THE LIFE, LETTERS AND LABOURS OF FRANCIS GALTON CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS C. F. CLAY, MANAOKR aonfton : FETTER LANE, E.C. Etmiturgti: 100 PRINCES STREET SMI lonoon: H. K. LKWIK, 131! fiOWER STREET, \V.C. lonoon: WILLIAM WESLEY & SO.V 18 I!SSI:\ STKKl"!'. STKANH Berlin: A. ASHER AND CO. 1Ui|>>i8: F. A. BROCKHADS jStni Borfe: G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS Sombnp nnli (Tnlmtln : MACMILT-AN AND CO., LTD. (Toronto: J. M. WENT AND SONS, Lin. rok»(i: Till! MAJM'/KX-KABX'SHIKI-KAISHA All rights rf nerved FRANCIS GALTON in I'.WW. From ;i |)hot.>jrrii|>li Ipy tin- Antlior of tlio inifinislii-il pictuiv l,y (. \\'. Fursc ;it ( laverdon. THE LIFE, LETTERS AND LABOURS OF FRANCIS GALTON BY KARL PEARSON GALTON PROFESSOR, UNIVERSITY OK LONDON VOLUME I BIRTH 1822 TO MARRIAGE 1853 Cambridge : ^' at the University Press l/l%/x\fl\ 1914 Q 114-3 v. I Cnnibtitigr PKINTEI) BY JOHN CLAY, M.A. AT THE UNIVERSITY PBE88 PREFACE THE delay that has attended the issue of this Life of Francis Galton, of which even now only the first volume appears, is largely due to three causes. In the first place the writer has so many other duties that the time to sort out, peruse and abstract the large amount of available material has only been obtained in odd holiday intervals or by postponing the claims of students and workers in the Galton Laboratory on his attention and energy. I trust that they will for the sake of this account of the life of the man, to whom we alike owe so much, pardon the delays, which have so often been inflicted on the publication of their own researches. Secondly I had hoped that some postponement of the date of issue might lead to the discovery of more material bearing on the " Fallow Years" 1844 to 1849. This hope has not been fulfilled, and nothing has reached me1 which in any way supplies the place of the material, which appears to have existed at the date of Galton's death, judging by his own index to his letters. Hardly a letter to him of this period, which would have fixed his habitation and occupation, or have suggested his thoughts and reading, has reached me. The whole of his letters home from Egypt and Syria have perished, and the letters to him from his sisters, which would have told much, have been destroyed. The first realisation of this loss so depressed me, that I almost determined to give up the portraiture of a life, which could thus never be adequately exhibited in some of its most momentous phases. The five years which follow most men's University careers are the most developmental of their lives. No other quinquennium is one of such marked growth, for men usually in this period will start to think and act definitely for themselves ; they must then face the fundamental problems of life relying on their own powers. Ik-re I can tell my reader little or nothing of Francis Galton, and I would merely say that the absence of information is not due to want of 1 I have endeavoured in vain to trace what has happened to letters written 60 to 70 years ago to College friends — all long dead. vi Life and Letters of /-'yv^r/.s (,'4*, New Haven, 1913. Preface vii and Mcndelism, for both now transcend any treatment which fails to approach them witli adequate mathematical knowledge. If this view be a true view of the evolution of biological thought in the near future, then any comparison of the relative greatness of the two men becomes superficial. Darwinism needs the complement of Galtonian method before it can become a demonstrable truth ; it requires to be supplemented by Galtonian enthusiasm before it can exercise a substantial influence on the conscious direction of race evolution. Man has been directly endeavouring for a few thousand years to improve himself by improving his environment. Galton's lesson over and over again disregarded by those who profess to be his disciples — was that little could be achieved this way, that the primary method to elevate the race was to insure that its physically and mentally abler members, not only had the unrecognised advantage of natural selection in their favour, but were directly and consciously encouraged to be fertile by the state. If my view be correct, Erasmus Darwin planted the seed of suggestion in questioning whether adapta- tion meant no more to man than illustration of creative ingenuity ; the one grandson, Charles Darwin, collected the facts which had to be dealt with and linked them together by wide-reaching hypotheses; the other grandson, Francis Galton, provided the methods by which they could be tested, and saw with the enthusiasm of a prophet their application in the future to the directed and self-conscious evolution of the human race. It is unprofitable to discuss relative greatness, and in this work I have made no attempt to do so. I see one family which has done much for our national worth, and every fact which bears on its history and its characteristics is of interest to us all. Those who know the real history of the one occasion on which Galton and Darwin disagreed know how loyal Galton was to Darwin— loyal with a, loyalty far rarer to-day. Galton would not have wished me to put him in the same rank as his master, but the reader who follows my story to the end may possibly see that the ramifications of Galton's methods • are producing a renascence in innumerable branches of science, which will be as epoch-making in the near future as the Darwinian theory of evolution was in biology from 1860 to 1880, and which lias encountered and will encounter no less bigoted opposition from both the learned and the lay. To work for that Galtonian renascence has been the writer's main aim in life as it was also that of his chief colleague and friend— W. F. R. Weldon. I can only hope that these volumes will contribute viii Life and Letters of Francis Galton to the due appreciation of what Galton laboured to do and what he hoped in the future might be done in this field. It is only fitting that I should put on record here the ready help 1 have received in innumerable ways from Francis Galton's relatives and friends. For letters, papers and the reproduction of illustrative portraits I have in the first place to thank Mr Edward Wheler Galton of Claverdon ; to his sister, Mrs T. J. A. Studdy, I owe also much in the way of facts and portraits. Mrs M. G. B. Lethbridge, Sir Francis Galton's niece, did invaluable work in placing in order and indexing the letters to her uncle from 18fiO onwards. To the three sons of Charles Darwin, Mr William Erasmus Darwin, the late Sir George Howard Darwin and Sir Francis Darwin, I owe much information and many letters. Without their ever-ready and generous aid it would not have been possible to put before my readers so completely as I have done the ancestral history of Charles Darwin. To Mr Francis Rhodes Darwin and to Colonel C. W. Darwin I am much indebted for particulars and photographs of the Darwin portraits at Creskeld Hall, and to Lady George Darwin for kindly help after the death of her husband. The Rev. Darwin Wilmot placed at my disposal most valuable manuscript material as to his grandfather, Sir Francis Sacheverell Darwin, as to his great-grandfather, Erasmus Darwin, and as to the family history of the Darwins. Mrs William Wavell, great-granddaughter of Ei-asmus Darwin, allowed me to see her Darwin portraits and manuscripts. Several other members of the family also have most kindly shown me illustrative material, or provided me with data. Many friends and correspondents of Francis Galton have allowed me to take copies of his letters, which will find due acknowledgment in my second volume, where these letters are used. In the heavy pedigree work of this volume I have received con- tinual assistance in search work from my colleague Miss Amy Barring-ton and in the laborious drafting of the pedigrees for engraving from the Hon. Seci-etary of the Galton Laboratory, Miss H. Gertrude Jones. My heartiest thanks are due to them both for the patience which they have brought to their tasks, and the invariable suavity they have shown to a frequently overworked and occasionally irascible taskmaster. To my friend and colleague Professor W. Paton Ker I am very grateful for a variety of suggestions and corrections during proof. i.\ I am fully aware that the indolent reader will find much in this work which he does not want and which has but little interest for him. It is intended fundamentally as a permanent memorial to the Founder of the Galton Laboratory, and embraces material which may easily perish or be ultimately lost sight of. If the said reader will only wait a few years, I have little doubt that my material will be strained of its more solid content and presented to him in that light and cheap form, which we are told is a first necessity of the modern book market. My object is a different one, namely to issue a volume to some extent worthy of the name of the man it bears, — which may be studied here- after by those who wish to understand him, his origin and his aims,— rut her than to furnish an evening's amusement for readers however numerous, who would just as readily study any other biography as that of Galton, if only it chanced to be entertaining. I have been told that the genealogical section of my book will weary its readers and narrow its public. I would reply that this work is not written to gain a public, but piam memoriam prodere conditoris nostri and is intended especially for those who have known and loved Francis Galtou in the past, or who may in the future desire to understand and honour him. K. P. THE GALTON LABORATORY, UNIVERSITY OF LONDON. April 8, 1911. p. u. \ CONTENTS OF VOLUME I CHAP. PAOE I. FOREWORD 1 II. THE ANCESTRY OP FRANCIS GALTON ....... 5 III. CHILDHOOD AND BOYHOOD . . . . • 62 IV. LKIIIU.-UIR?. AND WA.\i>Kit.r.iin:i:. Part I. Medical Studies and the Flight to Constantinople . . 92 V. Li-:iin.i.iiiHK AND WAXDKR.IAIIRK. Part IT. Mathematical Studies and Cambridge Pleasures . . 140 VT. FALLOW YEARS, 1844—1849 196 VII. THE REAWAKENING: SCIENTIFIC EXPLORATION 211 Al'PKNDIX : NOTE I. POHTRAITS OP THE DARWIN FAMILY .... 243 NOTE II. ON THE HOWARD ANCESTRY OP CHARLES DARWIN. I'll b 2 ILLUSTRATIONS TO VOLUME I Frontispiece. Francis Gal ton in 1903. From a photograph by the author of tlic unfinished picture by C. W. Furse at Claverdon. PLATE I . Facsimile of a Letter of Charles Darwin to Francis ( jalton on the publica- tion of the latter's 1 1 i'ri>ditary Genius, Dec. 23, 1869 bvlwpfit .pp. 6 and 7 II. Facsimile of the Reply of Francis Galton to Charles Darwin's letter of Dec. 23, 1869 between pp. 6 and 1 tn fitfc page TIT. Erasmus Darwin. From a print after a picture by Rawlinson of Derby 13 I V. Erasmus Darwin and his father, Dr Erasmus Darwin, at Chess. From a silhouette at Claverdon in the possession of Mr Wheler Galton . 14 I V /i/.v. Elizabeth Darwin (nee Collier) and Dr Erasmus Darwin, Derby, 1800. From silhouettes mounted on opal glass in the possession of their great-granddaughter, Mrs T. J. A. Studdy . . . . . 14 V. From the MS. Boyhood of Sir Francis Sacheverell Darwin in the possession of Mr Darwin Wilmot. Mechanical Ferry designed by Dr Erasmus Darwin for crossing from his house in Fell Street, Derby, to his orchard. Francis S. Darwin as a child in the boat, 1789 16 VI. Robert Darwin of Elston (16S2— 1754). Father of Erasmus Darwin and great-grandfather of Charles Darwin and Francis Galton. From a picture at Creskeld Hall by Richardson, 1717 . . 17 VI /,/>•. William Alvey Darwin (1726 — 1783). Brother of Erasmus Darwin. From a photograph in the possession of Mr W. E. Darwin of the picture at Creskeld Hall ........ 17 VI ter. Robert Waring Darwin (1724—1816). Brother of Erasmus Darwin and author of Principia Botanica, or Introduction l<> t/ie Xn-nal liotany of Linnaeus. From the picture at Creskeld Hall painted by -John Borridge, 1775 ........ 17 VII. Elizabeth Hill (1702—1797). Wife of Robert Darwin of Elston and mother of Dr Erasmus 1 tarwin. From a photograph of the portrait at Creskeld Hall in the possession of Francis I )arwin, Esq. 1 7 VIII. Robert Wai-ing Darwin, F.R.S. (1766— 1848). Father of Charles Darwin. From a mezzotint of the painting in the possession of .M r William E. Darwin. (The mezzotint was engraved before the painting was cut down.) . . . . . . . . 17 IX. Susannah Wedgwood (1765 — 1817). Mrs Robert Waring Darwin, mother of Charles Darwin. From a miniature in the possession of Mr William E. Darwin . 17 xiv Life and Letters of Francis Gallon PI.ATK to face page \. From the MS. Boyhood of Sir Francis Sacheverell Darwin, who, being bitten by a dog, produced a stampede by barking as a dog to mimic hydrophobia. Mrs Darwin (Elizabeth Collier), the surgeon, the two Miss Parkers, Violetta Darwin (afterwards Mrs Galton) and Emma Darwin are seen on the stairs, while Dr Erasmus Darwin (•nines out of his study to ascertain what is wrong XL Poem to Mrs Pole (Elizabeth Collier), afterwards Mrs Erasmus Dai-win. From a manuscript volume of poems by Dr Erasmus Darwin in the possession of Mrs William Wavell. Words altered and erased by Sir Francis S. Darwin .... XT1. General Sir David Colyear, afterwards Lord Portmore (circa 1650 — 1730). Grandfather of Elizabeth Collier. From the portrait by Van der Banck formerly at Arthingworth Hall . . 1* XTII. Charles Colyear, second Earl Portmore (1700—1785). Father of Elizabeth Collier. From the picture by Reynolds formerly at Arthingworth Hall ..... XIV. Catherine Sedley, Countess of Dorchester, afterwards Lady Portmore (1657—1717). Grandmother of Elixabeth Collier. From the picture by Kneller formerly at Arthingworth Hall . . . 10 XV. Sir Henry Savile, Scholar (1549—1622). Maternal grandfather of Sir Charles Sedley and a direct ancestor of Francis Galton. From a print in the possession of the author of the portrait by Marcus Ghoeraerts the Younger ........ 20 X VT. Eli/abeth Collier (1747—1832). Mrs Polo, later .Mrs Erasmus Darwin, with her son Sacheverell Pole. Painted in the year 1770. From a picture in pastel by Wright of Derby in the possession of Mr Wheler Galton at Claverdon 21 XVII. Eli/abeth Collier (Mrs Pole, later Mrs Erasmus Darwin) with her dog. From a silhouette at Claverdon in tin1 possession of Mr Wilder Galton. Underneath, facsimile of her signature . . . . 21 XV 111. Sir Francis Sacheverell Darwin (17«G— 18f>9). Uncle and godfather of Sir Francis Galton. From a portrait by Haynes in the posses- sion of Sir Francis' granddaughter, Mrs William Wavell . . l'l' XIX. From the MS. Boyhood of Sir Francis Sarheverell Darwin. Francis S. Darwin and George Bilsborow while engaged in shooting pigs with arrows are disturbed by a mad dog, which communicates hydrophobia to the pigs and a horse. It is eventually killed l>y the mob. 1796 . . 22 XX. Three portraits of Frances Anne Violefta Darwin (Mrs Tertius Galton) (1788—1874): tn) In the year of her marriage, ISO". From a miniature by Thompson in the possession of her granddaughter, Mrs T. J. A. Studdy . . 2) Charles Darwin in later life. From a photograph by his son, Major Leonard Darwin ........ 68 Erasmus Galton (1815 — 1909). In his uniform as a "middy," aged 13. Silhouette in the possession of Mr Wheler Galton at Claverdon. " My second brother, Erasmus, then a boy of twelve or thirteen, showed himself to us in his uniform, with the dagger or ' dirk ' that was part of it." Francis Galton, Memories of my Life, p. 16 69 Breadsall Priory ("Happiness Hall"). The later home of Erasmus Darwin and afterwards of his widow (Elizabeth Collier, Mrs Pole). This is the house where the joyous visits of the young Galtons to their grandmother were made. From a pen and ink sketch of the garden front .......... 74 XLIV. (n) Breadsall Church. From a sketch. This church contains the tombs of Erasmus Darwin, his widow and other members of the Darwin family .......... 74 (b) Breadsall Priory. Purchased by Erasmus Darwin the Younger, and bequeathed by him to his father, Erasmus Darwin the Elder. From a water-colour sketch at Claverdon ..... 74 XLV. Plan of the Larches, the birthplace and home in boyhood of Francis Galton, with two inset aspects of the house. From a plan by Violetta Galton (nee Darwin) .75 XLVI. (a) Erasmus Darwin (1731—1802). From a painting by Wright of Derby 76 (b) Darwin Galton (1814— 1903). Eldest brother of Francis Galton. From a picture by Oakley at Claverdon 76 XLVII. Three great-grandchildren of David Barclay of Cheapside : (a) Hudson Gurney .......... 91 (b) Margaret Gurney (Margaret Barclay) ..... 91 (c) Mrs Fry (Elizabeth Gurney). All second cousins to each other and to Tertius Galton . . . . . . . . 91 XLVIII. Francis Galton. From a portrait by Oakley of 1840 (Galton Labora- tory, University of London) ..... 93 XLIX. Sketch by Francis Galton of the Bishop's Gateway at Liege, visited 1838 94 L. (a) Emma Sophia Galton (1811 — 1904), "Sister Pemmy." From a silhouette at Claverdon . . . . . . . . 96 (b) Elizabeth Anne Galton (1808—1906), "Sister Bessy," Mrs Edward Wheler. From a painting by Powles in 1891 at Claverdon . . 96 L bis. Elizabeth Anne Galton (1808 — 1906), " Sister Bessy." From a painting by Easton of 1844 in the possession of Mrs T. J. A. Studdy . 96 P. G. C \\iii L(f( cut/ n.ATK '" /'"'' /<".'/' LI. Sketches from (lalton's Cambridge Letters: (a) The tire-place in Gallon's rooms with the foils, Smyrna pistols and native lance .......... 1^0 (6) The sitting-n ..... i before the removal of the sofa to the fire-place I-'11 LIT. Sketches from Ualton's Cambridge Letters : (a) Pen and ink sketch of Ely Cathedral, 1842 . 167 (b) Pen and ink sketch of King's College Chapel from the Field l>y the Mill, IS -13 .......... 167 UII. From Francis Gallon's sketch-book of the German tour in 1843: (a) Emma Galton and Julia Hallam . . . . . . .180 (b) "Sister Emma" ...... .180 LIV. Last Days in Cambridge. Sketches from letters : (a) Letter of Francis Galton to Tertius Galtou announcing his degree 181 (6) The last meeting of the Caseo-Tostic Club, is 13 . . 181 LV. Francis Galton. From two early photographs in the possession of Mr Wheler Galton ......... 211 LV bis. Francis Galton's sisters. From early photographs on glass (before 1860) in the possession of their niece, Mrs T. J. A. Studdy : (a) Emma Sophia Galton (1811 — 1904), "Sister Pemmy " . . 213 (6) Milicent Adele Galton (1810—1883), "Sister Delly" . . 213 LVI. Sketches from Galton's African Diaries : (a) Rough water-colour sketch of gun set as a trap for a lion . 215 (b) Sample page of a diary sketch-book showing pencil "snapshots" 215 LVTI. Sketches from Galton's African Diaries : (a) Karupi, an Ovampo . . . . ..... 216 (b) Tchapupa's wife and Tchapupa, natives of Damaraland . . 216 (c) Omutchikota, the small lake in Ovampoland, where Galton's name was found in 1907-8 ......... 216 LVIII. Sketches from Galton's African Diaries : (a) The Captain of the Hottentots, Jonker Afrikaner, walks off with Galton's Law Code under his arm ...... 226 (b) Facsimile of Jonker Afrikaner's promise to keep the peace in Damaraland .......... 226 LIX. Sketches from Galton's African Diaries : (a) Nangoro, King of the Ovampo, original sketch of June 7, 1851; his majesty crowned with the theatrical tinsel crown . . 237 (b) Galton's favourite hack in Damaraland 237 illustrations to Volume I xix I'l.VI'i: In fun- /uli/v LX. Francis Galton and his Wife (Louisa Jane Butler). In early married life. From a photograph in the possession of Mr Wheler Galton at Claverdon 241 LXI. Francis Galton and his Wife (Louisa Jane Butler). In middle life . 242 LXII. Pictures at Newnham Grange : (a) 1 William Alvey Darwin (1720—1783) as a young man . . 243 (b) Robert Darwin of Elston (1682—1754) 243 LXIII. Thomas Foley (1617—1677), Founder of Old Swinford Hospital, from the engraving in Nash's History of Worcestershire after the painting of 1670 by William Trabute. A direct ascendant of Charles Darwin 245 LXTV. Heydon Hall. The home of the Earles, now of their descendants through the female line, the Bulwers. From an old engraving by W. Ellis of a drawing by F. Repton 246 LXV. Erasmus Earle (1590—1667), Own Sergeant to the Commonwealth. Great-great-grandfather of Erasmus Darwin. From the picture by Zoest at Heydon . .246 LXVI. Thomas Earle, Brother of Anne Earle, the great-grandmother of Erasmus Darwin. From the picture by Zoest at Heydon . . 