ng
but well and fair."
The profoundly interesting and now historic correspondence between
Darwin and Wallace, part of which has already appeared in the "Life and
Letters of Charles Darwin" and "More Letters," and part in Wallace's
autobiography, entitled "My Life," is here published, with new
additions, for the first time as a whole, so that the reader now has
before him the necessary material to form a true estimate of the origin
and growth of the theory of Natural Selection, and of the personal
relationships of its noble co-discoverers.
My warmest thanks are offered to Sir Francis Darwin for permission to
use his father's letters, for his annotations, and for rendering help in
checking the typescript of the Darwin letters; to Mr. John Murray,
C.V.O., for permission to use letters and notes from the "Life and
Letters of Charles Darwin" and from "More Letters"; to Messrs. Chapman
and Hall for their great generosity in allowing the free use of letters
and material in Wallace's "My Life"; to Prof. E.B. Poulton, Prof. Sir
W.F. Barrett, Sir Wm. Thiselton-Dyer, Dr. Henry Forbes, and others for
letters and reminiscences; and to Prof. Poulton for reading the proofs
and for valuable suggestions. An intimate chapter on Wallace's Home Life
has been contributed by his son and daughter, Mr. W.G. Wallace and Miss
Violet Wallace.
J.M.
_March, 1916._
CONTENTS
Volume I
INTRODUCTION
PART I
I. WALLACE AND DARWIN--EARLY YEARS
II. EARLY LETTERS (1854-62)
PART II
I. THE DISCOVERY OF NATURAL SELECTION
II. THE COMPLETE EXTANT CORRESPONDENCE BETWEEN WALLACE AND DARWIN
(1857-81)
Volume II
PART III
I. WALLACE'S WORKS ON BIOLOGY AND GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION
II. CORRESPONDENCE ON BIOLOGY, GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (1864-93)
III. CORRESPONDENCE ON BIOLOGY, GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION, ETC.
(1894-1913)
PART IV
HOME LIFE
PART V
SOCIAL AND POLITICAL VIEWS
PART VI
SOME FURTHER PROBLEMS
I. ASTRONOMY
II. SPIRITUALISM
PART VII
CHARACTERISTICS
APPENDIX: LISTS OF WALLACE'S WRITINGS
INDEX
LIST OF PLATES IN VOLUME I
A.R. WALLACE (1912)
A.R. WALLACE (SINGAPORE, 1862)
A.R. WALLACE'S MOTHER
A.R. WALLACE SOON AFTER HIS RETURN FROM THE EAST
Alfred Russel Wallace
Letters and Reminiscences
INTRODUCTION
In Westminster Abbey there repose, almost side by side, by no conscious
design yet with deep significance, the
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