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F1497    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1958. The autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809-1882. With the original omissions restored. Edited and with appendix and notes by his grand-daughter Nora Barlow. London: Collins.   Text   Image   PDF
Cirripedes form a highly varying and difficult group of species to class; and my work was of considerable use to me, when I had to discuss in the Origin of Species the principles of a natural classification. Nevertheless, I doubt whether the work was worth the consumption of so much time. From September 1854 onwards I devoted all my time to arranging my huge pile of notes, to observing, and experimenting, in relation to the transmutation of species. During the voyage of the Beagle I had been
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F1497    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1958. The autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809-1882. With the original omissions restored. Edited and with appendix and notes by his grand-daughter Nora Barlow. London: Collins.   Text   Image   PDF
town, or ever cared to meet a young American, and one could not go to them because they were known to dislike intrusion. The only Americans who were not allowed to intrude were the half-dozen in the Legation. Adams was content to read Darwin, specially his Origin of Species and his Voyage of the Beagle. He was a Darwinist before the letter; a predestined follower of the tide; but he was hardly trained to follow Darwin's evidences.…He never tried to understand Darwin; but he still fancied he might
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F1497    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1958. The autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809-1882. With the original omissions restored. Edited and with appendix and notes by his grand-daughter Nora Barlow. London: Collins.   Text   Image   PDF
development; without the urgent need to claim independence, would Charles have wished to overcome Robert's opposition to the proposed Beagle voyage? Without that five-years' discipline, would Charles's genius have come to fruition? Conjectures can be endless; but to me no reference to Robert's tyranny, nor to the early death of Charles's mother, can solve the particular problems of this Appendix.1 The impact of contemporary ideas and opinions handed on 1 See Note 5 on Charles's ill-health, p. 239. The
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F1497    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1958. The autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809-1882. With the original omissions restored. Edited and with appendix and notes by his grand-daughter Nora Barlow. London: Collins.   Text   Image   PDF
Darlington, C., 14, 98 Darwin, Annie, 10, 97, 98 Darwin, Caroline, 10, 22, 43, 54 Darwin, Catherine, 10, 22, 43 Darwin, Charles R., family tree, 10; childhood, 21-28; school life, 43-46; Edinburgh, 46-53; Cambridge, 56-71; Beagle, 71-82; marriage, 96; Down, 96, 114 Darwin, Sir Charles Galton, 6 Darwin, Emma, 10, 12, 87, 93, 94, 96, 97, 235-239, 240 Darwin, Dr. Erasmus, 6, 10, 36, 42, 124, 134, 149-166, 223-225 Darwin, Erasmus Alvey, brother of Charles, 10, 42, 45, 87, 236 Darwin, Erasmus
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
distribution of coral reefs (London, 1842). 3 The zoology of the voyage of the Beagle, edited by Charles Darwin (London, 1839- 43). 4 The Beagle had returned from her last surveying voyage under Captain J. L. Stokes. A brief account of the history of H.M.S. Beagle is given in Appendix II. 5 Mrs Evans, wife of Darwin's father's butler: an entry which shows that Covington was familiar with Shrewsbury. 6 On Robert FitzRoy see Appendix III. (Letter 2) [Charles Darwin to Syms Covington]1 Down
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
visited during the journey round the World by H.M.S. Beagle (London, 1845). 4 A monograph on the sub-class Cirripedia (London, 1851). 5 Bartholomew James Sulivan (1810-1890), afterwards K.C.B. and Admiral; Lieutenant in the Beagle with Darwin. 6 Philip Parker King (1793-1856), afterwards Admiral; commanded H.M.S. Adventure with which H.M.S. Beagle sailed on her first voyage; settled in Australia where his father Philip Gidley King (1758-1808) had been the first Governor of New South Wales. 7
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
Huxley (London, 1918). Samuel Butler, by H. Festing Jones (London, 1919). Life of Alfred Newton, by A. F. R. Wollaston (London, 1921). A long life's work; an autobiography, by Sir Archibald Geikie (London, 1924). APPENDIX II H.M.S. BEAGLE H.M.S. Beagle, third of the name, was built at Woolwich and launched on 11 May 1820, as a Sloop Brig of 235 tons. In the service of the Hydrographer of the Navy she made three voyages: 1st, 1826-1830, to South America, under the command of Captain Pringle Stokes
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
