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Darwin Correspondence Project

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Darwin Correspondence Project
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From Hugo de Vries   24 February 1879

Summary

Did not wish to imply that some leaves are insensitive to light, only that he could not measure their sensitivity. Contraction of roots seems common.

Author:  Hugo de Vries
Addressee:  Charles Robert Darwin
Date:  24 Feb 1879
Classmark:  DAR 209.3: 336
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-11900

From Anton Stecker   24 February 1879

Summary

Has not been able to complete Bohemian edition of Origin because of trip to Africa.

Is collecting zoological evidence for CD’s theory.

Author:  Anton Stecker
Addressee:  Charles Robert Darwin
Date:  24 Feb 1879
Classmark:  DAR 177: 251
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-11901
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2.24 Herbert Hampton statue, Lancaster

Summary

< Back to Introduction The monument to Queen Victoria in Dalton Square, Lancaster, is one of many late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century public projects that featured Darwin among the great men of history – often, as here, in the context of…

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  • … < Back to Introduction The monument to Queen Victoria in Dalton Square, Lancaster, is …

The Mount, Shrewsbury

Summary

Letters from home

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  • … Darwin writes in preparation for the voyage, and his father and sisters write with news from home …

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…

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  • … for a while, when he had again to lie down. ( LL 1: 224) Despite Darwin’s illness, the …

Origin: the lost changes for the second German edition

Summary

Darwin sent a list of changes made uniquely to the second German edition of Origin to its translator, Heinrich Georg Bronn.  That lost list is recreated here.

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  • … given in a future work.    Page 46, par. 2, lines 22–4, substitute for ‘but then  . . . …

Alexander von Humboldt

Summary

The phases of Charles Darwin’s career have often been defined by the books that he read, from Lyell’s Principles of Geology during the Beagle voyage to Malthus’s Essay on the Principle of Population during his London years. The book that encouraged him to…

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  • … The phases of Charles Darwin’s career have often been defined by the books that he read, from …

Darwin's health

Summary

On 28 March 1849, ten years before Origin was published, Darwin wrote to his good friend Joseph Hooker from Great Malvern in Worcestershire, where Dr James Manby Gully ran a fashionable water-cure establishment. Darwin apologised for his delayed reply to…

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  • … Charles Howard, had died of gout (see Autobiography, p. 224). Darwin discussed gout as an inherited …

Darwin and vivisection

Summary

Darwin played an important role in the controversy over vivisection that broke out in late 1874. Public debate was sparked when the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals brought an unsuccessful prosecution against a French physiologist who…

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  • … the matter ( Hansard Parliamentary Debates , 3d ser., vol. 224 (1875), col. 794). A Royal …

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…

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  • …  Translated by William Ross. London. [Abstract in DAR 91: 22–4.]  119: 4a Lesson, René …