[More Letters of Charles Darwin by Charles Darwin]@TWC D-Link book
More Letters of Charles Darwin

CHAPTER 1
42/183

TO A.R.WALLACE.

Down, September 22nd [1865].
I am much obliged for your extract (187/1.

Mr.Wallace had sent Darwin a note about a tufted cock-blackbird, which transmitted the character to some of its offspring.); I never heard of such a case, though such a variation is perhaps the most likely of any to occur in a state of nature, and to be inherited, inasmuch as all domesticated birds present races with a tuft or with reversed feathers on their heads.

I have sometimes thought that the progenitor of the whole class must have been a crested animal.
Do you make any progress with your journal of travels?
I am the more anxious that you should do so as I have lately read with much interest some papers by you on the ourang-outan, etc., in the "Annals," of which I have lately been reading the later volumes.

I have always thought that journals of this nature do considerable good by advancing the taste for Natural History: I know in my own case that nothing ever stimulated my zeal so much as reading Humboldt's "Personal Narrative." I have not yet received the last part of the "Linnean Transactions," but your paper (187/2.


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