From E. A. Wheler 28 March 1879
3 Bertie Terrace
28 Mch. 1879
My dear Cousin,
Emma will send you a book written by our Uncle Charles Darwin, & which gained him a name as a very clever & promising young man. At the end, you will see a short account of his life. His Father Dr. Darwin was not with him at his death. There would not have been time in those days to get there. He felt his son’s death most acutely, & his friends said he never recovered it, but was a different man after. Charles was sent at that early age to France on account of his stammering as he never stammered when speaking french.1
When Dr. Darwin married Mrs. Pole, he left Lichfield, & lived about two years at Radbourne, till her son Mr. Pole came of age, & my Mother was born there also our Uncle Edward her elder Brother.2 They then lived in the Full St in Derby, & the garden was just over the river Derwent, which they crossed in a ferry boat. Dr. D. had all his children taught to swim when they were four years old, & all were capital swimmers. My Mother twice saved a young friend’s life who was drowning in a swimming bath. I suppose you know that Dr. D. never took wine, & recommended all his Patients & friends to abstain & in my earlier days I can remember, among those of my Mothers standing, how few I knew in Derbyshire who took wine. I have seen some of my gdfather’s letters. I think Regd Darwin must have lent them to us—they were clever, playful & witty. Regd. has a sort of day book of his, which interested us, with cases of his patients, verses, remarks &c3
with kind remembrances | Yours very sincerely | E A Wheler
With regard to that tale about my gdfather & the Jockey I find he went to Margate to see my aunt in 1793 & his fee was 100 guineas.4 The month July.
Emma reminds me my gdfather left Radbourne because of the inconvenience to his practice, that his step son was not then of age5 She will like to have C Darwin’s book returned when you have quite done with it.
CD annotations
Footnotes
Bibliography
Darwin, Erasmus, ed. 1780. Experiments establishing a criterion between mucaginous and purulent matter: and, an account of the retrograde motions of the absorbent vessels of animal bodies in some diseases. Lichfield: J. Jackson.
Erasmus Darwin. By Ernst Krause. Translated from the German by W. S. Dallas, with a preliminary notice by Charles Darwin. London: John Murray. 1879.
King-Hele, Desmond. 1999. Erasmus Darwin. A life of unequalled achievement. London: Giles de la Mare Publishers.
Summary
Sends a book by her uncle, Charles Darwin [1758–78], and recounts some details of the life of her grandfather, Dr Erasmus Darwin.
Letter details
- Letter no.
- DCP-LETT-11959
- From
- Elizabeth Anne Galton/Elizabeth Anne Wheler
- To
- Charles Robert Darwin
- Sent from
- Leamington
- Source of text
- DAR 210.14: 17
- Physical description
- ALS 4pp †
Please cite as
Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 11959,” accessed on 26 September 2022, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-11959.xml