246 In the text : page Erasmus Darwin's visiting card. Tailpiece to Chapter V . . . 195 The three children of Erasmus and Elizabeth Darwin, Edward, Emma and Violetta Darwin (Francis Galton's mother). Tailpiece to Appendix ........... 246 PEDIGREE PLATES AT END (In Pocket of Cover) I'LATE A. Immediate Ancestry and Collaterals of Sir Francis Galton. B. Pedigree showing connection of Barclays with Noteworthy Ancestors. C. Pedigree illustrating Relationships of Freames, Barclays and Gallons. D. Pedigree of Abrahams, Farmers and Gallons. E. Pedigree showing connection of Charles Darwin with Noteworthy Ancestors. c2 RESUME OF THE LIFE AND LABOURS OF FRANCIS GALTON CHIEF EPOCHS IN THE LIFE OF FRANCIS G ALTON Bom February 16, 1822. Died January 17, 1911 A. "Apprenticeship " Age Yi'iim — 5 Trained under Sister Adele —1827 6—7 Dame School 1828—1829 8—9 School at Boulogne ... ... 1830—1831 10—12 „ at Kenilworth ... 1832— 1,-C, I 13—15 King Edward's School, Birmingham 1835—1837 16 Medical Education, General Hospital, Birmingham ... ... 1838 17 „ „ King's College, London 1839 18 1st Journey, down Danube to Smyrna ... ... ... ... 1840 18—21 Mathematical Education, Cambridge 1840 — 1843 B. " Journeyman Yrrirn " 2nd Journey, Egypt, Khartoum, Syria ... ... ... ... 1844 — 1845 22—27 Hunting and Shooting 1845—1849 28—30 3rd Journey, Tropical Africa ... ... 1850—1852 31 Marriage ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 1853 C. "Master Craftsman" 32 — 42 Art of Travel and Meteorology . ... 1854 1864 New Influences : (a) Quetelet's Lettres sur la theorie des probabilitea appli- quee aux sciences morales et politiqnes (Translation, 1849) ... 1849 (b) Darwin's Origin of Species 1859 43 First Research in Heredity (Hereditary Talent and Character) 1 8G5 47 Hereditary Genius ... ... ... ... ... ... 1869 50 Statistical Enquiries as to Prayer ... 1872 of Hie A///* «i"l L«l>oin-x of l>'r Transformation of "Eugenics Office" into the "Eugenics Labora- tory" and its association with the Biometric Laboratory 1907 •S9 Death and by bequest Foundation of the Ualton Professorship and Endowment of the Laboratory of Eugenics in the University of London ... ... ... ... ... 1911 CHIKF POSTS AND HONOURS Royal Geographical Society, Gold Medal (Member of Council for many years) 1853 Fellow of the Royal Societi/ (Gold Medal, 1886; Darwin Medal, 1902; Copley Medal, 1910; Member of Council, 1865-6, 70-2, 76-7, 82-4) 1S5C, Ili-i/inh Association (Sectional President, three times, Geography 1872, Anthropology 1877, 1885, and General Secretary 1863-7, .Member of Council ; twice asked to be President) Member of Meteorological Committee (Council) ............ 1868 — 1901 Chairman of the Kew Observatory Committee ............ 1889 — 1901 Anthropological Institute (President, 1885-9; Huxley Medal, 1901) Linnaean Society, Darwin-Wallace Medal ............... 1908 Cambridge: Rede Lecturer ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 1884 „ Honorary D.Sc. .................. 1895 „ Honorary Fellow of Trinity College ... ... ... 1902 Oxford: Honorary D.C.L ................... 1894 ,, Herbert Spencer Lecturer... ... ... ... ... ... 1907 1 The Laboratory existed from this date ; the name niuniftric was given to it after the naming in November 1900 of ninmetrikn, when the term Biometry was invented, see Life of Weldon, liiuini-trikil, vol. V, p. :'.5. xxii Li/i- (tin/ Lcf/crx of /''r«n<-ix d'tt/foit ANALYSIS OF FRANCIS GALTON'S WORK Yean I. '/',•„,;•/. (i) Practise ... 1840,1844,1850-2 (ii) Art: of Travel '. ... 1855 of Campaigning (Lectures at Aldrrslmt c;imj>) 1856 Vacation Tourists ... ... .. ... I860 Last Memoir ... ... ... ... ... 1881 (15 memoirs, etc.) II. Physics. Meteorology: (12 memoirs) chiefly ... ... ... 1861 — 1873 Design of Instruments (12 memoirs) ... ... ... 1850 — 1906 III. II,-,:;!',!,/. First Paper: Hereditary Temperament and Character ... 1865 Hereditary Genius ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 1869 (i) Physical Characters, Anthropo- (ii) .Mental Characters, Experimental mttry, 1873—1894 Psychology, 1876—1896 Influence of Town and Country (1873). Measurement of the Senses, Auditory Anthropometry in Schools (1874). (1876), Muscular (1883), Visual (1884), "Nature and Nurture" (1876). An- etc. etc. thropometric Laboratory (1882). An- Analysis of Mental Processes, Free will thropometric Instruments (1877 — 89). (1879), Visions and Imagery (1879 — Records of Families (1884), etc. etc. 82), Arithmetic by smell (1894), etc. (over 30 memoirs). (18 memoirs). (Hi) Human Faculty (1883). (Life History Album, and Record of Family Faculties, 1884.) (iv) Portraiture : Composite Portraits ... 1878 — 1885 Just perceptible Differences ... ... ... ... 1893 Photographs of Pedigree Stock ... ... ... ... 1898 Numeralised Profiles 1910 etc. etc. (12 memoirs) (v) Direct Experiments and Observations on Heredity : Transfusion and Pangenesis ... ... ... ... 1869 — 71 Twins ... 1876 Man: Stature, Eye Colour, Temper 1886 — 1887 Sweet Peas |SSC Pedigree Moth Breeding ... ... ... 1887 "Evolution" Committee ... 1896 Bassett Hounds 1897 etc. etc. (10 memoirs) Resume of tin1 Life (mil Labour* of /-'mitcix (,'nffon xxiii IV. Development <>/ Statistical Theory: I'epardire from Quetelet ... ... ... ... ... ISIi'.l Stati.stiral Scales ... ......... 1870 Percentiles :n,.| Crudes ... ... ...... 1870— 1907 Ogive Curves ... ... ... ... .. ... ... 1.S75 Geometrical Mean ( I'Vdmer's I, aw) ... ... ... ... 1K"(.» Regression ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 1885 Correlation and its Measurement ... ... ... ... 1889 "Ranks" and the Correlation of Ranks ........ 1889 First and Second Prizes, i.e. relative value of extreme ability 1901 (16 memoirs) V. Application to Timor;/ of Heredity : English Men of Science ... ... ... ... ... 1874 Laws of Heredity ... ... ... 1876-7 Inheritance and Regression ... ... ... ... ... 1885 \iiturnl Inheritance ... ... ... ... ... .... 1889 [Point of Departure of liiomctrii- School] Law of Ancestral Heredity ............... (18891), 1897 Noteworthy Families ... ... ... ... ... ... 1906 (36 memoirs and books, etc.) VI. From the measurement of characters for inheritance naturally anise the problem of their permanence: (i) Personal Identification and Description ... ... 1888 (ii) Finger Print Investigations ... ... ... ... 1891 — 1902 (13 memoirs, etc.) VII. Application to Human Affairs: Eugenics: Hereditary Talent and Character ... ... ... ... 1865 Gregariousness in Cattle and Men ... ... ... ... 1872 Hereditary Improvement ... ... ... ... ... 1873 Marks for Physical Fitness ............... 1889 Possible Improvement of Human Breed ... ... ... 1901 Eugenics Addresses and Essays ... ... ... ... 1901—10 (17 memoirs, etc.) I am inclined to agree with Francis Galton in believing that education and environment produce only a small effect on the mind of anyone, and that most of our' qualities are innate. CHARLES DARWIN. CHAPTER I FOREWORD To more than one reader of this biography the death of Francis Galton, following within five years that of one of the keenest of his friends and lieutenants, Walter Frank Raphael Weldon, meant not only the loss of a revered leader, but of another personal friend and counsellor. Some of my readers will remember quite recent visits, and fertile talk in the white-enamelled, sunlit drawing-room at Rutland Gate, with its collection of Darwin, Galton and Barclay relics ; the table at which Erasmus Darwin wrote, alongside the easel with its powerful, if unfinished, portrait by Furse, telling — as the highest phase of art alone can tell — why and even how Francis Galton inspired men. To such visitors anything written here must appear incomplete and one- sided ; the atmosphere of a really great man — and such unquestionably Francis Galton was — cannot be reproduced in words ; the tones of voice, the subtle sequences in phases of thought, the characteristic combinations of physical expression and of mental emphasis, which make the personality, can only be suggested by a great master of words, or at best outlined by a famous craftsman ; the student of science, unless he be endowed with a poet's inspiration, must fail to provide even such adumbration. Nor again is it easy to portray the essential features of a man who is at least one generation^plder than yourself. There are in life two barriers between man and man more marked, perhaps, than any others, the reticence of age to youth, and the reticence of age to age. The friends we have grown up with from our youth, whose emotions and beliefs have been moulded under like physical and mental environments, we may perhaps truly know ; we have caught their individuality before age laid constraint on its fullest expression. But the friends of adult life have no common mental history — the com- munity of like growth fails them ; they stand to each other even as great civilised nations whose culture and art may be revered and understood, whose knowledge and customs aid but do not replace home p. G. 1 2 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon growths. In youth friends are as primitive tribes, they raid each other's preserves both to destroy and to capture what they do not themselves possess ; they mould each other's mental growth by friction and combat, rather than by peaceful interchange of commodities ; the barrier of age to age, or of age to youth is wanting, and we actually know our friends in the very making of their characters. The friend- ships of age and age, and of youth and age possess many factors which fail the friendship of youth and youth ; there is probably no wiser gift a parent can wish for a child than the rare friendship of youth and age, and this even if it verges on hero-worship. But neither such friend- ship, nor that of age with age, is the one which best fits the biographer for his task of measuring the circumstances which have influenced a life, or of portraying the mental evolution of what he has only known in its ripest form. Francis Galton was seventy years of age before the present writer knew him personally, although the written influence began five years earlier ; he was seventy-five at least before intimacy ripened into a friendship which grew in closeness with the years. This, and the age difference of between thirty and forty years, might disqualify, and indeed do disqualify the writer for any attempt at what he understands by genuine biography — from a portrayal such as Arnold gives us of Clough, or Hogg of Shelley — the intense reality which springs from a personal and intimate knowledge of youthful develop- ment. But to be drawn in this sense we must die young, before at least our contemporaries have lost the will and power to wield the pen ; and there are but few who achieve and die young in the field of science. Francis Galton, and therein the Fates were kindly, was not one of these. He was over fifty years of age before much of his best work was done ; he was sixty-seven when his Natural Inheritance was published, the book which may be said to have created his school. For although his methods were developed in papers of the preceding decade, that book undoubtedly first made them known to us, and found him the lieutenants who built up the school of modern statistics. Other work of the highest value and of permanent usefulness in many branches of science Galton achieved before he was fifty, but the first central fact of his life is the relative lateness of much of his most inspiring work. His greatest contribution to method was published after he was sixty ; his greatest appreciation of what that method might achieve for man was hardly pressed on public attention before Foreword : ; he was eighty. How then shall one, who knew him— however inti- mately— only in the last years of life portray the mental evolution which was proceeding stage by stage for fifty years before friendship began ? A very slight introspection tells each one of us how complex was the scaffolding by which the structure of our own intellectual opinions has been reared ; how many attempts, how many failures, how many moulding men and things have contributed their part ! How little of this do even our life-long intimates know, how little finds its expression in diaries, letters or the printed word ! Could such things enable one to understand the whole nature of a man, the present writer, owing to the extreme kindness of the relatives and friends of Francis Galton, would have small need to lament the failure of his task. But the sense of failure has grown as these pages took form. The man of strength and character, who knew what he wished to accomplish and carried it through ; the leader who inspired us is there — even as we read him in Furse's portrait — but the evolution of the man — the story of the mental growth, which should be the aim of every genuine biographer — is seen but darkly and from afar ; it is but faintly shadowed in the written word and screened to dimness by those barriers of which the author has spoken. For reasons such as these he can only hope to place before his readers some phases of Francis Galton's life and some aspects of his scientific work. The real story of that life, the steep ascents, leading to wider horizons, won as all victorious minds have won them by struggle with earlier opinion's and with a less developed self, the arduous final acceptance of new ideas as triumphant certitudes ; these things the writer can but trace as they appear in- distinctly to him ; others will and must interpret in their own way, and will doubtless reach different view-points. Galton of all men would not have desired this biography to be a panegyric. To be of service it must be, as he would have wished it, the life of a real man, of a man who makes mistakes, who has wandered from the path, or stumbled, who has striven after the wholly illusory, or towards things beyond his individual reach. The difference between the ordinary mortal and the one of subtler mind is not that the former strays, and the latter does not, but that the deviations in the one case leave no permanent impress, while in the other they are coined into a golden experience, which forms the wisdom marking the riper life. Hundi-eds of men have failed to reach distinction or gain immediate 1—2 4 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon profit by their school education, by their college careers, by their professional training, or by their early travels. There was a period when Galton's fate seemed to hang in the balance, when it appeared as if he would become an English country gentleman, whose pleasure lay in sport and whose aim in life was good comradeship. Then the instinct for creative action mastered his nature, and every apparent failure of the past seemed to have borne, not bitter fruit, but a golden experience essential to labours, which the reaper had never foreseen when he garnered his harvest. That conception is the key to the first thirty years of Galton's life. It will be found, we think, a clue to the lives of many men of power, who strive in turn towards numerous goals, before they have learnt to realise their fitting sphere of achievement. Such apprenticeship with all its possible bungling, such Lehr- imd Wanderjahre, can only be reckoned as idle when the matured journey- man fails to produce his masterpiece. Of one thing we are certain, that the reader, who will follow patiently our hero through the great and the little, through the apparently trivial and the apparently vital incidents of this story, cannot fail to fall in love with a nature, which met life so joyously, and from childhood to extreme old age was resolved to see life at its best and be responsive to its many-sided experiences. Because Galton was a specialist in few, if any directions, because he appreciated with- out stint many forms of human activity, he was able to achieve in many spheres, where the established powers with greater craftsmanship but narrower outlook had failed to recognise that there were still verities to be ascertained. In the " fallow years " Galton wandered joyously through life, but he had been and he had seen, and he was thus trained, as few specialists are trained, to achieve in a marked degree. CHAPTER II THE ANCESTRY OF FRANCIS GALTON IT is only fitting that an early chapter of the life of Francis Galton should be devoted to some account of the ancestry of a man, who did so much to make the world at large appreciate the value of a good series of forbears. To some it may seem that Francis Galton in his Memories may have said all that is needful on the point of ancestry ; to others the mere statement that he was a grandson of Erasmus Darwin and a half-cousin to Charles Darwin may appear to account for his ability and for the directions of his scientific work. To a third group of persons, which has been much in evidence of late, the doctrine that mental characters are inherited appears to be not only absurd, but a sign of mental depravity in its upholders ; they would probably consider without investigation that both Charles Darwin and Francis Galton were intellectually the product of their environments, and that all further inquiry was wasted energy. Because there are so many able men whose ancestry is insignificant, the group to which I refer has never mastered the paradox that, while ability is inherited, a majority of able men have not had a noteworthy ancestry. Pairs of exceptional parents produce exceptional sons at a rate more than ten times as great as commonplace parents, but because exceptional parents only form about one-half per cent, of the community exceptional men as a rule have not had a noteworthy ancestry. It is peculiarly fitting in this place to turn to the question of ancestry, because if there is one point in his work that Francis Galton laid emphasis upon it was that the mental aptitudes are hereditary. His three chief works, Hereditary Genius, English Men of Science and Inquiries into Human Faculty were essentially devoted to the thesis that mental characters are inherited in the same manner and at the same rate as the physical characters. Even in his Natural Inheritance, Galton's fourth great book, he writes : "We may therefore conclude that the same law... which governs the inheritance both of Stature and Eye-colour, applies equally to the Artistic Faculty" (p. 162). 