首页 >出版文学> The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin>第35章
  Yoursverysincerely,C。DARWIN。
  P。S。——HereafterIshallbeparticularlycurioustohearwhatyouthinkofmyexplanationofEmbryologicalsimilarity。OnclassificationIfearweshallsplit。DidyouperceivetheargumentumadhominemHuxleyaboutkangarooandbear?
  ERASMUSDARWIN(Hisbrother。)TOCHARLESDARWIN。
  November23rd[1859]。
  DearCharles,Iamsomuchweakerinthehead,thatIhardlyknowifIcanwrite,butatalleventsIwilljotdownafewthingsthattheDr。(Dr。,afterwardsSirHenryHolland。)hassaid。Hehasnotreadmuchabovehalf,soashesayshecangivenodefiniteconclusion,anditismyprivatebeliefhewishestoremaininthatstate……Heisevidentlyinadreadfulstateofindecision,andkeepsstatingthatheisnottieddowntoeitherview,andthathehasalwaysleftanescapebythewayhehasspokenofvarieties。I
  happenedtospeakoftheeyebeforehehadreadthatpart,andittookawayhisbreath——utterlyimpossible——structure,function,etc。,etc。,etc。,butwhenhehadreadithehummedandhawed,andperhapsitwaspartlyconceivable,andthenhefellbackonthebonesoftheear,whichwerebeyondallprobabilityorconceivability。Hementionedaslightblot,whichIalsoobserved,thatinspeakingoftheslave—antscarryingoneanother,youchangethespecieswithoutgivingnoticefirst,anditmakesoneturnback……FormyselfIreallythinkitisthemostinterestingbookIeverread,andcanonlycompareittothefirstknowledgeofchemistry,gettingintoanewworldorratherbehindthescenes。Tomethegeographicaldistribution,Imeantherelationofislandstocontinents,isthemostconvincingoftheproofs,andtherelationoftheoldestformstotheexistingspecies。IdaresayIdon’tfeelenoughtheabsenceofvarieties,butthenIdon’tintheleastknowifeverythingnowlivingwerefossilizedwhetherthepaleontologistscoulddistinguishthem。Infacttheapriorireasoningissoentirelysatisfactorytomethatifthefactswon’tfitin,whysomuchtheworseforthefactsismyfeeling。MyaguehasleftmeinsuchastateoftorpiditythatIwishIhadgonethroughtheprocessofnaturalselection。
  Yoursaffectionately,E。A。D。
  CHARLESDARWINTOC。LYELL。
  Ilkley,November[24th,1859]。
  MydearLyell,AgainIhavetothankyouforamostvaluablelotofcriticismsinaletterdated22nd。
  ThismorningIheardalsofromMurraythathesoldthewholeedition(Firstedition,1250copies。)thefirstdaytothetrade。Hewantsaneweditioninstantly,andthisutterlyconfoundsme。Now,underwater—cure,withallnervouspowerdirectedtotheskin,Icannotpossiblydohead—work,andI
  mustmakeonlyactuallynecessarycorrections。ButIwill,asfarasIcanwithoutmymanuscript,takeadvantageofyoursuggestions:Imustnotattemptmuch。WillyousendmeonelinetosaywhetherImuststrikeoutaboutthesecondarywhale(Thepassagewasomittedinthesecondedition。),itgoestomyheart。Abouttherattle—snake,looktomyJournal,underTrigonocephalus,andyouwillseetheprobableoriginoftherattle,andgenerallyintransitionsitisthepremierpasquicoute。
  MadameBellocwantstotranslatemybookintoFrench;IhaveofferedtolookoverproofsforSCIENTIFICerrors。Didyoueverhearofher?I
  believeMurrayhasagreedatmyurgentadvice,butIfearIhavebeenrashandpremature。Quatrefageshaswrittentome,sayingheagreeslargelywithmyviews。Heisanexcellentnaturalist。Iampressedfortime。
  Willyougiveusonelineaboutthewhales?AgainIthankyoufornever—
  tiringadviceandassistance;Idointruthreverenceyourunselfishandpureloveoftruth。
