From Asa Gray 11 March 1880
Herbarium of Harvard University, | Botanic Garden, Cambridge, Mass.
March 11 1880.
Dear Darwin
I send you “one more” of the flat seeds, which has been about 10 days in damp sand. There are 3 others, perhaps not sound, we will watch1
How could the plumule of Delphinium nudicaule get out, but through the united petioles.?2
I sent you—to laugh at a notice in The Nation., of a Philadelphia lawyer’s Refutation of Darwinism. The adage is that “a Philadelphia Lawyer is a match for the Devil”. But a mere imp is a match for this one.3
As to the names of the species by the seeds, it is not clear— But, according to Watson, who has done his best with them, the one with large ovate turgid seeds rather pointed at one end, the germination of which is figured in Amer. Jour. Sci. & in Text-Book is Megarrhiza Californica, I suppose.4
The M. Oregana has flattish seeds;5
I have stopped & looked into this matter. There are two species clear.
1. A Californian one (M. Californica, with obovoid seeds & hilum at the small end—well figured by Naudin in Ann. Sci. Nat. ser. 4, 12, t. 9. The last seeds sent you must be of this, & it must include at least Watson’s M. Californica & M. muricata.6
2. M. Oregana, with oblate and flatter seeds, the hilum at middle of a long side, seed sent. And these seeds, supplied by a florist—must have come from Oregon.
The particular source of the seeds I germinated is uncertain, but surely Californian. If from San Francisco then probably M. Marah, a 3rd species. We will try to get them in cultivation. But tho’ they will grow here, we have not been able to flower them!
Yours ever | A. Gray
Footnotes
Bibliography
Brewer, W. H., et al. 1876–80. Geological Survey of California. Botany. 2 vols. Cambridge, Mass.: Welch, Bigelow & Co.
Gray, Asa. 1877e. The germination of the genus Megarrhiza, Torr. American Journal of Science and Arts 3d ser. 14: 21–4.
Gray, Asa. 1879. Gray’s botanical text-book. Vol. I. Structural botany or organography on the basis of morphology. To which is added the principles of taxonomy and phytography, and a glossary of botanical terms. 6th edition. New York and Chicago: Ivison, Blakeman, and Company.
Naudin, Charles Victor. 1859b. Revue des cucurbitacées cultivées au Muséum, en 1859. Annales des sciences naturelles (botanique) 4th ser. 12: 79–164.
O’Neill, T. Warren. 1880. The refutation of Darwinism; and the converse theory of development; based exclusively upon Darwin’s facts, and comprising qualitative and quantitative analyses of the phenomena of variation; of reversion; of correlation; of crossing; of close-interbreeding; of the reproduction of lost members; of the repair of injuries; of the reintegration of tissue; and of sexual and asexual generation. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co.
Rawson, Hugh and Miner, Margaret, eds. 2006. The Oxford dictionary of American quotations. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Summary
Sends seeds of Megarrhiza and gives details of species.
Letter details
- Letter no.
- DCP-LETT-12532
- From
- Asa Gray
- To
- Charles Robert Darwin
- Sent from
- Herbarium of Harvard
- Source of text
- DAR 209.6: 202
- Physical description
- ALS 4pp
Please cite as
Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 12532,” accessed on 26 September 2022, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-12532.xml