6 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon And again in the Fortnightly Review for 1887 : " I shall have fulfilled my object in writing this paper if it leaves a clear impression of the great range and variety of temper among persons of both sexes iu the upper and middle classes of English society ; of its disregard in Marriage Selection ; of the great admixture of its good and bad varieties in the same family ; and of its being nevertheless as hereditary as any other quality." Or lastly in 1904, writing in Nature (August 11) of his investiga- tions into "Natural Ability among the Kinsfolk of Fellows of the Royal Society," Galton says : "The result of this inquiry is to prove the existence of a small number of more or less isolated hereditary centres round which a large part of the total ability of the nation is clustered, with a closeness which rapidly diminishes as the distance of kinship from its centre increases." To these and many other published statements of Francis Galton could be added many memories of private talks. But perhaps the memorable letter of 1869', in which Charles Darwin acknowledges the receipt of Galton's Hereditary Genius, may suffice to demonstrate how early Galton taught the heredity of the mental characters. It runs as follows : DOWN, BECKENHAM, KENT, S.E. Dec. 23 (1869?). MY DEAR GALTON, I have only read about 50 pages of your Book (to the Judges), but I must exhale myself, else something will go wrong in my inside. I do not think I ever in all my life read anything more interesting and original. And how well and clearly you put every point ! George, who has finished the book, and who expresses himself just in the same terms, tells me the earlier chapters are nothing in interest to the latter ones ! It will take me some time to get to these latter chapters, as it is read aloud to me by my wife, who is also much interested. You have made a convert of an opponent in one sense, for I have always maintained that, excepting fools, men did not differ much in intellect, only in zeal and hard work; and I still think there is an eminently important difference. I congratulate you on producing what I am convinced will prove a memorable work. I look forward with intense interest to each reading, but it sets me thinking so much that I find it very hard work ; but that is wholly the fault of my brain and not of your beautifully clear style. Yours most sincerely, CH. DARWIN. The point to which Charles Darwin was converted was the principle that intellectual ability is hereditary. That much of that ability consists in the faculty for hard work is a further principle with 1 The letter is so characteristic, that I have reproduced it here followed by Galton's reply on the day of receipt : see Plates I and II. t I t L s; N I d \ < i T 4 Plate I I ^ - I tr '§ E a fir- I'/llt, II i I 5 '3 The Ancestry of Francis Galton 7 which most of us would also agree with Darwin — not the least Galton himself — with the proviso, that that mental faculty also is largely suhject to hereditary control. And Darwin did not hesitate to give expression to his conversion in TJie Descent of Man published two years later (Ed. 1885, p. 28). " So in regard to mental qualities, their transmission is manifest in our dogs, horses and other domestic animals. Besides special tastes and habits, general intelligence, courage, bad and good tempers, etc., are certainly transmitted. With man we see similar facts in almost every family ; and we now know, through the admirable labours of Mr Galton, that genius which implies a wonderfully complex combination of high faculties, tends to be inherited ; and, on the other hand, it is too certain that insanity and deteriorated mental powers likewise run in families." The chief conclusion of Galton's work, the most fixed principle of his teaching, was the like inheritance of the mental and physical characters. Many passages in his writings show that he fully appre- ciated the modifications introduced by environment, but these modifica- tions can be for any character plus or minus in effect, and on the average the hereditary factor comes out as the main controlling feature. It seems only a few months ago that talking with him over the almost bitter feeling which the work of the Galton Laboratory on environment had called forth, he said : " I wish they (the critics of that work) would study the subject of twins," and referred to his investigations of 1875. I wonder how many of those critics have studied Galton's papers on twins ! Had they done so, would they have supposed that the contrast of Nurture and Nature was a new fad of the Director of the Eugenics Laboratory, and had not been £-Of Jl recognised and rendered definite by Francis Galton himself. Let such study the section in Hereditary Genius entitled " Nature and Nurture," and its words : " When nature and nurture compete for supremacy on equal terms in the sense to be explained, the former proves the stronger. It is needless to insist that neither is self-sufficient ; the highest natural endowments may be starved by defective nurture, while no carefulness of nurture can overcome the evil tendencies of an intrinsically bad physique, weak brain, or brutal disposition. Differences of nurture stamp unmistakable marks on the disposition of the soldier, clergyman, or scholar, but are wholly insufficient to efface the deeper marks of individual character" (p. 12). How did Galton try to solve the relative strengths of " nature and nurture" — this " convenient jingle of words," as he terms it, which 8 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon "separates under two distinct heads the innumerable elements of which personality is composed"-? He noted that twins are of two kinds — those born physically and mentally alike, and those born as unlike as ordinary brothers and sisters. He proceeded to determine how far like twins were differentiated by unlike environments, and how far unlike twins were rendered like by their common nurture. He discovered that whatever the environment like twins remained alike and unlike twins remained unlike, even as they were born. Thus he sums up his History of Twins, as a Criterion of the Relative POWITX of Nature and Nurture : "There is no escape from the conclusion that nature prevails enormously over nurture when the differences of nurture do not exceed what is commonly to be found among persons of the same rank of society in the same country. My only fear is that my evidence seems to prove too much, and may be discredited on that account, as it seems contrary to all expectation that nurture should go for so little. But experience is often fallacious in ascribing great effects to trifling circumstances. Many a person has amused himself by throwing bits of stick into a tiny brook and watching their progress ; how they are arrested, first by one chance obstacle, then by another ; and again, how their onward course is facilitated by a combination of circumstances. He might ascribe much importance to each of these events, and think how largely the destiny of the stick has been governed by a series of trifling accidents. Nevertheless all the sticks succeed in passing down the current, and they travel, in the long run, at nearly the same rate. So it is with life, in respect to the several accidents which seem to have had a great effect upon our careers. The one element, which varies in different individuals, but is constant for each of them is the natural tendency ; it corresponds to the current in the stream, and inevitably asserts itself." (Journal of the Anthropological Institute, 1875, p. 391, etc.) Such work as the Gal ton Laboratory has done was to give quanti- tative definiteness to this conclusion of its founder. And, in view of it, would it not be idle in this biography to pass over the nature — the ancestral factor — and spend our time chiefly on the nurture of Francis Gal ton ? To those of us who believe in alternative inheritance, to those again who favour its more fashionable Mendelian phases, there is nothing marvellous in transcendent intellectual power being associated with one member of a Darwin or with one member of a Galton fraternity. To those who put their faith in nurture as the controller of mental characters, it must be a standing miracle that brothers reared under identical environment should fail to show the same ability, or showing the same ability should be so diverse in their physical attributes or in other mental characters ! The Ancestry of Francis Gallon 9 So much then can be said in favour of the study of Francis Galton's ancestry. While he himself has told us in broad outline what he owes to the strains which were mingled in his blood, there is much that he has not referred to, that possibly he could not refer to, either from modesty or ignorance. I have heard him speak with keen appreciation of his Quaker forbears ; but I doubt if he knew, or if even we now know all they suffered for their faith. Besse's record, in his Collection of the, Sufferings of the People called Quakers, is little more than a list of fines, imprisonments, and deaths, yet it occupies two large folio volumes, and the present writer, from a study of the Yorkshire records alone, knows how incompletely it represents all that occurred. Of that other wider side of his ancestry — which indeed helped the Apologist Robert Barclay to lighten the grave oppression directed against the early Society of Friends by actively soliciting his royal kinsmen in their favour — of this side of his ancestry Galton rarely if ever spoke. Yet it is one that we cannot pass over. As one who has dealt with many family pedigrees, chiefly of the professional classes, the writer's experience has been of the following kind. In ascending backwards we pass, perhaps through the squirearchy, eventually into the yeoman class. Here there is no hope of going further than the church registers (say to 1600) will carry us, or perhaps the wills a hundred years further. We leave the family on the soil, and we have no trace of further distinction or knowledge of its ever being anything but autochthonous. If a member reached, before that date, celebrity by marked ability, he was either an ecclesiastic who left no offspring, or he and his family were raised to the noble class. Once reach the yeoman class, and there is little hope of going beyond the data in the deeds of the yeoman's chest. A second method of terminating our ascent is to reach a bar-sinister, beyond which in more recent times there is only perhaps feeble family tradition, or in early times little screened disgrace, or even much pride. Lastly we may find ourselves passing into a noble or royal family, which for generations has maintained its position by its physique and mentality. And here, perhaps, we may recognise a distinct difference between what this means now and what it meant before 1700. From our earliest know- ledge of European history, till something like the 17th century, there was a continuous and most stringent selection of all noble and royal stocks. To retain your head on your shoulders and yet rise to p. G. 2 CO CO > •i2i*iii^f^|-h| '^•""Jl^iulIiJ O,?: <1 « I , 1 3 00 co Farmer 8—1777 «7 is s o J85 OS S i rs « GO 27 > g- Qco'2 t-3 J w I 13i S r"^ i^ |ls •< =8 00 -^Q7 m "o « — I — .s 11; PM-3" u The Ancestry of Francis Gallon 11 distinction in your country meant immense resource, activity and mental ability. Men like Alfred the Great, Friedrich Barbarossa, or William the Conqueror, were kings because they were essentially men preeminent in ability in their days ; and to show in the male line a continuous descent of ten generations, as the de Bruces did, signified that the family had craft to gain and strength to hold the acquired. The game at politics meant death to the checkmated, often destruction of their stock and forfeiture of their land. Thus it came about that royal and noble blood, from early mediaeval times almost to the close of the Stuart period, really signified stocks of physical and mental strength ; and the earlier we go back the more certain is this truth. To anyone whose ancestry carries him to such noble or royal lines, there will be little difficulty in linking on to most of the great names of early European history. To follow step by step backwards the pedigree of one man like Francis Galton till we can go no further, but find all our lines fail us, is perhaps the most instructive lesson in history that is possible. The biographer has learnt more history, social and political, in the present inquiry than he had ever done before. One sees not only our own times linked up with great names in the past, but one feels that yeoman, squire, noble and king form a more homogeneous whole than we have hitherto appreciated with our narrow class distinctions ; and we realise that the stocks which led to famous men of old may exhibit them to-day in methods more in keeping with our social ends. It seems to me that the pedigree showing the noteworthy ancestry of the Barclays is in itself a full reply to those who think it suffices to say that Francis Galton was a grandson of Erasmus Darwin ! Francis Galton owed much to his Darwin descent, but he owed not less to other strains, and notably to the firmness, conviction, toleration, and business aptitude of those Quaker strains of Galton, Button, Farmer and Barclay which formed nearly half his heritage. I trust that Pedigree B1 may show the reader reason enough for taking a wider view than Galton himself has given us of his past family history ; for indicating as he himself has indicated that it is neither to be wholly neglected, nor summed up in any one line of descent. The nurture of comfortable homes, good schools and our leading universities was provided for both Charles Darwin and Francis Galton, but it was 1 See end of this volume. 2—2 12 Lift- «ttt/ Li'tti-r* of Francis Gallon provided also in like measure for literally hundreds of their contem- poraries. If nurture could produce such mental characters as we find in both, then we should count such men by the tens instead of by units. Nurture indeed ! Let us listen to what Galton himself says of his school— the King Edward's School at Birmingham : "The literary provender provided at Dr Jeune's school disagreed wholly with my mental digestion. The time spent there was a period of stagnation to myself, which for many years I deeply deplored, for I was very willing and eager to learn, and could have learnt much, if a suitable teacher had been at hand to direct and encourage me." (Memories, p. 21.) Or, again, try Darwin ! Writing of Shrewsbury, his school, he says : " The school as a means of education to me was simply a blank," and again of his course at Edinburgh : "The instruction at Edinburgh was altogether by lectures, and these were intolerably dull, with the exception of those on chemistry by Hope ; but to my mind there are no advantages and many disadvantages in lectures compared with reading." (Life, i, p. 36.) At Cambridge both cousins took Poll degrees. Darwin says that his three years at Cambridge were "wasted as far as the academical studies were concerned, as completely as at Edinburgh and at school." Galton wondered at the narrowness of Cambridge, " for not a soul seemed to have the slightest knowledge of, or interest in, what I had acquired in my medical education, and what we have since learnt to call Biology" (Memories, p. 59). Undoubtedly their Cambridge time gave Darwin and Galton much — friends and the leisure to develop on their own lines. But in neither case was it nurture moulding the men, it was nature making the best use of an uncongenial environment. It may be said that the nurture was not that of school or college, but the nurture of the home. Both men were the exceptional members of genei-ally able stocks. That in many respects their home-conditions were sympathetic goes without saying, but these home conditions were similar to those of others of their own stock and of many contem- poraries. It may be said that their common grandfather was a man of distinction, and that although his writings were open to the world, Charles Darwin and Francis Galton, although born after Erasmus's death, came by family tradition more closely in touch with his teaching. Yet here is what Charles Darwin wrote of his grandfather's chief work ; he is speaking about his Edinburgh acquaintance with R. E. Plate III KRASMIS DAKU'IX (IT-'U-liiOi'). Kroni a print al'ti'i- a picture by Kawliiison of Derby. The Ancestry of Francis Gallon 13 Grant, afterwards Professor of Comparative Anatomy in University College, London, to whom that College owes its fine Grant Library: " I knew him well ; he was dry and formal in manner, with much enthusiasm beneath this outward crust. He one day, when we were walking together, burst forth in high admiration of Lamarck and his views on evolution. I listened in silent astonishment and as far as I can judge without an}' effect on my mind. I had previously read the Zoonomia of my grandfather, in which similar views are maintained, but without producing any effect on me. Nevertheless it is probable that the hearing rather early in life such views maintained and praised may have favoured my upholding them under a different form in my Origin of Species. At this time I had admired greatly the Zoonomia, but on reading it a second time after an interval of ten or fifteen years, I was much disappointed ; the proportion of speculation being so large to the facts given" (p. 38). In a letter to Alphonse de Candolle written shortly after Charles Darwin's death in June, 1882, Francis Galton says : "Thank you very much for your interesting brochure on Charles Darwin, analysing the causes that contributed to his success. It has been a great satisfaction in all our grief at his loss, to witness the wide recognition of the value of his work. . He certainly as you say appeared at a moment when the public mind was ripe to receive his views. I can truly say for my part that I was groaning under the intellectual burden of the old teleology, that my intellect rebelled against it, but that I saw no way out of it till Darwin's Origin of Species emancipated me. Let me, while fully agreeing with the views expressed in the pamphlet in all important particulars supply a few minor criticisms which it might be well to mention." After a reference to economic matters Galton cites the words of de Candolle that the descendants of the "poete physiologue" had certainly read at the right moment the works of their grandfather, and continues : "I am almost certain of the contrary in every case except Charles Darwin (and I doubt whether he had) — [as we have seen, he certainly had read the Zoonomia]. To myself the florid and now ridiculed poetry was and is intolerable, and the speculative physiology repellent. I had often taken up the books and could never get on with them. Canning's parody The Loves of the Triangles quite killed poor Dr Darwin's reputation. It just hit the mood of the moment, and though my mother never wearied of talking of him, his life was to me like a fable only half believed in. That much the same was the case with some of Charles Darwin's sons, I can I think affirm." Without being, perhaps, as hard on " poor Dr Darwin " as his grandson, I think we must admit that it was the hereditary taste or bent of the Darwin stock that Erasmus transmitted to his grand- children and not an environment or even a sympathetic tradition. In studying the works of Erasmus Darwin, it is indeed difficult not to be I \ Life and Letter* of Francis Galton repelled by the florid language or the want of reasoned inference drawn from marshalled facts. Part of this is due to his date, but not all, for his time carries us to the Wollastons, Young, Kerwan, Priestley and Smeaton, some of whom were close intimates of Darwin himself, to say nothing of the great continental physiologists, naturalists and mathematicians. Darwin's defects were partly due to his environment, the incessant occupation of a most popular physician, which hindered the possibility of a life wholly devoted to science, the smaller interests and the want of friction with the best minds which must often occur in narrow provincial circles — though the neighbouring Birmingham was in those days a centre of considerable mental activity. Yet beyond all this there was something of the prophet about Erasmus Darwin. He had thrown off the old teleological dogmas and was seeking a new theory of life, and he had inspirations even if his poetical representation of them wearied his grandsons and in no lesser degree wearies a still more modern reader. To start examining the characters of living forms not with a view of seeing in them evidence of design, but of testing their utility to the owner and how he or his stock might have acquired them, was a real step forward. Had Erasmus Darwin been by calling a man of science and not of medicine, doubtless many of his inspirations would have perished under his own analysis. Others would have stood his trained criticism, and been established by marshalled facts — as true scientific knowledge. As it is we regard him as a most interesting personality, almost as a man of genius ; but rather as evidence of the general ability of the Darwin stock, than as a powerful environmental or traditional factor influencing the develop- ment of either Charles Darwin or Francis Galton1. With our present views on heredity, we look upon Charles Darwin and Francis Galton as drawing their ability from the same reservoir as Erasmus Darwin did, but we realise that it only flowed from him to them in the sense that he was the conduit, not the source ef the ability. 1 This view was fully accepted by Francis Galton himself. Writing of men of science in his Hereditary Genius (1869) he says: "The number of individuals in the Darwin family who have followed some branch of natural history is very remarkable the more so because it so happens that the tastes appear (I speak from private sources of knowledge) to have been more personal than traditional. There is a strong element of individuality in the different members of the race which is adverse to traditional influence." Plate IV . j , 21 •:•: si " < j; a S ^ i ' a 3 a -1- c .'