APPENDIX IV FUEGIA BASKET Fuegia was one of the Fuegians that Captain FitzRoy captured as hostages for the theft of a boat, and brought back to England in 1830 to teach them Christianity and the use of tools at his own expense, with the ultimate aim of making the fate of shipwrecked mariners less precarious if they should be cast up on the shores where these cannibals lived. One of FitzRoy's chief inducements to undertake the voyage of the Beagle on which Darwin sailed was to return these
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F1573    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Darwin's journal. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (1): 1-21.   Text   Image   PDF
Sept. 11 Went with Capt. FitzRoy2 in steamer to Plymouth to see the Beagle.2 Sept. 22nd returned to Shrewsbury, passing through Cambridge. Oct. 2nd Took leave of my home, staid in London. Oct 24th Reached Plymouth. December 10th Sailed, but were obliged to put back. ,, 21st Put to sea again were driven back. ,, 27th Sailed from England on our Circumnavigation. 1832. Jan. 16th First landed on a tropical shore (St. Jago). Feb 29th Landed at Brazil. Dec. 2 ,, ,, Tierra del Fuego. 1833. Dec 6th
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
winter of 1825 went to the Edinburgh University for two years, thence to Christ's College Cambridge, where he took his B.A. degree in 1831. In the autumn of 1831 Captain FitzRoy R.N., having offered to give up part of his own cabin to any naturalist who would accompany H.M.S. Beagle in her surveying voyage circumnavigation, Mr. Darwin volunteered his services without salary, but on condition that he should have the entire disposal of his collections. The Beagle sailed from England Dec. 27 1831
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F1573    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Darwin's journal. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (1): 1-21.   Text   Image   PDF
day returned to Maer on the 17th to London on the 20th. 1 Ultimately published as Zoology of the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle, edited and superintended by Charles Darwin, London 1840-1843. 2 Ultimately published as Geology of the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle. London 1842-46. 3 Charles Darwin: On the formation of mould', read November 1, 1837. Proc. Geol. Soc., vol. 2, London 1838, p. 574, Trans. Geol. Soc., vol. 5, 1840, p. 505. 4 Charles Darwin: On the Connexion of certain Volcanic Phenomena and on
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F1573    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Darwin's journal. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (1): 1-21.   Text   Image   PDF
the Boulders transported by Floating Ice. Lond. Philos. Mag., vol. xix, 1842, p. 180. 5 Down House, Kent was Darwin's home for the remainder of his life. 6 Mary Eleanor Darwin (born and died 1842). 7 Charles Darwin: Geological observations on the Volcanic Islands and parts of South America visited during the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle. Being the Second part of the Geology of the Voyage of the Beagle London 1844. 8 Syms Covington c. 1816-1861; Darwin's attendant in the Beagle and amenuensis after
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
FitzRoy and C. Darwin, Esq., of H.M.S. Beagle', dated At Sea, 28June 1836, which appeared in the South African Christian Recorder (printed and published by G. J. Pike, St. George's Street, Cape Town), 2, No. 4, September 1836. This information is derived from the Catalogue of the library of Charles Darwin now in the Botany School, Cambridge, compiled by H. W. Rutherford, with an Introduction by Francis Darwin (Cambridge, 1908), p. 20 (where the name of the publication is not given; Charles
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
reason to believe he is trust­ worthy to the highest degree. 12 Upper Gower Street, London May 29, 1839. Charles Darwin' In Darwin's personal Journal5 under the date of 14 October 1842, just one month after settling into Down House, there is an entry to the effect that he had started on his manuscript of Geological observations on the volcanic islands visited during the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle (published in 1844) from the notes made by Covington. Covington was also an artist, and his daughter
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F1573    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Darwin's journal. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (1): 1-21.   Text   Image   PDF
Dust which often falls on vessels in the Atlantic Ocean . J. Geol. Soc., vol. 2, 1846, p. 26. 3 Charles Darwin: Brief Descriptions of several terrestrial Planariæ, and of some remarkable marine species, with an account of their habits. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., vol. 14, 1844, p. 241. 4 Charles Darwin: Geological Observations on South America. Being the Third part of the Geology of the Voyage of the Beagle. London 1846. 5 Charles Darwin: Journal of Researches into the Natural History and Geology of the
