登陆注册
5371100000178

第178章

There are similar classes of facts in marine productions. All this will appear very rash to you, and rash it may be; but I am sure not so rash as it will at first appear to you: Hooker could not stomach it at all at first, but has become largely a convert. From mammalia and shallow sea, Ibelieve Japan to have been joined to main land of China within no remote period; and then the migration north and south before, during, and after the Glacial epoch would act on Japan, as on the corresponding latitude of China and the United States.

I should beyond anything like to know whether you have any Alpine collections from Japan, and what is their character. This letter is miserably expressed, but perhaps it will suffice to show what I believe have been the later main migrations and changes of temperature...

CHARLES DARWIN TO J.D. HOOKER.

[Down] October 6th, 1858.

...If you have or can make leisure, I should very much like to hear news of Mrs. Hooker, yourself, and the children. Where did you go, and what did you do and are doing? There is a comprehensive text.

You cannot tell how I enjoyed your little visit here, it did me much good.

If Harvey is still with you, pray remember me very kindly to him.

...I am working most steadily at my Abstract, but it grows to an inordinate length; yet fully to make my view clear (and never giving briefly more than a fact or two, and slurring over difficulties), I cannot make it shorter.

It will yet take me three or four months; so slow do I work, though never idle. You cannot imagine what a service you have done me in making me make this Abstract; for though I thought I had got all clear, it has clarified my brains very much, by making me weigh the relative importance of the several elements.

I have been reading with much interest your (as I believe it to be) capital memoir of R. Brown in the "Gardeners' Chronicle"...

CHARLES DARWIN TO J.D. HOOKER.

Down, October 12th, [1858].

...I have sent eight copies (Of the joint paper by C. Darwin and A.R.

Wallace.) by post to Wallace, and will keep the others for him, for I could not think of any one to send any to.

I pray you not to pronounce too strongly against Natural Selection, till you have read my abstract, for though I dare say you will strike out MANYdifficulties, which have never occurred to me; yet you cannot have thought so fully on the subject as I have.

I expect my Abstract will run into a small volume, which will have to be published separately...

What a splendid lot of work you have in hand.

Ever yours, C. DARWIN.

CHARLES DARWIN TO J.D. HOOKER.

Down, October 13th [1858].

...I have been a little vexed at myself at having asked you not "to pronounce too strongly against Natural Selection." I am sorry to have bothered you, though I have been much interested by your note in answer. Iwrote the sentence without reflection. But the truth is, that I have so accustomed myself, partly from being quizzed by my non-naturalist relations, to expect opposition and even contempt, that I forgot for the moment that you are the one living soul from whom I have constantly received sympathy. Believe [me] that I never forget for even a minute how much assistance I have received from you. You are quite correct that Inever even suspected that my speculations were a "jam-pot" to you; indeed, I thought, until quite lately, that my MS. had produced no effect on you, and this has often staggered me. Nor did I know that you had spoken in general terms about my work to our friends, excepting to dear old Falconer, who some few years ago once told me that I should do more mischief than any ten other naturalists would do good, [and] that I had half spoiled you already! All this is stupid egotistical stuff, and I write it only because you may think me ungrateful for not having valued and understood your sympathy; which God knows is not the case. It is an accursed evil to a man to become so absorbed in any subject as I am in mine.

I was in London yesterday for a few hours with Falconer, and he gave me a magnificent lecture on the age of man. We are not upstarts; we can boast of a pedigree going far back in time coeval with extinct species. He has a grand fact of some large molar tooth in the Trias.

I am quite knocked up, and am going next Monday to revive under Water-cure at Moor Park.

My dear Hooker, yours affectionately, C. DARWIN.

CHARLES DARWIN TO J.D. HOOKER.

November 1858.

...I had vowed not to mention my everlasting Abstract to you again, for Iam sure I have bothered you far more than enough about it; but, as you allude to its previous publication, I may say that I have the chapters on Instinct and Hybridism to abstract, which may take a fortnight each; and my materials for Palaeontology, Geographical Distribution, and Affinities, being less worked up, I dare say each of these will take me three weeks, so that I shall not have done at soonest till April, and then my Abstract will in bulk make a small volume. I never give more than one or two instances, and I pass over briefly all difficulties, and yet I cannot make my Abstract shorter, to be satisfactory, than I am now doing, and yet it will expand to a small volume...

[About this time my father revived his old knowledge of beetles in helping his boys in their collecting. He sent a short notice to the 'Entomologist's Weekly Intelligencer,' June 25th, 1859, recording the capture of Licinus silphoides, Clytus mysticus, Panagaeus 4-pustulatus.

