WCP1859

Letter (WCP1859.4055)

[1]

5, Westbourne Grove Terrace, W.

May 29th. [1864]1

My dear Darwin

You are always so ready to appreciate what others do, & especially to over-estimate my desultory efforts, that I can not be surprised at your very kind & flattering remarks on my papers. I am glad however that you have made a few critical observations & am only sorry you were not well enough to make more, as that enables me to say a few words in explanation—

My great fault is haste. An idea strikes me, I think over it for a few days, & then write away with such illustrations as occur to me while going on— I therefore [2] look at the subject almost solely from one point of view. Thus, in my paper on "Man"2 I aim solely at showing that brutes are modified in a great variety of ways by "Natural Selection", but that in none of these particular ways can man be modified, because of the superiority of his intellect.— I therefore no doubt overlook a few smaller points in which Nat[ural]. Selec[tion]. may still act on men & brutes alike. Colour is one of them & I have alluded to this in correlation to constitution, in an abstract I have made at Sclater’s3 request for the Nat[ural]. Hist[ory]. Review.4 At the same time there is so much evidence of migrations & displacements of races of man, & so many cases of peoples of distinct physical characters inhabiting the same or similar regions, [3] & also of races of uniform physical characters inhabiting widely dissimilar regions,—that the external characteristics of the chief races of man must I think be older than his present geographical distribution,— & the modifications produced by correlation to favourable variations of constitution be only a secondary cause of external modification— I hope you may get the returns from the Army. They would be very interesting, but I do not expect the results would be favourable to your view.

With regard to the constant battles of savages leading to selection of physical superiority, I think it would be very imprefect [sic] & subject to [4] so many exceptions & irregularities that it could produce no definite result. For instance,—the strongest & bravest men would lead, & expose themselves most, & would therefore be most subject to wounds & death.— And the physical energy which led to any one tribe delighting in war, might lead to its extermination by inducing quarrels with all surrounding tribes & leading them to combine against it. Again superior cunning, stealth & swiftness of foot, or even better weapons would often lead to victory as well as mere physical strength. Moreover this kind of more or less perpetual war goes on among all savage peoples— It could lead therefore to no differential characters but merely to the keeping up of a certain average standard of bodily & mental health & vigour. [5] So with selection of variations adapted to special purposes habits of life as fishing, paddling, riding, climbing &c. &c. in different races, no doubt it must act to some extent, but will it be ever so rigid as to induce a definite physical modification, & can we imagine it to have had any part in producing the distinct races that now exist?

The sexual selection you allude to will also I think have been equally uncertain in its results— In the very lowest tribes there is rarely much polygamy & women are more or less a matter of purchase— There is also little difference of social condition & I think it rarely happens that any healthy & un-deformed [6] man remains without wife & children. I very much doubt the often repeated assertion that our aristocracy are more beautiful than the middle classes. I allow that they present specimens of the most perfect highest kind of beauty, but I doubt the average.

I have noticed in country places a greater average amount of good looks among the middle classes, & besides we unavoidably combine in our idea of beauty, with intellectual expression & refinement of manners, which often make the less appear the more beautiful. Mere physical beauty,— that is, a healthy & regular development of the body & features [7] approaching to the mean or type of European man,— I believe is quite as frequent in one class of society as the other & much more frequent in the rural districts than in cities.

With regard to the rank of man in Zoological Classification, I fear I have not made myself intelligible. I never meant to adopt Owen’s5 or any other such views— but only to point out that from one point of view he was right— I hold that a distinct family for Man, as Huxley6 allows, is all that can possibly be given him Zoologically. But at the same [8] time if my theory is true,— that while the animals which surrounded him have been undergoing modification in all parts of their bodies to a generic or even family degree of difference, he has been changing almost wholly in the brain & head, [one word illeg. crossed out] — then, in geological antiquity the species man may be as old as many mammalian families,— & the origin of the family man may date back to a period when some of the orders first originated—

As to the theory of "Natural Selection" itself, I shall always maintain it to be actually yours & your’s only. You had worked it out in details I had never thought of, years before I had a ray of light on the subject, & my paper would never have convinced anybody or been noticed as more than an ingenious speculation, whereas your book has revolutionized the study of Natural History, & carried away captive the best men of the present Age. All the merit I claim is the having been the means of inducing you to write & publish at once.