  MydearLyell,everyours,C。DARWIN。
  [WithregardtoaFrenchtranslation,hewrotetoMr。MurrayinNovember1859:"IamEXTREMELYanxious,forthesubject’ssake(andGodknowsnotformerefame),tohavemybooktranslated;andindirectlyitsbeingknownabroadwilldogoodtotheEnglishsale。Ifitdependedonme,Ishouldagreewithoutpayment,andinstantlysendacopy,andonlybegthatshe[Mme。Belloc]wouldgetsomescientificmantolookoverthetranslation……Youmightsaythat,thoughIamaverypoorFrenchscholar,I
  coulddetectanyscientificmistake,andwouldreadovertheFrenchproofs。"
  Theproposedtranslationwasnotmade,andasecondplanfellthroughinthefollowingyear。HewrotetoM。deQuatrefages:"Thegentlemanwhowishedtotranslatemy’OriginofSpecies’hasfailedingettingapublisher。Balliere,Masson,andHachetteallrejecteditwithcontempt。
  Itwasfoolishandpresumptuousinme,hopingtoappearinaFrenchdress;
  buttheideawouldnothaveenteredmyheadhaditnotbeensuggestedtome。Itisagreatloss。ImustconsolemyselfwiththeGermaneditionwhichProf。Bronnisbringingout。"(SeeletterstoBronn,page70。)
  AsentenceinanotherlettertoM。deQuatrefagesshowshowanxioushewastoconvertoneofthegreatestofcontemporaryZoologists:"HowIshouldliketoknowwhetherMilneEdwardshadreadthecopywhichIsenthim,andwhetherhethinksIhavemadeaprettygoodcaseonoursideofthequestion。ThereisnonaturalistintheworldforwhoseopinionIhavesoprofoundarespect。OfcourseIamnotsosillyastoexpecttochangehisopinion。"]
  CHARLESDARWINTOC。LYELL。
  Ilkley,[November26th,1859]。
  MydearLyell,Ihavereceivedyourletterofthe24th。Itisnousetryingtothankyou;
  yourkindnessisbeyondthanks。Iwillcertainlyleaveoutthewhaleandbear……
  Theeditionwas1250copies。WhenIwasinspirits,Isometimesfanciedthatmybookwouldbesuccessful,butIneverevenbuiltacastleintheairofsuchsuccessasithasmetwith;Idonotmeanthesale,buttheimpressionithasmadeonyou(whomIhavealwayslookedataschiefjudge)
  andHookerandHuxley。Thewholehasinfinitelyexceededmywildesthopes。
  Farewell,Iamtired,forIhavebeengoingoverthesheets。
  Mykindfriend,farewell,yours,C。DARWIN。
  CHARLESDARWINTOC。LYELL。
  Ilkley,Yorkshire,December2nd[1859]。
  MydearLyell,Everynotewhichyouhavesentmehasinterestedmemuch。PraythankLadyLyellforherremark。Inthechapterssherefersto,Iwasunabletomodifythepassageinaccordancewithyoursuggestion;butinthefinalchapterIhavemodifiedthreeorfour。Kingsley,inanote(Theletterisgivenbelow)tome,hadacapitalparagraphonsuchnotionsasminebeingNOTopposedtoahighconceptionoftheDeity。Ihaveinserteditasanextractfromalettertomefromacelebratedauthoranddivine。Ihaveputinaboutnascentorgans。IhadthegreatestdifficultyinpartiallymakingoutSedgwick’sletter,andIdaresayIdidgreatlyunderrateitsclearness。DowhatIcould,IfearIshallbegreatlyabused。InanswertoSedgwick’sremarkthatmybookwouldbe"mischievous,"Iaskedhimwhethertruthcanbeknownexceptbybeingvictoriousoverallattacks。
  Butitisnouse。H。C。Watsontellsmethatonezoologistsayshewillreadmybook,"butIwillneverbelieveit。"Whataspirittoreadanybookin!Crawfordwritestomethathisnotice(JohnCrawford,orientalist,ethnologist,etc。,1783—1868。Thereviewappearedinthe"Examiner",and,thoughhostile,isfreefrombigotry,asthefollowingcitationwillshow:"Wecannothelpsayingthatpietymustbefastidiousindeedthatobjectstoatheorythetendencyofwhichistoshowthatallorganicbeings,manincluded,areinaperpetualprogressofamelioration,andthatisexpoundedinthereverentiallanguagewhichwehavequoted。")
