<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1> THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF<br/><br/> CHARLES DARWIN </h1>
<p><br/></p>
<h3> From The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin </h3>
<p><br/></p>
<h2> By Charles Darwin </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<h3> Edited by his Son Francis Darwin </h3>
<p><br/></p>
<p><big><b>PREFACE</b></big></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>[My father's autobiographical recollections, given in the present chapter,
were written for his children,—and written without any thought that
they would ever be published. To many this may seem an impossibility; but
those who knew my father will understand how it was not only possible, but
natural. The autobiography bears the heading, 'Recollections of the
Development of my Mind and Character,' and end with the following note:—"Aug.
3, 1876. This sketch of my life was begun about May 28th at Hopedene (Mr.
Hensleigh Wedgwood's house in Surrey.), and since then I have written for
nearly an hour on most afternoons." It will easily be understood that, in
a narrative of a personal and intimate kind written for his wife and
children, passages should occur which must here be omitted; and I have not
thought it necessary to indicate where such omissions are made. It has
been found necessary to make a few corrections of obvious verbal slips,
but the number of such alterations has been kept down to the minimum.—F.D.]</p>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<p>A German Editor having written to me for an account of the development of
my mind and character with some sketch of my autobiography, I have thought
that the attempt would amuse me, and might possibly interest my children
or their children. I know that it would have interested me greatly to have
read even so short and dull a sketch of the mind of my grandfather,
written by himself, and what he thought and did, and how he worked. I have
attempted to write the following account of myself, as if I were a dead
man in another world looking back at my own life. Nor have I found this
difficult, for life is nearly over with me. I have taken no pains about my
style of writing.</p>
<p>I was born at Shrewsbury on February 12th, 1809, and my earliest
recollection goes back only to when I was a few months over four years
old, when we went to near Abergele for sea-bathing, and I recollect some
events and places there with some little distinctness.</p>
<p>My mother died in July 1817, when I was a little over eight years old, and
it is odd that I can remember hardly anything about her except her
death-bed, her black velvet gown, and her curiously constructed
work-table. In the spring of this same year I was sent to a day-school in
Shrewsbury, where I stayed a year. I have been told that I was much slower
in learning than my younger sister Catherine, and I believe that I was in
many ways a naughty boy.</p>
<p>By the time I went to this day-school (Kept by Rev. G. Case, minister of
the Unitarian Chapel in the High Street. Mrs. Darwin was a Unitarian and
attended Mr. Case's chapel, and my father as a little boy went there with
his elder sisters. But both he and his brother were christened and
intended to belong to the Church of England; and after his early boyhood
he seems usually to have gone to church and not to Mr. Case's. It appears
("St. James' Gazette", Dec. 15, 1883) that a mural tablet has been erected
to his memory in the chapel, which is now known as the 'Free Christian
Church.') my taste for natural history, and more especially for
collecting, was well developed. I tried to make out the names of plants
(Rev. W.A. Leighton, who was a schoolfellow of my father's at Mr. Case's
school, remembers his bringing a flower to school and saying that his
mother had taught him how by looking at the inside of the blossom the name
of the plant could be discovered. Mr. Leighton goes on, "This greatly
roused my attention and curiosity, and I enquired of him repeatedly how
this could be done?"—but his lesson was naturally enough not
transmissible.—F.D.), and collected all sorts of things, shells,
seals, franks, coins, and minerals. The passion for collecting which leads
a man to be a systematic naturalist, a virtuoso, or a miser, was very
strong in me, and was clearly innate, as none of my sisters or brother
ever had this taste.</p>
<p>One little event during this year has fixed itself very firmly in my mind,
and I hope that it has done so from my conscience having been afterwards
sorely troubled by it; it is curious as showing that apparently I was
interested at this early age in the variability of plants! I told another
little boy (I believe it was Leighton, who afterwards became a well-known
lichenologist and botanist), that I could produce variously coloured
polyanthuses and primroses by watering them with certain coloured fluids,
which was of course a monstrous fable, and had never been tried by me. I
may here also confess that as a little boy I was much given to inventing
deliberate falsehoods, and this was always done for the sake of causing
excitement. For instance, I once gathered much valuable fruit from my
father's trees and hid it in the shrubbery, and then ran in breathless
haste to spread the news that I had discovered a hoard of stolen fruit.</p>
<p>I must have been a very simple little fellow when I first went to the
school. A boy of the name of Garnett took me into a cake shop one day, and
bought some cakes for which he did not pay, as the shopman trusted him.