£. C 5 ± i a .- Plate IV hi* x • 02 - 3 D ^ s: a ^- o .1 "5 =5 3 2 g * s N 2 The Ancestry of Francis Galton In It is worth noting here that we cannot, when judging of the ability of the Darwin stirp, confine our attention to Erasmus and Charles. Erasmus Darwin's brother — the elder Robert Waring Darwin- published a Principia botanica or Introduction to the Sexual Botany of Linnaeus. The present writer is not able to judge its merits, but it ran through several editions, and illustrates at least the taste and bent of the stock. We note how the scientific work of the Darwins begins ilc novo in this generation with the two brothers Robert Waring and Erasmus1. The sons of Erasmus by his first wife were Charles, Erasmus and Robert Waring, the father of the greater Charles the younger. It is difficult in this case to separate out the personality of Erasmus the elder from that of his sons. Yet I think there is evidence that there was independence. Charles died from a dissection wound at the early age of 20, and a prize essay of his on pus and mucus and his proposed doctor's thesis were afterwards edited by the elder Erasmus. In the prize essay we find a number of experiments, in the thesis a round of clinical observations discussed in moderate and straight- forward language. Only occasionally, as in the peroration of the thesis, do we feel sure that we read the words of the father, Erasmus himself : " I beg, illustrious professors, and ingenious fellow-students, that you will recollect how difficult a task 1 have attempted, to evince the retrograde motions of the lymphatic vessels, when the vessels themselves, for so many ages, escaped the eyes and glasses of philosophers ; and if you are not quite convinced of the truth of this theory, hold, I entreat you, your minds in suspense, 'till ANATOMY draws her sword, with happier omens, cuts asunder the tenets which entangle PHYSIOLOGY ; and, like an augur, inspecting the immolated victim, announces to mankind the wisdom of HEAVEN2." In the same manner it is not possible to judge fairly of the thesis of Robert Waring Darwin which was published at Leyden in 1785, and afterwards in the Philosophical Transactions, 1786. The author was at the date of publication only 19, and Charles Darwin asserts that it was written by Erasmus. It largely reappears in the Zoonomia, but contains more appeal than the elder Darwin usually 1 I hardly think we can class Robert Darwin their father in this category; see how- ever Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, l, p. 3. a Even the printing of Heaven in smaller capitals than the Sciences is characteristic of Erasmus Darwin's muse, although when reprinting the essay in his Zoonomia, Vol. I, p. 512, he seems to have become conscious of the difficulty and transposed the sizes ! Hi A/A iind Letters of Francis Gallon makes to experiment'. The second son of Erasmus the elder, Erasmus the younger, seems to have been in character more like his nephe\ Erasmus Alvey Darwin, the brother of Charles and friend of Thomas Carlyle and his wiik He is reported to have been interested in statistics, and although we do not lay much stress on this point, it deserves notice with regard to later developments of ability in the Darwin family. Erasmus Darwin the elder seems to have had distinct mechanical ability, and physical tastes ; he was ingenious in mechanisms — as perhaps the sketch of his ferry at Derby, taken from a brief autobiography of his son, Sir Francis Sacheverel Darwin, will indicate (see Plate V). He was also in constant touch with a number of men working with distinction at mechanical problems. He invented a wind- mill to grind colours2 for his friend Wedgwood, which after approval by Watt was not only used, but continued to be used till a steam-engine by Boulton and Watt replaced it. To Darwin again Watt first imparted under pledge of secrecy his plan for improving the steam-engine3. In- directly also we find Darwin intelligently interested in astronomical and physical matters, such as the returns of comets predicted by Halley, the nearest approach of comets to the earth as discussed by Bode, or the experiments on mixing colours and on the nature of primary colours by his friend Samuel Galton — his grandson's paternal grand- father. 'On the whole we see in Erasmus Darwin most of the scientific tastes which have been developed with greater thoroughness by his children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. When we look at these four generations of scientific workers, the variable nature of their work — medical, biological, mathematical, mechanical — the wonder is not that ability has been maintained, but 1 Krasmus himself, in 1788 (Botanic Garden, Part n, p. 262), certainly approves the attribution of the memoir to Dr Robert Darwin. The paper dealing with "ocular spectra " is an interesting one, the earliest as far as I know which drew attention to the "contrast colour" seen by an eye fatigued by looking at a given colour. 1 Meteyard, Life of Josiah Wedgwood, Vol. n, pp. 29 and 447. ' Owing to the kindness of Mr Darwin Wilmott I have been able very fully to examine the commonplace book of Erasmus Darwin; it gives the reader a far more favourable opinion of Erasmus than his poems — designs for various mechanisms alternate with accounts of medical cases, and with suggestions for experimental treatment. It is a most interesting and valuable book from both the historical and social aspects. His ori-iimlity was shown in liis attempt to inoculate against measles; this made his son Robert very ill, and his daughter Elizabeth is reported by some to have died as a result. I'M,' V r K '^ AT w ,(J % ^V»V^?4^ SI4^^ 2 3 * := • .3- S. ~ • I i s •" t- g I Plate VI KOBKRT DARWIN of Elston (1682-1754). er of Charles Darwin and Francis Gallon. From the portrait at Creskeld painted by Richardson about 1717. Plate VI l/i.i \\ '1 1.1,1AM ALVKY DAKN'IN (1720—1783). Jln.tlicr of KraMiius Darwin. Kroin a plH.tojfra,,], i,, the possession of Mr William K. Darwin of the picture at Creskeld. Plate VI tcr ROBERT WARING DARWIN (1724— 1810). Brother of Dr Erasmus Darwin. Author of the l'ni,c:/,in Hi,t,itii,it, or liitnuliKii,,,, /„ tin- »•.!•««/ /Main/ of l.innam*. Aged 51 From the picture at Creskeld painted hy John Bon-idtfc, I??.'). Plate VIII UOKKHT WARIN<; DARWIN, F.R.S. (17GG— 1848). Father of diaries Darwin. From a mezzotint of the painting in the possession of Mr William Erasmus Darwin. (The mezzotint was engraved before the painting was cut down.) Plate IX SI SANNAH WEDGWOOD (1765—1817). Mrs Robert Waring- Darwin, mother of diaries Darwin. From a miniature in the possession of Mr William Erasmus Darwin. The Ancestry of Francis Gallon 17 that we can find so little trace of it in the generations of Darwins before Erasmus. They belonged more recently to the smaller squirearchy and ultimately to the yeoman class. As far as a full pedigree has yet been traced the Darwin stock is linked by the marriage of Erasmus' great-grandfather William Darwin with Ann Earle to a stock of considerable ability. Ann's father Erasmus Earle (whence ulti- mately the name Erasmus) was " Own Serjeant " to the Commonwealth, a lawyer and diplomatist of some distinction, from whom through the female line the Lytton Bulwers or Bulwer-Lyttons trace descent (see Plate LXII). There is no evidence, however, of any member of the Earles having had scientific ability, and such distinction of the more literary kind as might come from this family must have laid dormant for two generations. Until the pedigree of the Hills is more fully worked out, I am inclined to think that Erasmus Darwin's mother, Elizabeth Hill of Sleaford, may have brought some of their exceptional ability into the family1. Her portrait (see Plate VII) shows her to have been a lady of much character and her husband Robert Darwin (see Plate VI) is reported to have composed the verse : " From a morning that doth shine, From a boy that drinketh wine, From a wife that talketh Latine, Good Lord deliver me ! " where the third line is suggested by Charles Darwin to have had some relation to the learned character of Robert's own wife ! So far we have kept to Charles Darwin's line of descent in the Darwin family, i.e. that connected with Erasmus Darwin's first wife Mary Howard (see Note II, Appendix). It seems likely that a certain delicacy, but possibly also a certain increase of sympathy and gentleness, was brought into the Darwin stock by this lady ; she died at 30 years of age. For eleven years Erasmus Darwin remained unmarried2, then at 1 I have examined all the available wills of the Sleaford Hills and the church registers in the hope of linking up Erasmus Darwin with Sir John Hill, the botanist, who sprung from Lincoln, but I have found no link so far. 2 From the standpoint of heredity it is of interest to know that he had in the interval two natural daughters whom he educated ; he set up a school and wrote a book on female education for them, and provided his own later daughters as pupils. One of these ladies afterwards married a doctor and her son became a distinguished surgeon. This lady and her future husband are shown in the "hydrophobia" staircase scene from the MS. autobiography of Sir Francis S. Darwin's boyhood : see Plate X. p. G. 3 18 Lift tun/ letter* of FraiH-i* d alt on 50 he married the widow of Colonel Edward Sacheverel Pole. This lady, Elizabeth Collier by name, was famous for her wit and beauty ; Darwin made passionate poems (see Plate XI) to her even before liei husband's death, and when she was ill he is reported to have spent the night outside her chamber window. Elizabeth Collier (see Plate XVII) must have been a noteworthy beauty in her day and had many younger suitors when Erasmus Darwin won her after only six months of widow- hood. In old age she was a striking figure to her grandchildren, spending her days wholly outdoors supervising her gardeners and labourers at Breadsall Priory, and her house was visited by her grandchildren with the greatest enjoyment. Of her ancestry we can piece together but little, and that tradition, not certainty. Family tradition states that she was a natural daughter1 of Charles Colyear, second Earl of Portmore (see Plate XIII). Lord Portmore was a very well-known social figure in his days. He was one of the leading men on the turf in its early period, and his name occurs repeatedly in the old form of racing — namely, matches between two horses, agreed for a certain date between two owners. First as Captain Colyear and then as Lord Portmore from 1720 to 1760 we find him engaged in such matches with the Duke of Leeds, Sir Nathaniel Curzon, Lord Godolphin, etc., all notable figures in the early horse racing and horse breeding world. It was a world which centred chiefly round Newmarket Heath, and was largely self-contained. When Peregrine, the Duke of Leeds, dies, his widow Juliana marries Lord Portmore ; their daughter, Lady Caroline Colyear, marries Sir Nathaniel Curzon, and the son of Peregrine, Thomas fourth Duke of Leeds, marries Mary Godolphin in 1740, and ultimately comes into possession of Gog- Magog House (with the grave of the Godolphin Arab) near Cambridge. In such environment we have to look for the mother of Elizabeth Collier, who is reported to have been the governess to the Duchess of Leeds' daughters, Lady Caroline and Lady Juliana. It is significant of the higher sense of responsibility of those days, combined as it was with much greater looseness of morals, that we find in the family records that the natural children were often brought up in touch with members of the legitimate family and provided for in much the same way. Thus we She was brought up in good society under the charge of a Mrs Main waring of Farnham, of whom Elizabeth Collier always spoke with great affection, and whom she occasionally visited. I'lnte X _ . — - ^ elf * > «> = X '5 1 S'-i - / 2 >. £ = - -g 8 d * a * 5 1 01 S s g •5 -5 w .= = - •f r 1; = & = = Plate XI 'ocra to Mrs Polo CKli/.iilieth Collier), afterwards Mrs Erasmus Darwin. From a manuscript volume of poems by Dr Erasmus Darwin in the possession of Mrs William Wavell. Words altered and erased by Sir Francis S. Darwin. Plate XII GENERAL SIR DAVID COLYEAR, afterwards Lord Portmore (circa 1650—1730). From the portrait by Van der Bauek formerly at Artliiugworth Hall. CHARLES C'OLYEAR, Second Earl Portmore (1700—1785). From the picture by Reynolds formerly at Arthingworth Hall. Plate XIV CATHERINE SEDLEY, Countess of Dorchester, afterwards Lady Portmore (1057—1717). From the picture by Kueller formerly at Artliingworth Hall. T/ie Ancestry of Francis Gallon I'.t find Erasmus Darwin's natural daughters were intimates of his family'; Colonel Edward Sacheverel Pole gave the family living to a natural son who bore the name of Pole and was beloved by Darwins, Galtons and Poles alike. Our first knowledge of Elizabeth Collier is her marriage on April 10, 1769, to Colonel Pole in the little church at Radbourne. Why should a natural daughter of Lord Portmore appear in Derby- shire ? We think there is no doubt that the true explanation is to be found in the fact that the Gurzons were next neighbours to the Poles, and that Lady Curzon, formerly Lady Caroline Colyear, would be half- sister to Elizabeth Collier. She brought her natural sister with her to Derbyshire, and there Elizabeth married. In tracing the parentage of Erasmus Darwin's second wife to Lord Portmore, we have linked up Francis Galton's grandmother with a number of names of great his- torical interest. Charles Colyear himself — commonly called "Beau Colyear"— a name justified by the portraits I have seen of him, was chiefly cele- brated for his horses and his equipages. But his father (see Plate XII) was a man of great distinction. He served as a soldier of fortune under William of Orange and came with him to England, afterwards serving in Spain and Flanders — "one of the best foot officers in the world, is very brave and bold; hath a great deal of wit ; very much a man of honour and nice that way, yet married the Countess of Dorchester " writes a contemporary of him. Catherine Sedley, his wife, had been mistress to James the Second2. Portmore was a soldier of fortune raised to the peerage by his achievements in the field. Catherine Sedley, what- ever we may think of her morals, was undoubtedly a woman of very great character and of great wit. A sample of this is provided by her astonishment at the intensity of the Duke of York's passion for her : " It cannot be my beauty," she said, " for I have none ; and it cannot be my wit, for he has not enough to know that I have any." The portrait of her by Kneller3, till recently at Arthingworth Hall 1 There are frequent visits and letters to and from these Miss Parkers, and they are two out of the four children in the sketch of the staircase at Dr Darwin's house : see Plate X. 2 Catherine Sedley was a kinswoman of the Churchills, whether through the Drakes or not, I have been unable to ascertain. Thus she was probably related to Arabella Churchill, and possibly to both Barbara and Elizabeth Villiers — a subject which would form a fitting study for a thesis on heredity. SD|I| at Christie and Manson's in 1913. 3—2 20 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon (see Plate XIV), does not support the view that she was entirely lacking in beauty. It is not wholly unlike Wright's portrait of Elizabeth Collier (see Plate XVI), and we think in the youthful Violetta Darwin and in other members of the stock descended from Elizabeth Collier and Erasmus Darwin we may find traces of Catherine Sedley. And if we are to judge a royal mistress, we must turn to her time and parentage ! Her father was one of the lewdest men at Charles II's court, and even Pepys, by no means himself an ascetic, was shocked at his profligacy. Yet he was a man with real literary power, his prose style is " clear and facile," and his plays and poems had such a contemporary reputation that Charles II said of him that " his style, either in writing or discourse, would be the standard of the English tongue." Later in life Sedley somewhat redeemed himself by parliamentary activity and his advocacy of William III1. He will ever be remembered by his lyrics : " Love still has something of the sea, From whence his mother rose"; or : " Phillis is my only Joy, Faithless as the Winds or Seas, Sometimes coming, sometimes coy, Yet she never fails to please"; and these at least settle that he knew how to handle his mother tongue. His portrait from a print in the British Museum is given in Plate XXI. Sir Charles Sedley's wife was Elizabeth Savage, who came of a distinguished line, and his mother was the Elizabeth Savile, of whom Waller wrote : " Here lies the learned Savile's heir, So early wise and lasting fair, That none, except her years they told, Thought her a child or thought her old." Thus we link up with Sir Henry Savile (see Plate XV), the most scholarly Englishman of his date, the founder of the Savilian professor- ships of geometry and astronomy at Oxford, tutor to Queen Elizabeth, Warden of Merton and Provost of Eton. On the other hand Sir William Sedley', Sir Charles' paternal grandfather, founded the Sedleian He is reported to have said that if King James made his (Sedley's) daughter a countess, he had been even with him in courtesy by making James' daughter a queen ! ' I have not been able to discover in Oxford any portrait of Sir William Sedley. Plate XV SIR HENRY SAVILE, Scholar (1540—1022). Maternal grandfather of Sir diaries Sedley and a direct ancestor of Francis Gallon. From a print of the portrait by Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger in the possession of the author. Plate XVI ELIZABETH COLLIER (1747-1832). Mrs Poll-, later Mrs Erasmus Darwin, with her son Xacheverel Pole. Painted in the year 1770. From a picture in pastel by Wright of Derby in the possession of Mr VVheler Galton at Claverdon. Plate XVII KU/AKKTH COLLIER (Mrs Pole, later Mrs Erasmus Darwin) with her dog. From a silhouette at Claverdoii in the possession of Mr Wheler Galton. The Ancestry of Francis Gallon 21 professorship in Natural Philosophy at Oxford. It is not without interest that the grandson of Savile and Sedley in the sixth degree should have founded a professorship in his turn. One of the moat noteworthy points connected with this branch of Francis Galton's ancestry is the tendency to die out in the male line. Sir Henry Savile left an only daughter, Sir Charles Sedley an only daughter, the Colyears ceased to be in the male line, the Darwin family springing from the Darwin- Collier marriage has ceased to be in the male line, and this is true whether we follow it in either Galton or Darwin branches. The women of the stock have children, but their sons again are childless or nearly childless. This is far too wide- spread a phenomenon to be the result of chance; we must probably conclude that childlessness of the male is a definite heritage of the Savile-Sedley ancestry. It provided keen wit, courtly manners, literary power, and love of adventure, but handicapped the sons with this fatal dower. Of Elizabeth Collier's mother I am less able to speak definitely. I have sought for families of Collier which would be at all likely to be in touch with the racing circle of Godolphin, Leeds, and Portmore. The only one I have found was next neighbour to Gog-Magog House, a yeoman family of Collier associated with the villages of Stapleford and Stow-cum-Quy, but a few miles from Cambridge and from New- market. Here a certain Elizabeth Collier was born in 1713; she is not married till the year after Mrs Darwin's birth, but no trace of the registration of that birth has been found1. I suspect, but cannot prove, that she was the mother of our Elizabeth Collier, and that shortly before 1745, she came as governess into the household of the Dowager Duchess of Leeds, then wife of Lord Portmore, whose stepson two or three years earlier had married Mary Godolphin, the daughter of Lord Godolphin of Gog-Magog House, Stapleford. Should this be correct, Francis Galton would be a descendant of a member of a family which has produced men noteworthy both in literature and medicine. He would probably be a direct descendant of the father of Jeremy Collier, the famous non-juror. Collier's writings are described as " clear, brilliant and incisive," the work according to Macaulay of "a great master of sarcasm, a great master of rhetoric." Almost singlehanded Collier purged the 1 That birth is not recorded in the church registers at Weybridge, the home of the Portmores. 