  willbehostile,butthat"hewillnotcalumniatetheauthor。"Hesayshehasreadmybook,"atleastsuchpartsashecouldunderstand。"Hesentmesomenotesandsuggestions(quiteunimportant),andtheyshowmethatI
  haveunavoidablydoneharmtothesubject,bypublishinganabstract。HeisarealPallasian;nearlyallourdomesticracesdescendedfromamultitudeofwildspeciesnowcommingled。IexpectedMurchisontobeoutrageous。Howlittlehecouldeverhavegrappledwiththesubjectofdenudation!Howsingularsogreatageologistshouldhavesounphilosophicalamind!Ihavehadseveralnotesfrom——,verycivilandlessdecided。Saysheshallnotpronounceagainstmewithoutmuchreflection,PERHAPSWILLSAYNOTHINGonthesubject。X。says——willgotothatpartofhell,whichDantetellsusisappointedforthosewhoareneitheronGod’ssidenoronthatofthedevil。
  IfullybelievethatIowethecomfortofthenextfewyearsofmylifetoyourgeneroussupport,andthatofaveryfewothers。IdonotthinkIambraveenoughtohavestoodbeingodiouswithoutsupport;nowIfeelasboldasalion。ButthereisonethingIcanseeImustlearn,viz。,tothinklessofmyselfandmybook。Farewell,withcordialthanks。
  Yoursmosttruly,C。DARWIN。
  Ireturnhomeonthe7th,andshallsleepatErasmus’s。Iwillcallonyouaboutteno’clock,onThursday,the8th,andsitwithyou,asIhavesooftensat,duringyourbreakfast。
  IwishtherewasanychanceofPrestwichbeingshaken;butIfearheistoomuchofacatastrophist。
  [InDecemberthereappearedin’Macmillan’sMagazine’anarticle,"TimeandLife,"byProfessorHuxley。Itismainlyoccupiedbyananalysisoftheargumentofthe’Origin,’butitalsogivesthesubstanceofalecturedeliveredattheRoyalInstitutionbeforethatbookwaspublished。
  ProfessorHuxleyspokestronglyinfavourofevolutioninhisLecture,andexplainsthatinsodoinghewastoagreatextentrestingonaknowledgeof"thegeneraltenoroftheresearchesinwhichMr。Darwinhadbeensolongengaged,"andwassupportedinsodoingbyhisperfectconfidenceinhisknowledge,perseverance,and"high—mindedloveoftruth。"MyfatherwasevidentlydeeplypleasedbyMr。Huxley’swords,andwrote:
  "Imustthankyouforyourextremelykindnoticeofmybookin’Macmillan。’
  Noonecouldreceiveamoredelightfulandhonourablecompliment。IhadnotheardofyourLecture,owingtomyretiredlife。Youattributemuchtoomuchtomefromourmutualfriendship。Youhaveexplainedmyleadingideawithadmirableclearness。Whatagiftyouhaveofwriting(ormoreproperly)thinkingclearly。"]
  CHARLESDARWINTOW。B。CARPENTER。
  Ilkley,Yorkshire,December3rd[1859]。
  MydearCarpenter,Iamperfectlydelightedatyourletter。Itisagreatthingtohavegotagreatphysiologistonourside。Isay"our"forwearenowagoodandcompactbodyofreallygoodmen,andmostlynotoldmen。Inthelongrunweshallconquer。Idonotlikebeingabused,butIfeelthatIcannowbearit;and,asItoldLyell,Iamwellconvincedthatitisthefirstoffenderwhoreapstherichharvestofabuse。YouhavedoneanessentialkindnessincheckingtheodiumtheologicumintheE。R。(ThismustrefertoCarpenter’scritiquewhichwouldnowhavebeenreadytoappearintheJanuarynumberofthe"EdinburghReview",1860,andinwhichtheodiumtheologicumisreferredto。)Itmuchpainsallone’sfemalerelationsandinjuresthecause。
  Ilookatitasimmaterialwhetherwegoquitethesamelengths;andI