When we came out I asked him why he did not pay for them, and he instantly
answered, "Why, do you not know that my uncle left a great sum of money to
the town on condition that every tradesman should give whatever was wanted
without payment to any one who wore his old hat and moved [it] in a
particular manner?" and he then showed me how it was moved. He then went
into another shop where he was trusted, and asked for some small article,
moving his hat in the proper manner, and of course obtained it without
payment. When we came out he said, "Now if you like to go by yourself into
that cake-shop (how well I remember its exact position) I will lend you my
hat, and you can get whatever you like if you move the hat on your head
properly." I gladly accepted the generous offer, and went in and asked for
some cakes, moved the old hat and was walking out of the shop, when the
shopman made a rush at me, so I dropped the cakes and ran for dear life,
and was astonished by being greeted with shouts of laughter by my false
friend Garnett.</p>
<p>I can say in my own favour that I was as a boy humane, but I owed this
entirely to the instruction and example of my sisters. I doubt indeed
whether humanity is a natural or innate quality. I was very fond of
collecting eggs, but I never took more than a single egg out of a bird's
nest, except on one single occasion, when I took all, not for their value,
but from a sort of bravado.</p>
<p>I had a strong taste for angling, and would sit for any number of hours on
the bank of a river or pond watching the float; when at Maer (The house of
his uncle, Josiah Wedgwood.) I was told that I could kill the worms with
salt and water, and from that day I never spitted a living worm, though at
the expense probably of some loss of success.</p>
<p>Once as a very little boy whilst at the day school, or before that time, I
acted cruelly, for I beat a puppy, I believe, simply from enjoying the
sense of power; but the beating could not have been severe, for the puppy
did not howl, of which I feel sure, as the spot was near the house. This
act lay heavily on my conscience, as is shown by my remembering the exact
spot where the crime was committed. It probably lay all the heavier from
my love of dogs being then, and for a long time afterwards, a passion.
Dogs seemed to know this, for I was an adept in robbing their love from
their masters.</p>
<p>I remember clearly only one other incident during this year whilst at Mr.
Case's daily school,—namely, the burial of a dragoon soldier; and it
is surprising how clearly I can still see the horse with the man's empty
boots and carbine suspended to the saddle, and the firing over the grave.
This scene deeply stirred whatever poetic fancy there was in me.</p>
<p>In the summer of 1818 I went to Dr. Butler's great school in Shrewsbury,
and remained there for seven years still Midsummer 1825, when I was
sixteen years old. I boarded at this school, so that I had the great
advantage of living the life of a true schoolboy; but as the distance was
hardly more than a mile to my home, I very often ran there in the longer
intervals between the callings over and before locking up at night. This,
I think, was in many ways advantageous to me by keeping up home affections
and interests. I remember in the early part of my school life that I often
had to run very quickly to be in time, and from being a fleet runner was
generally successful; but when in doubt I prayed earnestly to God to help
me, and I well remember that I attributed my success to the prayers and
not to my quick running, and marvelled how generally I was aided.</p>
<p>I have heard my father and elder sister say that I had, as a very young
boy, a strong taste for long solitary walks; but what I thought about I
know not. I often became quite absorbed, and once, whilst returning to
school on the summit of the old fortifications round Shrewsbury, which had
been converted into a public foot-path with no parapet on one side, I
walked off and fell to the ground, but the height was only seven or eight
feet. Nevertheless the number of thoughts which passed through my mind
during this very short, but sudden and wholly unexpected fall, was
astonishing, and seem hardly compatible with what physiologists have, I
believe, proved about each thought requiring quite an appreciable amount
of time.</p>
<p>Nothing could have been worse for the development of my mind than Dr.
Butler's school, as it was strictly classical, nothing else being taught,
except a little ancient geography and history. The school as a means of
education to me was simply a blank. During my whole life I have been
singularly incapable of mastering any language. Especial attention was
paid to verse-making, and this I could never do well. I had many friends,
and got together a good collection of old verses, which by patching
together, sometimes aided by other boys, I could work into any subject.