[9] I may possibly some day go a little more into this subject (of "Man") & if I do will accept the kind offer of your notes.

I am now however beginning to write the "Narrative of my travels" which will occupy me a long time as I hate writing narrative, & after Bates’ brilliant success rather fear to fail.7

I shall introduce a few chapters on Geog[raphical]. Distribution & other such topics. Sir C[harles]. Lyell8 while agreeing with my main argument on "man", thinks I am wrong in wanting to put [10] him back into Miocene times, & thinks I do not appreciate the immense interval even to the later Pliocene. But I still maintain my view, which in fact is a logical result of my theory; for if man originated in later Pliocene when almost all mammalia were of closely allied species to those now living & many even identical,— then man has not been stationary in bodily structure while animals have been varying, & my theory will be proved to be all wrong.

In Murchison’s9 address to the Geographical Soc[iety]. just delivered he points out [11] Africa as being the oldest existing land. He says there is no evidence of its having been ever submerged during the tertiary epoch. Here then is evidently the place to find Early man. I hope something good may be found in Borneo & that then means may be found to explore for the still more promising regions of tropical Africa, for we can expect nothing of man very early in Europe.

It has given me great pleasure to find that there are symptoms of improvement in your health. I hope you will not exert yourself [12] too soon or write more than is quite agreeable to you.

I think I made out every word of your letter though it was not always easy.

Believe me | My dear Darwin | Yours very Sincerely | Alfred R. Wallace [signature]

Charles Darwin Esq.

The date of 29 May [1864] has been established by the Darwin Correspondence Project see DCP-LETT-4515.
Wallace, A. R. 1864. The Origin of Human Races and the Antiquity of Man Deduced From the Theory of "Natural Selection. Journal of the Anthropological Society of London, 2: clviii-clxx.
Sclater, Philip Lutley (1829-1913). British lawyer, zoologist and ornithologist, secretary to the Zoological Society of London.
Wallace, A. R. 1864. "Natural Selection" Applied to Man. Natural History Review 4 (n.s.): 328-336 (July 1864: no. 15).
Owen, Richard (1804-1892). British biologist, comparative anatomist and palaeontologist.
Huxley, Thomas Henry (1825-1895). British biologist known as "Darwin's Bulldog.
ARW refers to Henry Bates' recently published The Naturalist on the River Amazons. See Bates. H. W. 1863. The Naturalist on the River Amazons, 2 vols. London, UK: John Murray.
Lyell, Charles (1797-1875). British lawyer and geologist.
Murchison, Roderick Impey (1792-1871). British geologist; served four times as President of the Royal Geographical Society.

Transcription (WCP1859.1749)

[1]1

5, Westbourne Grove Terrace,

W.

May 29th. (1864 ?)

My dear Darwin,

You are always so ready to apprecaite what others do, & especially to over-estimate my desultory efforts, that I cannot be surprised at your very kind & flattering remarks on my papers. I am glad however that you have made a few critical observations & am only sorry you were not well enough to make more, as that enables me to say a few words in explanation.

My great fault is haste. An idea strikes me, I think over it for a few days, & then write away with such illustrations as occur to me while going on. I hope therefore look at the subject almost solely from one point of view. Thus in my paper on "Man" I aim solely at showing that brutes are modified in a great variety of ways by "Natural Selection", but that in none of these particular ways can man be modified, because of the superiority of his intellect. I therefore no doubt overlook a few smaller points in which Nat.Selec. may still act on men & brutes alike. Colour is one of them & I have allueded to this in correlation to consitution, in an abstract I have made at Sclater’s request for the Nat.Hist.Review. At the same time there is so muhc evidence of migrations & displacements of races of man, & so many cases of people of distant physical characters inhabiting the same or similar regions, & also of races of uniform physical characters inhabiting widely dissimilar regions,- that the external characteristics of the chief races of man must I think be older than his present geographical distribution,- & the modifications produced by correlations to favourable variations of constitution be only a secondary cause of external modification. I hope you may get the returns from the Army. They would be very interesting, but I do not expect the results would be favourable to your view.

