From Francis Galton 12 November 1879
42 Rutland Gate
Nov 12/79
My dear Darwin
It was with the greatest pleasure that I received & read your biography of Dr.Darwin1
What a marvel of condensation it is, and how firmly you lay hold of facts that had long been distorted and ram them home into their right places.
The biography seems to me quite a new order of writing, so scientifically accurate in its treatment. The many passages you quote are curiously modern in their conception and (Excuse this horrid paper which folds the wrong way) simple in expression, (considering his average style) I still can’t quite appreciate the flow in his mind which made it possible for him to write so very hypothetically for the most part, while at the same time his strictly scientific gifts were of so high an order. There seems to be an unexplained residuum, even after what you quote from him about the value of hypotheses.—2 I see you have mentioned me twice, very kindly—but too flatteringly for my deserts.3 How you are down upon Mrs Schimmelpenninck & Miss Seward.!4
I now, with fear & trembling lest you should finally vote me a confirmed bore, venture to enclose copies of some queries I have just had printed & am circulating, after having obtained by personal enquiries a good deal of very curious information on the points in question.5 I venture to ask you more particularly, because the “visualising” faculty of Dr. Darwin appears to have been remarkable & of a peculiar order & it is possible that your’s through inheritance may also be similarly peculiar. It is perfectly marvellous how the faculty varies, & moreover some very able men intellectually do not possess it They do their work by words. I am in correspondence, with Max Müller about this, who is an outré “nominalist”.6
Very sincerely yrs | Francis Galton.
Thanks for Bowditch (children’s growth), which you kindly sent me.7
Footnotes
Bibliography
Bowditch, H. P. 1877. The growth of children. [From the eighth annual report of the State Board of Health of Massachusetts.] Boston: Albert J. Wright.
Hankin, Christiana C. ed. 1858. Life of Mary Anne Schimmelpenninck. 2 vols. London: Longman, Brown, Green, Longmans, and Roberts.
Seward, Anna. 1804. Memoirs of the life of Dr. Darwin. London: J. Johnson.
Summary
Praises CD’s biography of Erasmus Darwin;
asks CD to answer some queries he is circulating. Is particularly interested in "visualizing faculty" in CD and Dr Darwin.
Letter details
- Letter no.
- DCP-LETT-12313
- From
- Francis Galton
- To
- Charles Robert Darwin
- Sent from
- London, Rutland Gate, 42
- Source of text
- DAR 105: A101–2
- Physical description
- ALS 4pp
Please cite as
Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 12313,” accessed on 26 September 2022, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-12313.xml