Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Symbols, abbreviations, and conventions
- 1 Friends
- 2 Marriage
- 3 Children
- 4 Scientific wives and allies
- 5 Observing plants
- 6 Companion animals
- 7 Insects and angels
- 8 Observing humans
- 9 Editors
- 10 Writers and critics
- 11 Religion
- 12 Travellers
- 13 Servants and governesses
- 14 Ascent of woman
- List of letters and provenances
- Biographical notes
- Bibliography and further reading
- Index
7 - Insects and angels
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 February 2017
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Symbols, abbreviations, and conventions
- 1 Friends
- 2 Marriage
- 3 Children
- 4 Scientific wives and allies
- 5 Observing plants
- 6 Companion animals
- 7 Insects and angels
- 8 Observing humans
- 9 Editors
- 10 Writers and critics
- 11 Religion
- 12 Travellers
- 13 Servants and governesses
- 14 Ascent of woman
- List of letters and provenances
- Biographical notes
- Bibliography and further reading
- Index
Summary
Women also studied animals that didn't come into the category of companion animals: the correspondence chosen here has to do with barnacles, insects, and worms. (The term ‘insect’ was formerly loosely applied to any small or insignificant animal.) Although they might be collected for aesthetic reasons and studied purely for their own interest, the economic importance of these creatures should not be overlooked. Barnacles slowed down ships, insects destroyed crops, and worms were important to soil fertility. In this arena, female practitioners could be taken seriously: no one could risk doing otherwise, if it sounded as if they knew what they were talking about.
One of Darwin's earliest female correspondents on the subject of zoology (specifically, barnacles), and geology, was Mary Elizabeth Lyell, the wife of the geologist Charles Lyell and daughter of the geologist Leonard Horner. Leonard Horner had taken great care with the education of his daughters; when Mary was 5 years old he noted that she was getting on well in reading, and was learning geography. When she was 13, he was teaching her Italian, and when she was 18 he was congratulating her on her drawing, which she studied formally, and planning to study shells with her. Mary collected land snails on Madeira in 1854. She regularly travelled with her husband and presumably helped him with his work, although the extent of her contribution is unknown. The following letter to her from Darwin of 4 October 1847 suggests that she had her own collection of barnacles.
Monday Morning
My dear Mrs Lyell
I am much obliged for the Barnacles; the one marked Bergen is the right one; but it seems I must give it “locality unknown”: I do not think anyone could have called it a Conia. You shall have your specimens back, but having now passed your new shell, I shd like to leave it, till I go over all the genera again, which will be sometime hence, but I will pledge myself that your shells are returned.
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- Information
- Darwin and WomenA Selection of Letters, pp. 105 - 121Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2017