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PREFACE.

IN preparing this volume, which is practically an abbreviation of the Life and Letters (1887), my aim has been to retain as far as possible the personal parts of those volumes. To render this feasible, large numbers of the more purely scientific letters are omitted, or represented by the citation of a few sentences.* In certain periods of my father's life the scientific and the personal elements run a parallel course, rising and falling together in their degree of interest. Thus the writing of the Origin of Species, and its publication, appeal equally to the reader who follows my father's career from interest in the man, and to the naturalist who desires to know something of this turning point in the history of Biology. This part of the story has therefore been told with nearly the full amount of available detail.

In arranging my material I have followed a roughly chronological sequence, but the character and variety of my father's researches make a strictly chronological order an impossibility. It was his habit to work more or less simultaneously at several subjects. Experimental work was often carried on as a refreshment or variety, while books entailing reasoning and the marshalling of large bodies of facts were

* I have not thought it necessary to indicate all the omissions in the abbreviated letters.

being written. Moreover many of his researches were dropped only to be resumed after years had elapsed. Thus a chronological record of his work would be a patchwork, from which it would be difficult to disentangle the history of any given subject. The Table of Contents will show how I have tried to avoid this result. It will be seen, for instance, that after Chapter VIII. a break occurs; the story turns back from 1854 to 1831 in order that the Evolutionary chapters which follow may tell a continuous story. In the same way the Botanical Work which occupied so much of my father's time during the latter part of his life is treated separately in Chapters XVI. and XVII.

With regard to Chapter IV., in which I have attempted to give an account of my father's manner of working, I may be allowed to say that I acted as his assistant during the last eight years of his life, and had therefore an opportunity of knowing something of his habits and methods.

It is pleasure to me to acknowledge the kindness of Mr. Cameron who has allowed me to reproduce the late Mrs. Cameron's fine photograph of my father as a frontispiece. My acknowledgments, too, are gladly made to the publishers of the Century Magazine, who have courteously given me the use of one of their illustrations for the heading of Chapter IV.

FRANCIS DARWIN.

WYCHFIELD, CAMBRIDGE,
August, 1892.

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1828-1831

IV. Reminiscences

V.-Cambridge Life-The Appointment to the Beagle :

VI. The Voyage: 1831-1836

VII.-London and Cambridge: 1836-1842.

VIII. Life at Down: 1842-1854

IX.-The Foundations of the Origin of Species: 1831–1844
X.-The Growth of the Origin of Species: 1843–1858

XI. The Writing of the Origin of Species, June 1858, to

66

104

124

140

150

165

173

November 1859.

185

XII. The Publication of the Origin of Species, October to

December 1859

206

XIII.-The Origin of Species-Reviews and Criticisms-Ad-

hesions and Attacks: 1860

223

XIV. The Spread of Evolution: 1861-1871
XV. Miscellanea Revival of Geological Work-The Vivi-

245

section Question-Honours

:

281

XVI. The Fertilisation of Flowers

297

XVII.-Climbing Plants-Power of Movement in Plants-

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"For myself I found that I was fitted for nothing so well as for the study of Truth; as being gifted by nature with desire to seek, patience to doubt, fondness to meditate, slowness to assert, readiness to reconsider, carefulness to dispose and set in order; and as being a man that neither affects what is new nor admires what is old, and that hates every kind of imposture. So I thought my nature had a kind of familiarity and relationship with Truth." - BACON. (Proem to the Interpretatio Naturæ.)

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