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BOTANICAL LETTERS.

PAGE

CHAPTER VII. - FERTILISATION OF FLOWERS-1839-1880 254

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CHAPTER VIII. -THE EFFECTS OF CROSS- AND SELF-
FERTILISATION IN THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM '-1866-

1877

289

CHAPTER IX. - DIFFERENT FORMS OF FLOWERS ON
PLANTS OF THE SAME SPECIES'-1860-1878

295

CHAPTER X. - CLIMBING AND INSECTIVOROUS PLANTS-

1863-1875

311

CHAPTER XI. -THE 'POWER OF MOVEMENT IN PLANTS'

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APPENDIX I. -THE FUNERAL IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY
APPENDIX II.-LIST OF WORKS BY C. DARWIN

360

362

APPENDIX III. -PORTRAITS

371

APPENDIX IV. - HONOURS, DEGREES, SOCIETIES, &c.

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INDEX.

377

VOL. I.

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ILLUSTRATIONS.

VOLUME I.
▼Frontispicce: CHARLES DARWIN IN 1854 (?). From 'Harper's
Magazine': the Photograph by Messrs. Maull and Fox.

THE STUDY AT DOWN. From the 'Century Magazine'
✓ THE HOUSE AT DOWN. From the 'Century Magazine'

✓ THE 'BEAGLE' LAID ASHORE

VOLUME II.

108

to face page 320

Frontispiece: CHARLES DARWIN IN 1874 (?). From the 'Century Magazine': the Photograph by Captain L. Darwin, R.E.

✓ FACSIMILE OF A PAGE FROM A NOTE-BOOK OF 1837. Photolithographed by the Cambridge Scientific Instrument Company

VOLUME III.

to face page

• Frontispiece: CHARLES DARWIN IN 1881. From a Photograph by Messrs. Elliot and Fry.

217

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VOLUME I.

ERRATA.

P. 367, line 25: for "Montague" read "Montagu."

VOLUME II.

P. 239, line 17: for "[?]" read "E. R." The surmise given in the footnote is incorrect. It appears from papers in the possession of Mr. J. Estlin Carpenter, that Dr. Carpenter urged on the Editor of the 'Edinburgh Review' a purely scientific treatment of the 'Origin of Species.

P. 246, note: for "Ichthyology" read "Ichnology."

P. 289, line 22: for "Crampton" read "Crompton."

P. 356, line 6: for "3000" read "2000."

P. 380, line 3 from foot: for "in the Amazons" read " on the Amazons."

P. 390, line 4: for "direct in the "read "in the direct."

VOLUME III.

P. 40, line 13: for "Magazines" read "Magazine."

P. 46, note, last line: for "contemporaine" read "contemporain."

P. 58, line 8: for "laburnums, Adami-trifacial" read "laburnum

Adami, trifacial.'.

LIFE AND LETTERS

OF

CHARLES DARWIN.

CHAPTER I.

THE DARWIN FAMILY.

THE earliest records of the family show the Darwins to have been substantial yeomen residing on the northern borders of Lincolnshire, close to Yorkshire. The name is now very unusual in England, but I believe that it is not unknown in the neighbourhood of Sheffield and in Lancashire. Down to the year 1600 we find the name spelt in a variety of ways -Derwent, Darwen, Darwynne, &c. It is possible, therefore, that the family migrated at some unknown date from Yorkshire, Cumberland, or Derbyshire, where Derwent occurs as the name of a river.

The first ancestor of whom we know was one William Darwin, who lived, about the year 1500, at Marton, near Gainsborough. His great grandson, Richard Darwyn, inherited land at Marton and elsewhere, and in his will, dated 1584, "bequeathed the sum of 3s. 4d. towards the settynge up of the Queene's Majestie's armes over the quearie (choir) doore in the parishe churche of Marton." *

The son of this Richard, named William Darwin, and described as "gentleman," appears to have been a successful

* We owe a knowledge of these earlier members of the family to researches amongst the wills at

Lincoln, made by the well-known genealogist, Colonel Chester.

VOL. I.

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man.

Whilst retaining his ancestral land at Marton, he acquired through his wife and by purchase an estate at Cleatham, in the parish of Manton, near Kirton Lindsey, and fixed his residence there. This estate remained in the family down to the year 1760. A cottage with thick walls, some fish-ponds and old trees, now alone show where the "Old Hall" once stood, and a field is still locally known as the "Darwin Charity," from being subject to a charge in favour of the poor of Marton. William Darwin must, at least in part, have owed his rise in station to his appointment in 1613 by James I. to the post of Yeoman of the Royal Armoury of Greenwich. The office appears to have been worth only £33 a year, and the duties were probably almost nominal; he held the post down to his death during the Civil Wars.

The fact that this William was a royal servant may explain why his son, also named William, served when almost a boy for the King, as "Captain-Lieutenant" in Sir William Pelham's troop of horse. On the partial dispersion of the royal armies, and the retreat of the remainder to Scotland, the boy's estates were sequestrated by the Parliament, but they were redeemed on his signing the Solemn League and Covenant, and on his paying a fine which must have struck his finances severely; for in a petition to Charles II. he speaks of his almost utter ruin from having adhered to the royal cause.

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During the Commonwealth, William Darwin became barrister of Lincoln's Inn, and this circumstance probably led to his marriage with the daughter of Erasmus Earle, serjeantat-law; hence his great-grandson, Erasmus Darwin, the Poet, derived his Christian name. He ultimately became Recorder of the city of Lincoln.

The eldest son of the Recorder, again called William, was born in 1655, and married the heiress of Robert Waring, a member of a good Staffordshire family. This lady inherited from the family of Lassells, or Lascelles, the manor and hall of Elston, near Newark, which has remained ever since in the family.* A portrait of this William Darwin at Elston shows him as a good-looking young man in a full-bottomed wig.

This third William had two sons, William, and Robert who was educated as a barrister. The Cleatham property was left to William, but on the termination of his line in daughters reverted to the younger brother, who had received Elston. On his mother's death Robert gave up his profession and resided ever afterwards at Elston Hall. Of this Robert, Charles Darwin writes †:

"He seems to have had some taste for science, for he was an early member of the well-known Spalding Club; and the celebrated antiquary Dr. Stukeley, in 'An Account of the almost entire Sceleton of a large Animal,' &c., published in the Philosophical Transactions,' April and May 1719, begins the paper as follows: 'Having an account from my friend, Robert Darwin, Esq., of Lincoln's Inn, a person of curiosity, of a human sceleton impressed in stone, found lately by the rector of Elston,' &c. Stukeley then speaks of it as a great rarity, 'the like whereof has not been observed before in this island to my knowledge.' Judging from a sort of litany written by Robert, and handed down in the family, he was a strong advocate of temperance, which his son ever afterwards so strongly advocated :

*

From a morning that doth shine,
From a boy that drinketh wine,
From a wife that talketh Latine,
Good Lord deliver me!

Captain Lassells, or Lascelles, of Elston was military secretary to Monk, Duke of Albemarle, during the Civil Wars. A large volume of account-books, countersigned in many places by Monk, are now in the possession of my cousin Francis Darwin. The accounts might possibly prove of interest to the antiquarian or historian. A portrait of

Captain Lassells in armour, although used at one time as an archerytarget by some small boys of our name, was not irretrievably ruined.

† What follows is quoted from Charles Darwin's biography of his grandfather, forming the preliminary notice to Ernst Krause's interesting essay, 'Erasmus Darwin,' London, 1879, p. 4.

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