With regard to the constant battles of savages leading to selection of physical superiority, I think it would be very imperfect & subject to so many exceptions & irregularities that it coule produce no definite result. For instance, — the strongest & bravest men would lead, & expose themselves most, & would therefore be most subject to wounds & death. And the physical energy which led to [2]2 any one tribe delighting in war, might lead to its extermination by inducing quarrels with all surrounding tribes & leading them to dombine against it. Again superior cunning, stealht & swiftness of foot, or even better weapons would often lead ot victory as well as mere physical strenght. Moreover this kind of more or less perpetual war goes on among all savage peoples. It could lead therefore to no differential characters but merely to the keeping up of a certain average standard of bodily & mental helath & vigour.

So with Selection of variations adapted to special habits of life as fishing, paddling, riding, climbing &c, &c, in different races, no doubt it must act to some extent, but will it be ever so rigid as to induce a definite physical modification, & can we imagine it to have had any part in producing the distinct races that now exist?

The sexual selection you allude to will also I think have been equally uncertain in its results.In the very lowest tribes there is rarely much polygamy & women are more or less a matter of purchase. There is also little difference of social condition & I think it rarely happens that any healthy and un-deformed man remains without wife & children. I very much doubt the often repeated assertion that our aristocracy are more beautiful than the middle classes. I allow that they present specimens of the highest kind of beauty, but I doubt the average. I have noticed in country places a greater average amount of good looks among the middle classes, & besides we unavoidably combine in our idea of beauty, intellectual expression & refinement of manner, which often make the less appear the more beautiful. Mere physical beauty,- that is, a healthy and regular development of the body & features approaching to the mean or type of Eurasian man,- I believe is quite as frequent in one class of soeicty as the other & much more frequent in rural districts than in cities.

With regard to the rank of man in Zoological Classification, I fear I have not make myself intelligible. I never meant to adopt Owen’s or any other such views — but only to point out that from one point of view he was right. I hold that a distinct family for man, as Huxley allows, is all that can possibly be given [3] him Zoologically. But at the same time if my theory is true,- that while the animals which surrounded him have been undergoing modification in all parts of their bodies to a generio or even family degree of difference, he has been changing almost wholly in the brain & head, — then, in geological antiquity the species man may be as old as many mammilian families, & the origin of the family man may date back to a period when some of the orders first originated.

As to the theory of "Natural Selection" itself, I shall always maintain it to be actually yours & yours only. You had worked it out in details I had never thought of, years before I had a ray of light on the subject, & my paper would never have convinced anybody or been noticed as more than an ingenious speculation, wheras your book has revolutionized the study of Natural History, & carried away captive the best men of the present Age. All the merit I claim is the having been the means of inducing you to write & publish at once.

I may possibly someday go on a little more into this subject (of "Man") & if I do will accept the kind offer of your notes. I am now however beginning to write the "Narrative of my travels" which will occupy me a long time as I hate writing narrative, & after Bates’ brilliant success rather than fear to fail. I shall introduce a few chapters on Geog. Distribution & other such subjects topics.

Sir C. Lyell while agreeing with my man main argument on "man", thinks I am wrong in wanting to put him back into Miocene times , & thinks I do not appreciate the immense interval even to the later Pliocene. But I still maintain my view, which in fact is a logical result of my theory, for if man originated in later Pliocene when almost all mammalia were of closely allied species to those now living & many even identical,- then man has not been stationary in odily structure while animals have been varying, & my theory will be proved to be all wrong.

[4] In Murchison’s address to the Geographical Soc. just delivered he points out Africa as being the oldest existing land. He say sther is no evidence of its having been ever submerged durng the tertiary epoch. Here then is evidently the place to find Early man.

I hoe something good may be found in Borneo & that then means may be found to explore the still more promising regions of tropical Africa, for we can expect nothing of man very early in Europe.