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
work were described from this source.' 4 John Clement Wickham was 1st Lieutenant in the Beagle with Darwin; he commanded the Beagle on her third voyage in 1838 and surveyed the coast of Australia; afterwards Governor of Queensland. 5 Sir Donald Maclean (1820-1877) was living in Sydney before going to New Zealand where he served in the Legislature as Minister. 6 The two sources of anxiety here described, and an additional one, were referred to in a letter from Darwin to William Darwin Fox, 7
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
by H. E. Litchfield. (Privately printed, Cambridge, 1904. Abridged published edition London, 1915.) Charles Darwin and the voyage of the Beagle, edited and introduced by Nora Barlow (London,1945). The autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809-1882, edited by Nora Barlow (London, 1958). Small collections or single letters from Darwin will be found in the following: Extracts from letters addressed to Professor Henslow by C. Darwin, Esq. (for Private Distribution, Cambridge, 1835). 'Obituary of Charles
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
; so as there was nothing in your letter to me which you could have disliked any one seeing I sent it to him. My life pursuits are so uniform that I have really no news to tell you of myself I have published one book on Barnacles,2 and am going to publish a second volume, and quite lately I have been examining some of the specimens you sent me, and very useful, and interesting they proved. My health keeps indifferent. The only officer of the Beagle that I have seen for several years is Captain
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
1. Reprinted from The Sydney Mail,9 Aug. 1884. 2. Darwin's information that the Beagle was used as a collier may have been based on the fact that at that time she was employed on static duties at Southend, and that some such ships were used as coal-hulks. A brief account of her history is given in Appendix II. 3. Sveaborg. 4. A monograph on the sub-class Cirripedia-the Balanidae (London, 1854). 5. This is the large work of which the Origin of species was an 'abstract'. It is being transcribed
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
of the Shetlands; for I suppose peat is dug. You ask about myself; I have devoted my whole life to do what little I could for our favourite pursuit of Natural History I volunteered my services on board H.M.S. Beagle in her circumnavigation, did my best during our long voyage of five years, published an account of it. With my cordial thanks, pray believe me, my dear Sir, Your truly obliged Ch. Darwin. 1 Ms. in the possession of Colonel Laurence D. Edmondston. 2 William Macgillivray (1796-1852
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
. Variation of animals and plants…, I, 47. 4 Thomas Rivers (1798-1877). RICHARD OWEN Darwin first met Richard Owen (1804-1892) at the house of Sir Charles Lyell on 29 October 1836, less than one month after the Beagle had landed him at Falmouth. Owen, who had then recently been appointed Hunterian Professor at the Royal College of Surgeons, was one of the very few men who took any interest at all in the collections which Darwin had made, and one of Darwin's first problems was to decide what to do with
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F1573    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Darwin's journal. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (1): 1-21.   Text   Image   PDF
have been of the greatest value to him when visiting South America in the Beagle. (cf. L. L., vol. 1, p. 190.) It is not generally known that Darwin also contemplated a voyage to South America. This emerges from the following letter addressed by the Hydrographer of the Navy, Captain Francis Beaufort R. N. (1774-1857), to Captain Robert FitzRoy R. N., for the text which I am indebted to Rear-Admiral K. St. B. Collins, R.N., O.B.E., D.S.C., Hydrographer of the Navy. Capn Fitzroy Sepr 1 1831 My dear
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
under Captain Pringle Stokes and, after his death in 1828, under Captain Robert FitzRoy. He served as Assistant Surveyor in the voyage with Darwin, and he sailed a third time in the Beagle as Lieutenant and Assistant Surveyor under Captain John Clement Wickham in 1837, and succeeded him in command in 1841 until the ship's return to England in 1843. In his book Discoveries in Australia (London, 1846, 2, pp. 5, 6), Stokes wrote under the date 9 September, 1839: 'A wide bay appearing between two
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
