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From George Jenyns? to F. H. or J. D. Hooker?   [c. 19 April 1873?]

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Summary

Recipient is to stay with CD;

sender relates some observations of dogs and birds, to be passed on to CD.

Author:  George Leonard Jenyns
Addressee:  Joseph Dalton Hooker; Frances Harriet Henslow; Frances Harriet Hooker
Date:  [c. 19 Apr 1873?]
Classmark:  DAR 159: 142
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-8707
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5 Items

4.19 George Montbard, caricature

Summary

< Back to Introduction In this watercolour drawing by Charles Auguste Loye, who called himself George Montbard, Darwin is in a ‘Gallery of ancestors’. He is improbably pictured as a connoisseur in a sleek cut-away tail coat, training his lorgnette on…

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  • … < Back to Introduction In this watercolour drawing by Charles Auguste Loye, who …

4.52 'Wasp' caricature

Summary

< Back to Introduction Less than a fortnight after Darwin’s death, an irreverent portrayal of him appeared on the cover of a Californian satirical magazine. The Wasp, based in San Francisco, resembled the better-known New York magazine Puck in its…

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  • … 299; 8:303 (19 May 1882), p. 317; 8:310 (7 July 1882), p. 419. These are accessible online at …

Darwin in letters, 1877: Flowers and honours

Summary

Ever since the publication of Expression, Darwin’s research had centred firmly on botany. The year 1877 was no exception. The spring and early summer were spent completing Forms of flowers, his fifth book on a botanical topic. He then turned to the…

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  • … meaning of heterostyled flowers’ (‘Recollections’, p. 419). During the winter and spring, Darwin was …

St George Jackson Mivart

Summary

In the second half of 1874, Darwin’s peace was disturbed by an anonymous article in the Quarterly Review suggesting that his son George was opposed to the institution of marriage and in favour of ‘unrestrained licentiousness’. Darwin suspected, correctly,…

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  • … has his approval is manifest, since he tells us (p. 419): ‘one may hope’ for certain preliminary …

Darwin in letters, 1876: In the midst of life

Summary

1876 was the year in which the Darwins became grandparents for the first time.  And tragically lost their daughter-in-law, Amy, who died just days after her son's birth.  All the letters from 1876 are now published in volume 24 of The Correspondence…

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  • … noticed by ‘only a few persons’ (‘Recollections’, p. 419). Unnoticed results such as this, together …