skip to content

Darwin Correspondence Project

Search: contains ""

Darwin Correspondence Project
Search:
letter in document-type disabled_by_default
letter in document-type disabled_by_default
letter in document-type disabled_by_default
1840 in date disabled_by_default
1840 in date disabled_by_default
1840 in date disabled_by_default
Unidentified in addressee disabled_by_default
Unidentified in addressee disabled_by_default
1 Item
Sorted by:  
Page: 1

To ?   [2 June? 1840]

Summary

Can give no information on the separation of the sexes in the guanaco.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  Unidentified
Date:  [2 June? 1840]
Classmark:  The British Library (Charnwood Autographs Vol. IV Add MS 70951: 315)
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-570F
Search:
in keywords
1 Items

Darwin’s observations on his children

Summary

Charles Darwin’s observations on the development of his children, began the research that culminated in his book The Expression of the emotions in man and animals, published in 1872, and his article ‘A biographical sketch of an infant’, published in Mind…

Matches: 10 hits

  • … gives the first notice that he is going to cry. Feb 27. 1840 When nine weeks & three days …
  • … our door N o  12 and N o  11 is in the slit for the Letter box.— he decidedly ran past N o  11 …
  • … has learned them from my sometimes changing the first letter in any word he is using—thus I say …
  • … , pp. 131–2. [6]  Correspondence  vol. 2, letter from Emma Wedgwood, [23 January 1839] . …
  • … preceding sentence and the following text to ‘Feb 27. 1840’ on page 6 is in Emma Darwin’s hand. …
  • … stayed with CD and Emma Darwin between 21 March and 2 May 1840 (Emma Darwin’s diary). If Emma Darwin …
  • … December, rather than 4, and 28 days, not 29, in February (1840 was a leap year) when calculating …
  • … Darwin’s parents Bessy and Josiah Wedgwood II, on 5 June 1840. They remained in Staffordshire and …
  • … the role of bees in pollination, made in the summers between 1840 and 1842, are in DAR 46.2 and DAR …
  • … in Emma Darwin’s hand. [81] This sentence is in an unidentified child’s hand. …