fbpx
Wikipedia

Erasmus Darwin

Erasmus Robert Darwin FRS[1] (12 December 1731 – 18 April 1802) was an English physician. One of the key thinkers of the Midlands Enlightenment, he was also a natural philosopher, physiologist, slave-trade abolitionist,[2] inventor, and poet.

Erasmus Darwin

Erasmus Darwin c. 1792–1793, oil painting by Joseph Wright of Derby, Derby Museum and Art Gallery
Born
Erasmus Robert Darwin

(1731-12-12)12 December 1731
Elston Hall, Elston, Nottinghamshire
near Newark-on-Trent, England
Died18 April 1802(1802-04-18) (aged 70)
Breadsall, Derby, England
Resting placeAll Saints Church, Breadsall
Alma mater
Children14
Parents
RelativesSee Darwin–Wedgwood family
Signature

His poems included much natural history, including a statement of evolution and the relatedness of all forms of life.

He was a member of the Darwin–Wedgwood family, which includes his grandsons Charles Darwin and Francis Galton. Darwin was a founding member of the Lunar Society of Birmingham, a discussion group of pioneering industrialists and natural philosophers.

He turned down an invitation from George III to become Physician to the King.

Early life and education

 
Stone-cast bust of Erasmus Darwin, by W. J. Coffee, c. 1795
 
Darwin's House in Lichfield, now a museum dedicated to his life and work.

Darwin was born in 1731 at Elston Hall, Nottinghamshire, near Newark-on-Trent, England, the youngest of seven children of Robert Darwin of Elston (1682–1754), a lawyer and physician, and his wife Elizabeth Hill (1702–97). The name Erasmus had been used by a number of his family and derives from his ancestor Erasmus Earle, Common Sergent of England under Oliver Cromwell.[3] His siblings were:

  • Robert Waring Darwin of Elston (17 October 1724 – 4 November 1816)
  • Elizabeth Darwin (15 September 1725 – 8 April 1800)
  • William Alvey Darwin (3 October 1726 – 7 October 1783)
  • Anne Darwin (12 November 1727 – 3 August 1813)
  • Susannah Darwin (10 April 1729 – 29 September 1789)
  • Rev. John Darwin, rector of Elston (28 September 1730 – 24 May 1805)

He was educated at Chesterfield Grammar School, then later at St John's College, Cambridge.[4] He obtained his medical education at the University of Edinburgh Medical School; whether he ever obtained the formal degree of MD is not known.

Darwin settled in 1756 as a physician at Nottingham, but met with little success and so moved the following year to Lichfield to try to establish a practice there. A few weeks after his arrival, using a novel course of treatment, he restored the health of a young fisherman whose death seemed inevitable. This ensured his success in the new locale. Darwin was a highly successful physician for more than fifty years in the Midlands. George III invited him to be Royal Physician, but Darwin declined.[5]

In Lichfield, Darwin wrote "didactic poetry, developed his system of evolution, and invented amongst other things, a carriage steering mechanism, a manuscript copier and a speaking machine.

Personal life

Darwin married twice and had 14 children, including two illegitimate daughters by an employee, and, possibly, at least one further illegitimate daughter.

 
Erasmus Darwin's coat of arms. Escutcheon: Argent, on a bend Gules cottised Vert, three escallop shells, Or. Crest: A demi-griffin segreant, Vert, holding in his claws an escallop, Or. Motto: E conchis omnia (All things out of conches/molluscs).

In 1757 he married Mary (Polly) Howard (1740–1770), the daughter of Charles Howard, a Lichfield solicitor.[6] They had four sons and one daughter, two of whom (a son and a daughter) died in infancy:

  • Charles Darwin (1758–1778), uncle of the naturalist
  • Erasmus Darwin Jr (1759–1799)
  • Elizabeth Darwin (1763, survived 4 months)
  • Robert Waring Darwin (1766–1848), father of the naturalist Charles Darwin
  • William Alvey Darwin (1767, survived 19 days)

The first Mrs. Darwin died in 1770. A governess, Mary Parker, was hired to look after Robert. By late 1771, employer and employee had become intimately involved and together they had two illegitimate daughters:

  • Susanna Parker (1772–1856)
  • Mary Parker Jr (1774–1859)

Susanna and Mary Jr later established a boarding school for girls. In 1782, Mary Sr (the governess) married Joseph Day (1745–1811), a Birmingham merchant, and moved away.

Darwin may have fathered another child, this time with a married woman. A Lucy Swift gave birth in 1771 to a baby, also named Lucy, who was christened a daughter of her mother and William Swift, but there is reason to believe the father was really Darwin.[7] Lucy Jr. married John Hardcastle in Derby in 1792 and their daughter, Mary, married Francis Boott, the physician.

In 1775, Darwin met Elizabeth Pole, daughter of Charles Colyear, 2nd Earl of Portmore, and wife of Colonel Edward Pole (1718–1780); but as she was married, Darwin could only make his feelings known for her through poetry. When Edward Pole died, Darwin married Elizabeth and moved to her home, Radbourne Hall, four miles (6.4 km) west of Derby. The hall and village are these days known as Radbourne. In 1782, they moved to Full Street, Derby. They had four sons, one of whom died in infancy, and three daughters:

Darwin's personal appearance is described in unflattering detail in his Biographical Memoirs, printed by the Monthly Magazine in 1802. Darwin, the description reads, "was of middle stature, in person gross and corpulent; his features were coarse, and his countenance heavy; if not wholly void of animation, it certainly was by no means expressive. The print of him, from a painting of Mr. Wright, is a good likeness. In his gait and dress he was rather clumsy and slovenly, and frequently walked with his tongue hanging out of his mouth."

Freemasonry

Darwin had been a Freemason throughout his life, in the Time Immemorial Lodge of Cannongate Kilwinning, No. 2, of Scotland. Later on, Sir Francis Darwin, one of his sons, was made a Mason in Tyrian Lodge, No. 253, at Derby, in 1807 or 1808. His son Reginald was made a Mason in Tyrian Lodge in 1804. Charles Darwin's name does not appear on the rolls of the Lodge but it is very possible that he, like Francis, was a Mason, as he held many Masonic beliefs such as Deism throughout his life.[8]

Death

Darwin died suddenly on 18 April 1802, weeks after having moved to Breadsall Priory, just north of Derby. The Monthly Magazine of 1802, in its Biographical Memoirs of the Late Dr. Darwin, reports that "during the last few years, Dr. Darwin was much subject to inflammation in his breast and lungs; he had a very serious attack of this disease in the course of the last Spring, from which, after repeated bleedings, by himself and a surgeon, he with great difficulty recovered."