  suspect,judgingfrommyself,thatyouwillgofurther,bythinkingofapopulationofformslikeOrnithorhyncus,andbythinkingofthecommonhomologicalandembryologicalstructureoftheseveralvertebrateorders。
  Butthisisimmaterial。Iquiteagreethattheprincipleiseverything。
  InmyfullerMS。Ihavediscussedagoodmanyinstincts;buttherewillsurelybemoreunfilledgapsherethanwithcorporealstructure,forwehavenofossilinstincts,andknowscarcelyanyexceptofEuropeananimals。
  WhenIreflecthowveryslowlyIcameroundmyself,IamintruthastonishedatthecandourshownbyLyell,Hooker,Huxley,andyourself。Inmyopinionitisgrand。Ithankyoucordiallyfortakingthetroubleofwritingareviewforthe’National。’GodknowsIshallhavefewenoughinanydegreefavourable。(SeealettertoDr。Carpenterbelow。)
  CHARLESDARWINTOC。LYELL。
  Saturday[December5th,1859]……IhavehadaletterfromCarpenterthismorning。Hereviewsmeinthe’National。’Heisaconvert,butdoesnotgoquitesofarasI,butquitefarenough,forheadmitsthatallbirdsarefromoneprogenitor,andprobablyallfishesandreptilesfromanotherparent。Butthelastmouthfulchokeshim。Hecanhardlyadmitallvertebratesfromoneparent。
  HewillsurelycometothisfromHomologyandEmbryology。Ilookatitasgrandhavingbroughtroundagreatphysiologist,forgreatIthinkhecertainlyisinthatline。HowcuriousIshallbetoknowwhatlineOwenwilltake;deadagainstus,Ifear;buthewrotemeamostliberalnoteonthereceptionofmybook,andsaidhewasquitepreparedtoconsiderfairlyandwithoutprejudicemylineofargument。
  J。D。HOOKERTOCHARLESDARWIN。
  Kew,Monday。
  DearDarwin,Youhave,Iknow,beendrenchedwithletterssincethepublicationofyourbook,andIhavehenceforbornetoaddmymite。IhopenowthatyouarewellthroughEditionII。,andIhaveheardthatyouwereflourishinginLondon。Ihavenotyetgothalf—throughthebook,notfromwantofwill,butoftime——foritistheveryhardestbooktoread,tofullprofits,thatIevertried——itissocram—fullofmatterandreasoning。Iamallthemoregladthatyouhavepublishedinthisform,forthethreevolumes,unprefacedbythis,wouldhavechokedanyNaturalistofthenineteenthcentury,andcertainlyhavesoftenedmybrainintheoperationofassimilatingtheircontents。Iamperfectlytiredofmarvellingatthewonderfulamountoffactsyouhavebroughttobear,andyourskillinmarshallingthemandthrowingthemontheenemy;itisalsoextremelyclearasfarasIhavegone,butveryhardtofullyappreciate。SomehowitreadsverydifferentfromtheMS。,andIoftenfancyImusthavebeenverystupidnottohavemorefullyfolloweditinMS。Lyelltoldmeofhiscriticisms。
  Ididnotappreciatethemall,andtherearemanylittlemattersIhopeonedaytotalkoverwithyou。Isawahighlyflatteringnoticeinthe’EnglishChurchman,’shortandnotatallenteringintodiscussion,butpraisingyouandyourbook,andtalkingpatronizinglyofthedoctrine!……BenthamandHenslowwillstillshaketheirheadsIfancy……
  Everyoursaffectionately,JOS。D。HOOKER。
  CHARLESDARWINTOC。LYELL。
  Down,Saturday[December12th,1859]……Ihadverylonginterviewswith——,whichperhapsyouwouldliketohearabout……Iinferfromseveralexpressionsthat,atbottom,hegoesanimmensewaywithus……
  Hesaidtotheeffectthatmyexplanationwasthebesteverpublishedofthemannerofformationofspecies。IsaidIwasverygladtohearit。Hetookmeupshort:"YoumustnotatallsupposethatIagreewithyouinallrespects。"IsaidIthoughtitnomorelikelythatIshouldberightinnearlyallpoints,thanthatIshouldtossupapennyandgetheadstwentytimesrunning。Iaskedhimwhathethoughttheweakestpart。Hesaidhehadnoparticularobjectiontoanypart。Headded:——