22 I -ife and Letters of Francis Galton English stage at the close of the 17th century by his courageous attack on Dryden, Congreve, D'Urfey, and the school of licence in his Short View of the Immorality and Profaneness of the English Stage (1697)'. It is one of the weird phases of human history that if our suggestion be correct Elizabeth Collier should be a kinswoman at the same time of the licentious playwright Charles Sedley and the courageous and indignant non-juring bishop Jeremy Collier ! One thing both her kins- men possessed in common — sarcastic wit and a fine command of English — and that is a heritage which is so rare that none can disregard it. A few words must be said here of the descendants of Erasmus and Elizabeth Darwin. Of the seven children of this marriage, Edward Darwin the elder died unmarried at 47. We have few details of his character or ability. John Darwin, Rector of Elston, died unmarried at 31, Henry Darwin died as an infant, Emma died unmarried at 34, Harriet married Admiral Maling and died without issue at 35. Thus for our present purposes the family reduces to two : Francis Sacheverel, afterward Sir Francis S. Darwin, and Violetta, afterward Mrs Galton. Sir Francis Darwin (see Plate XVIII) is for us a most interesting figure. In the first place he was godfather to his nephew Francis Galton. In the next place, like his godson he was trained to medicine. A brief autobiographical account of his boyhood illus- trated by his daughter Violetta is still in existence, and it shows him as an adventurous, rather wild boy (see Plates X and XIX). Like his godson he soon ceased to pursue medicine as a profession, but in 1808, at 22, he started with four others, one of whom was Theodore Galton, a younger brother of Francis Galton's father, on a tour through Spain, the Mediterranean and the East. Travelling was not then what it is now, and we come in contact with war, robbers, privateers and the plague in the diary of this two years' tour in the East. Of the five who started, only Dr Francis Darwin returned alive ! The diary of the tour shows a keen antiquarian taste gratified under many difficulties, and we recognise that Francis Darwin not only loved adventure for its own sake, but was a born naturalist also, whose ready pencil followed a keen eye, where rock and mineral, plant and 1 I have followed Macaulay (Essays, ed. 1874, p. 588, and History, ed. 1876, v. p. 85), but I have not done so without examination of the originals. Jeremy Collier's Short View does not suit the public taste of to-day, but the question is whether we do not need a second lustration. Hate XVIII SIR FRANCIS SACHEVEREL DARWIN (1786-1859). Uncle and fio.lfatli.-r of Francis Galtou. From a portrait by Haynes in the possession of Sir Francis' irranddautrhter Mrs William Wavell. V. r XIX .s = bl *• fj 1 4 = i 2 - a 5 H I u 'I " £ j IJj ' The Am-i'xfi-;/ of Francis Gallon 23 beast were concerned, as readily as when it portrayed an archaeological novelty or displayed the costumes of Greece or Turkey. Typical of the mail is the account he gives of the plague in Smyrna ; instead of flying from the place, he remarks : " On the 2nd day we again found ourselves at Smyrna amongst the plague, which had increased, 400 persons having died in our absence. I had now an opportunity of watching the progress of this disorder in several English sailors, who having been on shore, had caught the infection. I also visited the Armenian and Greek hospitals, where numbers were dying daily of the plague " (p. 55). At Smyrna also we hear the tale of a gun discharged immediately under the window, which their host informed them was the shooting of another cat by a soldier posted to shoot the cats coming out of the next house where everybody but the baby had died of plague ; the cats being the chief transporters of the infection. Darwin, wanting more experience of the plague, on another return to Smyrna undertook by invitation of the native physicians charge of several hospitals, of which the Greek and Armenian contained each 120 patients. "This," Darwin writes, "was a good opportunity to become conversant with the diseases of the climate, and from constant observation 1 found the plague was frequently checked by an active practice of which the Medici of the East were totally ignorant. Intermittent fevers and the Lepra Graecorum are very peculiar in the Levant. Hard eggs and salt fish being the hospital diet, phthisis is most prevalent." During the tour Darwin visited Tangiers, Tetuan, and attempted to get into Fez, not then visited by Europeans, but was not permitted to reach that closed centre of Mahommedanism. The strange element in Sir Francis Darwin's life is that he returned home, and after a short practice in Lichfield, settled down in a wild out of the way part of Derbyshire, and spent his days in studying archaeology and natural history without ulterior end1 ; his place was full of animal oddities ; there were wild pigs in the woods, and tame snakes in the house. Possibly his son Edward's keen power of observation of the habits of animals as exhibited in his Gamekeepers Manual was developed under this environment. But the fragmentary knowledge we have been able to gather of Francis Darwin suggests marked character and 1 There is a marked tendency, almost an instinct, in many members of the Darwin- Galton stock to lead a leisurely country life, which completely masks their scientific interests. It became dominant for a time in the life of Francis Galton himself. 24 A//'- find Letter* of Frauds Gallon ability, which somehow failed of full fruition. Francis Galton's sister writes in her Reminiscences of the year 1826 : " We then went on to my uncle Sir Francis Darwin at Sydnope, who sent a pair of horses to help ours up the steep hill to the house. It was a wild place, but very amusing to visit. The six children slept in hammocks and kept pet snakes." The love of adventure, the scientific and literary tastes of Sir Francis S. Darwin lead me to associate him closely with his godson, and it is strange that of all his Darwin or Gal ton uncles, Francis Gal ton in personal appearance seems to me to resemble most closely Francis Darwin. This leads me to emphasise a point which I think is of some importance : the Darwins were not by nature born travellers. Charles Darwin it is true went on the memorable " Beagle " voyage, but prob- ably not because he derived immediate pleasure from travel for its own sake. " I trust and believe," he wrote, " that the time spent in this voyage, if thrown away for all other respects, will produce its full worth in Natural History ; and it appears to me the doing what little we can to increase the general stock of knowledge is as respectable an object in life as one can in any likelihood pursue." (Life, I, p. 205.) Those are not the words of a traveller for the joy of travel, but of one who travels to obtain an end, not from innate Wanderlust. Some of my readers may know that joy in passing on into the unfamiliar, in spending each day under new conditions, — an unknown mortal mid unknowns ! The Wanderlust is a fever which seizes the non-immune, mostly in youth, but may be in the blood, unquenched even in age. Both Francis Galton and Francis Darwin had marked touches of it, and in two ancestral lines — other than the direct Darwin line — we reach men who wandered and fought, and in an earlier century we have little doubt our Francises would have joined another Francis and have reached fame as Elizabethan buccaneers. This love of travel sprung, not from Darwin, but from Colyear and Barclay ancestry ; it is manifest even in the scientific work of Galton. Both Charles Darwin and Francis Galton were pioneers in science, but the nature of their work was essentially different. Darwin invaded a new continent with the idea of settling in it. He planned great roads through it and he largely built them, and organized the country. He left traces of his pioneer work on the face of the land which must remain as his memorial for all time. Galton also discovered a new world, but he rushed from point to point of it making his hasty maps and ever eager The Ancestry of Francis Gallon 25 to see beyond. He never waited to see who was following him, he pointed out the new land to biologist, to anthropologist, to psychologist, to meteorologist, to economist, and left them to follow or not at their leisure1. He left others to settle and develop ; his joy was in rapid pioneer work in a wide range of fields. If the world did not under- stand and accept, he would leave them thirty or forty years to consider it, until after many other wanderings he came to that land again to find an altered state of scientific knowledge and of public opinion. This love of travel for its own sake, the Wanderlust, which for many of us was largely the secret of Galton's power, was hardly Darwinian, we believe it came partly through the Colyears — which explains its appearance in a lessened form in Francis Darwin — but partly through the Barclay-Cameron and Button strains, as we shall indicate later. The second child of Erasmus Darwin and Elizabeth Collier — sister of Sir Francis Darwin — who comes especially under our ken is Frances Ann Violetta, shortly Violetta Darwin, the mother of Francis Galton (see Plate XX). She inherited many qualities from her mother, Elizabeth Collier, and although she bears the name of Darwin we must not look upon her as a pure Darwin. Much of her joyous unconventional nature was undoubtedly from the ancestry of Elizabeth Collier. She was by no means a Quaker by instinct, and the Quaker, Samuel Tertius Galton when aged 33, seems to have been baptised as an adult (Jan. 18, 1816) at Radbourne Church — probably owing to her influence. Her pictures as a young bride show her to have possessed 1 Francis Galton himself realised this to the full. Thus he writes as follows in his Inquiries into Human Faculty : "My general object has been to take note of the varied hereditary faculties of different men, and of the great differences in different families and races, to learn how far history may have shown the practicability of supplanting inefficient human stocks by better strains, and to consider whether it might not be our duty to do so by such efforts as may be reasonable, thus exerting ourselves to further the ends of evolution more rapidly and with less distress than if events were left to their own course. The subject is, however, so entangled with collateral considerations that a straightforward step-by- step inquiry did not seem to be the most suitable course. I thought it safer to proceed like the surveyor of a new country, and endeavour to fix in the first instance as truly as I could the position of several cardinal points" (p. 2). Six years later in the Natural Inheritance (p. 2) he again describes his work in much the same spirit, that of a pioneer building a high level road into a new country, affording wide views in unexpected directions and easy descents to novel and not yet mapped districts. p. G. 4 26 Lij'e nnii Letter* of Francis Galton marked good looks, more Collier than Darwin ; she had considerable artistic faculty, and we are inclined to think that possibly the initials V. G. may be found on the graceful bookplate of her husband. Through her too came longevity into Francis Galton's stock from the Colliers. She lived to be 91, her mother Elizabeth Collier to be 85, and Elizabeth Collier's mother to be 96 '. Francis Galton's brother Erasmus lived to be 94, his brother Darwin to be 89, his sister Emma to be 93, his sister Bessie to be 98, and Sir Francis himself lived to be 89 ! This again is not a Darwin characteristic. It was also a longevity associated with persistent freshness of intellect — the sole condition under which longevity is of personal or social value. Violetta Darwin (see Plate XX) seems to have been a woman of much character, for thirty years after her husband's death she was the centre of a large household, with excellently kept records, and accounts. She did not permit liberties2, but was warmly loved by her children ; in fact, she had an essential feature of lovableness which she handed ,down to her son Francis in a marked degree. No servant, no subordinate, ever attempted to take liberties with Francis Galton, and yet no man was more loved by relatives, friends, members of his expeditionary force and of his household3. To Violetta Galton we owe a quaint little biographical account of her son Francis' childhood, of which the first page and the silhouette are reproduced later. Passing now to the paternal ancestry of Francis Galton we find ourselves at once in a sterner atmosphere. If we look through the list 1 Francis Galton says so himself in his Memories, p. 7. But we have not been able to verify the statement. There is possibly confusion with Elizabeth (Hill) Darwin. - She wrote a quaint Advice to Young Women upon their first going out into Service published in Derby, and dedicated to Miss Harriet Darwin " for the use of her school for poor children." As an extract I take : " When you speak to upper servants, always add Mr or Mrs before their names, it is a respect due to them ; and whenever you happen to meet a Lady or Gentleman, in any part of the House, always courtesy on passing them, as you should remember to be civil." 3 This lovable side of his nature is so truly expressed in a letter from one of his great nieces, that I venture to cite her words here : " I expect we all see our friends differently ; if I were to write a memoir of Uncle Frank I should just say what a pet he was, and how good tempered and full of delightful naive sayings, and that everybody wanted to kiss him ! I should not bother about his intellect, which did not come my way." These sentences give a picture of Francis Galton, which all his intimates know to be true, but which it would be hard to express so well. XX S3 £ : ~ ^ s I o » I : I I 4. .s £.2 a * — gj ^- « c '? •£ | i a «.= •=: 2; = s = 5 X _£ _af ,c ^ ~ Plate XXI SIR EU EN CAMERON of Lochiel (1629— 17i:i)- Great-great-great-grand&ther of Francis (ialton. From a print in the possession of Mr \Vlieler Galton. SIR CHARLES SEDLEY, Poet (1(539—1701). • in-at-yreat-ffreat-gramlfather of Francis Gulton. Fiiini a print in tlie IJritish Miiseinn Print Room, \\liicli is troni an original picture fornu'rly in tlie possession t>f tin- Diu-lifss of Dorset. The Anccnf.i'1/ of Francis Gallon 27 of Gallon's 16 great-great-great-grandparents on the paternal side (see p. 10), we find that 11, possibly 13, were early members of the Society of Friends. Another, Sir Ewen Cameron, is famous as one of the last of the Highland chieftains, a man who summoned his clan and fought at its head (see Plate XXI). It is at first sight strange to find him marrying a daughter of the Quaker David Barclay, the sister Jean of the Apologist Robert Barclay. But the Quakers were never opposed to the Stuarts in the way the Puritans were. Robert Barclay himself was a direct descendant of the Stuarts in more than one line (see Pedigree Plate B). At the instigation of George Fox, Barclay appealed to James II, to check the persecution of the Quakers, and his kinship to the Stuarts gave him easy access to the King. He believed in James' zeal for liberty of conscience being sincere ; and in his Vindication of 1689 he says : " I love King James and wish him well." But as a Quaker he was a man of peace, who preached obedience to every established government and unlike his brother-in-law Cameron of Lochiel took no part in the Jacobite move- ments. His influence with Lochiel was probably great, and in 1688 Lochiel accompanied Barclay to London that the latter might use his influence with the King to settle a dispute between Gordons and Camerons. Barclay's mother was Catherine Gordon. Of Robert Barclay himself we must all acknowledge that he will ever remain one of the great masters of the English tongue. He formulated as a scholar and a rhetorician the doctrines of the Society of Friends in a way that was impossible for the uncultured George Fox. We may not agree with the doctrine of immediate revelation as it was developed in the Apology ; that the inward testimony of the spirit in each man telleth him of the true will of God is a teaching which had led the Anabaptists to terrible catastrophe, but held in check by such quietism as we find in the mediaeval mystics and in the early Quakers it has done little harm and much good. Above all it led directly, since the inward spirit alone dictates religious knowledge and there is no formal creed or recognised outward authority, to the doctrine of universal toleration. We do not all realise how much we owe to the Quakers, and not least to Robert Barclay, for proclaiming this great doctrine, and, what is more, ulti- mately establishing it by their passive but stubborn resistance. Papist, Lutheran, Calvinist, Anabaptist, Anglican had not got as far as Robert Barclay when he wrote : . 4— :> •_>s Life and Letters of Francis Gallon "This forcing of men's consciences is contrary to sound Reason, mid the very Law of Nature. For Man's Understanding cannot be forced, by all the Bodily Sufferings another man can inflict upon him, especially in matters spiritual and supernatural : '2"is argument and evident Demonstration of Reason, together with the Power of God reaching the Heart, that can change a Man's Mind from one Opinion to another, and not Kn and Blows, and such like things ; which may well destroy the Body, but can never inform the Soul, which is a free Agent, and must either accept or reject matters of Opinion, as tftey are born in upon it by something proportional to its own nature. To seek to force minds in any other manner, is to deal with men, as if they were Brutes, void of under- standing ; and at last is but to lose one's labour, and as the Proverb is : To seek to wash the Black-moor white. By that course indeed, men may be made Hypocrites, but can never be made Christians." (Apology, 4th Edn., p. 497.) This may serve as a sample of Barclay's opinions, and of his command of our tongue. With his father, Colonel David Barclay, Robert had to suffer much for his faith. Colonel David Barclay had been a soldier of fortune, serving under Gustavus Adolphus through many fierce campaigns, and again in our own civil wars. Then between 50 and 60 he tells us that having served many others he made up his mind to enter the service of God, and looked around him with the greatest anxiety and earnestness, to know, in the midst of so many pretenders, what society of Christians to join with. Ultimately in his perplexity he found refuge in the Society of Friends. He resolved in the year 1666 to suffer indignities and injuries for conscience' sake and to exhibit his bravery in a new field. He established the Quakers' meeting at Ury and henceforth prison, public mockery, fine and dis- traint were his lot. He has met his reward in the noble ballad of Whittier1 : 1. "Up the streets of Aberdeen, By the Kirk and College Green, Rode the Laird of Ury ; Close behind him, close beside, Foul of mouth and evil eyed Pressed the mob in fury. 2. Flouted him the drunken churl, Jeered at him the serving girl, Prompt to please her master ; And the begging carlin, late Fed and clothed at Ury's gate, Cursed him as he passed her. ' John Greenleaf Whittier, Poetical Works, London, 1904, p. 35. Phde XXH DAVID BARCLAY of Youn^bury (1728—1809). Philanthropist and Slave-Emancipator. Uncle of Mrs Samuel Gallon (Lucy Barclay). Great-uncle to Tertius Gallon and to Mrs Fry, and grandfather to Hudson Gurney. From a print in the British Museum 1'rint Room after the picture by Houghton. The Ancestry of Francis Galton •_".» i 3. Yet with calm and stately mien, Up the streets of Aberdeen Came he slowly riding ; And to all he saw and heard, Answering not with bitter word, Turning not for chiding — 4. Came a Troop with broad-swords swinging, Bits and bridles sharply ringing, Loose and free and froward ; Quoth the foremost ' Ride him down ! Push him, prick him through the town Drive the Quaker coward ' ' 5. But from out the thickening crowd Cried a sudden voice and loud, ' Barclay ! Ho ! A Barclay ! ' And the old man at his side Saw a comrade, battle-tried, Scarred and sunburnt darkly. 