WCP4108

Letter (WCP4108.4124)

[1]1

The Dell, Grays, Essex.

Jany. 14th. 1873

Dear Darwin

I am not at all surprised at your dissent from my criticisms.2 They are probably most of them unsound as it cannot be expected that a person to whom a subject is almost new can see further into it than a man who has looked at it in every possible way for 20 years. You state the evidence about the cat much more strongly in your letter than you do in your book. You say nothing there about your having observed it in the same cat from youth to age. As to [2] the expression of astonishment by lifting up the hands, I hold to my interpretation. When the astonishment arises from seeing or hearing any thing I think you will find it perfectly applies. When it is astonishment at something related only, — the expression is of course purely conventional, but its form is the same as when the astonishment arose from a reality.

However3 as I said to you some time ago a critic is bound to criticise, and not having a great deal of time to do it in we are bound obliged to take what strikes us as weak points though we may in many cases only shew our [3]4 own weakness on the subject.

Hoping you are in pretty good health.

Believe me | Yours very faithfully | Alfred R. Wallace [signature]

P.S. The last three months I have been living in a perpetual hurricane, for my house is fully exposed to the South west & the wind howls around it at night terrifically.5 We have received no damage however; & the wet has been just the thing for my dry soil. I work 4 ~ 5 hours every day in the garden & have been planting extensively. ARW. [signature]

"used" is written in CD's[?] hand below the date. "I am not at all... 20 years" is crossed through by a central vertical line. From "You state" to the foot of the page is marked by a square bracket before "You" and a vertical line in the left margin.
CD's reaction to Wallace, A. R. 1873. [Review of Darwin, C. R. 1872. The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals. London: John Murray]. Quarterly Journal of Science, 3 (37): 113-118. See WCP1959.6057, CD to ARW 13 Jan. 1873.
"However... shew one" is crossed through by two central vertical lines.
All text on page [[3]] except the valediction is crossed through by vertical lines.
The Wallaces had moved into the Dell in March 1872. Raby, P. 2001. Alfred Russel Wallace, A Life. London: Chatto & Windus. p. 210.

Please cite as “WCP4108,” in Beccaloni, G. W. (ed.), Ɛpsilon: The Alfred Russel Wallace Collection accessed on 29 March 2024, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/wallace/letters/WCP4108