Darwin's death, the Biographical Memoirs continues, "is variously accounted for: it is supposed to have been caused by the cold fit of an inflammatory fever. Dr. Fox, of Derby, considers the disease which occasioned it to have been angina pectoris; but Dr. Garlicke, of the same place, thinks this opinion not sufficiently well founded. Whatever was the disease, it is not improbable, surely, that the fatal event was hastened by the violent fit of passion with which he was seized in the morning."

His body is buried in All Saints' Church, Breadsall.

Erasmus Darwin is commemorated on one of the Moonstones, a series of monuments in Birmingham.

Writings

Botanical works and the Lichfield Botanical Society

 
Erasmus Darwin in stipple engraving by Holl, 1803, after J. Rawlinson

Darwin formed 'A Botanical Society, at Lichfield' almost always incorrectly named as the Lichfield Botanical Society (despite the name, composed of only three men, Erasmus Darwin, Sir Brooke Boothby and Mr John Jackson, proctor of Lichfield Cathedral[notes 1])[9][10] to translate the works of the Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus from Latin into English. This took seven years. The result was two publications: A System of Vegetables between 1783 and 1785, and The Families of Plants in 1787. In these volumes, Darwin coined many of the English names of plants that we use today.[11]

Darwin then wrote The Loves of the Plants, a long poem, which was a popular rendering of Linnaeus' works. Darwin also wrote Economy of Vegetation, and together the two were published as The Botanic Garden. Among other writers he influenced were Anna Seward and Maria Jacson.

Zoonomia

Darwin's most important scientific work, Zoonomia (1794–1796), contains a system of pathology and a chapter on 'Generation'. In the latter, he anticipated some of the views of Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, which foreshadowed the modern theory of evolution. Erasmus Darwin's works were read and commented on by his grandson Charles Darwin the naturalist. Erasmus Darwin based his theories on David Hartley's psychological theory of associationism.[12] The essence of his views is contained in the following passage, which he follows up with the conclusion that one and the same kind of living filament is and has been the cause of all organic life:

Would it be too bold to imagine, that in the great length of time, since the earth began to exist, perhaps millions of ages before the commencement of the history of mankind, would it be too bold to imagine, that all warm-blooded animals have arisen from one living filament, which THE GREAT FIRST CAUSE endued with animality, with the power of acquiring new parts, attended with new propensities, directed by irritations, sensations, volitions, and associations; and thus possessing the faculty of continuing to improve by its own inherent activity, and of delivering down those improvements by generation to its posterity, world without end![13]

Erasmus Darwin also anticipated survival of the fittest in Zoönomia mainly when writing about the "three great objects of desire" for every organism: "lust, hunger, and security."[13] A similar "survival of the fittest" view in Zoönomia is Erasmus' view on how a species "should" propagate itself. Erasmus' idea that "the strongest and most active animal should propagate the species, which should thence become improved".[13] Today, this is called the theory of survival of the fittest. His grandson Charles Darwin posited the different and fuller theory of natural selection. Charles' theory was that natural selection is the inheritance of changed genetic characteristics that are better adaptations to the environment; these are not necessarily based in "strength" and "activity", which themselves ironically can lead to the overpopulation that results in natural selection yielding nonsurvivors of genetic traits.

Erasmus Darwin was familiar with the earlier proto-evolutionary thinking of James Burnett, Lord Monboddo, and cited him in his 1803 work Temple of Nature.

Poem on evolution

Erasmus Darwin offered the first glimpse of his theory of evolution, obliquely, in a question at the end of a long footnote to his popular poem The Loves of the Plants (1789), which was republished throughout the 1790s in several editions as The Botanic Garden. His poetic concept was to anthropomorphise the stamen (male) and pistil (female) sexual organs, as bride and groom. In this stanza on the flower Curcuma (also Flax and Turmeric) the "youths" are infertile, and he devotes the footnote to other examples of neutered organs in flowers, insect castes, and finally associates this more broadly with many popular and well-known cases of vestigial organs (male nipples, the third and fourth wings of flies, etc.)

Woo'd with long care, CURCUMA cold and shy
Meets her fond husband with averted eye:
Four beardless youths the obdurate beauty move
With soft attentions of Platonic love.

Darwin's final long poem, The Temple of Nature was published posthumously in 1803. The poem was originally titled The Origin of Society. It is considered his best poetic work. It centres on his own conception of evolution. The poem traces the progression of life from micro-organisms to civilised society. The poem contains a passage that describes the struggle for existence.[14]

His poetry was admired by Wordsworth, while Coleridge was intensely critical, writing, "I absolutely nauseate Darwin's poem".[10] It often made reference to his interests in science; for example botany and steam engines.

Education of women

The last two leaves of Darwin's A plan for the conduct of female education in boarding schools (1797) contain a book list, an apology for the work, and an advert for "Miss Parkers School".[15]

The school advertised on the last page is the one he set up in Ashbourne, Derbyshire, for his two illegitimate children, Susanna and Mary.

Darwin regretted that a good education had not been generally available to women in Britain in his time, and drew on the ideas of Locke, Rousseau, and Genlis in organising his thoughts. Addressing the education of middle-class girls, Darwin argued that amorous romance novels were inappropriate and that they should seek simplicity in dress. He contends that young women should be educated in schools, rather than privately at home, and learn appropriate subjects. These subjects include physiognomy, physical exercise, botany, chemistry, mineralogy, and experimental philosophy. They should familiarise themselves with arts and manufactures through visits to sites like Coalbrookdale, and Wedgwood's potteries; they should learn how to handle money, and study modern languages. Darwin's educational philosophy took the view that men and women should have different capabilities, skills, interests, and spheres of action, where the woman's education was designed to support and serve male accomplishment and financial reward, and to relieve him of daily responsibility for children and the chores of life.[16] In the context of the times, this program may be read as a modernising influence in the sense that the woman was at least to learn about the "man's world", although not be allowed to participate in it. The text was written seven years after A Vindication of the Rights of Woman by Mary Wollstonecraft, which has the central argument that women should be educated in a rational manner to give them the opportunity to contribute to society.

Some women of Darwin's era were receiving more substantial education and participating in the broader world. An example is Susanna Wright, who was raised in Lancashire and became an American colonist associated with the Midlands Enlightenment. It is not known whether Darwin and Wright knew each other, although they definitely knew many people in common. Other women who received substantial education and who participated in the broader world (albeit sometimes anonymously) whom Darwin definitely knew were Maria Jacson and Anna Seward.

Lunar Society

These dates indicate the year in which Darwin became friends with these people, who, in turn, became members of the Lunar Society. The Lunar Society existed from 1765 to 1813.

Before 1765:

After 1765:

Darwin also established a lifelong friendship with Benjamin Franklin, who shared Darwin's support for the American and French revolutions. The Lunar Society was instrumental as an intellectual driving force behind England's Industrial Revolution.