Much attention was paid to learning by heart the lessons of the previous
day; this I could effect with great facility, learning forty or fifty
lines of Virgil or Homer, whilst I was in morning chapel; but this
exercise was utterly useless, for every verse was forgotten in forty-eight
hours. I was not idle, and with the exception of versification, generally
worked conscientiously at my classics, not using cribs. The sole pleasure
I ever received from such studies, was from some of the odes of Horace,
which I admired greatly.</p>
<p>When I left the school I was for my age neither high nor low in it; and I
believe that I was considered by all my masters and by my father as a very
ordinary boy, rather below the common standard in intellect. To my deep
mortification my father once said to me, "You care for nothing but
shooting, dogs, and rat-catching, and you will be a disgrace to yourself
and all your family." But my father, who was the kindest man I ever knew
and whose memory I love with all my heart, must have been angry and
somewhat unjust when he used such words.</p>
<p>Looking back as well as I can at my character during my school life, the
only qualities which at this period promised well for the future, were,
that I had strong and diversified tastes, much zeal for whatever
interested me, and a keen pleasure in understanding any complex subject or
thing. I was taught Euclid by a private tutor, and I distinctly remember
the intense satisfaction which the clear geometrical proofs gave me. I
remember, with equal distinctness, the delight which my uncle gave me (the
father of Francis Galton) by explaining the principle of the vernier of a
barometer with respect to diversified tastes, independently of science, I
was fond of reading various books, and I used to sit for hours reading the
historical plays of Shakespeare, generally in an old window in the thick
walls of the school. I read also other poetry, such as Thomson's
'Seasons,' and the recently published poems of Byron and Scott. I mention
this because later in life I wholly lost, to my great regret, all pleasure
from poetry of any kind, including Shakespeare. In connection with
pleasure from poetry, I may add that in 1822 a vivid delight in scenery
was first awakened in my mind, during a riding tour on the borders of
Wales, and this has lasted longer than any other aesthetic pleasure.</p>
<p>Early in my school days a boy had a copy of the 'Wonders of the World,'
which I often read, and disputed with other boys about the veracity of
some of the statements; and I believe that this book first gave me a wish
to travel in remote countries, which was ultimately fulfilled by the
voyage of the "Beagle". In the latter part of my school life I became
passionately fond of shooting; I do not believe that any one could have
shown more zeal for the most holy cause than I did for shooting birds. How
well I remember killing my first snipe, and my excitement was so great
that I had much difficulty in reloading my gun from the trembling of my
hands. This taste long continued, and I became a very good shot. When at
Cambridge I used to practise throwing up my gun to my shoulder before a
looking-glass to see that I threw it up straight. Another and better plan
was to get a friend to wave about a lighted candle, and then to fire at it
with a cap on the nipple, and if the aim was accurate the little puff of
air would blow out the candle. The explosion of the cap caused a sharp
crack, and I was told that the tutor of the college remarked, "What an
extraordinary thing it is, Mr. Darwin seems to spend hours in cracking a
horse-whip in his room, for I often hear the crack when I pass under his
windows."</p>
<p>I had many friends amongst the schoolboys, whom I loved dearly, and I
think that my disposition was then very affectionate.</p>
<p>With respect to science, I continued collecting minerals with much zeal,
but quite unscientifically—all that I cared about was a new-<i>named</i>
mineral, and I hardly attempted to classify them. I must have observed
insects with some little care, for when ten years old (1819) I went for
three weeks to Plas Edwards on the sea-coast in Wales, I was very much
interested and surprised at seeing a large black and scarlet Hemipterous
insect, many moths (Zygaena), and a Cicindela which are not found in
Shropshire. I almost made up my mind to begin collecting all the insects
which I could find dead, for on consulting my sister I concluded that it
was not right to kill insects for the sake of making a collection. From
reading White's 'Selborne,' I took much pleasure in watching the habits of
birds, and even made notes on the subject. In my simplicity I remember
wondering why every gentleman did not become an ornithologist.</p>
<p>Towards the close of my school life, my brother worked hard at chemistry,
and made a fair laboratory with proper apparatus in the tool-house in the
garden, and I was allowed to aid him as a servant in most of his
experiments. He made all the gases and many compounds, and I read with
great care several books on chemistry, such as Henry and Parkes' 'Chemical
Catechism.' The subject interested me greatly, and we often used to go on
working till rather late at night. This was the best part of my education
at school, for it showed me practically the meaning of experimental
science. The fact that we worked at chemistry somehow got known at school,
and as it was an unprecedented fact, I was nicknamed "Gas." I was also
once publicly rebuked by the head-master, Dr. Butler, for thus wasting my
time on such useless subjects; and he called me very unjustly a "poco
curante," and as I did not understand what he meant, it seemed to me a
fearful reproach.</p>
<p>As I was doing no good at school, my father wisely took me away at a
rather earlier age than usual, and sent me (Oct. 1825) to Edinburgh
University with my brother, where I stayed for two years or sessions. My
brother was completing his medical studies, though I do not believe he
ever really intended to practise, and I was sent there to commence them.
