登陆注册
5371100000094

第94章

My dear Henslow, ...Pray tell Leonard (Rev. L. Jenyns.) that my Government work is going on smoothly, and I hope will be prosperous. He will see in the Prospectus his name attached to the fish; I set my shoulders to the work with a good heart. I am very much better than I was during the last month before my Shrewsbury visit. I fear the Geology will take me a great deal of time; Iwas looking over one set of notes, and the quantity I found I had to read, for that one place was frightful. If I live till I am eighty years old Ishall not cease to marvel at finding myself an author; in the summer before I started, if any one had told me that I should have been an angel by this time, I should have thought it an equal impossibility. This marvellous transformation is all owing to you.

I am sorry to find that a good many errata are left in the part of my volume, which is printed. During my absence Mr. Colburn employed some goose to revise, and he has multiplied, instead of diminishing my oversights; but for all that, the smooth paper and clear type has a charming appearance, and I sat the other evening gazing in silent admiration at the first page of my own volume, when I received it from the printers!

Good-bye, my dear Henslow, C. DARWIN.

1838.

[From the beginning of this year to nearly the end of June, he was busily employed on the zoological and geological results of his voyage. This spell of work was interrupted only by a visit of three days to Cambridge, in May; and even this short holiday was taken in consequence of failing health, as we may assume from the entry in his diary: "May 1st, unwell,"and from a letter to his sister (May 16, 1838), when he wrote:--"My trip of three days to Cambridge has done me such wonderful good, and filled my limbs with such elasticity, that I must get a little work out of my body before another holiday." This holiday seems to have been thoroughly enjoyed; he wrote to his sister:--"Now for Cambridge: I stayed at Henslow's house and enjoyed my visit extremely. My friends gave me a most cordial welcome. Indeed, I was quite a lion there. Mrs. Henslow unfortunately was obliged to go on Friday for a visit in the country. That evening we had at Henslow's a brilliant party of all the geniuses in Cambridge, and a most remarkable set of men they most assuredly are. On Saturday I rode over to L. Jenyns', and spent the morning with him. I found him very cheerful, but bitterly complaining of his solitude. On Saturday evening dined at one of the Colleges, played at bowls on the College Green after dinner, and was deafened with nightingales singing. Sunday, dined in Trinity; capital dinner, and was very glad to sit by Professor Lee (Samuel Lee, of Queens', was Professor of Arabic from 1819 to 1831, and Regius Professor of Hebrew from 1831 to 1848.)...; I find him a very pleasant chatting man, and in high spirits like a boy, at having lately returned from a living or a curacy, for seven years in Somersetshire, to civilised society and oriental manuscripts. He had exchanged his living to one within fourteen miles of Cambridge, and seemed perfectly happy. In the evening attended Trinity Chapel, and heard 'The Heavens are telling the Glory of God,' in magnificent style; the last chorus seemed to shake the very walls of the College. After chapel a large party in Sedgwick's rooms. So much for my Annals."He started, towards the end of June, on his expedition to Glen Roy, of which he writes to Fox: "I have not been very well of late, which has suddenly determined me to leave London earlier than I had anticipated. Igo by the steam-packet to Edinburgh,--take a solitary walk on Salisbury Craigs, and call up old thoughts of former times, then go on to Glasgow and the great valley of Inverness, near which I intend stopping a week to geologise the parallel roads of Glen Roy, thence to Shrewsbury, Maer for one day, and London for smoke, ill-health and hard work."He spent "eight good days" over the Parallel Roads. His Essay on this subject was written out during the same summer, and published by the Royal Society. ('Phil. Trans.' 1839, pages 39-82.) He wrote in his Pocket Book:

"September 6 [1838]. Finished the paper on 'Glen Roy,' one of the most difficult and instructive tasks I was ever engaged on." It will be remembered that in his 'Recollections' he speaks of this paper as a failure, of which he was ashamed.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 一往情深不及你

    一往情深不及你

    童璐被所有人嘲笑,因为她把自己嫁给了一个癌症晚期的老公,结婚当天被告知丈夫去世。谁知道,哈哈,四年后,一个不老不死、宛若神奇宝贝的神秘丈夫强势回归,亮瞎了所有人的眼。传闻,冷家掌权人冷夜谨手腕狠辣,势力滔天,得罪他的人没有一个好下场,唯独为他守了四年活寡的小妻子不经意间入了他的心,从此,他只想翻手为云覆手为雨,将她宠上天……
  • 绝世神医之颜倾天下

    绝世神医之颜倾天下

    她,绝色倾城,聪明伶俐,一身医术出神入化;为身世,为红颜,数次绝处逢生:他,云国四皇子,腹黑且无赖,为夺皇位,费尽心机。他,江湖第一杀手组织当家少主,默默守候,只为她的回眸一笑。他,敌国皇子,为她倾尽所有。人生若只如初见,朝堂争斗,江湖风雨,究竟,是谁执谁之手,笑看世间红尘!
  • 净琉璃净土标

    净琉璃净土标

    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。
  • 当修真遇上二次元

    当修真遇上二次元

    新书《在异界成为火影》上线,感兴趣还不怕毒的朋友们可以去看看哦~
  • 求幸福斋随笔

    求幸福斋随笔

    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。
  • 天地八阳神咒经

    天地八阳神咒经

    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。
  • 灵玥成恩

    灵玥成恩

    林逍玥原本是一个普普通通的大学生,一次试衣间奇遇,让她加入了知名乐队并邂逅了主唱李在恩。他们之间的故事正在开始。。。
  • 婚婚独宠总裁快走开

    婚婚独宠总裁快走开

    乔北辰的心很软,只要自己表现得非常爱他的话,他一定不会放弃他们之前所许下的诺言的。刚在一起的时候,乔北辰就跟她承诺过了,他一定会娶她~
  • 青春不负遇你

    青春不负遇你

    还记得吗?那一片绿荫下。那一处操场上,奋力奔跑的的我们,只为早点休息,去偷看他一眼,只是一眼,即使无法说话,那也是十分满足,还记得吗,一个班里总有一个傻子,一个帅哥,一个校花,一群路人甲,每个人都在用自己书写着自己的青春。青春,不负遇你————by玉溪六二.
  • 重生农女很猖狂

    重生农女很猖狂

    一朝被困于古墓,她在无意间唤醒了棺内沉睡千年的紫眸男子。再次睁眼,她已魂穿千年之前,面对身边这两只不知身份的可爱包子和雪中送炭的隔壁大婶,顾念瑶撸胳膊挽袖,誓死捍卫这个小家。没吃没穿没住处?但咱有脑子有锄头有田园,外加魂穿所赠的空间神器,缺什么咱就赚什么,要什么咱就去买什么!