  "IfImustcriticise,Ishouldsay,’wedonotwanttoknowwhatDarwinbelievesandisconvincedof,butwhathecanprove。’"IagreedmostfullyandtrulythatIhaveprobablygreatlysinnedinthisline,anddefendedmygenerallineofargumentofinventingatheoryandseeinghowmanyclassesoffactsthetheorywouldexplain。IaddedthatIwouldendeavourtomodifythe"believes"and"convinceds。"Hetookmeupshort:"Youwillthenspoilyourbook,thecharmof(!)itisthatitisDarwinhimself。"
  Headdedanotherobjection,thatthebookwastooteresatquerotundus———
  thatitexplainedeverything,andthatitwasimprobableinthehighestdegreethatIshouldsucceedinthis。Iquiteagreewiththisratherqueerobjection,anditcomestothisthatmybookmustbeverybadorverygood……
  Ihaveheard,byroundaboutchannel,thatHerschelsaysmybook"isthelawofhiggledy—piggledy。"WhatthisexactlymeansIdonotknow,butitisevidentlyverycontemptuous。Iftruethisisagreatblowanddiscouragement。
  CHARLESDARWINTOJOHNLUBBOCK。
  December14th[1859]……ThelatterpartofmystayatIlkleydidmemuchgood,butIsupposeI
  nevershallbestrong,fortheworkIhavehadsinceIcamebackhasknockedmeupalittlemorethanonce。Ihavebeenbusyingettingareprint(withaveryfewcorrections)throughthepress。
  MybookhasbeenasyetVERYMUCHmoresuccessfulthanIeverdreamedof:
  Murrayisnowprinting3000copies。Haveyoufinishedit?Ifso,praytellmewhetheryouarewithmeontheGENERALissue,oragainstme。Ifyouareagainstme,Iknowwellhowhonourable,fair,andcandidanopponentIshallhave,andwhichisagooddealmorethanIcansayofallmyopponents……
  Praytellmewhatyouhavebeendoing。HaveyouhadtimeforanyNaturalHistory?……
  P。S。——Ihavegot——IwishandhopeImightsaythatWEhavegot——afairnumberofexcellentmenonoursideofthequestiononthemutabilityofspecies。
  CHARLESDARWINTOJ。D。HOOKER。
  Down,December14th[1859]。
  MydearHooker,Yourapprovalofmybook,formanyreasons,givesmeintensesatisfaction;
  butImustmakesomeallowanceforyourkindnessandsympathy。Anyonewithordinaryfaculties,ifhehadPATIENCEenoughandplentyoftime,couldhavewrittenmybook。YoudonotknowhowIadmireyourandLyell’sgenerousandunselfishsympathy,Idonotbelieveeitherofyouwouldhavecaredsomuchaboutyourownwork。Mybook,asyet,hasbeenfarmoresuccessfulthanIeverevenformerlyventuredinthewildestday—dreamstoanticipate。Weshallsoonbeagoodbodyofworkingmen,andshallhave,I
  amconvinced,allyoungandrisingnaturalistsonourside。IshallbeintenselyinterestedtohearwhethermybookproducesanyeffectonA。
  Gray;fromwhatIheardatLyell’s,Ifancyyourcorrespondencehasbroughthimsomewayalready。IfearthatthereisnochanceofBenthambeingstaggered。Willhereadmybook?Hasheacopy?Iwouldsendhimoneofthereprintsifhehasnot。OldJ。E。Gray(JohnEdwardGray(1800—1875),wasthesonofS。F。Gray,authorofthe’SupplementtothePharmacopoeia。’
  In1821hepublishedinhisfather’sname’TheNaturalArrangementofBritishPlants,’oneoftheearliestworksinEnglishonthenaturalmethod。In1824hebecameconnectedwiththeNaturalHistoryDepartmentoftheBritishMuseum,andwasappointedKeeperoftheZoologicalcollectionsin1840。Hewastheauthorof’IllustrationsofIndianZoology,’’TheKnowsleyMenagerie,’etc。,andofinnumerabledescriptiveZoologicalpapers。),attheBritishMuseum,attackedmeinfinestyle:"YouhavejustreproducedLamarck’sdoctrineandnothingelse,andhereLyellandothershavebeenattackinghimfortwentyyears,andbecauseYOU(withasneerandlaugh)saytheverysamething,theyareallcominground;itisthemostridiculousinconsistency,etc。,etc。"