number of aspects of Darwin's life and work. They are concerned with items relating to his own health (Letters 2, 3, 7, 10, 17, 21, 22, 24, 26, 27, 37), including the information that he did not expect to survive the winter of 1848-9; anxieties about his family and careers for his sons (3, 6, 8, 9); the possibility of his emigration (3); interest in his old shipmates in the Beagle (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9); the progress of his own work on barnacles (2, 4, 7, 33), the Origin of species (7, 9
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
use in enabling an attribution of a rough date─ bracket to be made to such letters as bear no year. 1 The bibliography to Darwin's published letters is given in Appendix I. 2 Loren C. Eiseley: Darwin's Century (London 1959); 'Charles Darwin and Edward Blyth', Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc., 103, 94 (1959). SYMS COVINGTON Syms Covington (born c. 1816, died 17 February 1861) was 'Fidler and boy to Poop cabin' on the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle and became Darwin's attendant, and his clerk and amanuensis after
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
try the cold water cure, and I have already received so much benefit that I really hope my health will be much renovated. I have finished my three geological volumes on the voyage of the old Beagle,2 and my journal, which you copied, has come out in a second edition,3 has had a very large sale. I am now employed on a large volume,4 describing the anatomy and all the species of barnacles from all over the world. I do not know whether you live near the sea, but if so I should be very glad if you
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
believe me your faithful friend C. Darwin. 1 Reprinted from The Sydney Mail, 9 Aug. 1884. 2 Mundy, Godfrey C. Our antipodes; or residence and rambles in the Australian gold fields (London, 1852). 3 Arthur Mellersh, midshipman in the Beagle with Darwin; afterwards Admiral. 4 On Fuegia, see Appendix IV. (Letter 6) [Charles Darwin to Syms Covington]1 Down, Farnborough, Kent February 28, 1855 Dear Covington, I was very glad to get your letter about six weeks ago, dated August 8, 1854, with so good an
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
─ compared to what they could have been in this old burthened country, with every soul struggling for subsistence. I have lately been talking a good deal on this subject with Captain Sulivan, who has four boys, and who often seems half-inclined to start for some colony and make his boys farmers. Captain Sulivan, owing to all his practice in the old Beagle (I have heard that our old ship is now a collier), was the right hand of the fleet in the Baltic, and had all the difficult work to do in
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F1595    Periodical contribution:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1959. Some unpublished letters of Charles Darwin. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 14: 12-66.   Text   PDF
the Paris Museum of Natural History (where five years previously Owen had worked with Cuvier) as a repository for Darwin's collections, had been discussed. 4 A number of specimens collected by Darwin and described in the Zoology of the voyage of the Beagle were presented to the British Museum in 1837 by Sir William Burnett (Physician-General of the Navy) and Captain FitzRoy. Some of Darwin's specimens were given to the Zoological Society's Museum, from which they were transferred to the British
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
) Specimens taken from vols. 27 (i), 53, 63, 69-70, 84-5, 106/7, 108-11 142 In alcohol Birds, list of Beagle specimens 29 (iii) Catalogue of plants, 1842 106/7 Fish, list of Beagle specimens 29 (i) Insects, list of Beagle Specimens 29 (iii) Mammals, list of Beagle specimens 29 (iii) Note, 1841-6 106/7 Notes on preservation of 29 (iii) Shells, list of Beagle specimens 29 (i) Stems, see Plants Sterility. List of articles and pamphlets 75 Sulivan, B. J. On the geology of the Falkland Islands 39 (i) Sundew
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
Remarkable Marine Species '* 135(8) The Formation of Vegetable Mould through the Action of Worms Material for 63-5 Chs. 1-7 24-5 Printed copy* 139(7) Wright, C. Darwinism: An Examination of Mr St George Mivart's Genesis of Species* 133(6) Zanzibar. Notes by W. J. S. Wharton 69 Zoology Beagle notes plates and references 29 (iii) Diary of observations of places visited during the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle 30-1 Notes on Erasmus Darwin's Zoonomia 154 [page] 6
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
. Beagle, 1832 6, on: (i) Animals, pp. 1 50. Descriptions, notes, etc. Fish in spirits of wine: 20 pages with a brown paper wrapper. Insects: 2 pages, and a letter: C. C. Babington, 1 July 1837. Shells in spirits of wine [8 pages]. (ii) Birds. (iii) Shells. Lists of Beagle specimens. Catalogue of boxes of corallines [10 small pieces of paper]. Insects in spirits of wine [one sheet only]. Zoological plates and references. 'Table for Lind's wind gage for Captain Fitzroy of H.M.S. Beagle'. Mammalia in
