Darwin puts pen to paper
One-hundred and fifty years ago today, on 20th July, 1858, while staying at The King’s Head Hotel in Sandown on the Isle of Wight, Charles Darwin began an ‘abstract’ of his planned major work on evolution. The following day, he wrote to his cousin, William Darwin Fox:
I am now beginning to prepare an abstract of my Species Theory. By an odd coincidence, Mr Wallace in the Malay Archipelago sent to me an Essay containing my exact theory; & asking me to show it to Lyell. The latter & Hooker have taken on themselves to publish it in Linnean Journal, together some notes of mine written very many years ago; & both of them have urged me so strongly to publish a fuller abstract, that I have resolved to do it, & shall do nothing till completed: it will be published, probably, in Journal of Linn. Socy. & I shall have separate copies & will send you one.— It is impossible in abstract to do justice to subject.—
Darwin’s abstract quickly grew in size. It was published the following year with the rather snappy title On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life.
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