6. Who with ready weapon bare ; Fronting to the troopers there Cried aloud : ' God save us ! Call ye coward him who stood Ankle deep in Lutzen's blood With the brave Gustavus?' 7. 'Nay, I do not need thy sword, Comrade mine,' said Ury's lord ; ' Put it up I pray thee ; Passive to His Holy Will Trust I in my Maker still, Even though He slay me.' " Galton had as much to thank his Barclay ancestors for as his Darwin descent ; it was not less, possibly more notable (see Pedigree Plates A and C). And Galton knew it ; writing in the summer of 1906 he says1: "It is delightful to hear that you are so pleasantly placed among old Quaker associations. They — the Quakers — were grandly (and simply) stubborn." That stubborn persistency was a wonderful asset of nearly half Francis Galton's immediate ancestry. David Barclay, younger son of the Apologist, walked from Ury to London, and, commencing life afresh, 1 Letter to K. P. 13/7/'06. 30 L(ff //' ttii'l Letters of Francis Gallon The Buttons are descended from an old Glamorganshire family, and there are several distinguished men of this name. Robert Button, who married Edith Batt, was a near relative of Admiral Sir Thomas Button, probably first cousin or first cousin once removed, but the evidence is traditional and I have as yet no proper pedigree worked out. Sir Thomas Button, however, was clearly a stubborn old fighter, much of Robert Button's type. He was one of the earliest to seek for a North-west passage in 1612, and although he did not discover it, he for the first time, amid great hardships in the ship Resolution with the pinnace Discovery, explored the coasts of Hudson's Bay. Button's Bay and Isle, Resolution Island and Nelson River (called after the master of his ship who died there) still remind us of Button's voyage. Later he was Admiral of the Irish seas, busily engaged in repressing the numerous pirates of those days. As in the case of most strenuous men, he succeeded in quarrelling with officialdom, but the charges raised against him were absurd, were easily disproven, and probably only raised to avoid paying his salary, which remained unsettled at his death. When Robert Button married on his release from gaol Edith Batt in 1672, he is described as of Taunton, Somersetshire, and by trade he was a grocer. They had eleven children, of whom no less than eight died in infancy. The youngest, Robert, born 1693, married twice, first (March 1716) Mary Ellis, and second Martha Vickris1 (October 1719). Both died within ten years of their marriages. Ellis, the child of the first, married a cousin, another Mary Ellis, but does not appear to have had any children ; he died aged 40. His father, the second Robert, died aged 33 in 1726. Those who survived were Elizabeth (1689 — -1754) and Sarah (1 682— 1754), who married John Galton of Yatton in 1703. Elizabeth married (1723) Joseph Gifford, of Wellington, who settled at Taunton. Three daughters died as infants, one son only, Joseph Gifford (b. 1724), survived, but did not marry and died in 1801, suspicious of all his relatives. His father died in 1730. The mortality of the Buttons2 is remai'kable, and doubtless points 1 A well-known Quaker name. 3 Edith Button (n£e Batt) was 42 years old at the death of her husband. In the following year she married Matthew Perin, the companion in Ilchester gaol of her father Jaspar Batt. Perin was then 60 years of age, and died three years after. His widow married a third time a year later Edward Watts, fifteen years her junior. There was no issue of either of these marriages. The Ancestry of Francis Gallon 37 to some weakness in the stock, probably on the Batt side. But we have to realise that during the 20 years of the married life of Robert and Edith Button, Robert spent additional time in gaol. George Fox visited Taunton in 1656 and 1663, in which year Street was visited. Fox's meetings in Bristol were very frequent, and he married Margaret Fell there in 1669 ; his last ministry there was in 1677. There can be little doubt that Robert Button like Jaspar Batt came personally into contact with George Fox. John Galton must have been already a Friend in 1700, when he married Sarah Button, but we do not know at what date or under what influences. Originally he had been apprenticed to William Wake of Shapwick, a gentleman grazier of Dorset (d. 1705) and father of Archbishop Wake. He moved from Yatton to Taunton1 on the day of his marriage, — which he tells us was "a sunshine day," — and his children were born and he died there. Probably the great mortality of the Button family opened some field of activity for him in Taunton. His sons Robert and John moved to Bristol, where their widowed mother also resided. But the worst persecution of the Friends in the West was over before the date of John Galton's marriage (1703). The severest years were 1682 and 16832 — the former 1 Yatton is 12 miles from Bristol, Taunton 45 miles, and Street, near Glastonbury, about halfway between Bristol and Taunton. 2 Probably the Grace Button who was fined with Elias Waymouth, an innkeeper of Taunton, and 20 others in 1670 for being at a meeting was a relative of the then imprisoned Robert (Besse's Sufferings, Vol. I, p. 607). In 1678 we find Robert Button is confined again in Ilchester by Justices' warrant for contempt in not appearing at the Bishop's Court on processes for tithes at the suit of Robert Collier, Priest of Chard. He and other Friends were confined in a place called the Friery, and it would seem that he had been there since 1675 (Besse's Sufferings, Vol. i, p. 612). In 1683 we again find a record of imprisonment for Robert Button. "On the 12th of the Month called August, Henry Walrond, a Justice of the Peace and Cap1 of the Militia, came with some of his soldiers and a Constable to a Meeting at Gregory-Stoke where Jasper Batt was preaching. After some time he was silent, and they scornfully bid him Go on ; He answered, It is not meet to cast Pearls before Swine. Then the Cap' took their names both men and women. He let the Women go, but committed the Men to the Constable's Custody except four, viz. William Calbreath, John Powel, John Crocker and Robert Button, whose words he took to appear at his House next day, requiring the Constable to bring the others also thither at the same time (p. 637). Next day those four who had promised to appear, went to the Captain's House, who set one of them at liberty, fined William Calbreath and John Powel 101. 10*. each and committed Robert Button to prison " (Besse, Vol. I, pp. 626 and 627). 38 Life and Letters of Francis Galton being the year of birth of Sarah Galton (nee Button). In Bristol all the men in these years were put in prison ; then the women kept up the meetings and they also were seized. Then the Friends' children were left alone with the servants, and the children under 16 kept up the meetings. Notwithstanding that the law could not properly reach them nineteen of them were carried to the house of correction and threatened with a whipping. Most of the Friends committed to prison were traders and craftsmen, and they endeavoured to carry on their trades in gaol, but were not permitted. It was a time of stringent selection and many children suffered, but it brought the " grandly stubborn " into a community, and gave Francis Galton a factor of his ancestry, which is too influential to be passed over. We now reach the Farmer and Abrahams families. Ill both of these we find an ancestor killed in the Civil Wars (see Pedigree Plate D) : probably but not certainly on the Puritan side, for the sons of both became Friends. Two sisters, Sarah and Abigail Abrahams, married two brothers, Joseph1 and Thomas Farmer, in 1711 and 1713 respectively. Again in 1686 : "On the 12th of the Month called April this Year, Robert Button, a Grocer of Taunton, being Overseer of the Poor, appeared before the Commissioners of Enquiry into the Rebels Estates upon Summons. They would have administered an Oath to him, which he refused to take, mildly telling them, that he should do his Duty as faith- fully as those who did Swear. One of the Commissioners upon this began to examine him : When he had been at Church and when he took the Sacrament 1 To which Robert answered, That he thought he was not summoned here for that, and that he did not come to accuse himself. Whereupon the Commissioners required the Mayor and another Justice present to tender him the Oath of Allegiance, which they did, and on his refusal to take it, committed him to Taunton Bridewell, where he was confined about two weeks " (Besse, Vol. i, p. 648). It will be seen that Robert Button was obviously a man respected in his own district, for he was Overseer of the Poor, and he was clearly recognised as a leader, for when others are fined he is sent to gaol. In England, I think, few were more frequently or longer in gaol than this father-in-law of John Galton of Yatton. Yet those who will read the history of Admiral Thomas Button's fight with the Admiralty, will under- stand that Robert Button was not "grandly stubborn" because he was a Quaker, but a Quaker because he came of "grandly stubborn" stock. 1 This Joseph appears to be the man referred to in a deed of 1720. Joseph Farmer, Ironmaster of Birmingham, entered into articles of agreement with Joshua Gee of London, William and Thomas Russell of Birmingham, Ironmasters, John Ruston of Worcester, Ironmaster, and Stephen Onion of Brewood, Stafford, Ironmaster, to purchase land in Baltimore County in 1720 (March 17), and also gave directions to John Copson to purchase other lands in Cecil County, convenient for navigation into The Ancestry of Francis Gallon 39 Abigail Farmer, after the death of her husband in 1725, married Arthur Jephson of Bristol, and from this Abrahams' marriage was descended John Henry Shorthouse the author of John Inglesant. The com- mercial links between Bristol and Birmingham were very strong, and we are inclined to think that Joseph Farmer, the father of Joseph and Thomas, may have been a Bristol man. There are Joseph Farmer of Gary's Lane, Bristol, who died in 1755, and his wife Sarah, who died in 1722, and these may well have been the parents of our Joseph and Thomas. Anyhow, we find the son Thomas of Thomas Farmer is an ironmonger of Bristol, and marries there in 1743 Mary Jephson, almost certainly a relative of his mother's second husband, Arthur Jephson1. It is in Bristol, rather than Birmingham, that we must look for the link between the Galtons and Farmers. Robert Galton, son of John of Taunton, appears in Bristol as a " Haberdasher of small wares," and there in 1734 he marries Hannah Farmer2; this is the first Galton-Farmer marriage. Hannah was daughter of Thomas Farmer and Abigail Abrahams and sister of Thomas the ironmonger in Bristol. It is quite probable that Thomas Farmer and Robert Galton both dealt in Birmingham hardware, and from this basis started the common mercantile interests of Galtons and Farmers in later years, Bristol being then largely the port of Birmingham. Robert Galton lived in King's Square, Bristol, and there his last child, Sarah, was born in 1743, and she died and was buried in 1745. Shortly after this he appears to have gone to Boston in New England, probably on business matters, and there he died in 1746, or according to some accounts in 1749. It is hardly likely that he settled there as his wife and children remained in Bristol. It is possible that his mission had something to do with the large consignment of slaves valued at the Bay of Chesapeake, near to the Ironstone Mines, where they would erect their forges and furnaces. Thus Farmer seems to have been one of the pioneers in estab- lishing the iron-industry of America and the Galtons' connection with the Farmers and their dealings in slaves seem to point to the reason for Robert Galton's visit to New England in 1743 — 1745. [The deed above referred to was in the possession of Messrs S. and E. Coleman of White Hart Lane, Tottenham, in July, 1913, and was most kindly purchased and presented to the Galton Laboratory by Mr Edmund Wheler Galton.] 1 Tertius Galton's physician at Leamington, Dr Jephson, was probably also a relative. - There were only four children of this marriage, three died in infancy, one only survived to twenty and died then. 40 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon .£54,000 to John, Robert and Samuel Galton to which I have already referred. His wife Hannah Galton (Farmer) died in 1767 at Bristol and was buried in the Quakers' Ground at Redclif. The youngest brother, Samuel Galton, born in 1720, also started life in Bristol1, where he paid for his freedom in 1742. In 1743 his stock, he tells us, was worth .£1144. In 1746 be married Mary Farmer, the daughter of Joseph Farmer of Birmingham, and thus cousin of Hannah, his brother Robert's wife. He received ,£1600 as marriage portion, and definitely becomes assistant to his brother-in-law, James Farmer. This probably took Samuel to Birmingham where his brother John was already established at Duddeston. In the next year, 1747, he is admitted partner with James Farmer for a quarter of his stock for £2500. In 1753 he is equal partner with Farmer. James Farmer's cousin Benjamin Farmer, son of Thomas, was a merchant in Lisbon, and James had very large ventures there in 1755. The earthquake of that year appears to have involved the Farmers in great losses, and James Farmer was bankrupt in this year. The partnership was dissolved and the estates at Duddeston, Saltley, etc. were assigned to Galton. Samuel Galton renewed the partnership with Farmer in 1757, and from an agreement of 1766 the shares of James Farmer and Samuel Galton are placed respectively at £13,862 and £22,281. Meanwhile by the death of his mother, Sarah Button, in 1754, an estate had accrued to Samuel at Taunton. By the death of his brother John in 1775, several other estates in Somerset — Edgmead, High Ham, Allermoor, Bridgwater — were inherited by Samuel2. This brother John had married Hannah Alloway and settled at Duddeston on the outskirts of Birmingham as it then was. He, however, had no children, and his property passed to his brother. When Samuel Galton died in 1799 aged 80, the Galton business held in equal partnership by him- self and his son Samuel was valued at £139,000. We have gone into these details as they are illustrative of the Quaker stubbornness turned to successful commercial achievement. 1 The connection with Bristol was kept up, for Samuel's sister Mary died there in 1789 and his daughter Hannah in 1773. 2 In 1776 Samuel Galton states in his memoranda that he sold the estate at "Beer Hill." This proves that the Thomas Galton of Beere who appears in the Registers of Winterbourne-Kingston in 1617, and who was probably the Thomas baptized Jan. 7, 1 580, was an ascendant or relative of the John Galton of Yatton. The Ancestry of Francis Gallon 41 A very appreciative notice of Samuel Galton the first appears in the Gentleman s Magazine for 1799 (p. 63): "A sound and acute understanding, a quick and clear conception, extended views and a mind active and firm, joined to the habit of unremitting industry, coniinandi'il success with regard to the improvement of his fortune. The same talents were ever ready to be employed in giving advice and assistance to those who asked and in forming and directing charitable institutions." After referring to his local charities and general beneficence, the writer continues : "These excellent qualities wore accompanied with great hospitality, and their effect improved by the urbanity and courtesy of his manners, by an agreeable, well-formed person, and a countenance expressive of the intelligence of his mind and the cheerfulness of his disposition. He encountered the various accidents of life and the infirmity of old age with uncommon dignity ; the energies of a strong and powerful mind enabling him to support those trials which related to himself, without relaxing in his attention to the distresses of others. The same firmness of character accompanied him in death." Surely much of this characterisation might be directly applied to his great-grandson Francis Galton. Unfortunately no portrait of him appears to have been preserved1. Nor were " the various accidents of life " which the first Samuel encountered slight in character ; besides the bankruptcy of his partner a more personal distress arose from the 1 A pleasing pen-picture of this typical Quaker is given by his granddaughter Mary Anno Schimmelpenninck (see Hankin, Christiana C., Life of Mary Anne Sckimm?!- penuiuck, Vol. I, Autobiography. Pt. I, 1778—1787, pp. 45—53. London, 1858). "Of all the pleasures of my childhood, by far the greatest and the sweetest in recollection were the visits, whether of days or weeks, to my dear grandfather at Dudson. I can hardly say how delightful to me was the quiet, the spirit of love and order and peace which characterised his household. The family, as I remember it, consisted of my grandfather himself and of Lizzie Forster. She had formerly superintended the education of my aunts, my father's sisters, but, after the death of my grandmother and my aunts, Lizzie Forster continued her post as head of the establish- ment. My grandfather himself presented so striking a likeness to Win Penn in West's picture of the Treaty with the Indians, that I never knew any person who had seen both, who was not struck by it. He was very cheerful, orderly, active, acute as a man of business, and most kindly in his consideration and thought for the welfare and happiness of all about him. While my mother bestowed out of her benevolent heart, like a noble benefactress, my grandfather gave in a benevolent, considerate, and business-like way ; with brotherly kindness he ascertained what would add to the well- being of his people, and supplied the want kindly, beneficently, yet not lavishly, with a completeness that showed his pleasure in giving, yet with an orderly economy. He considered himself as a responsible steward, and as his fortune had been the fruit of ({oil's blessing on his industry, he desired, remembering the labour of his youth, to . / v. o. G 42 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon early deaths of his children. It would seem that the short-livedness of the Button stock was handed down to the third generation. His eldest daughter Sarah died at 13; his second child James at one year ; his reward industry in others, and to make as many hearts as he could, light and grateful to God the Giver, never seeking to fix the eye of the receiver on himself " Well do I recollect my dear grandfather's cheerful voice, as, at about six o'clock, on a bright summer morning, he would call me to accompany him on his walk, or if he were suffering from the gout, to walk by his wheel-chair in the shrubbery. First we used to visit the little garden he had given me, and watch the growth of the seeds and roots I had planted there under his direction. Then we proceeded to the hothouse or conservatories, where my grandfather affixed to various bunches of grapes or pines tho names of invalid friends or others, to whom they might be a comfort. If I had been a good child, he would let me affix the tickets, and would teach me to print the names on them or perhaps allow me to be the bearer of his gifts. And then he liked to visit his bees in their glass hives, whence ho drew many a lesson on industry. He was likewise a great florist, and delighted to visit his greenhouse, his auriculas, and other choice flowers. Then we proceeded to the pond, or rather, perhaps, lake, since the stream on which Birmingham stands runs through it. This lake occupied eight or ten acres, and was of considerable length. It was truly beautiful ; its borders indented and clothed with the finest willows and poplars I ever saw. The stillness was delightful, interrupted only by some sparkling leaping fish, or the swallow skimming in circles over the water, the hissing of the swans from their two woody islets, or the cries of the wildfowl from the far-off sedges and bulrushes. It used to be a delight to me, when standing near my grandfather in a rustic fishing-house at the farthest end of the pool, he applied to his lips a little silver whistle (such as now, sixty-six years after, I wear in remembrance of him) and immediately the surface of the lake seemed instinct with life. Waterfowl, of all descriptions, rose from their coverts, and hurried towards us : the heavy Muscovy ducks, Sheldrakes, Burrow ducks from the Severn, sea-gulls, Canada and Cape and tall Peruvian geese, and the little moor-hen and teal, half-sailing, half-flying, with six majestic swans all drew near to be fed. How well do I remember my grandfather then saying to me ' Thou canst not do much good, and canst feed but a very few animals ; yet how pleasant it is to do even that ! God, the Father of all, opens His hand, and all His creatures on the face of the wide earth are filled with good. How blessed is He ! ' Then my grandfather would visit his mill, which was near the lake ; there he inquired after all his workmen, went to the cottages of any that were ill, and was sure to leave some substantial evidence of his visit, besides the kind word which accompanied all his gifts. Pleasant were his friendly calls on some infirm or aged person, or sickly child, and sure were those who diligently attended his school of a reward. " On our return to breakfast, my grandfather would make me partake of his little ration of toast and clotted cream, and then came the pleasure of throwing open the window and spreading corn with salt on the large pigeon-board How eagerly I listened when my grandfather pointed out to me the deep attachment of the carrier pigeon to her home, of the queest to her nest, of the turtle-dove to her mate; that they could oiily flourish upon corn and all their food seasoned with salt. He also showed me XXV SAMUEL GALTON, the Younger (1753— 183i>). ''r a l><>i'triiit by Longastre at Claverdou in the ptissession of Mr Wheler Gallon. The Ancestry of /<'m//r;/.s (,'alfon 43 fourth child Mary at 28 ; his fifth Edith in the first year of life ; his sixth Elizabeth at 21 and his youngest Hann.