It has given me great pleasure to find that there are symptoms of improvement in your health. I hope you will not exert yourself too soon or write more than is quite agreeable to you.

I think I made out every word of your letter though it was not always easy.

Believe me | My dear Darwin | Yours very sincerely | Alfred R. Wallace.

Typed transcript.
Annotation at top of each new page: "To C.Darwin.) May 29th (1864)"

Transcription (WCP1859.4528)

[1]

To C. Darwin.) 5, Westbourne Grove Terrace, W. May 29th. (1864?)

My dear Darwin,

You are always so ready to appreciate what others do, & especially to over-estimate my desultory efforts, that I can not be surprised at your very kind & flattering re-marks on my papers. I am glad however that you have made a few critical observations & am only sorry you were not well enough to make more, as that enables me to say a few words in explanation.

My great fault is haste. An idea strikes me, I think over it for a few days, & then write away with such illustrations as occur to me while going on. I hope therefore look at the subject almost solely from one point of view. Thus in my paper on "Man"1 I aim solely at showing that brutes are modified in a great variety of ways by "Natural Selection", but that in none of these particular ways can man be modified, because of the superiority of his intellect. I therefore no doubt overlook a few smaller points in which Nat. Selec. may still act on man & brutes alike. Colour is one of them & I have alluded to this in correlation to constitution, in an abstract I have made at Sclater’s2 request for the Nat.Hist.Review. At the same time there is so much evidence of migrations & displacements of races of man, & so many cases of peoples of distinct physical characters inhabiting the same or similar regions, & also of races of uniform physical characters inhabiting widely dissimilar regions, — that the external characteristics of the chief races of man must I think be older than his present geographical distribution, — & the modifications produced by correlation to favourable variations of constitution be only a secondary cause of external modification. I hope you may get the returns from the Army. They would be very interesting, but I do not expect the results would be favourable to your view.

With regard to the constant battles of savages leading to selection of physical superiority, I think it would be very imperfect & subject to so many exceptions & irregularities that it could produce no definite3 result. For instance,- the strongest & bravest men would lead, & expose themselves most, & would therefore be most subject to wounds and death. And the physical energy which led to [2] any one tribe delighting in war, might lead to its extermination by inducing quarrels with all surrounding tribes & leading them to combine against it. Again superior cunning, stealth, & swiftness of foot, or even better weapons would often lead to victory as well as mere physical strength. Moreover this kind of more or less perpetual war goes on among all savage peoples. It could lead therefore to no differential characters but merely to the keeping up of a certain average standard of bodily mental health & vigour.

So with Selection of variations adapted to special habits of life as fishing, paddling, riding, climbing, &c, &c, in different races, no doubt it must act to some extent, but will it be ever so rigid as to induce a definite physical modification, & can we imagine it to have had any part in producing the distinct races that now exist.?

The sexual selection you allude to will also I think have been equally uncertain in its results. In the very lowest tribes there is rarely much polygamy & women are more or less a matter of purchase. There is also little difference of social condition & I think it rarely happens that any healthy and un-deformed man remains without wife & children. I very much doubt the often repeated assertion that our aristocracy are more beautiful than the middle classes. I allow that they present specimens of the highest kind of beauty, intellectual expression & refinement of manner, which often make the less appear the more beautiful. Mere physical beauty, — that is, a healthy and regular development of the body & features approaching to the mean or type of European man, — I believe is quite as frequent in one class of society as the other & much more frequent in rural districts than in cities.

With regard to the rank of man in Zoological Classification, I fear I have not made myself intelligible. I never meant to adopt Owen’s4 or any other such views — but only to point out that from one point of view he was right. I hold that a distinct family for man, as Huxley5 allows, is all that can possibly be given [3] him Zoologically. But at the same time if my theory is true, — that while the animals which surrounded him have been undergoing modification in all parts of their bodies to a generic or even family degree of difference, he has been changing almost wholly in the brain & head, — then, in geological antiquity the species man may be as old as many mammalian families- & the origin of the family man may date back to a period when some of the orders first originated.