But soon after this period I became convinced from various small
circumstances that my father would leave me property enough to subsist on
with some comfort, though I never imagined that I should be so rich a man
as I am; but my belief was sufficient to check any strenuous efforts to
learn medicine.</p>
<p>The instruction at Edinburgh was altogether by lectures, and these were
intolerably dull, with the exception of those on chemistry by Hope; but to
my mind there are no advantages and many disadvantages in lectures
compared with reading. Dr. Duncan's lectures on Materia Medica at 8
o'clock on a winter's morning are something fearful to remember. Dr.——
made his lectures on human anatomy as dull as he was himself, and the
subject disgusted me. It has proved one of the greatest evils in my life
that I was not urged to practise dissection, for I should soon have got
over my disgust; and the practice would have been invaluable for all my
future work. This has been an irremediable evil, as well as my incapacity
to draw. I also attended regularly the clinical wards in the hospital.
Some of the cases distressed me a good deal, and I still have vivid
pictures before me of some of them; but I was not so foolish as to allow
this to lessen my attendance. I cannot understand why this part of my
medical course did not interest me in a greater degree; for during the
summer before coming to Edinburgh I began attending some of the poor
people, chiefly children and women in Shrewsbury: I wrote down as full an
account as I could of the case with all the symptoms, and read them aloud
to my father, who suggested further inquiries and advised me what
medicines to give, which I made up myself. At one time I had at least a
dozen patients, and I felt a keen interest in the work. My father, who was
by far the best judge of character whom I ever knew, declared that I
should make a successful physician,—meaning by this one who would
get many patients. He maintained that the chief element of success was
exciting confidence; but what he saw in me which convinced him that I
should create confidence I know not. I also attended on two occasions the
operating theatre in the hospital at Edinburgh, and saw two very bad
operations, one on a child, but I rushed away before they were completed.
Nor did I ever attend again, for hardly any inducement would have been
strong enough to make me do so; this being long before the blessed days of
chloroform. The two cases fairly haunted me for many a long year.</p>
<p>My brother stayed only one year at the University, so that during the
second year I was left to my own resources; and this was an advantage, for
I became well acquainted with several young men fond of natural science.