The members of the Lunar Society, and especially Darwin, opposed the slave trade. He attacked it in The Botanic Garden (1789–1791), and in The Loves of Plants (1789), The Economy of Vegetation (1791), and the Phytologia (1800).[17]

Other activities

In 1761, Darwin was elected a fellow of the Royal Society.[1]

In addition to the Lunar Society, Erasmus Darwin belonged to the influential Derby Philosophical Society, as did his brother-in-law Samuel Fox (see family tree below). He experimented with the use of air and gases to alleviate infections and cancers in patients. A Pneumatic Institution was established at Clifton in 1799 for clinically testing these ideas. He conducted research into the formation of clouds, on which he published in 1788. He also inspired Robert Weldon's Somerset Coal Canal caisson lock.

In 1792, Darwin was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia.[18]

Percy Bysshe Shelley specifically mentions Darwin in the first sentence of the 1818 Preface to Frankenstein to support his contention that the creation of life is possible. His wife Mary Shelley in her introduction to the 1831 edition of Frankenstein wrote that she overheard her husband talk about Darwin's experiments with Lord Byron about unspecified "experiments of Dr. Darwin" that led to the idea for the novel.[19]

Cosmological speculation

Contemporary literature dates the cosmological theories of the Big Bang and Big Crunch to the 19th and 20th centuries. However, Erasmus Darwin had speculated on these sorts of events in The Botanic Garden, A Poem in Two Parts: Part 1, The Economy of Vegetation, 1791:[20]

Roll on, ye Stars! exult in youthful prime,
Mark with bright curves the printless steps of Time;
Near and more near your beamy cars approach,
And lessening orbs on lessening orbs encroach; —
Flowers of the sky! ye too to age must yield,
Frail as your silken sisters of the field.
Star after star from Heaven's high arch shall rush,
Suns sink on suns, and systems, systems crush,
Headlong, extinct, to one dark centre fall,
And death and night and chaos mingle all:
— Till o'er the wreck, emerging from the storm,
Immortal Nature lifts her changeful form,
Mounts from her funeral pyre on wings of flame,
And soars and shines, another and the same!

Inventions

Darwin was the inventor of several devices, though he did not patent any: he believed this would damage his reputation as a doctor. He encouraged his friends to patent their own modifications of his designs.[21]

  • A horizontal windmill, which he designed for Josiah Wedgwood (who would be Charles Darwin's other grandfather, see family tree below).
  • A carriage that would not tip over (1766).
  • A steering mechanism for his carriage, known today as the Ackermann linkage, that would be adopted by cars 130 years later (1759).[21]
  • A speaking machine, which was a mechanical larynx made of wood, silk, and leather and pronounced several sounds so well 'as to deceive all who heard it unseen' (at Clifton in 1799).[22]
  • A canal lift for barges.
  • A minute artificial bird.[21] [23]
  • A copying machine (1778).
  • A variety of weather monitoring machines.

Rocket engine

In notes dating to 1779, Darwin made a sketch of a simple hydrogen-oxygen rocket engine, with gas tanks connected by plumbing and pumps to an elongated combustion chamber and expansion nozzle, a concept not to be seen again until one century later.[24][25]

Major publications

  • Erasmus Darwin, A Botanical Society at Lichfield. A System of Vegetables, according to their classes, orders... translated from the 13th edition of Linnaeus' Systema Vegetabiliium. 2 vols., 1783, Lichfield, J. Jackson, for Leigh and Sotheby, London.
  • Erasmus Darwin, A Botanical Society at Lichfield. The Families of Plants with their natural characters...Translated from the last edition of Linnaeus' Genera Plantarum. 1787, Lichfield, J. Jackson, for J. Johnson, London.
  • Erasmus Darwin, The Botanic Garden, Part I, The Economy of Vegetation. 1791 London, J. Johnson.
  • Part II, The Loves of the Plants. 1789, London, J. Johnson.
  • Erasmus Darwin, Zoonomia; or, The Laws of Organic Life, 1794, Part I. London, J. Johnson.
  • Part I–III. 1796, London, J. Johnson.
  • Darwin, Erasmus (1797). A plan for the conduct of female education, in boarding schools, private families, and public seminaries. By Erasmus Darwin, M.D. F.R.S. author of Zoonomia, and of The botanic garden; To which are added, Rudiments of taste, in a series of letters from a mother to her daughters (4to, 128 pages). Derby: J. Johnson. Retrieved 5 March 2015. (last two leaves contain a book list, an apology for the work, and an advert for "Miss Parkers School")
  • Erasmus Darwin, Phytologia; or, The Philosophy of Agriculture and Gardening. 1800, London, J. Johnson.
  • Erasmus Darwin, The Temple of Nature; or, The Origin of Society. 1803, London, J. Johnson.

Family tree

 

Commemoration

Erasmus Darwin House, his home in Lichfield, Staffordshire, is a museum dedicated to him and his life's work. A secondary school at Burntwood, near Lichfield, was renamed Erasmus Darwin Academy in 2011.

A science building on the Clifton campus of Nottingham Trent University is named after him.[26]

In fiction

See also

Notes

  1. ^ fl. 1740s–1790s. Also Bookseller and Printer in Lichfield. When Darwin left Lichfield in 1781, Jackson took over his botanical garden. (Desmond 1994, Jackson, John p. 377) (Seward 1804, p. 70) His daughter, Miss Mary A(nn) Jackson of Lichfield (Britten & Boulger 1889, p. 180) (fl. 1830s–1840s), was a botanical illustrator, (Desmond 1994, Jackson, Mary Ann p. 377) and author of Botanical Terms illustrated (1842) and Pictorial Flora (1840)

