From J. D. Hooker [26 December 1858]1
Kew
Sunday
My dear Darwin
I wish we could have a little work together— When shall we ever get to a reasonable agreement?.— I am horrified to find that you think Australian forms lower than Old World ones; because under every method of determining high & low in Botany the Australian vegetation is the highest in the world—2
- 1. The proportion of Phænog. to Cryptog is infinitely greater in Australia than elsewhere. (this as being a mere condition of climate I do not give much for)
- 2. Monocot to Dicot. are in same proportion as elsewhere.
- 3. Petaloid (& higher Monocot) are in greater ratio to Glumaceous in Australia than in Europe.
- 4 The 4 orders of Dicots considered by different systematists as highest are Compositæ, Myrtaceæ, Leguminosæ & The Ranunculaceous including Dilleniaceæ &c.— Now I believe (I have not tabulated yet)—that all these are in greater proportion & more varied & peculiar in Australia than in any other country.
- 5 Then granting with heretical JH that Conifers are highest. Phænogs—& they are as numerous & most varied.3
- 6. There are very few Monochlamydæous or Achlamydeous Dicots. in Australia.
Now I have been using your line of argument to my own purposes, in this fashion.
“Granting with Darwin, that the principle of selection tends to extermination of low forms & multiplication of high; it is easy to account for the general high developement & peculiarity of Australian forms of plants—these being the remnants of an extensive Flora of great antiquity & which covered a very extensive now destroyed Southern continent &c &c &c How often do I say all our arguments are edged swords—
Again—some Australian plants are rapidly running wild in India as Casuarina, & I believe several Acacias in Nilgherries & some other Leguminosæ.
We cannot argue any thing by contrasting the multiplication of European forms in Australia & New Zealand with the absence of the converse in England— our Spring-frosts account for the difference. In South Europe I believe various Australian forms are rapidly being naturalized. Consider too the current of export of European agricultural notions & plants to Australia & consequent alteration of conditions & that nothing of that kind comes back to Europe.
Your letter has interested me more than any you ever wrote me (because we are both ripening I hope) but it staggers me too.— It opens a much wider question upon which I have often pondered in vain—& have hoped latterly to have made more of— it is this—are we right in assuming that the developement of plants has been parallel to that of animals. I sent out a feeler in the concluding notices of my Review of ADC. where I indicate my views that Geology gives no evidence of a progression in plants.4 I do not say that this is proof of there never having been progression—that is quite a different matter—but the fact that there is less structural difference between the recognizable representatives of Coniferæ, Cycadeæ, Lycopodiaceæ &c &c & Dicots of Chalk & those of present day, than between the animals of those periods & their living representatives, appears to me a very remarkable fact & one that must enter into all our
CD annotations
Footnotes
Bibliography
Candolle, Alphonse de. 1855. Géographie botanique raisonnée ou exposition des faits principaux et des lois concernant la distribution géographique des plantes de l’époque actuelle. 2 vols. Paris: Victor Mason. Geneva: J. Kessmann.
Correspondence: The correspondence of Charles Darwin. Edited by Frederick Burkhardt et al. 29 vols to date. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1985–.
Summary
JDH cannot abide CD’s connection of wide-ranging species and "highness". Australian flora contradicts this in many ways.
Letter details
- Letter no.
- DCP-LETT-2385
- From
- Joseph Dalton Hooker
- To
- Charles Robert Darwin
- Sent from
- Kew
- Source of text
- DAR 100: 125–6
- Physical description
- inc †
Please cite as
Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 2385,” accessed on 26 September 2022, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-2385.xml
Also published in The Correspondence of Charles Darwin, vol. 7