As to the theory of "Natural Selection" itself, I shall always maintain it to be actually yours & yours only. You had worked it out in details I had never thought of, years before I had a ray of light on the subject, & my paper would never have convinced anybody or been noticed as more than an ingenious speculation, whereas our book has revolutionized the study of Natural History, & carried away captive the best men of the present Age. All the merit I claim is the having been the means of inducing you to write & publish at once.6

I may possibly someday go on a little more into this subject (of "Man") & if I do will accept the kind offer of your notes.

I am now however beginning to write the "Narrative of my travels" which will occupy me a long time as I hate writing narrative, & after Bates’ brilliant success rather fear to fail.

I shall introduce a few chapters on Geog. Distribution & other such subjects topics.

Sir G. Lyell while agreeing with my man main argument on "man", thinks I am wrong in wanting to put him back into Miocene times, & thinks I do not appreciate the immense interval even to the later Pliocene. But I still maintain my view, which in fact is a logical result of my theory, for if man originated in later Pliocene when almost all mammalia were of closely allied species to those now living & many even identical, — then man has not been stationary in bodily structure while animals have been varying, & my7 theory will be proved to be all wrong.

[4] In Murchinson’s8 address to the Geographical Soc. just delivered he points out Africa as being the oldest existing land. He says there is no evidence of its having been ever submerged during the tertiary epoch. Here then is evidently the place to find Early man.

I hope something good may be found in Borneo & that then means may be found to explore the still more promising regions of tropical Africa, for we can expect nothing of man very early in Europe.

It has given me great pleasure to find that there are symptoms of improvement in your health. I hope you will not exert yourself too soon or write more than is quite agreeable to you.

I think I made out every word of your letter though it was not always easy.

Believe me | My dear Darwin | Yours very sincerely | Alfred R. Wallace.

Refers to Wallace’s essay titled "On the varieties of man in the Malay Archipelago," which chronicled his 1854 — 1862 voyage
Philip Lutley Sclater, zoological editor, lived 1829 — 1913
This word was underlined later, in black ink
Richard Owen, biologist, lived 1804 — 1892
Thomas Henry Huxley, biologist and anatomist, lived 1825 — 1895
Refers to Darwin and Wallace’s joint paper on natural selection, published February 1858
The "y" in this word was added later, written in black ink
Roderick Impey Murchison, Scottish geologist, lived 1792 — 1871. Refers here to an address given in May 1864

Published letter (WCP1859.5942)

[1] [p. 155]

5 Westbourne Grove Terrace, W. May 29 (1864).

My dear Darwin,— You are always so ready to appreciate what others do, and especially to overestimate my desultory efforts, that I cannot be surprised at your very kind and flattering remarks on my papers. I am glad, however, that you have made a few critical observations, and am only sorry you were not Well enough to make more, as that enables me to say a few words in explanation.

My great fault is haste. An idea strikes me, I think over it for a few days, and then write away with such illustrations as occur to me while going on. I therefore look at the subject almost solely from one point of view. Thus in my paper on Man* I aim solely at showing that brutes are modified in a great variety of ways by Natural Selection, but that in none of these particular ways can man be modified, because of the superiority of his intellect. I therefore no doubt [2] [p. 156] overlook a few smaller points in which Natural Selection may still act on men and brutes alike. Colour is one of them, and I have alluded to this in correlation to constitution in an abstract I have made at Sclater's request for the Natural History Review.1 At the same time, there is so much evidence of migrations and displacements of races of man, and so many cases of peoples of distinct physical characters inhabiting the same or similar regions, and also of races of uniform physical characters inhabiting widely dissimilar regions, that the external characteristics of the chief races of man must I think be older than his present geographical distribution, and the modifications produced by correlation to favourable variations of constitution be only a secondary cause of external modification. I hope you may get the returns from the Army. They would be very interesting, but I do not expect the results would be favourable to your view. With regard to the constant battles of savages leading to selection of physical superiority, I think it would be very imperfect, and subject to so many exceptions and irregularities that it could produce no definite result. For instance, the strongest and bravest men would lead, and expose themselves most, and would therefore be most subject to wounds and death. And the physical energy which led to any one tribe delighting in war might lead to its extermination by inducing quarrels with all surrounding tribes and leading them to combine against it. Again, superior cunning, stealth and swiftness of foot, or even better weapons, would often lead to victory as well as mere physical strength. Moreover this kind of more or less perpetual war goes on among all savage peoples. It could lead therefore to no differential characters, but merely to the keeping up of a certain average standard of bodily and [3] [p. 157] mental health and vigour. So with selection of variations adapted to special habits of life, as fishing, paddling, riding, climbing, etc. etc., in different races: no doubt it must act to some extent, but will it be ever so rigid as to induce a definite physical modification, and can we imagine it to have had any part in producing the distinct races that now exist?

