skip to content

Darwin Correspondence Project

From J. P. Taylor   14 November 1881

Athenæum Club | Pall Mall S.W.

14th Nov | 1881—

Dear Sir

I have been reading with much interest your little Essay on Earth Worms.1

I agree in the main with most of your observations, though I cannot but feel that you have a little overestimated the value of your pets as agricultural laborers—2 It seems to me that in accounting for the formation of mould you have scarcely made sufficient allowance for the annual decay of vegetation, the deposit of dust carried by the winds, the deposit of mud carried by the waters, the disintegration of rocks & hard soil caused by changes of temperature, the droppings of animals & birds, the labours of dung beetles & of carrion beetles, & the works of moles & mice.

However I am not writing this note with the view of playing the critic, but for the purpose of making you acquainted with one or two facts, which you may possibly deem of some slight interest—

1st. I observe that at p. 128 you cite Dr King as an authority for a worm which he saw in Ceylon “about two feet in length,” & you seem to regard that specimen as unusally large—3 Now, I had a worm some years ago which was 3 ft. 2 inch. long, & about the thickness of a gentleman’s umbrella stick— This creature had been brought from Ceylon by my friend Sir James Emerson Tennent & he told me that it had been found in the rich mud of one of the abandoned tanks.

2d at p. 14 you speak of the ‘number of dead worms which may sometimes be seen lying on the ground,’ & you then cite Mr Galton as having seen last March a vast quantity in Hyde Park—4 In support of this statement, if indeed it requires any, I may here add that four or five years ago, I noticed several hundred dead worms as I was walking down the Mall in St James’ Park. I could see that many of these had travelled several yards from their holes before they had died, as their tracts were plainly visible on the soft sand. I know not what had killed them, but as it had been raining for a day or two before, I imagined at the time that they had come to the surface to avoid the water which had run into their burrows, & that exposure to the air had been fatal to them.

3d. At p. 34 you cite Hoffmeister as an authority to prove that worms “pass the winter either singly or rolled up with others into a ball.”5 To this passage I can add as a note, that I have often, while digging in my father’s garden when a boy,6 turned up single worms that were obviously hybernating, & for that purpose had tied themselves up in a sort of lover’s knot. It used to amuse me as a boy to try to untie them without doing them any serious injury— I mention this fact, as I do not remember that I have ever seen the curious habit I have just mentioned alluded to by any naturalist.

The public will probably ask, ere long, for a second edition of your book,7 & in that event a few pages respecting their generative qualities would be interesting— Are they oviparous or viviparous? Do they pair like birds? or live in promiscuous concubinage? In what ratio do they encrease & multiply, that is, how many are born at a birth, & how many births in a year? What is the period of gestation? & what is the average term of life? I will only further add that since your book has appeared I have been asked at least half a dozen times by intelligent & generally well informed persons of both sexes, whether a worm cut in half will unite again, or grow into two worms!

All which teaches me that, as Naturalists, we have still much to learn.

Apologising for inflicting this long letter on you, I remain | yrs faithfully | J Pitt Taylor

Ch. Darwin Esqr | &c &c &c

CD annotations

7.3 Are they … a year? 7.5] scored pencil
7.8 whether … worms! 7.9] scored pencil

Footnotes

Earthworms was published on 10 October 1881 (Freeman 1977).
CD had emphasised the role of worms in preparing the soil for agriculture (Earthworms, pp. 309–13).
George King had sent CD observations of worms and worm-castings from Calcutta (Kolkata); his letters have not been found, but see Correspondence vol. 21, letters to George King, 18 February 1873 and 6 July 1873.
Francis Galton sent the observations to CD in his letter of 7 March 1881.
On the worms’ habit of rolling into balls during winter, CD cited the monograph on the family of earthworms by Werner Hoffmeister (Hoffmeister 1845).
Taylor’s father was Thomas Taylor.
No second edition of Earthworms was published; the final printing, with minor additions and corrections by Francis Darwin, was Earthworms (1882).

Bibliography

Earthworms (1882): The formation of vegetable mould through the action of worms: with observations on their habits. By Charles Darwin. Seventh thousand (corrected by Francis Darwin). London: John Murray. 1882.

Earthworms: The formation of vegetable mould through the action of worms: with observations on their habits. By Charles Darwin. London: John Murray. 1881.

Freeman, Richard Broke. 1977. The works of Charles Darwin: an annotated bibliographical handlist. 2d edition. Folkestone, Kent: William Dawson & Sons. Hamden, Conn.: Archon Books, Shoe String Press.

Hoffmeister, Werner. 1845. Die bis jetzt bekannten Arten aus der Familie der Regenwürmer. Als Grundlage zu einer Monographie dieser Familie. Brunswick: Friedrich Vieweg and Son.

Summary

Thinks CD overestimates earthworms’ role in creating mould. Gives some observations on worms and questions about their breeding habits.

Letter details

Letter no.
DCP-LETT-13483
From
John Pitt Taylor
To
Charles Robert Darwin
Sent from
Athenaeum Club
Source of text
DAR 178: 55
Physical description
ALS 8pp †

Please cite as

Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 13483,” accessed on 2 December 2024, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-13483.xml

letter