WCP6655

Letter (WCP6655.7704)

[1]1

My dear Huxley

I am so extremely glad that Hooker will sign. You have managed the affair wonderfully. His former letter made me give up the ghost completely. I cannot see that there is the least necessity to call any minister’s attention to Spiritualism, or to repeat (what you said) to Gladstonethat Spiritualism is not worse than the prevailing superstitions of this country!2

Hurrah I am sanguine

Yours affectionately | Ch. Darwin

The date is established by the relationship between this letter and the letter from J. D. Hooker, 26 November 1880.
In his letter of 26 November 1880, Joseph Dalton Hooker had provisionally agreed to sign the memorial that CD had prepared in support of a civil list pension for Alfred Russel Wallace but had wondered whether Wallace’s belief in spiritualism should be mentioned privately to the minister. For Hooker’s previous letter stating that Wallace’s chances of a pension were hopeless, see Correspondence vol. 27, letter from J. D. Hooker, 18 December 1879. William Ewart Gladstone was a correspondent of CD’s and visited Down on 11 March 1877 (see, for example, Correspondence vol. 27, letter from W. E. Gladstone, 24 July 1879, and Emma Darwin’s diary (DAR 242)). For Gladstone’s sympathy with spiritualist beliefs, see Windscheffel 2006.

Please cite as “WCP6655,” in Beccaloni, G. W. (ed.), Ɛpsilon: The Alfred Russel Wallace Collection accessed on 27 April 2024, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/wallace/letters/WCP6655