登陆注册
38545600000178

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 ****** me make this Abstract; for though I thought I had got all clear, it has clarified my brains very much, by ****** 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
  • 净土境观要门

    净土境观要门

    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。
  • 卓异记

    卓异记

    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。
  • 坚瓠集

    坚瓠集

    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。
  • 药征续编

    药征续编

    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。
  • 玄沙师备禅师广录

    玄沙师备禅师广录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 中国东乡族

    中国东乡族

    这套《中华民族全书》主题鲜明,彰显了“中华民族多元一体和而不同”的理念,执着追求:充分展示56个民族丰富多彩的文化内涵;全面探寻56个民族波澜起伏的历史轨迹;深刻解读56个民族自强不息的精神气质;真切反映56个民族生机勃勃的发展前景。
  • 神异入侵

    神异入侵

    看似平静的江湖之下却是波涛汹涌,神秘的鬼,崛起的妖,诡异正悄然改变着这个世界……
  • 龙门千金赖上门

    龙门千金赖上门

    千桦乱世,女子命若浮萍。她是骄纵的龙门千金,最宠爱她的哥哥与爹心愿,岁月静好,幸福一生,可是偏偏遇上最坎坷的生活,爱过,恨过,撕心裂肺。念今生,一眼回眸尽哀愁,花前月下独自醉,一点迟疑,错付今生;愿来生,你为儿郎我作红颜,哭尽相思泪,沧海桑田,执手相握,永不错付。
  • (便携式)中医诊断学学习记忆手册

    (便携式)中医诊断学学习记忆手册

    本手册分两篇。“学习篇”对教材内容进行了全面系统的整理、归纳、提练、概括,使学习内容变得简明扼要、重点突出,以便学者在复习时能准确把握主要知识点。在表述形式上主要采用图表形式,将内容相关、格式类似的内容进行归纳与概括,以化繁杂为简明,变零散为系统,帮助学习者对相关知识点的前后联系与比较,便于掌握和记忆,并在脑中构建起《中医诊断学》的知识网络。“释难篇”主要针对教学内容的难点或易混淆的内容,加以解释和剖析。附录中有2套模拟试卷,以帮助学习课后复习之用。
  • 做个魔神怪兽

    做个魔神怪兽

    重生成为一只怪兽,因为人类对所有怪兽一致的恶念,让洛修认可了怪兽的身份,既然要做怪兽,就要做最坏,最强的,让所以生物闻风丧胆的
  • 请叫我卡牌大师

    请叫我卡牌大师

    一不小心穿越了脑中还有个奇怪的游戏商店啥你有神器啥你会治疗术啥你穿的宝甲不好意思,哥左手饮血剑,右手无尽之刃,肩背三项之力,不服来战人家要治疗,我只要一瓶药人家穿宝甲我穿日炎
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 逆道屠神

    逆道屠神

    谁掀起了腥风血雨?谁是杀天之星?谁一人独战九天十地?谁又让谁落下了那英雄的情泪。谁踿立风雨中啸问苍天?谁开始了血腥的杀戮?谁为救父甘心被神火炼魂一千年?这个世界步步杀机,强者传说遍布每个角落,所有人为追寻大道,挥动了手中的屠刀,争夺那种种增强实力的事物。大道无情,将世人玩弄于道途之中,谁能笑道最后,踏着那千尸万骨,登上那尸峰骨山,俯视芸芸众生?谁能超脱大道,逆天横行,笑傲风云?既然顺道与我无缘,那我就逆道而行。既然道途玩弄于我,我就踏破那大道的痕迹,创造自我的道,轰破那无情的苍天。
  • 斗罗之异世无敌

    斗罗之异世无敌

    一个老书虫在用三星Note7追斗罗大陆的时候,手机爆炸导致漏电,死在床上,一股电流带他穿入了斗罗世界
  • 酒鬼打天下

    酒鬼打天下

    一个酒鬼误打误撞,跌进了三国。福兮祸兮?