The sexual selection you allude to will also, I think, have been equally uncertain in its results. In the very lowest tribes there is rarely much polygamy, and women are more or less a matter of purchase. There is also little difference of social condition, and I think it rarely happens that any healthy and undeformed man remains without wife and children. I very much doubt the often-repeated assertion that our aristocracy are more beautiful than the middle classes. I allow that they present specimens of the highest kind of beauty, but I doubt the average. I have noticed in country places a greater average amount of good looks among the middle classes, and besides, we unavoidably combine in our idea of beauty, intellectual expression and refinement of manner, which often make the less appear the more beautiful. Mere physical beauty — that is, a healthy and regular development of the body and features approaching to the mean or type of European man — I believe is quite as frequent in one class of society as the other, and much more frequent in rural districts than in cities.

With regard to the rank of man in zoological classification, I fear I have not made myself intelligible. I never meant to adopt Owen's or any other such views, but only to point out that from one point of view he was right. I hold that a distinct family for man, as Huxley allows, is all that can possibly be given him zoologically. But at the same time, if my theory is true — that while the animals which surrounded him have been undergoing modification [4] [p. 158] in all parts of their bodies to a generic or even family degree of difference, he has been changing almost wholly in the brain and head — then, in geological antiquity the species of man may be as old as many mammalian families, and the origin of the family man may date back to a period when some of the orders first originated.

As to the theory of Natural Selection itself, I shall always maintain it to be actually yours and yours only. You had worked it out in details I had never thought of, years before I had a ray of light on the subject, and my paper would never have convinced anybody or been noticed as more than an ingenious speculation, whereas your book has revolutionised the study of natural history, and carried away captive the best men of the present age. All the merit I claim is the having been the means of inducing you to write and publish at once.

I may possibly some day go a little more into this subject (of Man), and, if I do, will accept the kind offer of your notes. I am now, however, beginning to write the "Narrative of my Travels" which will occupy me a long time, as I hate writing narrative, and after Bates's brilliant success rather fear to fail. I shall introduce a few chapters on geographical distribution and other such topics.

Sir C. Lyell, while agreeing with my main argument on Man, thinks I am wrong in wanting to put him back into Miocene times, and thinks I do not appreciate the immense interval even to the later Pliocene. But I still maintain my view, which in fact is a logical result of my theory, for if man originated in later Pliocene times, when almost all mammalia were of closely allied species to those now living, and many even identical, then man has not been stationary in bodily structure While animals have been varying, and my theory will be proved to be all wrong. [5]

In Murchison's address to the Geographical Society just delivered he points out Africa as being the oldest existing land. He says there is no evidence of its having been ever submerged during the tertiary epoch. Here, then, is evidently the place to find early man. I hope something good may be found in Borneo, and that then means may be found to explore the still more promising regions of tropical Africa, for we can expect nothing of man very early in Europe.

It has given me great pleasure to find that there are symptoms of improvement in your health. I hope you will not exert yourself too soon or write more than is quite agreeable to you. I think I made out every word of your letter though it was not always easy. — Believe me, my dear Darwin, Yours very sincerely, ALFRED R. WALLACE.

A footnote here reads: "Nat. Hist. Rev, 1864, p. 328."

Please cite as “WCP1859,” in Beccaloni, G. W. (ed.), Ɛpsilon: The Alfred Russel Wallace Collection accessed on 16 April 2024, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/wallace/letters/WCP1859