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
Selection Natural 'The Alleged Failure of Natural Selection in the Case of Man'* 135(1) Newspaper cuttings from the Spectator on natural and supernatural selection* 139(16) See also Species Sexual 'Preliminary notice' to 'On the Modifications of a Race of Syrian Street-Dogs by means of Sexual Selection', Dr W. Van Dyck 28 (ii) Seward, A. C. More Letters of Charles Darwin, copy for press of vol. I 149 Shells List of Beagle specimens in alcohol 29 (i) Lists of Beagle specimens 29 (iii) Notes by
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
Fertilization of Papilionaceous Flowers, and on the Crossing of Kidney Beans' 27 (i) Beetles. Description of Beagle specimens by G. R. Waterhouse* 133(8) Bennett, A. W. 'Spontaneous Movement in Plants'* 135(5) Berries. Newspaper cutting on holly berries* 132(8) Birds Diary for 1826, with entries of birds seen 129 List of Beagle specimens in alcohol 29 (iii) Notes, made on Beagle voyage 29 (ii) A. R. Wallace: 'The Geographical Distribution of Birds'* 133(9) A. R. Wallace: 'The Philosophy of Birds'
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
America, South. Maps 44 See also Geology, Zoology Ammonia 'The Action of Carbonate of Ammonia on Chlorophyll Bodies' Copy 28 (ii) Fair copy corrected by C.D. 28 (ii) 'The Action of Carbonate of Ammonia on the Roots of Certain Plants' Notes for 62 Copy 28 (i) Fair copy 28 (i) Printed copy* 135(17) Anders, J. M. 'The Transpiration of Plants'* 136(6) Animals Diary for 1826, with entries of animals seen 129 Notes made on Beagle voyage 29 (i) Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication, draft
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
Distribution of Coral Reefs 69 Material for the 2nd ed. 69 Proof sheets of 2nd ed.* 69 Notes for 3rd ed. 69 Corallines. Catalogue of boxes of Beagle specimens 29 (iii) Croll, J. 'Abstract of Views on Glacial Periods' 50 Cr ger, H. 'A Few Notes on the Fecundation of Orchids '* 136(3) Cultivation. H. Hoffmann: Culturversuche* 136(11) Darwin, Charles Robert Autobiographical material Fragment of an autobiography 91 Recollections of the Development of My Mind and Character 26 Copy of the above 149
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
Notes on the fertility of Antirrhinum 51 'On the Agency of Bees in the Fertilization of Papilionaceous Flowers, and on the Crossing of Kidney Beans' 27 (i) On the Various Contrivances by which Orchids are Fertilized by Insects Material for 2nd ed. 70 Proof sheets of 2nd ed.* 140(6) Field, The, 1864-5* 138(3) Fish. List of Beagle specimens in alcohol 29 (i) Fitzroy, Captain Robert. Table for Lind's wind gage for him 29 (iii) Flies, see Diptera Flowers 'Bees Boring Holes in Flowers' 27 (i
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
. Beagle 32-3 Geological Observations on South America Notes for 42 Last ch.: 'Northern Chile' 1 Appendix by G. B. Sowerby Original version 43 Fair copy 43 Final version 43 Lists of specimens Notes on places visited during the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle 34-8 'On the Distribution of the Erratic Boulders and on the Contemporaneous Unstratified Deposits of South America'* 139(10) 'On the Connexion of Certain Volcanic Phenomena in South America; and on the Formation of Mountain Chains and Volcanos '* 139(8
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
. Wharton: Notes on Rodriguez and Zanzibar 69 Indies, East, see East Indies Infants, see Children Insects Entomological Society of London Address at the Anniversary Meeting, by A. R. Wallace, 1871, and 1872* 133(15, 16) Insectivorous plants Daily observations and notes for, 1860-75 54-61 Newspaper cuttings* 139(18) Rough draft 61 Notes of errata 86 Lists of Beagle specimens in alcohol 29 (iii) Notes made on Beagle voyage 29 (i) On the Various Contrivances by Which Orchids are Fertilized by
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
Kidney beans, see Beans King, P. G. Account of the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle (copy) 106/7 Kosmos. Congratulations to C.D. on his 70th birthday 99 Krause, E. Erasmus Darwin Correspondence and notes 99 Pamphlets and reviews 133(5) K nckel, J. Les L pidoptr res trompe perforante, destructeurs des oranges* 138(4) Kuntze, O. Die Schutzmittel der Pflanzen gegen Thiere und Wetterungunst * 136(8) Lanessan, J.-L. de. 'L'absorption de l'eau par les feuilies', by H. Baillon and J.-L. de Lanessan* 136(15
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
. d'Acclimatatn., 10 January 1862; M. T. Masters, 28 March 1867; Schweizerbart?, n.d.; Williams and Norgate, 2 June 1868; Schultze, 4 August 1868; M. Wilckens, 25 March 1869; G. R. Gray, 9 July 1869; Soc. Anthr. de Paris, 9 December 1871; J. S. Craig, 4 November 1872; ?, 11 June 1872. 97 Letters to C.D., 1831 6, also some letters about him. These deal largely with the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle. Letters: G. Peacock to J. S. Henslow, ? September 1831; J. S. Henslow, 24 August 1831; J. Wedgwood to R. Darwin