-ih ;it 14! Only his third son Samuel survived to carry on the line1. To anyone who has studied the pedigrees of families in the 17th century this immense mortality will not seem wholly exceptional. Of its great influence on national life and character there can be small doubt. The death of his brothers and sisters all previous to that of his father, meant that Samuel Galton the second became, on the death of his father in 1799, a man of large wealth and considerable estates. His portrait (see Plate XXV) seems to indicate a man very similar to the verbal description given by the writer in the Gentleman's Magazine of his father. In the family he was often spoken of as Samuel John or John Samuel, but he was not so registered at birth ; it seems probable that the name was merely adopted to distinguish him from his father. Born in 1753, Samuel Galton the second went in 1759 to school at Bristol — a fact which shows how the Bristol connection of the Galtons was still maintained. In 1760 he was transferred to James Fell's School at Worcester, which he left in the following year. In 1768 he their beautiful but sober plumage, and pointed out, when they soared up aloft, how bright their iridescent colours appeared in the sun I loved, too, to assist my grandfather in arranging old letters and papers from friends of his youth, or of his ancestors " One more anecdote respecting my grandfather. He was most kind to us his grand- children, but I believe yet more especially to me, who was three year's and a half older than any of the others, and who from delicate health always preferred the quiet society of those older than myself, to children's play. It was his custom to give each of his grandchildren a guinea on the day of their birth, and on every birthday add another, paying us also interest on the former. When we were seven years old, he made us keep the accounts ourselves. This was to go till each attained the age of twenty-one, when he intended the whole sum as a little present ; besides this, he frequently gave me money, sometimes half-a-crown, sometimes a guinea. He gave me also a little account- book in which he desired I should set down accurately everything I received and expended. This was contrary to my natural taste and habits ; it was also very different from my dear mother's magnificent manner of spending and acting in all that related to money : but one day my grandfather called me to him and said : ' My child, thou didst not like when I advised thee, the other day to save thy sixpence, instead of spending it in barberry drops and burnt almonds We cannot be self-denying wisely till we know the real value of what we give up ; that is why I wish thee to keep exact ace1*.' " 1 Their mother, Mary Galton, died at the Swan Inn, Tewkesbury, on her way from Cheltenham to Birmingham in the presence of the two Samuels and her daughter Mary — " my exemplary and dear mother," as the younger Samuel expresses it. 6—2 44 Liji1 a n <« 05 '5 O a II lO- ^i a 5 ^ -a 2* — 2 ° 3§ 3 5 ••§ A 0 2 1 Jtf § i S - linini- of Howard Gallon. Plate XXX a I O I s g •< O ^* In ~ i ° g J O .a 9 Q t» a 7 •w O s o V Plate XXXI I, s I ; . •• i"**. •=. .; e « 'jn - a = .= H £ ^ Ed s; ^ =s - S -c The Ancestry of Francis Gallon 49 and she studied history and literature of every kind to educate her children. She brought the physique of the Barclays and Cameron s, and something of the courtly bearing of the Stuarts, and the ability of their greater ancestors into the Galton stock. Samuel Galton himself contributed determination, industry and a strong element of Quaker stubbornness — but at the same time wide public and social sympathies, and a distinct scientific bent. Elizabeth Collier of more slender figure than Lucy Barclay was not behind her in beauty. She supplied an artistic instinct, a joyousness in life, an appreciation of form and expression which are less usual among the Society of Friends ; in her ancestry we trace in addition both love of adventure and love of learning. Arid last, but not least, we have Erasmus Darwin, who presented his descendants with that great gift, the scientific imagina- tion— the match which may light a strong fire if the solid fuel of other characters be provided. Before we pass to the children of Samuel Galton the second, a word may be added here about the Galton houses in Birmingham and elsewhere (see Plate XXIX). We have already noted the partnership of the Farmers and Galtons (John and Samuel) originating in Bristol. When John went at first to Birmingham he took a lease of Duddeston, and this house at his death was taken over by his brother Samuel, and passed in 1799 to his nephew Samuel the second (see Plate XXX). He enlarged it in 1800 and went to reside there in 1801. Samuel soon after his marriage had bought a house in Five Ways, Birmingham, and added the next house to it. But in 1785 he went to live at Great Barr1, a large country house about four miles out of Birmingham, spending the winter in various houses in Birmingham. In 1702 the shop of Joseph Farmer was in the corner of Bull Street and the Minories in Old Square, Birmingham. He was an ironworker, who became a successful gunsmith. He lived in the Square till 1735 when he moved to the house in Steelhouse Lane, known afterwards as Farmer and Galton's house and subsequently still as Galton's Bank (see 1 This house, of which we give the photograph of a water colour (see Plate XXXI), was a frequent meeting place of the members of the Lunar Society. An interesting account of the meetings at Great Barr in her childhood is given by Mary Anne Galton (Mrs Schimmelpenninck). There is a paper in the Birmingham and Midland Institute Archaeological Section, Transactions, 1890, pp. 79 — 84, by H. C. Bolton, on the Lunar Society with references to Great Barr. p. G. 7 50 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon Plate XXXII). Joseph Farmer died in 1741 and his son James succeeded him. In 1746 Samuel Galton married Mary Farmer and went to live at 13 Old Square. When James removed to London, Samuel left the Square to live in the Steelhouse Lane house. He appears to have remained there after James' bankruptcy and his return to Birmingham, for the latter then went to live at Bingley House, which afterwards passed into the hands of the Lloyds. The Galton-Farmer house bore the initials J. F. in monogram over the doorway, and this fine old house, scarcely recognis- able, still exists. In 1782 Galton rented Duddeston ', he took a 99 years' lease of it in 1 789 and his grandson purchased the freehold in 1 820. Samuel his son lived immediately after his marriage also in the Steelhouse Lane house, he then went to Hagley Road, Edgbaston, and afterwards to Great Barr, finally settling at Duddeston on his father's death. Thus in Francis Galton's childhood from 1822 to 1832 Duddeston was the much frequented home of the grandfather ; it was superintended by a highly respected Quaker housekeeper, Lizzie Forster, after the death of Lucy (Barclay) Galton in 1817. When in 1804 the gunsmith business was wound up2, the Farmer-Galton house was converted into a bank, possibly at the suggestion of the Barclays. In this bank Samuel and Samuel Tertius were partners with Paul Moon James, and later Hubert Galton, a younger brother of Tertius, also became a partner. In 1825 there was a general panic in the money market involving a run on the banks throughout the country. Hubert Galton, going up to Barclay's in London to borrow, found no less than ten partners of the Gurney banks come up for the same purpose. The run lasted about a week, but the strain on Samuel Tertius Galton was very great during the crisis — a crisis indeed which he had actually predicted in his tract of 1813. His friends, however, stood firmly by him during this trying period3, and the bank weathered the storm well. The strain, however, 1 A Mr Freame appears to have rented Duddeston from 1757—1780, 1 am uncertain whether a relative of the Freames discussed above. J It would appear that Samuel Galton the second determined on his father's death to wind up the gun-factory (at one time producing guns at the rate of one a minute !) and start the bank. Whether this change was due to altering economic conditions, or to a religious scruple, reaching freedom of expression on the death of his father, we cannot say. 3 One friend collected 1000 sovereigns in a bag and threw it on the counter with a loud chink at the height of the crisis before the clamouring depositors asking the partners to take care of them for him, a most seasonable kindness. Mrs Wheler's Reminiscences. Plate XXXII The Galton-Farmer house, later the Galton Bank, in Steelhouse Lane, Birmingham, now a shop. Friends' Meeting House in Bull Street, Birmingham, where the two Samuel Galtons with their wives attended and were ultimately buried. The Ancestry of Fraud* (,'alton 51 induced Samuel Tertius gradually to close the bank, which was ac- complished in 1831, without the majority of people knowing anything about it until nearly every account was paid off. The Galton Bank in Steelhouse Lane afterwards became the Polytechnic Institution, later a Children's Hospital, and afterwards (1897) was the house of a medical man. It is now converted into a shop. In 1831, the Galtons' business relations with Birmingham ceased, and Samuel Tertius retired to Leamington in 1832. He had never lived at Duddeston, although he purchased the freehold of it in 1820 for £8000, and it became later a most valuable building estate. After his marriage, he lived at Ladywood, then a mile from Birmingham, and here all his children were born, except Francis who was born at the Larches (see Plate XLV), one mile from Birmingham on the Warwick Road. This house had been Dr Priestley's, being then called Fair Hill, and it was the house burnt in the Birmingham Riots to which we have already referred ; nothing was left but one room and the laboratory over the stables1. There was a good gai'den and three fields, and here the children used to scamper about on the two small Welsh ponies- Scamper and Fenella — to which Charles Darwin refers in his letter of 1853: " I should much like to hear something of your brothers Darwin and Erasmus : I very distinctly remember a pleasant visit at the Larches, now many years ago, and having many rides with them on ponies without stirrups." Of this visit of Charles Darwin to the Larches Mrs Wheler writes as follows in her Reminiscences : " My Unole, Dr Robert Darwin, was a tall, very large man, weighing more than 20 stone, but wonderfully active for his size and very fond of his garden. He was extremely cheerful and agreeable, full of amusing anecdotes and considered a very clever doctor. His son Charles was a very pleasant lad ; when about 15, he was staying with us and went out with my Father to practise shooting ; on his return we asked if he had been successful. ' Oh,' said my Father, ' the birds sat upon the tree and laughed at him.' Some time after my Fathers and Brothers went to Shrewsbury. My Father had hardly sat down, when Charles begged him to come out on the lawn, where he threw up a glove and hit it shooting, without missing, two or three times." In 1824 Samuel Tertius purchased Claverdon'2, an estate near Warwick, which, at first a summer residence, became later almost the ' It was rebuilt and occupied by Withering the botanist. 2 It is now in possession of his grandson, Mr Edward Wheler Galton, and contains a valuable collection of Galton, Darwin and Barclay pictures and manuscripts, 7—2 52 L(f<: ant/ Leftertt of Francis Gallon family centre. Samuel Tertius and Francis Galton and many of the family are buried in Claverdon churchyard. The earlier Galtons were buried in the yard of the quaint little Meeting House of the Society of Friends at Birmingham, a photograph of which is here reproduced. Of Samuel Tertius Galton (see Plates XXXIII and XXXIV) we have many accounts from his children1. Francis Galton describes him as "one of the most honorable and kindly of men and eminently statistical by nature2." " When we children quarrelled," writes Mrs Wheler, " and went to my Father or Mother to complain, he used to send one into one corner of the room, and the other into the opposite corner, and at the word of command, each had to rush into the other's arms. This made us laugh and ended the dispute. My Father was a true peace-maker, he always turned the matter off playfully. He was fond of science, and took much interest in all new improvements. He liked measuring hills and mountains with his portable barometer, which we always took on a journey and which required great care not to break." The scientific instruments, however, with which he amused and instructed his children appear to have been chiefly those purchased by his father. Samuel Tertius does not seem to have been a man of quite the vigour or originality of his father, but he inherited his father's public spirit and much of his business capacity. He was High Bailiff of Birmingham in 1814, and took up the addresses from that town to the Prince Regent on the restoration of peace and on the marriage of Princess Charlotte. This public work was continued as magistrate and deputy-lieutenant after his removal to Leamington. He was called upon to act in numerous arbitrations owing to the widespread esteem for his good sense and judgment. It is reported that he never kept a poor man waiting, always saying "Time was money to the poor." While he suffered, as his father and grandfather had done, and his sons 1 He was educated at Dr Valpy's School, Reading, and was entered in 1799, aged 16, as a pensioner at Trinity College, Cambridge. His father's account-book would seem to show that he went into residence, but he did not matriculate, and we soon after find him in a commercial office in Liverpool. 2 His only published work: "A Chart exhibiting the Relation between the Amount of Bank of England Notes in Circulation, the Rate of Foreign Exchanges, and the Prices of Gold and Silver Bullion and of Wheat, accompanied with Explanatory Observations," London, 1813, is a graphical consideration of what we now term the corre- lation of these variates. It is a strong attack on an inconvertible paper circulating medium, and predicts disastrous consequences as invariably following such a system. It must have been quite useful in its day. /'////<• A'A'Xlll "182 SAMUEL TERTIUS GALTON (17f«-1844). Fatlier of Francis Galton, and liuslmnd of Violctta Darwin. From a painting1 liy Oakley in 18;S(i. A .\XXIV i The Ancestr;/ of Francis Gait on 53 Hubert and Francis did later, from asthma, he yet inherited something of his Barclay ancestors' power of walking, and would walk all day without fatigue. He was not a man of that kind of note which finds its way into biographical dictionaries, but he did — what many of us everyday mortals fail to do — the usual work of the everyday world and he did it well1. As a result he was respected by all who knew him and beloved by all his children, who found in him on every occasion their best friend. He died at the relatively early age of 61, and left his sons each sufficient fortune to follow their own bent apart from a profession. Like Samuel Tertius, his two brothers John Hubert Barclay Galton (1789—1864) and John Howard Galton (1794—1862) married into able stocks, the first married Mary, daughter of Robert Barclay, Banker of London, and therefore a multiple cousin ; the second a daughter of Joseph Strutt and ultimately his heiress. Miss Strutt was a granddaughter of Jedediah Strutt (1726 — 1797), the partner of Arkwright in establishing the spinning jenny, and himself an inventor of no mean order. Her father was not only the benefactor of Derby, but an intimate friend of Thomas Moore and Edge worth. John Hubert had four children, three died quite young and the fourth left no issue. John Howard Galton's is the only line by which the name of Galton has been preserved. His second son Sir Douglas Galton (1822 — 1899) reached fame in a variety of ways: as a Royal Engineer he did much good, especially for the Commission on the Application of Iron to Railway Structures (1848); he was General Secretary and afterwards President of the British Association and the third of his name to obtain fellowship of the Royal Society. He was Assistant Inspector-General of Fortifications (1859 — 1862), Assistant Under- secretary of War (1862—1870) and Director of Public Works and Buildings (1870 — 1875); and generally an able chairman of committees and of very considerable inventive ability. His achievements mark the scientific and business capacity of Galton and Strutt stocks, apart from the scientific imagination contributed by the Darwin blend. Of Tertius Galton's sisters2 the most noteworthy was Mary Anne (1778 — 1 A shorthand diary of Tertius Galton for the years 1829 — 1844 (Eugenics Laboratory) testifies to his multifarious duties and his genial nature. 