To G. J. Romanes 2 September 1881
Down, | Beckenham, Kent. | (Railway Station | Orpington. S.E.R.)
Sept 2d. 1881.
My dear Romanes.
Your letter has perplexed me beyond all measure.1 I fully recognise the duty of everyone, whose opinion is worth anything, expressing his opinion publicly on vivisection; & this made me send my letter to the Times.—2 I have been thinking at intervals all morning what I could say, & it is the simple truth that I have nothing worth saying. You & men like you, whose ideas flow freely & who can express them easily, cannot understand the state of mental paralysis in which I find myself.
What is most wanted is a careful & accurate attempt to show what physiology has already done for man, & even still more strongly what there is every reason to believe it will hereafter do.— Now I am absolutely incapable of doing this, or of discussing the other points suggested by you.—
If you wish for my name (& I shd. be glad that it shd appear with that of others in the same cause) could you not quote some sentence from my letter in the Times, which I enclose, but please return it.— If you thought fit you might say that you quoted it with my approval, & that after still further reflexion I still abide most strongly in my expressed conviction. For Heaven’s sake, do think of this.— I do not grudge the labour & thought, but I could write nothing worth anyone reading.
Allow me to demur to your calling your conjoint article a “symposium”,—strictly a “drinking party”.3 This seems to me very bad taste, & I do hope everyone of you will avoid any semblance of a joke on the subject.— I know that words, like a joke, on this subject have quite disgusted some persons not at all inimical to physiology.— One person lamented to me that Mr Simon in his truly admirable Address at the Medical Congress (by far the best thing which I have read) spoke of the “fantastic sensuality” (or some such term) of the many mistaken, but honest men & women who are half mad on the subject.4
Do pray try & let me escape & quote my letter, which in some respects is more valuable as giving my independent judgment before the Medical Congress.—
I really cannot imagine what I could say.—
I will now turn to another subject: My little book on Worms has been long finished, but Murray was so strongly opposed to publishing it at the dead season, that I yielded.5 I have told the Printers to send you a set of clean sheets, which you can afterwards have stitched together.— There is hardly anything in it which can interest you.—
Two or three papers by Hermann Müller have just appeared in Kosmos, which seem to me interesting as showing how soon, i.e. after how many attempts, Bees learn how best to suck a new flower.6 There is also, a good & laudatory review of Dr. Roux.—7
I could lend you Kosmos if you think fit.—
You will perhaps have seen that my poor dear brother Erasmus has just died, & he was buried yesterday here at Down.8
Many thanks for your kind invitation to my sons, none of whom are likely to be in Scotland.9
Yours very sincerely | Charles Darwin
Footnotes
Bibliography
Cantor, Geoffrey, et al. 2004. Science in the nineteenth-century periodical: reading the magazine of nature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Earthworms: The formation of vegetable mould through the action of worms: with observations on their habits. By Charles Darwin. London: John Murray. 1881.
Müller, Hermann. 1881b. Die Entwickelung der Blumenthätigkeit der Insekten. Kosmos 9: 204–15, 258–72, 351–70, 415–32.
Romanes, Ethel Duncan. 1896. The life and letters of George John Romanes M.A., LL.D., F.R.S. London, New York, and Bombay: Longmans, Green, and Co.
Roux, Wilhelm. 1881. Der Kampf der Theile im Organismus. Ein Beitrag zur Vervollständigung der mechanischen Zweckmässigkeitslehre. Leipzig: Verlag von Wilhelm Engelmann.
Simon, John. 1882. Experiments on life, as fundamental to the science of preventive medicine and as of question between man and brute: an address delivered on August 3rd, 1881, at the opening of the State Medicine section of the International Medical Congress then assembled in London. Issued by the Association for the Advancement of Medicine by Research. London: J. W. Kolckmann.
Summary
Unable to contribute an essay to a symposium on the subject of vivisection. Objects to use of term "symposium".
Mentions articles of Hermann Müller.
Death of his brother Erasmus [26 Aug 1881].
Letter details
- Letter no.
- DCP-LETT-13312
- From
- Charles Robert Darwin
- To
- George John Romanes
- Sent from
- Down
- Source of text
- American Philosophical Society (Mss.B.D25.597)
- Physical description
- ALS 8pp
Please cite as
Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 13312,” accessed on 5 June 2024, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-13312.xml