One of these was Ainsworth, who afterwards published his travels in
Assyria; he was a Wernerian geologist, and knew a little about many
subjects. Dr. Coldstream was a very different young man, prim, formal,
highly religious, and most kind-hearted; he afterwards published some good
zoological articles. A third young man was Hardie, who would, I think,
have made a good botanist, but died early in India. Lastly, Dr. Grant, my
senior by several years, but how I became acquainted with him I cannot
remember; he published some first-rate zoological papers, but after coming
to London as Professor in University College, he did nothing more in
science, a fact which has always been inexplicable to me. I knew him well;
he was dry and formal in manner, with much enthusiasm beneath this outer
crust. He one day, when we were walking together, burst forth in high
admiration of Lamarck and his views on evolution. I listened in silent
astonishment, and as far as I can judge without any effect on my mind. I
had previously read the 'Zoonomia' of my grandfather, in which similar
views are maintained, but without producing any effect on me. Nevertheless
it is probable that the hearing rather early in life such views maintained
and praised may have favoured my upholding them under a different form in
my 'Origin of Species.' At this time I admired greatly the 'Zoonomia;' but
on reading it a second time after an interval of ten or fifteen years, I
was much disappointed; the proportion of speculation being so large to the
facts given.</p>
<p>Drs. Grant and Coldstream attended much to marine Zoology, and I often
accompanied the former to collect animals in the tidal pools, which I
dissected as well as I could. I also became friends with some of the
Newhaven fishermen, and sometimes accompanied them when they trawled for
oysters, and thus got many specimens. But from not having had any regular
practice in dissection, and from possessing only a wretched microscope, my
attempts were very poor. Nevertheless I made one interesting little
discovery, and read, about the beginning of the year 1826, a short paper
on the subject before the Plinian Society. This was that the so-called ova
of Flustra had the power of independent movement by means of cilia, and
were in fact larvae. In another short paper I showed that the little
globular bodies which had been supposed to be the young state of Fucus
loreus were the egg-cases of the wormlike Pontobdella muricata.</p>
<p>The Plinian Society was encouraged and, I believe, founded by Professor
Jameson: it consisted of students and met in an underground room in the
University for the sake of reading papers on natural science and
discussing them. I used regularly to attend, and the meetings had a good
effect on me in stimulating my zeal and giving me new congenial
acquaintances. One evening a poor young man got up, and after stammering
for a prodigious length of time, blushing crimson, he at last slowly got
out the words, "Mr. President, I have forgotten what I was going to say."
The poor fellow looked quite overwhelmed, and all the members were so
surprised that no one could think of a word to say to cover his confusion.
The papers which were read to our little society were not printed, so that
I had not the satisfaction of seeing my paper in print; but I believe Dr.
Grant noticed my small discovery in his excellent memoir on Flustra.</p>
<p>I was also a member of the Royal Medical Society, and attended pretty
regularly; but as the subjects were exclusively medical, I did not much
care about them. Much rubbish was talked there, but there were some good
speakers, of whom the best was the present Sir J. Kay-Shuttleworth. Dr.
Grant took me occasionally to the meetings of the Wernerian Society, where
various papers on natural history were read, discussed, and afterwards
published in the 'Transactions.' I heard Audubon deliver there some
interesting discourses on the habits of N. American birds, sneering
somewhat unjustly at Waterton. By the way, a negro lived in Edinburgh, who
had travelled with Waterton, and gained his livelihood by stuffing birds,
which he did excellently: he gave me lessons for payment, and I used often
to sit with him, for he was a very pleasant and intelligent man.</p>
<p>Mr. Leonard Horner also took me once to a meeting of the Royal Society of
Edinburgh, where I saw Sir Walter Scott in the chair as President, and he
apologised to the meeting as not feeling fitted for such a position. I
looked at him and at the whole scene with some awe and reverence, and I
think it was owing to this visit during my youth, and to my having
attended the Royal Medical Society, that I felt the honour of being
elected a few years ago an honorary member of both these Societies, more
than any other similar honour. If I had been told at that time that I
should one day have been thus honoured, I declare that I should have
thought it as ridiculous and improbable, as if I had been told that I
should be elected King of England.</p>
<p>During my second year at Edinburgh I attended ——'s lectures on
Geology and Zoology, but they were incredibly dull. The sole effect they
produced on me was the determination never as long as I lived to read a
book on Geology, or in any way to study the science. Yet I feel sure that
I was prepared for a philosophical treatment of the subject; for an old
Mr. Cotton in Shropshire, who knew a good deal about rocks, had pointed
out to me two or three years previously a well-known large erratic boulder
in the town of Shrewsbury, called the "bell-stone"; he told me that there
was no rock of the same kind nearer than Cumberland or Scotland, and he
solemnly assured me that the world would come to an end before any one
would be able to explain how this stone came where it now lay. This
produced a deep impression on me, and I meditated over this wonderful
stone. So that I felt the keenest delight when I first read of the action
of icebergs in transporting boulders, and I gloried in the progress of
Geology. Equally striking is the fact that I, though now only sixty-seven
years old, heard the Professor, in a field lecture at Salisbury Craigs,
discoursing on a trapdyke, with amygdaloidal margins and the strata
indurated on each side, with volcanic rocks all around us, say that it was
a fissure filled with sediment from above, adding with a sneer that there
were men who maintained that it had been injected from beneath in a molten
condition. When I think of this lecture, I do not wonder that I determined
never to attend to Geology.</p>
<p>From attending ——'s lectures, I became acquainted with the
curator of the museum, Mr. Macgillivray, who afterwards published a large
and excellent book on the birds of Scotland. I had much interesting
natural-history talk with him, and he was very kind to me. He gave me some
rare shells, for I at that time collected marine mollusca, but with no
great zeal.</p>
<p>My summer vacations during these two years were wholly given up to
amusements, though I always had some book in hand, which I read with
interest. During the summer of 1826 I took a long walking tour with two
friends with knapsacks on our backs through North wales. We walked thirty
miles most days, including one day the ascent of Snowdon. I also went with
my sister a riding tour in North Wales, a servant with saddle-bags
carrying our clothes. The autumns were devoted to shooting chiefly at Mr.