References

  1. ^ a b Hassler, Donald M. (1963). Erasmus Darwin. p. 164. Retrieved 18 November 2021.
  2. ^ Graves, Joseph L (2003). The Emperor's New Clothes: Biological Theories of Race at the Millennium. p. 57. ISBN 978-0-8135-3302-5. Retrieved 18 September 2011.
  3. ^ Burke's Landed Gentry, Darwin formerly of Downe, 1966
  4. ^ "Darwin, Erasmus (DRWN750E)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  5. ^ Duffin, C.J.; Moody, R.T.J.; Gardner-Thorpe, C. (2013). A History of Geology and Medicine. Geological Society London: Geological Society special publication. Geological Society. p. 336. ISBN 978-1-86239-356-1. Retrieved 1 May 2019.
  6. ^ "Darwin, Erasmus". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/7177. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  7. ^ "Darwin Correspondence Project".
  8. ^ "Erasmus Darwin". Grand Lodge of British Columbia and Yukon. Retrieved 12 March 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ Uglow 2002a.
  10. ^ a b Uglow 2002b.
  11. ^ George 2014.
  12. ^ Allen, Richard C. 1999. David Hartley on human nature. Albany, N.Y.: SUNY Press. ISBN 0-7914-4233-0
  13. ^ a b c "Erasmus Darwin, Zoonomia: Project Gutenberg text XXXIX.4.8".
  14. ^ Zirkle, Conway (25 April 1941). "Natural Selection before the 'Origin of Species'". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 84 (1): 71–123. ISSN 0003-049X. JSTOR 984852.
  15. ^ Darwin, Erasmus (1798). A plan for the conduct of female education, in boarding schools, private families, and public seminaries. University of California Libraries. Philadelphia: : Printed by John Ormrod, no. 41, Chesnut-Street.
  16. ^ DNB entry for Erasmus Darwin. Oxford.
  17. ^ Darwin, Erasmus (1800). Phytologia, or the philosophy of agriculture and gardening (1st ed.). London: J. Johnson. p. 77.
  18. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  19. ^ Shelley, Mary. "Introduction" Frankenstein (1831 edition) Gutenberg
    "Many and long were the conversations between Lord Byron and Shelley, to which I was a devout but nearly silent listener. ... They talked of the experiments of Dr. Darwin, (I speak not of what the Doctor really did, or said that he did, but, as more to my purpose, of what was then spoken of as having been done by him,) who preserved a piece of vermicelli in a glass case, till by some extraordinary means it began to move with voluntary motion." She confused vermicelli, pasta, for the actual word Darwin and Shelley used, which was vorticella, a miniscule [sic] wheel animal. This was a major mistake or flub. As she admitted, everything she knew about science she got from her husband Shelley. [underlining added]
  20. ^ Mackay, Charles, ed. (1896). A Thousand and One Gems of English Poetry. London: Routledge. p. 160.
  21. ^ a b c Smith 2005.
  22. ^ . Erasmus Darwin House. 9 January 2013. Archived from the original on 24 March 2015. Retrieved 23 February 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  23. ^ "Erasmus Darwin's Artificial Bird – European Romanticisms in Association".
  24. ^ Rocket motor. P.82. (photograph of 1779 sketch) revolutionaryplayers.org.uk, accessed 14 November 2018
  25. ^ J.G.Crowther, New Scientist 12 Dec 1963 p.690 Book Reviews including Desmond King-Hele: 'Erasmus Darwin, 1731–1802' books.google.com, accessed 14 November 2018
  26. ^ "Guided tour of Clifton Campus" (PDF). Nottingham Trent University. September 2017. Retrieved 23 February 2023.

Sources

  • Britten, J; Boulger, GS (1889). "Biographical Index of British and Irish Botanists". Journal of Botany, British and Foreign. 27. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  • Carter, Philip (Spring 2013). (PDF). West Midlands History Issue 1. pp. 13–16. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 April 2015. Retrieved 12 March 2015.
  • Desmond, Ray (1994) [1977]. Dictionary of British and Irish botanists and horticulturalists : including plant collectors, flower painters and garden designers (2 ed.). London: Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-85066-843-8. Retrieved 28 February 2015.
  • Fara, Patricia (2003). Sex, Botany and Empire: The Story of Carl Linnaeus and Joseph Banks. Cambridge: Icon Books. ISBN 978-1-84046-444-3. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  • George, Sam (June 2005). "'Not Strictly Proper for a Female Pen': Eighteenth-Century Poetry and the Sexuality of Botany". Comparative Critical Studies. 2 (2): 191–210. doi:10.3366/ccs.2005.2.2.191.
  • Linné, Carl von (1785) [1774]. Systema vegetabilium (13th edition of Systema Naturae) [A System of Vegetables 2 vols. 1783–1785]. Lichfield: Lichfield Botanical Society. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
  • Schofield, R. E. (1963). The Lunar Society, A Social History of Provincial Science and Industry in Eighteenth Century England. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-858118-5. Retrieved 3 March 2015.
  • Uglow, Jenny (2002a). The lunar men: five friends whose curiosity changed the world. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux. ISBN 978-0-374-19440-6. Retrieved 12 March 2015.

Biographies and criticism

  • Fara, Patricia (2012). Erasmus Darwin : sex, science, and serendipity. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-958266-2. Retrieved 12 March 2015.
  • George, Sam (30 January 2014). "Carl Linnaeus, Erasmus Darwin and Anna Seward: Botanical Poetry and Female Education". Science & Education. 23 (3): 673–694. Bibcode:2014Sc&Ed..23..673G. doi:10.1007/s11191-014-9677-y. S2CID 142994653.
  • King-Hele, Desmond. 1963. Doctor Darwin. Scribner's, N.Y.
  • King-Hele, Desmond. 1977. Doctor of Revolution: the life and genius of Erasmus Darwin. Faber, London.
  • King-Hele, Desmond. 1999. Erasmus Darwin: a life of unequalled achievement Giles de la Mare Publishers.
  • King-Hele, Desmond (ed) 2002. Charles Darwin's 'The Life of Erasmus Darwin' Cambridge University Press.
  • Krause, Ernst 1879. Erasmus Darwin, with a preliminary notice by Charles Darwin. Murray, London.
  • Pearson, Hesketh. 1930. Doctor Darwin. Dent, London.
  • Porter, Roy, 1989. 'Erasmus Darwin: doctor of evolution?' in 'History, Humanity and Evolution: Essays for John C. Greene, ed. James R. Moore.
  • Priestman, Martin (2014). The Poetry of Erasmus Darwin: Enlightened Spaces, Romantic Times. Ashgate. ISBN 978-1-4724-1956-9. Retrieved 12 March 2015.
  • Seward, Anna (1804). Memoirs of the Life of Dr. Darwin: Chiefly During His Residence in Lichfield: With Anecdotes of His Friends, and Criticisms on His Writing. Philadelphia: W.M. Poyntell. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
  • Smith, Christopher (2005). The Genius of Erasmus Darwin. Ashgate Publishing. p. 416. ISBN 978-0-7546-3671-7. Retrieved 12 March 2015.
  • Uglow, Jenny (21 September 2002b). "Sexing the plants". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 March 2015.