The notice begins with the words, "We three very young collectors having lately taken in the parish of Down," etc., and is signed by three of his boys, but was clearly not written by them. I have a vivid recollection of the pleasure of turning out my bottle of dead beetles for my father to name, and the excitement, in which he fully shared, when any of them proved to be uncommon ones. The following letters to Mr. Fox (November 13, 1858), and to Sir John Lubbock, illustrate this point:]

CHARLES DARWIN TO W.D. FOX.

Down, November 13th [1858].

同类推荐
  • 儒言

    儒言

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 咸亨殿宴近臣诸亲柏

    咸亨殿宴近臣诸亲柏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 文殊师利所说般若波罗蜜经

    文殊师利所说般若波罗蜜经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 上清太极真人撰所施行秘要经

    上清太极真人撰所施行秘要经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 大乘掌珍论

    大乘掌珍论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 系统之善行天下

    系统之善行天下

    一名华夏国西南边陲的少年林鹏飞意外地在乡下小庙里获得神奇的“功德善人系统”。我是个善人,可我不是什么好人,所以谁也别来惹我。我很想扇人,可我是个大善人,所以……怎么解除“功德善人系统”的绑定。在线等,挺急的!===========宅男新书,请大家多多支持!
  • 没有完不成的任务,只有找不完的借口

    没有完不成的任务,只有找不完的借口

    让每个员工都发挥主动性的实用指南,全球政治圈,财经圈金字塔顶尖人士最重要的成功素质。“没有完不成的任务,只有找不完的借口”,成功注定属于那些不找借口的人!本书针对企业普遍存在的“借口文化”提供了详细的解决方案,从多角度分析,案例新颖幽默,方案切实可行。
  • 漫谈武器与战争

    漫谈武器与战争

    战争和武器,这两个如影随形的狰狞怪物,远在阶级产生之前就已产生,强者恃它而成就霸业,弱者也依仗它得以生存和自强。自古有矛就有盾。随着科学的发展,到了现代,战争规模、武器的更新程度以及谋略者们的战争观念,足以令安于现状的局外人所膛目······
  • 史上最强弗利沙

    史上最强弗利沙

    善与恶的交织,一次又一次的激烈碰撞。 是棋子,还是执子之人。我若是棋子,那执子之人又是谁?目前完结世界《海贼王》、《犬夜叉》、《我和僵尸有个约会》。《全职猎人》完结,《斗破苍穹》。。。。。
  • 指腹为婚

    指腹为婚

    从小家里为我指腹为婚,二十二年后,没想到女人竟然是……我从一个农村走出的乡下单身小子,慢慢的学会在大城市立足,最后真正和未婚妻生活在一起……
  • 大唐隐王

    大唐隐王

    "听说过穿越后美女相拥,前程似锦的,但你听说过穿越后却要被活埋,然后流亡逃窜的吗?考古学家李承训只因穿越到大唐李建成之子身上,便注定要被活埋?好不容易逃脱,他还没松口气又被朝廷高手追杀,多舛的他只好隐身少林,学武练拳,却不曾想又失手打死了和尚,被少林通缉,一场更大的风雨正扑面而来……看他如何破局?缔造大唐隐王!"
  • 花心王爷的挂名妻:冷妃妖娆

    花心王爷的挂名妻:冷妃妖娆

    一朝穿越,成为护国大将军的掌上明珠,无奈奉旨嫁给本朝最嚣张的王爷。王爷虽帅,却花名在外,且另有爱妾,对她冷酷无情!他娶她,只是为了折磨她!只是为了报复她的哥哥,占有了他最心爱的女人……她的苦日子,从嫁给他的那天起,才刚刚开始……这个从现代穿越过来的漂亮女孩,能不能在异时空的古代,找到自己的真爱?【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 吴地记

    吴地记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 宽恕

    宽恕

    “他有很多伤。”她以验尸官般的精准说,“光是上腹部就有五道伤口,这些伤口显示,用来刺伤他的凶器有很多种,或刺伤他的是一群人。”姆兰乌丽太太对“真相与和解委员会”(Truth and Reconciliation Commission)提出她惨痛的证词,她说的是丈夫西塞罗失踪与遇害的经过。“他的下腹部也有伤,全身总共有四十三处伤。他们往他脸上泼硫酸。
  • 封魔刀客

    封魔刀客

    一个爱刀如狂的少年,他活着就是为了挑战,挑战江湖上成名的用刀高手。无数刀客成就了他,直到最后,他也成就了一名刀客。