  Youmustbeverygladtobesettledinyourhouse,andIhopealltheimprovementssatisfyyou。Asfarasmyexperiencegoes,improvementsareneverperfection。Iamverysorrytohearthatyouarestillsoverybusy,andhavesomuchwork。Andnowforthemainpurportofmynote,whichistoaskandbegyouandMrs。Hooker(whomitisreallyanagesinceIhaveseen),andallyourchildren,ifyoulike,tocomeandspendaweekhere。
  Itwouldbeagreatpleasuretomeandtomywife……Asfaraswecansee,weshallbeathomeallthewinter;andalltimesprobablywouldbeequallyconvenient;butifyoucan,donotputitoffverylate,asitmayslipthrough。ThinkofthisandpersuadeMrs。Hooker,andbeagoodmanandcome。
  Farewell,mykindanddearfriend,Yoursaffectionately,C。DARWIN。
  P。S。——IshallbeverycurioustohearwhatyouthinkofmydiscussiononClassificationinChapterXIII。;IbelieveHuxleydemurstothewhole,andsayshehasnailedhiscolourstothemast,andIwouldsoonerdiethangiveup;sothatweareinasfineaframeofmindtodiscussthepointasanytworeligionists。
  Embryologyismypetbitinmybook,and,confoundmyfriends,notonehasnoticedthistome。
  CHARLESDARWINTOASAGRAY。
  Down,December21st[1859]。
  MydearGray,Ihavejustreceivedyourmostkind,long,andvaluableletter。Iwillwriteagaininafewdays,forIamatpresentunwellandmuchpressedwithbusiness:to—day’snoteismerelypersonal。Ishould,forseveralreasons,beverygladofanAmericanEdition。Ihavemadeupmymindtobewellabused;butIthinkitofimportancethatmynotionsshouldbereadbyintelligentmen,accustomedtoscientificargument,thoughNOTnaturalists。
  Itmayseemabsurd,butIthinksuchmenwilldragafterthemthosenaturalistswhohavetoofirmlyfixedintheirheadsthataspeciesisanentity。Thefirsteditionof1250copieswassoldonthefirstday,andnowmypublisherisprintingoff,asRAPIDLYASPOSSIBLE,3000morecopies。
  ImentionthissolelybecauseitrendersprobablearemunerativesaleinAmerica。IshouldbeinfinitelyobligedifyoucouldaidanAmericanreprint;andcouldmake,formysakeandthepublisher’s,anyarrangementforanyprofit。Theneweditionisonlyareprint,yetIhavemadeaFEW
  importantcorrections。Iwillhavethecleansheetssentoverinafewdaysofasmanysheetsasareprintedoff,andtheremainderafterwards,andyoucandoanythingyoulike,——ifnothing,thereisnoharmdone。I
  shouldbegladfortheneweditiontobereprintedandnottheold。——Ingreathaste,andwithheartythanks,Yoursverysincerely,C。DARWIN。
  Iwillwritesoonagain。
  CHARLESDARWINTOC。LYELL。
  Down,22nd[December,1859]。
  MydearLyell,Thanksabout"Bears"(See’Origin,’editioni。,page184。),awordofill—
  omentome。
  Iamtoounwelltoleavehome,soshallnotseeyou。
  IamverygladofyourremarksonHooker。(SirC。LyellwrotetoSirJ。D。
  Hooker,December19,1859(’Life,’ii。page327):"IhavejustfinishedthereadingofyoursplendidEssay[the’FloraofAustralia’]ontheoriginofspecies,asillustratedbyyourwidebotanicalexperience,andthinkitgoesveryfartoraisethevariety—makinghypothesistotherankofatheory,asaccountingforthemannerinwhichnewspeciesentertheworld。")Ihavenotyetgottheessay。ThepartswhichIreadinsheetsseemedtomegrand,especiallythegeneralizationabouttheAustralianfloraitself。HowsuperiortoRobertBrown’scelebratedessay!IhavenotseenNaudin’spaper(’RevueHorticole,’1852。SeehistoricalSketchinthelatereditionsofthe’OriginofSpecies。’),andshallnotbeabletillI
