To J. D. Hooker 18 November [1856]1
Down Bromley Kent
Nov. 18th
My dear Hooker
I send enclosed, received this morning.—2 I send my own,, also, as you might like to see it; please be sure return it.—3 As the facts about N. range are quite invaluable for me for my theory of transport to America. If your letter is Botanical & has nothing private, I shd. like to see it. I do not know whether I ought to send to you his to me; as you will see there is a little rap for you. But, as I know full well, you are not thin-skinned & can stand a blow (& by Jove return it) as well as any man, I send it.—
Many thanks for your note received this morning, & now for another “wriggle”4 According to my notions, the sub-arctic species would advance in a body, advancing so as to keep climate nearly the same, & as long as they did this, I do not believe there would be any tendency to change, but only when the few got amongst foreign associates. When the tropical species retreated as far as they could to the equator, they would halt, & then the confusion would spread back in the line of march from the far north & the strongest would struggle forward &c &c (But I am getting quite poetical in my wriggles) In short I think the warm temperate would be exposed very much longer to those causes which I believe are alone efficient in producing change than the sub-arctic; but I must think more over this, & have a good wriggle I cannot quite agree with your proposition that because the sub-arctic have to travel twice as far, they wd be more liable to change. Look at the two Journeys which the Arctics have had from N. to S. & S. to North, with no change, as may be inferred, if my doctrine is correct, from similarity of Arctic species in America & Europe & in the Alps.— But I will not weary you; but I really & truly think your last objection is not so strong as it looks at first. You never make an objection without doing me much good.—
Hurrah a seed has just germinated after 21 hours in Owls stomach. This according to ornithologists calculation wd. carry it, God knows how many miles; but I think an owl really might go in storm in this time 400 or 500 miles.—5
Adios | C. Darwin
Owls & Hawks have often been seen in mid Atlantic.
Footnotes
Summary
CD encloses letter from Asa Gray, although it is critical of JDH.
Role of struggle in forming species in retreat from advancing glaciers.
Letter details
- Letter no.
- DCP-LETT-1991
- From
- Charles Robert Darwin
- To
- Joseph Dalton Hooker
- Sent from
- Down
- Source of text
- DAR 114: 183
- Physical description
- ALS 6pp
Please cite as
Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 1991,” accessed on 26 November 2024, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-1991.xml
Also published in The Correspondence of Charles Darwin, vol. 6