Owen's, at Woodhouse, and at my Uncle Jos's (Josiah Wedgwood, the son of
the founder of the Etruria Works.) at Maer. My zeal was so great that I
used to place my shooting-boots open by my bed-side when I went to bed, so
as not to lose half a minute in putting them on in the morning; and on one
occasion I reached a distant part of the Maer estate, on the 20th of
August for black-game shooting, before I could see: I then toiled on with
the game-keeper the whole day through thick heath and young Scotch firs.</p>
<p>I kept an exact record of every bird which I shot throughout the whole
season. One day when shooting at Woodhouse with Captain Owen, the eldest
son, and Major Hill, his cousin, afterwards Lord Berwick, both of whom I
liked very much, I thought myself shamefully used, for every time after I
had fired and thought that I had killed a bird, one of the two acted as if
loading his gun, and cried out, "You must not count that bird, for I fired
at the same time," and the gamekeeper, perceiving the joke, backed them
up. After some hours they told me the joke, but it was no joke to me, for
I had shot a large number of birds, but did not know how many, and could
not add them to my list, which I used to do by making a knot in a piece of
string tied to a button-hole. This my wicked friends had perceived.</p>
<p>How I did enjoy shooting! But I think that I must have been
half-consciously ashamed of my zeal, for I tried to persuade myself that
shooting was almost an intellectual employment; it required so much skill
to judge where to find most game and to hunt the dogs well.</p>
<p>One of my autumnal visits to Maer in 1827 was memorable from meeting there
Sir J. Mackintosh, who was the best converser I ever listened to. I heard
afterwards with a glow of pride that he had said, "There is something in
that young man that interests me." This must have been chiefly due to his
perceiving that I listened with much interest to everything which he said,
for I was as ignorant as a pig about his subjects of history, politics,
and moral philosophy. To hear of praise from an eminent person, though no
doubt apt or certain to excite vanity, is, I think, good for a young man,
as it helps to keep him in the right course.</p>
<p>My visits to Maer during these two or three succeeding years were quite
delightful, independently of the autumnal shooting. Life there was
perfectly free; the country was very pleasant for walking or riding; and
in the evening there was much very agreeable conversation, not so personal
as it generally is in large family parties, together with music. In the
summer the whole family used often to sit on the steps of the old portico,
with the flower-garden in front, and with the steep wooded bank opposite
the house reflected in the lake, with here and there a fish rising or a
water-bird paddling about. Nothing has left a more vivid picture on my
mind than these evenings at Maer. I was also attached to and greatly
revered my Uncle Jos; he was silent and reserved, so as to be a rather
awful man; but he sometimes talked openly with me. He was the very type of
an upright man, with the clearest judgment. I do not believe that any
power on earth could have made him swerve an inch from what he considered
the right course. I used to apply to him in my mind the well-known ode of
Horace, now forgotten by me, in which the words "nec vultus tyranni,
etc.," come in.</p>
<p>(Justum et tenacem propositi virum<br/>
Non civium ardor prava jubentium<br/>
Non vultus instantis tyranni<br/>
Mente quatit solida.)<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />