From John Scott 21 December 1869
Royal Botanic Gardens | Calcutta
Decr 21st /69
Dear Sir
I often think on subjects, material I may have collected information likely to interest you, but I get together even in India so slowly little scraps that I am long in getting sufficient to fill a sheet or so. I was indeed very much pleased to find that my observations on expressions were valued of you.1 I do not think I have anything noteworthy to add to them … I have particularly observed, since I heard from you, the colour of hair and beard, and invariably seen that when they do differ the former is of the darker shade.2 (beard always lighter coloured than the hair) I have indeed seen it somewhat marked in the thinly bearded Lepchas and Mechis of Sikkim: the Bhotea also show it as do many Burmese and Chinamen—all of which have very little hair in general on the face.3
I have frequently thought—though you are in all probability already familiar—that the native mode of swimming might interest you: the action is so known, by that of the lower animals. It is different of course with some of the sea-faring races as the Burmese and Malays who have been much in contact with Europeans. I refer only to those races who have come little in contact with Europeans. The Santhals, or Dhangars of Nagpore illustrate it well,4 as do also the generality of the country nurtured Bengalee and various other Indian races. These in the act of swimming pose the body at a high angle (nearly 45o ) in the water, throw the head slightly backward so that the water level is in a line with the middle of the chin base of the ears and nape of neck; thus strikingly different from the Europeans. Again the progressive action is simply “pawing”, the manner of short, quick, alternate, almost vertical strokes, with slightly bent or curved hands, the motion of feet spurring, the right limb being drawn forward and struck out again with the stroke of the left hand and so on alternately in a somewhat devious course with opposing limbs and arms. I was oft struck with their truly animal like mode of progression and frequently thought of mentioning it to you. Lately however, I had the opporunity of seeing one of our big Hanuman monkeys5 fall accidentally from a tree into one of our garden tanks in making a long spring. After composing himself somewhat his movements resembled very strikingly indeed those which I have above described: this has induced me to bring it to your notice.
I have often thought also of monkey like mode natives here generally adopt in carrying their children. It is striking to see the youngest infants tied astride the mothers hip with its slender arms athwart her body. Truly they need to have but a slight elongation of the latter so that they might clasp the body to complete the comparison.
I shall now add a few notes on a different subject which I have thought might interest you. Polydactylism 6 This occurs in several native families, from whom I have had the following [records]. In the first case is a family of two sons and a daughter, of whom the latter and one of the former had six digits; the supernumerary being a finger attached to the metacarpal bone on the outer margin of the hand. The feet had the ordinary number of digits in the feet. In this case the grandfathers brother had six digits on one hand. Both brothers and sister were married but none of their children have inherited this peculiarity.
Another case is of a man with six digits on one foot (supernumerary on outer margin) the left, while this man’s grandfather had a sixth on the right foot. It has appeared in none of the other members of their families. A third had six fingers (very perfectly developed) on both hands, as had also a brother and uncle—but none of their descendants, which are as yet however confined to a single generation. A fourth family had a supernumary thumb (perfectly developed) supported on the metacarpal bone, and this man’s grandson (an infant of 10 months) has also six digits but in this case a finger on the outer margin of the left hand.— I have also to note a Bengale⟨e⟩ family which for three generations have had all its members strongly prognathic. The present family consists of three male and two female children all of whom present the peculiarity and which has been inherited from the father and grandfather. I have seen all the present male members of the family and found in each with the upper maxillary bone projecting considerably more than lower with exceedingly large though equably developed teeth: the canine are same plane and not longer than the others; previously to seeing the family I had been told that they projected and were much longer.
I do not think that I have anything further worth communicating (if indeed what I have already written is) I have been much bothered with fever and ague since the close of the rains and have really been little able for work of any sort. I am now however I think fairly clear of them—I have just sent to Dr. Hooker a paper on the tree-ferns of Sikkim in which I treat of their distribution, economic uses, structures of caudex, and relations with the higher plants and a few other peculiarities with descriptions and figures of the species—also a number of plates illustrations of their structure. Dr. Hooker promises to look it over for me and if it proves worthy he will communicate it to the Linnean.7 I am just commencing a book on Indian Horticulture, in which I devote a chapter to acclimatization.8
I am Dear Sir | Yours respectfully | John Scott.
CD annotations
Footnotes
Bibliography
Correspondence: The correspondence of Charles Darwin. Edited by Frederick Burkhardt et al. 29 vols to date. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1985–.
Descent: The descent of man, and selection in relation to sex. By Charles Darwin. 2 vols. London: John Murray. 1871.
EB: The Encyclopædia Britannica. A dictionary of arts, sciences, literature and general information. 11th edition. 29 vols. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1910–11.
Scott, John. 1868. Report on trial sowings of flower-seeds from Messrs. James Carter & Co. of London and Messrs. Vilmorin Andrieux & Co. of Paris. [Extracts read 21 January 1868.] Journal of the Agricultural and Horticultural Society of India n.s. 1 (1869): 191–9.
Variation: The variation of animals and plants under domestication. By Charles Darwin. 2 vols. London: John Murray. 1868.
Summary
Observations on expression and variation in Asian peoples: when colour of beard and hair differ, beard is always lighter. Differences in swimming strokes. Polydactylism.
Has just sent Hooker a paper on Sikkim tree-ferns [Trans. Linn. Soc. Lond. 30 (1875): 1–44, read 1870].
Has had fever since the end of the rains.
Letter details
- Letter no.
- DCP-LETT-7030
- From
- John Scott
- To
- Charles Robert Darwin
- Sent from
- R. Bot. Gard., Calcutta
- Source of text
- DAR 85: A106–6a
- Physical description
- ALS 4pp †
Please cite as
Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 7030,” accessed on 28 March 2024, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-7030.xml
Also published in The Correspondence of Charles Darwin, vol. 17