WCP6869

Letter (WCP6869.7964)

[1]

St Mary's Terrace Paddington W.

Nov 7. 1880

Dear Mr. Darwin,

It is all right as far as regards Mr. Wallace himself—

I told him that you & Mr. Huxley thought him entitled to a govt. pension if it could be got— At first he hesitated but when I represented that such men as Joule & Farady had received it he said "I confess it would be a very great relief to me and if such men as Darwin & Huxley think I may accept it[,] it suppose I may" — adding "I really have some claim, for most naturalists & travellers on their return from a foreign country have been given some post, & I tried for one in vain".

It seems some friend suggest it to him some time ago but he rejected the idea; but now that it comes from men like yourself & Huxley who can appreciate his work it makes a difference—

I could not get the memorial lists but when I said that you would have only a few good names & suggested the Duke of Argyll, Mr. Wallace said he is just the man who would probabaly give his name with pleasure—

He quite understands that the result is very doubful & indeed he said very little about it, for when I had once ascertained his views I did not want to lead him to dwell upon it—

I have nothing I think to add to the notes I gave you. I enclose a very brief statement which may be of some use, though of the real value of his work you can speak best—

F<ro>m my short conversation yesterday I am more than ever sure that your generous efforts if they succed <wi>ll really confer a great boon on Mr. Wallace & relieve him of anxiety—

If I can look out anything more for you please let me know—

With kind remembrances to Mrs. Darwin | Yours very sincerely

Arabella B Buckley

Enclosure (WCP6869.7963)

[1]1,2

Alfred Russel Wallace

Born Jan 8. 1822 — gave up the profession of land surveyor & architect to travel & find new specimens of animals—

Went to Amazons with Mr Bates in 1848 (I do not know what capital he had. Probably none for he says "I proposed to pay my expenses by making collections in natural History & was enabled to do so.["] he sent specimens home to dealers with whom he & Mr Bates had made arrangements before starting. — His collections on the proceeds of which he meant to settle down in England were all lost by burning on the ship on the homeward journey— The result was his work of the Amazon & Rio Negro[.]

The loss of his collections caused him to go to the Malay Archipelago in 1854 & he returned in 1862 & published his work on it in 1869 —

Since then he devoted between five & six years to the collection of materials for his great work on the Distribution of Animals a work which though invaluable to naturalists has not been renumerative having cost an immense amount of labour, while yet it is not popular enough but which from its character is not adapted for general readers[.]

He has been living upon the interest of the money obtained by the sale of his collections in the Malay Archipelago, but he once told me that the failure of some investments has greatly reduced this & that he is a poorer man than when he returned from the Malay Archipelago — He applied for the curatorship [2] of the East London Museum in about 1866? (this I think is a great point for he was led to believe he w[oul]d certainly have it) when it was first built & through the influence of Sir C[harles]. Lyell & others obtained a initial promise from Sir George Grey— the Museum however began with Sir R Wallace[']s pictures & was not made into a scientific museum & so the plan fell through. He waited some time in hopes of this appointment, & since then has tried for several some other local curatorships but younger men with local influence obtained them—

He has since failed in obtaining the post of Superintendent of Epping Forest, & more lately he wrote to some scientific men as to a post at Josaih Mason's College Birmingham (I think it was this), but he was told that owing to some dividends not accruing immediately they were going to work very economically for some time & should not have an opening—

He has just lately undertaken some a popular science work for Macmillan & has written several review articles to increase his income — he is not at all strong, as his hard life abroad is beginning to tell upon him & constant writing work is very trying to him—

He has often bitterly regretted to me the impossibility of affording a journey to Switzerland which he is very anxious to visit for natural history purposes & one of his great hopes was that by obtaining the appointment to Epping Forest he might accomplish this[.]

It might appear from the fact of his building now a cottage at Godalming that he is better off than he really is, for the cottage is being really built under the Birkbeck Building society which and will enable him to & will cost him less ye annually than his present rent— He has a wife & two children ages 8 & 12, the boy 8[,] the girl 11. I have put several facts in this paper only fit for private use as I have learnt them when staying with Mr. & Mrs. Wallace.

[3] Titles of works of Alfred Russel Wallace

A Narrative of Travels on the Amazon & Rio Negro with account of the native tribes & observations on the climate, geology & natural history of the Amazon valley. 1853.

The Malay Archipelago 1869 — (containing the arguments as to the causes of distribution of man & animals in the archipelago & surrounding countries)[.]

The Geographical Distribution of Animals

Natural Selection Essays on.

Tropical Nature

Island Life

Papers in Societies

On Umbrella Bird 1850. 1851. Zool. Proc. & Ann of Nat Hist.

On Monkeys of Amazons 1852 Zool Proc

On insects used for food by Indians of Amazons Entom Soc 1852-3

On habits of Butterflies of Amazon Valley Entom Soc 1852-3

On the Rio Negro. Geog. Soc. 1853 Geog

On habits of Hesperidae 1853 Zoologist

On fishes allied to Gymnotus 1853 Zool Proc.

Letter from Singapore, Borneo, Zoologist

New Species of Ornithoptera Entom Soc. 1854-56

Ornithology of Malacca 1855 Nat His Ann—

Law regulating the introduction of new species Ann Nat hist 1855—

[4] Botany of Malacca 1855 Hooker Journ of Botany

Entomology of Malacca Zoologist

An infant Orang-Outang 1856 Ann. Nat. Hist

Orang-Outang or Mias of Borneo Ann Nat Hist. 1856

Do — 2nd Paper

Attempts at a natutal arrangement of birds 1856 Ann Nat Hist

Observations on Zoology of Borneo 1856 Zoologist

Letter from Aru islands (Coleoptera) Entom Soc 1859

Habits & Transformation of a species of Ornithoptera Entom Soc 1859

On great Bird of Paradise 1858-9 Ann. Nat. hist

Natural History of Aru islands 1858-9 A.N.H.

Journey up the Sadong River Borneo Geogr. Soc. 1857

On Tendency of varieties to depart indefinitely from the original type Linn Soc 1859

After this follows a long list of papers making in all 85 including several valuable ones on mimicry, besides numerous descriptions of habits & affinities of butterflies birds etc & some papers on geology & anthropology.

[5]2

22 (Wallace's Papers) Government Annuity

Box G

Letters removed Aug 1899

Pages 1-4 are numbered in an unknown at the upper right-hand corner of each page. Pages are also numbered in pencil 91-94 in the upper right-hand corner of each page, probably by the repository.
An annotation is written in the upper right-hand corner of page 1, "1880 | 1888 | 58".

Please cite as “WCP6869,” in Beccaloni, G. W. (ed.), Ɛpsilon: The Alfred Russel Wallace Collection accessed on 28 April 2024, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/wallace/letters/WCP6869