  huntthelibraries。Iamveryanxioustoseeit。Decaisneseemstothinkhegivesmywholetheory。IdonotknowwhenIshallhavetimeandstrengthtograpplewithHooker……
  P。S。——IhaveheardfromSirW。Jardine(Jardine,SirWilliam,Bart。,1800—
  1874,wasthesonofSirA。JardineofApplegarth,Dumfriesshire。HewaseducatedatEdinburgh,andsucceededtothetitleonhisfather’sdeceasein1821。Hepublished,jointlywithMr。Prideaux,J。Selby,SirStamfordRaffles,Dr。Horsfield,andotherornithologists,’IllustrationsofOrnithology,’andeditedthe’Naturalist’sLibrary,’in40volumes,whichincludedthefourbranches:Mammalia,Ornithology,Ichnology,andEntomology。Ofthese40volumes14werewrittenbyhimself。In1836hebecameeditorofthe’MagazineofZoologyandBotany,’which,twoyearslater,wastransformedinto’AnnalsofNaturalHistory,’butremainedunderhisdirection。ForBohn’sStandardLibraryheeditedWhite’s’NaturalHistoryofSelborne。’SirW。Jardinewasalsojointeditorofthe’EdinburghPhilosophicalJournal,’andwasauthorof’BritishSalmonidae,’
  ’IchthyologyofAnnandale,’’MemoirsofthelateHughStrickland,’
  ’ContributionstoOrnithology,’’OrnithologicalSynonyms,’etc。——(TakenfromWard,’MenoftheReign,’andCates,’DictionaryofGeneralBiography。’):hiscriticismsarequiteunimportant;someoftheGalapagosso—calledspeciesoughttobecalledvarieties,whichIfullyexpected;
  someofthesub—genera,thoughttobewhollyendemic,havebeenfoundontheContinent(notthathegiveshisauthority),butIdonotmakeoutthatthespeciesarethesame。Hisletterisbriefandvague,buthesayshewillwriteagain。
  CHARLESDARWINTOJ。D。HOOKER。
  Down[23rdDecember,1859]。
  MydearHooker,Ireceivedlastnightyour’Introduction,’forwhichverymanythanks;Iamsurprisedtoseehowbigitis:Ishallnotbeabletoreaditverysoon。
  ItwasverygoodofyoutosendNaudin,forIwasverycurioustoseeit。
  IamsurprisedthatDecaisneshouldsayitwasthesameasmine。Naudingivesartificialselection,aswellasascoreofEnglishwriters,andwhenhesaysspecieswereformedinthesamemanner,Ithoughtthepaperwouldcertainlyproveexactlythesameasmine。ButIcannotfindonewordlikethestruggleforexistenceandnaturalselection。Onthecontrary,hebringsinhisprinciple(page103)offinality(whichIdonotunderstand),which,hesays,withsomeauthorsisfatality,withothersprovidence,andwhichadaptstheformsofeverybeing,andharmonisesthemallthroughoutnature。
  Heassumeslikeoldgeologists(whoassumedthattheforcesofnaturewereformerlygreater),thatspecieswereatfirstmoreplastic。Hissimileoftreeandclassificationislikemine(andothers),buthecannot,Ithink,havereflectedmuchonthesubject,otherwisehewouldseethatgenealogybyitselfdoesnotgiveclassification;IdeclareIcannotseeaMUCH
  closerapproachtoWallaceandmeinNaudinthaninLamarck——weallagreeinmodificationanddescent。IfIdonothearfromyouIwillreturnthe’Revue’inafewdays(withthecover)。IdaresayLyellwouldbegladtoseeit。Bytheway,IwillretainthevolumetillIhearwhetherIshallornotsendittoLyell。IshouldratherlikeLyelltoseethisnote,thoughitisfoolishworkstickingupforindependenceorpriority。
  Everyours,C。DARWIN。
  A。SEDGWICK(Rev。AdamSedgwick,1785—1873,WoodwardianProfessorofGeologyintheUniversityofCambridge。)TOCHARLESDARWIN。
  Cambridge,December24th,[1859]。
  MydearDarwin,Iwritetothankyouforyourworkonthe’OriginofSpecies。’Itcame,I