Further reading

External links

  • Erasmus Darwin House, Lichfield
  • Works by Erasmus Darwin at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Erasmus Darwin at Internet Archive
  • Works by Erasmus Darwin at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • in Ernst Krause, Erasmus Darwin (1879)
  • Letter from Erasmus Darwin to Dr. William Withering at Mount Holyoke College 2 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine

erasmus, darwin, this, article, about, lived, 1731, 1802, descendants, with, same, name, disambiguation, erasmus, robert, darwin, december, 1731, april, 1802, english, physician, thinkers, midlands, enlightenment, also, natural, philosopher, physiologist, slav. This article is about Erasmus Darwin who lived 1731 1802 For his descendants with the same name see Erasmus Darwin disambiguation Erasmus Robert Darwin FRS 1 12 December 1731 18 April 1802 was an English physician One of the key thinkers of the Midlands Enlightenment he was also a natural philosopher physiologist slave trade abolitionist 2 inventor and poet Erasmus DarwinFRSErasmus Darwin c 1792 1793 oil painting by Joseph Wright of Derby Derby Museum and Art GalleryBornErasmus Robert Darwin 1731 12 12 12 December 1731Elston Hall Elston Nottinghamshire near Newark on Trent EnglandDied18 April 1802 1802 04 18 aged 70 Breadsall Derby EnglandResting placeAll Saints Church BreadsallAlma materSt John s College Cambridge University of Edinburgh Medical SchoolChildren14ParentsRobert Darwin of Elston Elizabeth HillRelativesSee Darwin Wedgwood familySignatureHis poems included much natural history including a statement of evolution and the relatedness of all forms of life He was a member of the Darwin Wedgwood family which includes his grandsons Charles Darwin and Francis Galton Darwin was a founding member of the Lunar Society of Birmingham a discussion group of pioneering industrialists and natural philosophers He turned down an invitation from George III to become Physician to the King Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Personal life 2 1 Freemasonry 3 Death 4 Writings 4 1 Botanical works and the Lichfield Botanical Society 4 2 Zoonomia 4 3 Poem on evolution 4 4 Education of women 5 Lunar Society 6 Other activities 6 1 Cosmological speculation 6 2 Inventions 6 3 Rocket engine 7 Major publications 8 Family tree 9 Commemoration 10 In fiction 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Sources 14 1 Biographies and criticism 15 Further reading 16 External linksEarly life and education Edit Stone cast bust of Erasmus Darwin by W J Coffee c 1795 Darwin s House in Lichfield now a museum dedicated to his life and work Darwin was born in 1731 at Elston Hall Nottinghamshire near Newark on Trent England the youngest of seven children of Robert Darwin of Elston 1682 1754 a lawyer and physician and his wife Elizabeth Hill 1702 97 The name Erasmus had been used by a number of his family and derives from his ancestor Erasmus Earle Common Sergent of England under Oliver Cromwell 3 His siblings were Robert Waring Darwin of Elston 17 October 1724 4 November 1816 Elizabeth Darwin 15 September 1725 8 April 1800 William Alvey Darwin 3 October 1726 7 October 1783 Anne Darwin 12 November 1727 3 August 1813 Susannah Darwin 10 April 1729 29 September 1789 Rev John Darwin rector of Elston 28 September 1730 24 May 1805 He was educated at Chesterfield Grammar School then later at St John s College Cambridge 4 He obtained his medical education at the University of Edinburgh Medical School whether he ever obtained the formal degree of MD is not known Darwin settled in 1756 as a physician at Nottingham but met with little success and so moved the following year to Lichfield to try to establish a practice there A few weeks after his arrival using a novel course of treatment he restored the health of a young fisherman whose death seemed inevitable This ensured his success in the new locale Darwin was a highly successful physician for more than fifty years in the Midlands George III invited him to be Royal Physician but Darwin declined 5 In Lichfield Darwin wrote didactic poetry developed his system of evolution and invented amongst other things a carriage steering mechanism a manuscript copier and a speaking machine Personal life Edit Joseph Wright of Derby Erasmus Darwin 1770 Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery Darwin married twice and had 14 children including two illegitimate daughters by an employee and possibly at least one further illegitimate daughter Erasmus Darwin s coat of arms Escutcheon Argent on a bend Gules cottised Vert three escallop shells Or Crest A demi griffin segreant Vert holding in his claws an escallop Or Motto E conchis omnia All things out of conches molluscs In 1757 he married Mary Polly Howard 1740 1770 the daughter of Charles Howard a Lichfield solicitor 6 They had four sons and one daughter two of whom a son and a daughter died in infancy Charles Darwin 1758 1778 uncle of the naturalist Erasmus Darwin Jr 1759 1799 Elizabeth Darwin 1763 survived 4 months Robert Waring Darwin 1766 1848 father of the naturalist Charles Darwin William Alvey Darwin 1767 survived 19 days The first Mrs Darwin died in 1770 A governess Mary Parker was hired to look after Robert By late 1771 employer and employee had become intimately involved and together they had two illegitimate daughters Susanna Parker 1772 1856 Mary Parker Jr 1774 1859 Susanna and Mary Jr later established a boarding school for girls In 1782 Mary Sr the governess married Joseph Day 1745 1811 a Birmingham merchant and moved away Darwin may have fathered another child this time with a married woman A Lucy Swift gave birth in 1771 to a baby also named Lucy who was christened a daughter of her mother and William Swift but there is reason to believe the father was really Darwin 7 Lucy Jr married John Hardcastle in Derby in 1792 and their daughter Mary married Francis Boott the physician In 1775 Darwin met Elizabeth Pole daughter of Charles Colyear 2nd Earl of Portmore and wife of Colonel Edward Pole 1718 1780 but as she was married Darwin could only make his feelings known for her through poetry When Edward Pole died Darwin married Elizabeth and moved to her home Radbourne Hall four miles 6 4 km west of Derby The hall and village are these days known as Radbourne In 1782 they moved to Full Street Derby They had four sons one of whom died in infancy and three daughters Edward Darwin 1782 1829 Frances Ann Violetta Darwin 1783 1874 married Samuel Tertius Galton was the mother of Francis Galton Emma Georgina Elizabeth Darwin 1784 1818 Sir Francis Sacheverel Darwin 1786 1859 Revd John Darwin 1787 1818 Christian Rector of All Saints Church Elston Henry Darwin 1789 1790 died in infancy Harriet Darwin 1790 1825 married Admiral Thomas James MalingDarwin s personal appearance is described in unflattering detail in his Biographical Memoirs printed by the Monthly Magazine in 1802 Darwin the description reads was of middle stature in person gross and corpulent his features were coarse and his countenance heavy if not wholly void of animation it certainly was by no means expressive The print of him from a painting of Mr Wright is a good likeness In his gait and dress he was rather clumsy and slovenly and frequently walked with his tongue hanging out of his mouth Freemasonry Edit Darwin had been a Freemason throughout his life in the Time Immemorial Lodge of Cannongate Kilwinning No 2 of Scotland Later on Sir Francis Darwin one of his sons was made a Mason in Tyrian Lodge No 253 at Derby in 1807 or 1808 His son Reginald was made a Mason in Tyrian