Search: Dobell, H. B. in addressee 
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From:
Charles Robert Darwin
To:
Horace Benge Dobell
Date:
16 Feb [1863]
Source of text:
Barton L. Smith MD (private collection)
Summary:

Thanks HBD for his lectures On the germs and vestiges of disease [1861].

Thinks his reasoning that the V. M. F. ("force exhibited in the operations of life") is not a "given quantity" is satisfactory.

How far the conditions of life affect the forms of organic life puzzles CD more than any other part of his subject. Thinks he may have underrated its importance in Origin.

Asks for source of the quotation on regeneration in HBD’s work.

Contributor:
Darwin Correspondence Project
From:
Charles Robert Darwin
To:
Horace Benge Dobell
Date:
6 Mar [1863]
Source of text:
DAR 143: 389
Summary:

Thanks for information [on regeneration quotation].

Contributor:
Darwin Correspondence Project
From:
Charles Robert Darwin
To:
Horace Benge Dobell
Date:
21 Apr [1863]
Source of text:
DAR 221.5: 6 (photocopy); Legends (dealers) (catalogue 2, 1990)
Summary:

CD thinks HBD’s tables would be a considerable gain because "the importance of hereditary transmission can hardly be exaggerated from every point of view". Makes suggestions.

Asks him to send any remarkable cases of inheritance to him and, as well, any case of regrowth of amputated additional digit.

Contributor:
Darwin Correspondence Project
From:
Charles Robert Darwin
To:
Horace Benge Dobell
Date:
13 May [1863]
Source of text:
DAR 221.5: 7
Summary:

The [genealogical] table seems excellent. Would be obliged for any further information about the children of the cousins – the case surprises CD.

Contributor:
Darwin Correspondence Project
From:
Charles Robert Darwin
To:
Horace Benge Dobell
Date:
17 July [1864]
Source of text:
DAR 221.5: 8 (photocopy)
Summary:

Thanks HBD for his note. The analogy of surnames had not occurred to CD – only that of language generally, as shown so well by Lyell. Fears HBD’s argument about progression would not have much weight.

Contributor:
Darwin Correspondence Project
From:
Charles Robert Darwin
To:
Horace Benge Dobell
Date:
7 Oct [1871]
Source of text:
DAR 221.5: 9 (photocopy)
Summary:

"I should expect that the period of gestation will differ very little in the individuals of the same species, as long as its conditions of life remained the same. But I doubt whether it is sure as an absolute criteria; for although little or nothing on this field can be known with respect to species in a state of nature, yet with races of the same species as with dogs and cattle, the period is known slightly to differ. In the generation of seeds from the same capsule there is often the most wonderful and inexplicable difference in the periods".

Contributor:
Darwin Correspondence Project