  think,inthelatterpartoflastweek;butitMAYhavecomeafewdayssooner,andbeenoverlookedamongmybook—parcels,whichoftenremainunopenedwhenIamlazyorbusywithanyworkbeforeme。SosoonasI
  openeditIbegantoreadit,andIfinishedit,aftermanyinterruptions,onTuesday。YesterdayIwasemployed——1st,inpreparingformylecture;
  2ndly,inattendingameetingofmybrotherFellowstodiscussthefinalpropositionsoftheParliamentaryCommissioners;3rdly,inlecturing;
  4thly,inhearingtheconclusionofthediscussionandtheCollegereply,whereby,inconformitywithmyownwishes,weacceptedtheschemeoftheCommissioners;5thly,indiningwithanoldfriendatClareCollege;6thly,inadjourningtotheweeklymeetingoftheRayClub,fromwhichIreturnedat10P。M。,dog—tired,andhardlyabletoclimbmystaircase。Lastly,inlookingthroughthe"Times"toseewhatwasgoingoninthebusyworld。
  Idonotstatethistofillspace(thoughIbelievethatNaturedoesabhoravacuum),buttoprovethatmyreplyandmythanksaresenttoyoubytheearliestleisureIhave,thoughthatisbutaverycontractedopportunity。
  IfIdidnotthinkyouagood—temperedandtruth—lovingman,Ishouldnottellyouthat(spiteofthegreatknowledge,storeoffacts,capitalviewsofthecorrelationofthevariouspartsoforganicnature,admirablehintsaboutthediffusion,throughwideregionsofmanyrelatedorganicbeings,etc。,etc。)Ihavereadyourbookwithmorepainthanpleasure。PartsofitIadmiredgreatly,partsIlaughedattillmysideswerealmostsore;
  otherpartsIreadwithabsolutesorrow,becauseIthinkthemutterlyfalseandgrievouslymischievous。YouhaveDESERTED——afterastartinthattram—
  roadofallsolidphysicaltruth——thetruemethodofinduction,andstartedusinmachineryaswild,Ithink,asBishopWilkins’slocomotivethatwastosailwithustothemoon。Manyofyourwideconclusionsarebaseduponassumptionswhichcanneitherbeprovednordisproved,whythenexpresstheminthelanguageandarrangementofphilosophicalinduction?Astoyourgrandprinciple——NATURALSELECTION——whatisitbutasecondaryconsequenceofsupposed,orknown,primaryfacts!Developmentisabetterword,becausemoreclosetothecauseofthefact?Foryoudonotdenycausation。Icall(intheabstract)causationthewillofGod;andIcanprovethatHeactsforthegoodofHiscreatures。Healsoactsbylawswhichwecanstudyandcomprehend。Actingbylaw,andunderwhatiscalledfinalcauses,comprehends,Ithink,yourwholeprinciple。Youwriteof"naturalselection"asifitweredonecuriouslybytheselectingagent。
  ’Tisbutaconsequenceofthepresupposeddevelopment,andthesubsequentbattleforlife。Thisviewofnatureyouhavestatedadmirably,thoughadmittedbyallnaturalistsanddeniedbynooneofcommonsense。Wealladmitdevelopmentasafactofhistory:buthowcameitabout?Here,inlanguage,andstillmoreinlogic,wearepoint—blankatissue。Thereisamoralormetaphysicalpartofnatureaswellaphysical。Amanwhodeniesthisisdeepinthemireoffolly。’TisthecrownandgloryoforganicsciencethatitDOESthroughFINALCAUSE,linkmaterialandmoral;andyetDOESNOTallowustomingletheminourfirstconceptionoflaws,andourclassificationofsuchlaws,whetherweconsideronesideofnatureortheother。Youhaveignoredthislink;and,ifIdonotmistakeyourmeaning,youhavedoneyourbestinoneortwopregnantcasestobreakit。Wereitpossible(which,thankGod,itisnot)tobreakit,humanity,inmymind,wouldsufferadamagethatmightbrutalizeit,andsinkthehumanraceintoalowergradeofdegradationthananyintowhichithasfallensinceitswrittenrecordstellusofitshistory。Takethecaseofthebee—cells。