up for a weekly political paper, I gave up the London Review when it began to snuffle to the low X,30 & look to the Spectator, which I now abominate; it is as unfair as the Athenæum unscrupulous as the Times & wrong as the Saturday—31 We have no paper like the old Spectator in Rintouls time.32
I have letters from Hector talking of the “glacier origin of all the W. Coast valleys.”33 I think Jukes & Ramsay carry glacial action much too far.34
Did I tell you that the Pinus peuce found on one solitary mountain of Western Macedonia being the famous P. excelsa of Himalaya35—the most wonderful case of an outlier on record—as the P. excelsa is not found W. of Affghanistan.
I wish you would tell me if ever you happen to know of Godfrey Wedgwood coming to Town, I want his help to decipher some dates of my wedgwood— his father has been excessively kind, & I dread trespassing on his kindness36
Ever yr affec | J D Hooker
CD annotations
Footnotes
Bibliography
Brandon-Jones, Christine. 1997. Edward Blyth, Charles Darwin, and the animal trade in nineteenth-century India and Britain. Journal of the History of Biology 30: 145–78.
Busk, George. 1864. On a very ancient human cranium from Gibraltar. Report of the thirty-fourth meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, held at Bath, Transactions of the sections, pp. 91–2.
Coats, Alice Margaret. 1969. The quest for plants. A history of the horticultural explorers. London: Studio Vista.
Correspondence: The correspondence of Charles Darwin. Edited by Frederick Burkhardt et al. 29 vols to date. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1985–.
Desmond, Ray. 1995. Kew: the history of the Royal Botanic Gardens. London: Harvill Press with the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
DNB: Dictionary of national biography. Edited by Leslie Stephen and Sidney Lee. 63 vols. and 2 supplements (6 vols.). London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1912. Dictionary of national biography 1912–90. Edited by H. W. C. Davis et al. 9 vols. London: Oxford University Press. 1927–96.
DNZB: A dictionary of New Zealand biography. Edited by G. H. Scholefield. 2 vols. Wellington, New Zealand: Department of Internal Affairs. 1940. The dictionary of New Zealand biography. Edited by W. H. Oliver et al. 5 vols. Auckland and Wellington, New Zealand: Department of Internal Affairs [and others]. 1990–2000.
Falconer, Hugh. 1868. Palæontological memoirs and notes of the late Hugh Falconer … with a biographical sketch of the author. Compiled and edited by Charles Murchison. 2 vols. London: Robert Hardwicke.
Freeman, Richard Broke. 1978. Charles Darwin: a companion. Folkestone, Kent: William Dawson & Sons. Hamden, Conn.: Archon Books, Shoe String Press.
North, John S. 1997. The Waterloo directory of English newspapers and periodicals, 1800–1900. 10 vols. Waterloo, Ontario: North Waterloo Academic Press.
Prestwich, Joseph. 1864. On the Quaternary flint implements of Abbeville, Amiens, Hoxne, &c., their geological position and history. [Read February 26 1864.] Proceedings of the Royal Institution of Great Britain 4 (1862–6): 213–22.
Summary
John Scott’s career.
Huxley’s vicious attack on anthropologists.
Critique of Joseph Prestwich’s theory of rivers.
Bitter feelings between the Hookers and the Veitch family of nurserymen.
Letter details
- Letter no.
- DCP-LETT-4439
- From
- Joseph Dalton Hooker
- To
- Charles Robert Darwin
- Sent from
- Kew
- Source of text
- DAR 101: 193–7
- Physical description
- ALS 10pp †
Please cite as
Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 4439,” accessed on 11 October 2024, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-4439.xml
Also published in The Correspondence of Charles Darwin, vol. 12