Lodge in 1804 Charles Darwin s name does not appear on the rolls of the Lodge but it is very possible that he like Francis was a Mason as he held many Masonic beliefs such as Deism throughout his life 8 Death EditDarwin died suddenly on 18 April 1802 weeks after having moved to Breadsall Priory just north of Derby The Monthly Magazine of 1802 in its Biographical Memoirs of the Late Dr Darwin reports that during the last few years Dr Darwin was much subject to inflammation in his breast and lungs he had a very serious attack of this disease in the course of the last Spring from which after repeated bleedings by himself and a surgeon he with great difficulty recovered Darwin s death the Biographical Memoirs continues is variously accounted for it is supposed to have been caused by the cold fit of an inflammatory fever Dr Fox of Derby considers the disease which occasioned it to have been angina pectoris but Dr Garlicke of the same place thinks this opinion not sufficiently well founded Whatever was the disease it is not improbable surely that the fatal event was hastened by the violent fit of passion with which he was seized in the morning His body is buried in All Saints Church Breadsall Erasmus Darwin is commemorated on one of the Moonstones a series of monuments in Birmingham Writings EditBotanical works and the Lichfield Botanical Society Edit Erasmus Darwin in stipple engraving by Holl 1803 after J Rawlinson Darwin formed A Botanical Society at Lichfield almost always incorrectly named as the Lichfield Botanical Society despite the name composed of only three men Erasmus Darwin Sir Brooke Boothby and Mr John Jackson proctor of Lichfield Cathedral notes 1 9 10 to translate the works of the Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus from Latin into English This took seven years The result was two publications A System of Vegetables between 1783 and 1785 and The Families of Plants in 1787 In these volumes Darwin coined many of the English names of plants that we use today 11 Darwin then wrote The Loves of the Plants a long poem which was a popular rendering of Linnaeus works Darwin also wrote Economy of Vegetation and together the two were published as The Botanic Garden Among other writers he influenced were Anna Seward and Maria Jacson Zoonomia Edit Darwin s most important scientific work Zoonomia 1794 1796 contains a system of pathology and a chapter on Generation In the latter he anticipated some of the views of Jean Baptiste Lamarck which foreshadowed the modern theory of evolution Erasmus Darwin s works were read and commented on by his grandson Charles Darwin the naturalist Erasmus Darwin based his theories on David Hartley s psychological theory of associationism 12 The essence of his views is contained in the following passage which he follows up with the conclusion that one and the same kind of living filament is and has been the cause of all organic life Would it be too bold to imagine that in the great length of time since the earth began to exist perhaps millions of ages before the commencement of the history of mankind would it be too bold to imagine that all warm blooded animals have arisen from one living filament which THE GREAT FIRST CAUSE endued with animality with the power of acquiring new parts attended with new propensities directed by irritations sensations volitions and associations and thus possessing the faculty of continuing to improve by its own inherent activity and of delivering down those improvements by generation to its posterity world without end 13 Erasmus Darwin also anticipated survival of the fittest in Zoonomia mainly when writing about the three great objects of desire for every organism lust hunger and security 13 A similar survival of the fittest view in Zoonomia is Erasmus view on how a species should propagate itself Erasmus idea that the strongest and most active animal should propagate the species which should thence become improved 13 Today this is called the theory of survival of the fittest His grandson Charles Darwin posited the different and fuller theory of natural selection Charles theory was that natural selection is the inheritance of changed genetic characteristics that are better adaptations to the environment these are not necessarily based in strength and activity which themselves ironically can lead to the overpopulation that results in natural selection yielding nonsurvivors of genetic traits Erasmus Darwin was familiar with the earlier proto evolutionary thinking of James Burnett Lord Monboddo and cited him in his 1803 work Temple of Nature Poem on evolution Edit Erasmus Darwin offered the first glimpse of his theory of evolution obliquely in a question at the end of a long footnote to his popular poem The Loves of the Plants 1789 which was republished throughout the 1790s in several editions as The Botanic Garden His poetic concept was to anthropomorphise the stamen male and pistil female sexual organs as bride and groom In this stanza on the flower Curcuma also Flax and Turmeric the youths are infertile and he devotes the footnote to other examples of neutered organs in flowers insect castes and finally associates this more broadly with many popular and well known cases of vestigial organs male nipples the third and fourth wings of flies etc Woo d with long care CURCUMA cold and shy Meets her fond husband with averted eye Four beardless youths the obdurate beauty move With soft attentions of Platonic love Darwin s final long poem The Temple of Nature was published posthumously in 1803 The poem was originally titled The Origin of Society It is considered his best poetic work It centres on his own conception of evolution The poem traces the progression of life from micro organisms to civilised society The poem contains a passage that describes the struggle for existence 14 His poetry was admired by Wordsworth while Coleridge was intensely critical writing I absolutely nauseate Darwin s poem 10 It often made reference to his interests in science for example botany and steam engines Education of women Edit The last two leaves of Darwin s A plan for the conduct of female education in boarding schools 1797 contain a book list an apology for the work and an advert for Miss Parkers School 15 The school advertised on the last page is the one he set up in Ashbourne Derbyshire for his two illegitimate children Susanna and Mary Darwin regretted that a good education had not been generally available to women in Britain in his time and drew on the ideas of Locke Rousseau and Genlis in organising his thoughts Addressing the education of middle class girls Darwin argued that amorous romance novels were inappropriate and that they should seek simplicity in dress He contends that young women should be educated in schools rather than privately at home and learn appropriate subjects These subjects include physiognomy physical exercise botany chemistry mineralogy and experimental philosophy They should familiarise themselves with arts and manufactures through visits to sites like Coalbrookdale and Wedgwood s potteries they should learn how to handle money and study modern languages Darwin s educational philosophy took the view that men and women should have different capabilities skills interests and spheres of action where the woman s education was designed to support and serve male accomplishment and financial reward and to relieve him of daily responsibility for children and the chores of life 16 In the context of the times this program may be read as a modernising influence in the sense that the woman was at least to learn about the man s world although