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
Birds, etc. in spirits of wine. [This and the above bear the stamp 'Coll. Sherborn. Ex. Litt. Ricardi. Owen. Don. R. S. Owen'. They were removed from boxes of copies of letters.] Notes on the preservation of specimens. 30 (i), (ii) Zoology. Diary of observations on zoology of the places visited during the voyage [of H.M.S. Beagle]. 31 (i), (ii) Zoology. Diary of observations on zoology of the places visited during the voyage. . . . 32 (i), (ii) Diary of observations on the geology of the
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
1846, 7 February 1846. Notes by Orbigny, Sowerby and Forbes on shells collected by C.D. MS. [in Sowerby's hand] of original version of Sowerby's Appendix to Geological Observations on South America, Being the 3rd part of. . .the Voyage of the Beagle. . . (London, 1846). Letters: E. Forbes, n.d.[2]; incomplete and n.d. [2]; A. d'Orbigny, 14 February 1845, 31 January 1846. (ii) Fair copy of the above; MS. of final version. 44 Printed maps of South America, and plans and diagrams (geological
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
(7) Asa Gray: A Free Examination of Darwin's Treatise On the Origin of Species and of its American Reviewers [reprinted from the Atlantic Monthly for July, August and October 1860]. (London, 1861. 55 pp.) (8) Descriptions of Beagle specimens. Mostly extracts from the Annals and Mag. Natural History, includes G. R. Waterhouse on C.D.'s collection of carabideous insects, Adam White on descriptions of little known Arachnidae, F. Walker on Chalcidites from Lima, Valparaiso, Valdivia, Concepci n
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
, see Lepidoptera Caernarvonshire, see Geology, British Isles Calcutta. Notes made there by E. Blyth 98 Canis. 'Preliminary notice' to 'On the Modifications of a Race of Syrian Street-Dogs by Means of Sexual Selection' by Dr W. Van Dyck 28 (ii) Carabidae, see Beetles Carbonate of Ammonia, see Ammonia Carlyle, T. Newspaper cuttings on his supposed attack on C.D. and the refutation* 132(3) Chalcidoideae. Descriptions of Beagle specimens by F. Walker* 133(8) Chambers, R. W. Draft of a letter to him 50
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
the Beagle expedition 97 Darwin, W. E. Notebook, containing notes and diagrams of flowers 117 Delpino, F. Rivista Botanica* 132(5) Dichogamy List of articles and pamphlets 75 Notes, 1841 75 [page] 5
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
the Natural History of Countries Visited During the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle, notes for 2nd ed. 46 (ii) Nature Collection of articles on cross-fertilization* 139(18) Newspaper cutting, 1876* 139(19) Letters on subject of abortion* 52 Nests. A. R. Wallace: 'The Philosophy of Birds' Nests'* 133(12) New Jersey. H. D. Rogers: Description of the Geology of the State of New Jersey * 135(1) [page] 5
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
. 'Preliminary notice' by C.D. to 'On the Modifications of a Race of Syrian Street-Dogs by Means of Sexual Selection 28 (ii) Variation, biological List of articles and pamphlets 75 Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication, draft of ch. 27 51 Varieties, see Species Vegetable mould, see Mould Vegetables. Notes on seeds 46 (ii) Vicia faba. ' On the Crossing of Kidney Beans' 27 (i) Vivisection. Material on, 1881 139(17) Wales, see Geology, British Isles Walker, F. Descriptions of Beagle specimens
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F1575    Periodical contribution:     Barrett, P. H. ed. 1960. A transcription of Darwin's first notebook [B] on 'Transmutation of species'. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard 122: [245]-296, for 1959-1960 (April).   Text   Image
53. Semnopitheque, a name now technically invalid for the Old World langur monkeys. 54. Sapajou, a monkey of the genus Cebus of S. America. 55. See Lyell, op. cit., note 4 (in vol. 2, p. 402). 56. Muscicapa coronata? Lath., a tyrant-flycatcher of the Galapagos Islands. See Darwin, Charles, 1839. Journal of researches into the geology and natural history of the various countries visited by H.M.S. Beagle, p. 461. London, Colburn. 57. This word is crossed out, but looks as if it might have been
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A94    Pamphlet:     Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
(ii) Notes on the seeds of flowers (including hollyhock and stock) and vegetables, 'Comparison of seeds, flowers, legumes, etc. to see effect of selection and of non-correlation'. Notes on the origin of cultivated plants, abstracts and a list of alpine plants not found in arctic Europe. Notes for 2nd edition of Journal of Researches into the Natural History and Geology of Countries Visited During the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle which 'may be useful in species theory'. Notes on the habits of bees
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