Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CONTENTS
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- 1 Green Threads across the Ages: A Brief Perspective on the Darwins' Botany
- 2 The Fortunes of the Darwins
- 3 The Misfortunes of Botany
- 4 Erasmus Darwin's Vision of the Future: Phytologia
- 5 Charles Darwin's Evolutionary Period
- 6 Charles Darwin's Physiological Period
- 7 Charles Darwin, Francis Darwin and Differences with von Sachs
- 8 Francis Darwin, Cambridge and Plant Physiology
- 9 Francis Darwin, Family and his Father's Memory
- 10 Fortune's Favourites?
- 11 Where Did the Green Threads Lead? The Botanical Legacy
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index
8 - Francis Darwin, Cambridge and Plant Physiology
- Frontmatter
- CONTENTS
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- 1 Green Threads across the Ages: A Brief Perspective on the Darwins' Botany
- 2 The Fortunes of the Darwins
- 3 The Misfortunes of Botany
- 4 Erasmus Darwin's Vision of the Future: Phytologia
- 5 Charles Darwin's Evolutionary Period
- 6 Charles Darwin's Physiological Period
- 7 Charles Darwin, Francis Darwin and Differences with von Sachs
- 8 Francis Darwin, Cambridge and Plant Physiology
- 9 Francis Darwin, Family and his Father's Memory
- 10 Fortune's Favourites?
- 11 Where Did the Green Threads Lead? The Botanical Legacy
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
As the autumn of 1882 slipped into winter and the pressure of events and duties following his father's death slowly eased, Francis was forced to confront his own future. Which way should he turn? There were hints coming out of Oxford University that he would be successful if he applied for the newly vacant Chair of Botany. He confided to Nain Ruck, to whom more than anyone he could tell his innermost thoughts and worries:
20 Dec 1882
I have been rather disturbed in my mind by the oxford people half hinting that they would like me to go in for the Botany professorship. There is no doubt that if I am to be a professed botanist I shall never have such a chance again … I should dislike leaving Cambridge and giving up Michael Foster, though I think he could not blame me.
His dilemma was that Michael Foster, head of the highly successful Cambridge School of Physiology, had dangled before him the prospect that there might be a Readership suitable for him in Cambridge. Given that neither the Chair nor the Readership were firm offers, and cautious by nature – to his family Frank was always sound and reliable rather than adventurous – he plumped for Cambridge. There he would be close to his mother, who had recently moved to the city, his siblings, and in familiar surroundings. Almost immediately, he felt he had made the wrong decision as Foster's plans were overtaken by changes to the rules for the medical examinations; these made it necessary for the lecture course to become more zoological than it had previously been, so ruling out any significant contribution from Francis. In another letter to Nain, he wrote:
11 Mar 1883
It is rather a disappointment as I should have been appointed University Reader and so with a fixed recognised position and a good class … Michael Foster has I think been rather stupid not foreseeing all this sooner. But he has behaved delightfully, and expresses very warmly his sorrow at what he calls bringing me here under false pretences.[…]
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- The Aliveness of PlantsThe Darwins at the Dawn of Plant Science, pp. 115 - 136Publisher: Pickering & ChattoFirst published in: 2014