not be allowed to participate in it The text was written seven years after A Vindication of the Rights of Woman by Mary Wollstonecraft which has the central argument that women should be educated in a rational manner to give them the opportunity to contribute to society Some women of Darwin s era were receiving more substantial education and participating in the broader world An example is Susanna Wright who was raised in Lancashire and became an American colonist associated with the Midlands Enlightenment It is not known whether Darwin and Wright knew each other although they definitely knew many people in common Other women who received substantial education and who participated in the broader world albeit sometimes anonymously whom Darwin definitely knew were Maria Jacson and Anna Seward Lunar Society EditThese dates indicate the year in which Darwin became friends with these people who in turn became members of the Lunar Society The Lunar Society existed from 1765 to 1813 Before 1765 Matthew Boulton originally a buckle maker in Birmingham John Whitehurst of Derby maker of clocks and scientific instruments pioneer of geologyAfter 1765 Josiah Wedgwood potter 1765 Dr William Small 1765 man of science formerly Professor of Natural Philosophy at the College of William and Mary where Thomas Jefferson was an appreciative pupil Richard Lovell Edgeworth 1766 inventor James Watt 1767 improver of steam engine James Keir 1767 pioneer of the chemical industry Thomas Day 1768 eccentric and author Dr William Withering 1775 the death of Dr Small left an opening for a physician in the group Joseph Priestley 1780 experimental chemist and discoverer of many substances Samuel Galton 1782 a Quaker gunmaker with a taste for science took Darwin s place after Darwin moved to Derby Darwin also established a lifelong friendship with Benjamin Franklin who shared Darwin s support for the American and French revolutions The Lunar Society was instrumental as an intellectual driving force behind England s Industrial Revolution The members of the Lunar Society and especially Darwin opposed the slave trade He attacked it in The Botanic Garden 1789 1791 and in The Loves of Plants 1789 The Economy of Vegetation 1791 and the Phytologia 1800 17 Other activities EditIn 1761 Darwin was elected a fellow of the Royal Society 1 In addition to the Lunar Society Erasmus Darwin belonged to the influential Derby Philosophical Society as did his brother in law Samuel Fox see family tree below He experimented with the use of air and gases to alleviate infections and cancers in patients A Pneumatic Institution was established at Clifton in 1799 for clinically testing these ideas He conducted research into the formation of clouds on which he published in 1788 He also inspired Robert Weldon s Somerset Coal Canal caisson lock In 1792 Darwin was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia 18 Percy Bysshe Shelley specifically mentions Darwin in the first sentence of the 1818 Preface to Frankenstein to support his contention that the creation of life is possible His wife Mary Shelley in her introduction to the 1831 edition of Frankenstein wrote that she overheard her husband talk about Darwin s experiments with Lord Byron about unspecified experiments of Dr Darwin that led to the idea for the novel 19 Cosmological speculation Edit Contemporary literature dates the cosmological theories of the Big Bang and Big Crunch to the 19th and 20th centuries However Erasmus Darwin had speculated on these sorts of events in The Botanic Garden A Poem in Two Parts Part 1 The Economy of Vegetation 1791 20 Roll on ye Stars exult in youthful prime Mark with bright curves the printless steps of Time Near and more near your beamy cars approach And lessening orbs on lessening orbs encroach Flowers of the sky ye too to age must yield Frail as your silken sisters of the field Star after star from Heaven s high arch shall rush Suns sink on suns and systems systems crush Headlong extinct to one dark centre fall And death and night and chaos mingle all Till o er the wreck emerging from the storm Immortal Nature lifts her changeful form Mounts from her funeral pyre on wings of flame And soars and shines another and the same Inventions Edit Darwin was the inventor of several devices though he did not patent any he believed this would damage his reputation as a doctor He encouraged his friends to patent their own modifications of his designs 21 A horizontal windmill which he designed for Josiah Wedgwood who would be Charles Darwin s other grandfather see family tree below A carriage that would not tip over 1766 A steering mechanism for his carriage known today as the Ackermann linkage that would be adopted by cars 130 years later 1759 21 A speaking machine which was a mechanical larynx made of wood silk and leather and pronounced several sounds so well as to deceive all who heard it unseen at Clifton in 1799 22 A canal lift for barges A minute artificial bird 21 23 A copying machine 1778 A variety of weather monitoring machines Rocket engine Edit In notes dating to 1779 Darwin made a sketch of a simple hydrogen oxygen rocket engine with gas tanks connected by plumbing and pumps to an elongated combustion chamber and expansion nozzle a concept not to be seen again until one century later 24 25 Major publications EditErasmus Darwin A Botanical Society at Lichfield A System of Vegetables according to their classes orders translated from the 13th edition of Linnaeus Systema Vegetabiliium 2 vols 1783 Lichfield J Jackson for Leigh and Sotheby London Erasmus Darwin A Botanical Society at Lichfield The Families of Plants with their natural characters Translated from the last edition of Linnaeus Genera Plantarum 1787 Lichfield J Jackson for J Johnson London Erasmus Darwin The Botanic Garden Part I The Economy of Vegetation 1791 London J Johnson Part II The Loves of the Plants 1789 London J Johnson Erasmus Darwin Zoonomia or The Laws of Organic Life 1794 Part I London J Johnson Part I III 1796 London J Johnson Darwin Erasmus 1797 A plan for the conduct of female education in boarding schools private families and public seminaries By Erasmus Darwin M D F R S author of Zoonomia and of The botanic garden To which are added Rudiments of taste in a series of letters from a mother to her daughters 4to 128 pages Derby J Johnson Retrieved 5 March 2015 last two leaves contain a book list an apology for the work and an advert for Miss Parkers School Erasmus Darwin Phytologia or The Philosophy of Agriculture and Gardening 1800 London J Johnson Erasmus Darwin The Temple of Nature or The Origin of Society 1803 London J Johnson Family tree Edit Commemoration EditErasmus Darwin House his home in Lichfield Staffordshire is a museum dedicated to him and his life s work A secondary school at Burntwood near Lichfield was renamed Erasmus Darwin Academy in 2011 A science building on the Clifton campus of Nottingham Trent University is named after him 26 In fiction EditCharles Sheffield an author noted largely for hard science fiction wrote a number of stories featuring Darwin in a roe similar to that of Sherlock Holmes These stories were collected in a book The Amazing Dr Darwin The forgetting of Erasmus designs for a rocket is a major plot point in Stephen Baxter s tale of alternate universes Manifold Origin Phrases from Darwin s poem The Botanic Garden are used as chapter headings in The Pornographer of Vienna by Lewis Crofts Darwin appears as a character in Sergey Lukyanenko s novel New Watch as a Dark Other and a prophet living in Regent s Park Estate See also EditEvolutionary ideas of the Renaissance and Enlightenment History of evolutionary thoughtNotes Edit fl 1740s 1790s Also Bookseller and Printer in Lichfield When Darwin left Lichfield in 1781 Jackson took over his botanical garden Desmond 1994 Jackson John p 377 Seward 1804 p 70 His daughter Miss Mary A nn Jackson of Lichfield Britten amp Boulger 1889 p 180 fl 1830s 1840s was a botanical illustrator Desmond 1994 Jackson Mary Ann p 377 and author of Botanical Terms illustrated 1842 and Pictorial Flora 1840 References Edit a b Hassler Donald M 1963 Erasmus Darwin p 164 Retrieved 18 November 2021 Graves Joseph L 2003 The Emperor s New Clothes Biological Theories of Race at the Millennium p 57 ISBN 978 0 8135 3302 5 Retrieved 18 September 2011 Burke s Landed Gentry Darwin formerly of Downe 1966 Darwin Erasmus DRWN750E A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Duffin C J Moody R T J Gardner Thorpe C 2013 A History of Geology and Medicine Geological Society London Geological Society special publication Geological Society p 336 ISBN 978 1 86239 356 1 Retrieved 1 May 2019 Darwin Erasmus Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 7177 Subscription or UK public library membership required Darwin Correspondence Project Erasmus Darwin Grand Lodge of British Columbia and Yukon Retrieved 12 March 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Uglow 2002a a b Uglow 2002b George 2014 Allen Richard C 1999 David Hartley on human nature Albany N Y SUNY Press ISBN 0 7914 4233 0 a b c Erasmus Darwin Zoonomia Project Gutenberg text XXXIX 4 8 Zirkle Conway 25 April 1941 Natural Selection before the Origin of Species Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 84 1 71 123 ISSN 0003 049X JSTOR 984852 Darwin Erasmus 1798 A plan for the conduct of female education in boarding schools private families and public seminaries University of California Libraries Philadelphia Printed by John Ormrod no 41 Chesnut Street DNB entry for Erasmus Darwin Oxford Darwin Erasmus 1800 Phytologia or the philosophy of agriculture and gardening 1st ed London J Johnson p 77 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 5 April 2021 Shelley Mary Introduction Frankenstein 1831 edition Gutenberg Many and long were the conversations between Lord Byron and Shelley to which I was a devout but nearly silent listener They talked of the experiments of Dr Darwin I speak not of what the Doctor really did or said that he did but as more to my purpose of what was then spoken of as having been done by him who preserved a piece of vermicelli in a glass case till by some extraordinary means it began to move with voluntary motion She confused vermicelli pasta for the actual word Darwin and Shelley used which was vorticella a miniscule sic wheel animal This was a major mistake or flub As she admitted everything she knew about science she got from her husband Shelley underlining added Mackay Charles ed 1896 A Thousand and One Gems of English Poetry London Routledge p 160 a b c Smith 2005 Project Update The Speaking Machine Erasmus Darwin House 9 January 2013 Archived from the original on 24 March 2015 Retrieved 23 February 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Erasmus Darwin s Artificial Bird European Romanticisms in Association Rocket motor P 82 photograph of 1779 sketch revolutionaryplayers org uk accessed 14 November 2018 J G Crowther New Scientist 12 Dec 1963 p 690 Book Reviews including Desmond King Hele Erasmus Darwin 1731 1802 books google com accessed 14 November 2018 Guided tour of Clifton Campus PDF Nottingham Trent University September 2017 Retrieved 23 February 2023 Sources EditBritten J Boulger GS 1889 Biographical Index of British and Irish Botanists Journal of Botany British and Foreign 27 Retrieved 7 March 2015 Carter Philip Spring 2013 Shapers of the West Midlands Enlightenment PDF West Midlands History Issue 1 pp 13 16 Archived from the original PDF on 3 April 2015 Retrieved 12 March 2015 Desmond Ray 1994 1977 Dictionary of British and Irish botanists and horticulturalists including plant collectors flower painters and garden designers 2 ed London Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 85066 843 8 Retrieved 28 February 2015 Fara Patricia 2003 Sex Botany and Empire The Story of Carl Linnaeus and Joseph Banks Cambridge Icon Books ISBN 978 1 84046 444 3 Retrieved 22 February 2015 George Sam June 2005 Not Strictly Proper for a Female Pen Eighteenth Century Poetry and the Sexuality of Botany Comparative Critical Studies 2 2 191 210 doi 10 3366 ccs 2005 2 2 191 Linne Carl von 1785 1774 Systema vegetabilium 13th edition of Systema Naturae A System of Vegetables 2 vols 1783 1785 Lichfield Lichfield Botanical Society Retrieved 24 February 2015 Schofield R E 1963 The Lunar Society A Social History of Provincial Science and Industry in Eighteenth Century England Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 858118 5 Retrieved 3 March 2015 Uglow Jenny 2002a The lunar men five friends whose curiosity changed the world New York Farrar Straus amp Giroux ISBN 978 0 374 19440 6 Retrieved 12 March 2015 Biographies and criticism Edit Fara Patricia 2012 Erasmus Darwin sex science and serendipity Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 958266 2 Retrieved 12 March 2015 George Sam 30 January 2014 Carl Linnaeus Erasmus Darwin and Anna Seward Botanical Poetry and Female Education Science amp Education 23 3 673 694 Bibcode 2014Sc amp Ed 23 673G doi 10 1007 s11191 014 9677 y S2CID 142994653 King Hele Desmond 1963 Doctor Darwin Scribner s N Y King Hele Desmond 1977 Doctor of Revolution the life and genius of Erasmus Darwin Faber London King Hele Desmond 1999 Erasmus Darwin a life of unequalled achievement Giles de la Mare Publishers King Hele Desmond ed 2002 Charles Darwin s The Life of Erasmus Darwin Cambridge University Press Krause Ernst 1879 Erasmus Darwin with a preliminary notice by Charles Darwin Murray London Pearson Hesketh 1930 Doctor Darwin Dent London Porter Roy 1989 Erasmus Darwin doctor of evolution in History Humanity and Evolution Essays for John C Greene ed James R Moore Priestman Martin 2014 The Poetry of Erasmus Darwin Enlightened Spaces Romantic Times Ashgate ISBN 978 1 4724 1956 9 Retrieved 12 March 2015 Seward Anna 1804 Memoirs of the Life of Dr Darwin Chiefly During His Residence in Lichfield With Anecdotes of His Friends and Criticisms on His Writing Philadelphia W M Poyntell Retrieved 24 February 2015 Smith Christopher 2005 The Genius of Erasmus Darwin Ashgate Publishing p 416 ISBN 978 0 7546 3671 7 Retrieved 12 March 2015 Uglow Jenny 21 September 2002b Sexing the plants The Guardian Retrieved 12 March 2015 Further reading EditDarwin Erasmus 1794 96 Zoonomia J Johnson reissued by Cambridge University Press 2009 ISBN 978 1 108 00549 4 King Hele Desmond ed 2007 The collected letters of Erasmus Darwin Cambridge Cambridge Univ Press ISBN 978 0 521 82156 8 Retrieved 7 March 2015 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Erasmus Darwin Wikiquote has quotations related to Erasmus Darwin Wikisource has original works by or about Erasmus Darwin Erasmus Darwin House Lichfield Works by Erasmus Darwin at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Erasmus Darwin at Internet Archive Works by Erasmus Darwin at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Revolutionary Players website Preface and a preliminary notice by Charles Darwin in Ernst Krause Erasmus Darwin 1879 Letter from Erasmus Darwin to Dr William Withering at Mount Holyoke College Archived 2 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Erasmus Darwin amp oldid 1157309973, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.