2 Of the remaining brothers Ewen Cameron died as a child of nine, according to family tradition from the rough usage he received from the elder boys at Dr Valpy's .". J Life awl Letters of Francis Galton 1856), who married Lambert Schimmelpenninck. She was a woman of very considerable literary power and made a special study of Port Royal ; her works, The Theory and Classification of Beauty and Deformity, 1815, and Select Memoirs of Port Royal, 1829, had considerable vogue in their day. Francis Galton has said all that need be said on her separation from her family. Members of the same family are at times mutually incompatible and it is a fact, not perhaps easily explicable, but none the less demonstrable that such incompatibilities often reappear generation by generation. Of the two other sisters of Samuel Tertius, Sophia (1782 — 1863) married (1833) Charles Brewin — his grandfather Charles Lloyd was first cousin of Charles Lloyd who married Mary Farmer — and Adele (1784 -1869) married Dr John Kaye Booth (1827). Neither of these marriages made relatively late in life had issue. Of his Galton uncles and aunts, Mrs Booth in face resembles most closely Francis Galton, and she has more resemblance to Samuel Galton, her father, than Mrs Schimmelpenninck or Mrs Brewin, who are more like Lucy Barclay in their portraits. But in mental characters — strong sense, excellent memory, business aptitude and fondness for natural history — Mrs Brewin had much that was akin to her nephew Francis, and perhaps she is with the exception of Sir Francis Darwin the nearest of any uncle or aunt to him in character (see Plates XXXV and XXXVI). Of Francis Galton's own brothers — Darwin Galton and Erasmus Galton — little need be said here. Erasmus entered the navy, but soon retired. Both brothers took their places as country gentlemen, and did their duty to their neighbours and to their shire. This was a life to which much of their ancestry, both Darwin and Galton, had been accustomed. On the one side had intervened the Quaker movement, followed by mercantile success, on the other, the exceptional appear- ance of Erasmus Darwin. But the younger generation, whether we consider the offspring of Violetta Galton or Francis Darwin, followed a sort of natural instinct and returned to the land. Their love of wild life and nature may have been great, but it did not lead them to the interpretation as well as to the observation of living forms. For a time it seemed that this native bent would master Francis Galton. Like his school at Reading. The other brother Theodore, a young man of much ability, died of fever at Malta (1810) when returning homeward with Francis Darwin— the fourth death in the party. , <* I'lntc XXXV THEODORE GALTON (1784—1810). Uncle of Francis Galton. ADELE GALTON (1784—1869). Mrs T. K. Booth, Aunt of Francis Galton. SOPHIA GALTON (1782—18(53). Mr> Charles lirewin, Aunt of Francis Galton. MARY ANNE GALTON (1778—1866). Mrs Schimmelpenninck, Aunt of Francis Galton. Plat,- -V.V.VI7 & £ - f I CO .- 7 e , a I = x I 3 i. tS o The Ancestry of Francis Gallon f)f> brothers he was in a position to become a country gentleman, and he himself says that, when aged 24 he returned from Syria, " I was conscious that with all my varied experience I was ignorant of the very ABC of the life of an English country gentleman, such as most of the friends of my family had been familiar with from childhood. I was totally unused to hunting, and I had no proper experience of shooting. This deficiency was remedied during the next three or four years. Under the advice of my eldest brother, I bought a hunter and a hack, and began to hunt at the rate of about three days per fortnight in Warwickshire and at neighbouring meets " (Memories, p. 110). But something else mastered this ancestral instinct. Galton was not to revert to the land and after six years the Wanderlust again sent him forth on his travels. If we knew the little difference which divides one man from another, even within the same family, we should have the key to most of life's riddles. Of one thing we can be certain, it is not slight variations of environment; it is the individuality of nature not of nurture. If we endeavour to sum up the fairly detailed account we have given of Francis Galton's kinships, can we attribute to their different sources some of the chief physical and mental characters we note in him ? The following may be emphasised as marked features of Francis Galton : Physical, (a) Marked longevity, (b) Very considerable physical strength and power of endurance, (c) A well knit figure somewhat above the average height and not tending to corpulence, (d) Regular features, with nothing unfinished, or at all unkempt about the person, generally what are described as "good looks." (c) Blue eyes and light hair. (/) Ailments, asthma and deafness, (g) Good digestion. Of these physical qualities the marked longevity seems to have come from Elizabeth Collier ; the physical strength from the Camerons and Barclays ; the well-knit figure and good looks possibly from Beau Colyear1, though Samuel Galton the second possessed them in a marked degree. The blue eyes and fair hair were again probably a Barclay heritage ; the asthma, and also possibly the deafness, a Galton charac- ter— both Samuel Tertius and his father Samuel suffered badly from asthma. Thus we realise that in most of his physical characters Francis Galton was not a Darwin ; Darwin physical characters have 1 Of Sir Henry Savile it was said that he was " an extraordinary handsome man, no lady having a finer complexion." .".it Life anul Letters of Francis Galton appeared in more than one of the descendants of Samuel Tertius and Violetta, but the most close of the Darwius to Francis Galton was his uncle Sir Francis Darwin, who also has the Collier strain. And in several of the physical features which seem to differentiate Francis Galton from many of his Galton kin, they seem to resemble more than he did the Darwins. If we take portraits of Charles Darwin and of Francis Galton in middle life, we may perhaps detect some resemblances in the rather firm lips, the strong chin, the heavy brow and luxuriant eyebrows, the slightly receding forehead and the apparent absence of marked occipital development (see PlateXXXVII). But taking physique as "a whole, Galton. was in popular language, "not a Darwin." It is to the mental characters we must turn for likeness. Mental, (a) Even temper1, (b) Great sympathy, (c) Ascetic rather than sensuous, (d) Strong mechanical bent, (e) Keen delight m numerical evaluation and symbolic expression, two factors hardly to be put, perhaps, under one heading. (/) Strongly emphasised power of observation and appreciation of observation — what we might almost speak of as the " clinical instinct." (g) Marked love of adventure, the roving. lust, (h) By no means a student or collector in the usual sense, neither a wide reader of books nor a worker in museums. Galton- rather observed and collected to answer a problem he had a priori proposed to himself, than studied material with a view to the discovery of some hidden secret, (i) Continuous concentration in reading or analysis was liable to lead to " mental fag," and on two occasions in his life led to a breakdown, (j) An instinct almost amounting to a moral sense that the end of science was not so much knowledge for its own sake, as social utility and increased human efficiency. (&) Much steadfastness of purpose accompanied by a con- siderable power of controlling others and inspiring them to fulfil his planned ends. (Z) A noteworthy sense of humour, (m) A great appreciation of the need for clear expression in science. We believe that several of these features are markedly Darwin, but others just as certainly come from different strains. Power of observation, the " clinical instinct " that we have referred to, was essentially Darwin. Probably also much of his sympathetic 1 Francis Galton himself has said that he had a quick temper only gradually brought under control by exercise. If this be so, the power of control was probably hereditary. Plate .V.V.VI7/ CHARLES DARWIN, aged .51. From a photograph by Maull and Fox, touched up by -Mrs Darwin and now in the possession of Mr William K. Darwin. FRANCIS GALTON, aged about 50. From a photograph in the (ialton laboratory. These two photographs in much the same attitude indicate the degree of resemblance between the two grandchildren of Erasmus Darwin. The Ancestry of Francis Gallon 57 nature arose from the same source. Although a most distinguished mathematician has appeared in the Darwin stock, and it is stated that Erasmus Darwin the younger was statistically minded, there was no trace of it in Erasmus the elder, and it may be safely said that statistics were almost distasteful to Charles Darwin himself. On the other hand Samuel Tertius Galton, as we have already seen, published a statistical tract, and he and quite a number of his family delighted in numerical and statistical representation. There is hardly a doubt that this was in Francis Galton an emphasised Galton heritage, not wholly unassociated with considerable power of fine draughtsmanship, which we also find in other members of the family. During many years of friend- ship with Francis Galton, his present biographer never saw him handle the pencil nor had any reason to believe he had special aptitude in this matter ; and yet examining his earlier notebooks and diaries we find them full of sketches which show that he had equal capacity with his sisters in draughtsmanship. When we read also the accounts of the work of his Galton ancestry in Birmingham, the manner in which they not only built up a great business, but also were continually engaged in public and charitable work, we must again place to their credit the passion Galton exhibited to turn all his work to public service — to regard all science as subservient to human progress. He was not content that the Eugenics Laboratory should produce merely scientific memoirs ; he repeatedly urged its members to place their results in a popular form before a wider public. He disliked technical terms, and demanded the expression of results in language that all men can understand. Probably he and the present writer were not quite at one on this point, partly because the latter believed that new technical terms are needful in every progressive branch of science, partly because the writer thought that Biometry and Eugenics must in the first place establish themselves by the production of work especially appealing to the scientific world. Francis Galton pulled his way, and his biographer pulled in the opposite, both, perhaps, with something of Quaker stubborn- ness, but never with the least personal friction, and in the end came the compromise which marks the publications of the Galton Laboratory and the directions for its guidance in his will. Reference is made to these matters here because it must be fully realised that the social utility of his work was not a secondary but a primary motive in Galton's character. Charles Darwin thought that to add to the sum of knowledge .~>s Life and Letters of Francis Gallon was perhaps the most respectable object a man can have in life, and this desire to increase knowledge amounts in some of our greatest men to the equivalent of Spinoza's Amor del intellectualis ; in the case of Francis Galton it was rather an " intellectual love of man " which was the motive force in his work. Charles Darwin collected facts bearing on selection without any theory and on a wholesale scale. He made his systematic enquiry and then searched for a law1. This Baconian method was not Francis Galton's. He had formed his problem, and he devised his experiments or recorded his observations so as to give a definite answer yes or no to his questions. It was rather the economy of a business instinct. The inspiration came first, but he did not put it down as possibly his grandfather Erasmus would have done without array of reasoned and well-marshalled facts. He made just the limited observations which confirmed or refuted it, and in almost all Galton's work we see observations collected to answer an individual and relatively closely defined issue. We cannot fit diverse types of mind into rigid categories, but roughly we may say that Erasmus Darwin, Charles Darwin, and Francis Galton all possessed in a high degree scientific imagination. Erasmus put down his inspira- tions without due demonstration or effective self-criticism. Charles Darwin collected his facts before he allowed his imagination to play on them, he followed his inspirations by self-criticism and due demonsti'a- tion. Francis Galton used his imagination to find his problem, then narrowed it to a small issue, and tested its truth by experiment and observation before publication. To a certain extent the difference in method is that of Bacon and Newton — possibly that of the biological and mathematical temperament. Something of the difference in Charles Darwin and Francis Galton was hereditary, and marked the concentrated business instinct which Galton inherited from Farmers and Freames, Braines and Barclays, as well as his own name-stock. It was that business instinct applied in science. Perhaps also the danger of "mental fag," a heritage which we are inclined to think came from the Farmers — was influential in guiding Galton in the matter. He was never a great collector or a mighty reader as his cousin Charles Darwin undoubtedly was. In the roving lust again we see Cameron, Barclay and Colyear ancestry rather than Darwin, and, as already hinted, this influenced 1 See Life and Letters, Vol. I, p. S3. I'lutc A\ VAT/// SAN'Mli". KIN'. "!•' Till: 01 IMPO, Kngraving from the First Edition of Frauds (Jalton's Tro/ticul ttouth Africa. The Kiiiff of tin- ()viiin]io crowned by tin- explorer. In illustration of Francis (ialton's sense of humour. The Ancestry of Frauds Gallon 59 Galton's attitude in science ; he delighted in inroads into unexplored territory, or even into what his neighbours considered as their special preserves. The incursions of a pioneer mind, unfettered by the orthodox opinions of a specialised group of workers, however irritating to the established hierarchy, are undoubtedly of the highest service to science, if that mind has exceptional insight and marked novelty of method. Both these Galton possessed in the highest degree. /Steadfastness of purpose — may we not credit something of this to Robert Button and Jaspar Batt with their many years of gaol experience ? power of control and of inspiring others may be sought legitimately also in that more distant ancestry of great names to which I have but briefly referred (see Pedigree Plate B). From Barclay, from Sedley and possibly from Collier came the desire for terse expression, the demand for simple language. But I doubt whether the wit of Sedley was akin to the humour of Francis Galton. Speaking of his father, Samuel Tertius, Galton writes : " He was devoted to Shakespeare, and revelled in Hudibras ; lie read Tom Jones through every year, and was gifted with abundance of humour V The humour of Samuel Tertius was certainly manifest again in his son2. Many will remember the numerous personal anecdotes told by Francis Galton with keen appreciation of subtle humour, and never with touch of malevolence. But those who were not thus favoured will recall the famous incident of his desire to impress a Hottentot captain, who might prove dangerous, and how, with this end in view, he rode in a red hunting coat on an ox up to the captain's hut, thrusting the ox's nose into the very doorway of his abode. Or again, having sufficiently impressed a negro chief with his visitor's weight and importance, he then led him outside, and to emphasise the negro's own worth he pro- ceeded to decorate his sable majesty with a paper crown of gold tinsel. The picture of the resulting figure published in the first edition of his Tropical South Africa, p. 220, and reproduced here (see Plate 1 Memories, p. 8. 2 It is of importance to emphasise this because the late Dr John Beddoe declared in a short notice of Francis Galton (Man, 1911, p. 34) that "Humour was the only quality we could conceive as lacking in him ; and we know it is apt to be so in the Quakers." Humour is incapable, perhaps, of definition, and the above statement is of marked interest as indicating how big personal equation can lie in its appreciation. 8—2 CHAPTER III CHILDHOOD AND BOYHOOD FRANCIS GALTON was born on February 16, 1822 \ at the Larches, near Sparkbrook, Birmingham. We have already noted the features of that house ; how it was built by the botanist, Dr Withering, after the mob had practically destroyed the whole of Priestley's residence, one room only surviving. The site is now marked by a tablet to Priestley ; it would be fitting to add to it some commemoration of the relation of the site to another Birmingham worthy, who has been as great a leader of scientific thought. Writing sixty years after the event a birthday letter to her brother Francis, Emma Galton thus recalls the day itself : "My dearest Frank, We shall think of you tomorrow, and wish you and Louisa [Mrs Francis Galtou] very many happy returns of the day. What a blessing you have been to us, and how proud we all feel of you. How wonderful a thing memory is ! It seems but the other day that Mrs Ryland had called with her 4 horses, and walked in the garden by my mother's garden chair. A1 Booth [ Adele Galton, Mrs Booth, Francis Galton 's aunt] dined at our house, and in the evening you were born about 9 o'clock. And the importance Darwin, Erasmus and myself thought of the Dudson carriage and pompous coachman coming early on the following morning (Sunday) to take us to spend the day at Dudson [Grandfather Samuel Galton's house]. And we worried the servants by every now and then standing on a chair to make us high enough to reach the call-tube in the Library to inform them : ' Mama had a Baby, and it was a Boy ! ' But we then little realised what a comfort you would be to every one of us. We should have vegetated and had green mould much thicker upon us had it not been for you." [Letter from 5 Bertie Terrace, Leamington, Feb. 15, 1882'-]. 1 He was baptised on March 20 following at the Church of St Martin, Birmingham. As we have already noted his father Tertius Galton had left the Society of Friends and received adult baptism in 1816 at Radbourne. 2 Another account is given by sister Adele herself 42 years after the event : " How well do I remember Aunt Booth dining with us on that day and she and my mother .dining up in the white room to sit with me that evening; my mother being taken ill at 8 o'clock ; Mr Hodgson being sent for and his coming to awake me in the middle of ilie night to tell me that ;v ' fine boy' was born. How well can 1 remember seeing you Plate XL Sample page of Violetta Galton's Life History of Francis Galton, written by his motlier on her son's departure for school at Boulogne, 1830. Childhood and lioi/liood <;:; Francis was the last child in a family of nine, of which two sisters, Agnes and Violetta, died as infants. The youngest of his four sur- viving sisters was eleven years older than Francis, and his brothers, Darwin and Erasmus, were respectively eight and six years his seniors, and thus too different in age to be very companionable. Francis had therefore all the temporary disadvantages which arise from being the late and somewhat solitary member of a large family. But these disadvantages often result in permanent advantages, if a child be of marked character. It is thrown on the one hand more on its own resources for amusement, and on the other hand may receive special attention from parents and elders. " On the 16th February," — writes Mrs Wheler [Elizabeth Anne Galton] in her Remi- niscences,— " my youngest brother Francis was born, lie was 6 years younger than the youngest of us and never was a baby more welcomed. He was the pet of us all, and niy mother was obliged to hang up her watch, that each sister might iiurse the child for a quarter of an hour and then give him up to the next. He was a great amusement to Adele and as soon as he could sit up, at five or six months old, he always preferred sitting on her couch to be amused by her. She taught him his letters in play and he could point to them all before he could speak. Adele had a wonderful power of teaching and gaining attention without fatiguing. She taught herself Latin and Greek, that she might teach him. She never made him learn by heart, but made him read his lesson bit by bit, eight times over, when he then could say it. He could repeat much of Scott's Marmion, and understood it well by the time he was five." [MS. Reminiscences.'] For early training and companionship — her room was his nursery —Francis depended largely on this invalid sister Adele, afterwards Mrs Bunbury. From the couch to which she was confined by weakness of the spine, she directed his early studies, and, whatever might be thought of her methods now, she undoubtedly encouraged both Francis' literary and scientific tastes. In a little history (see Plates XXXIX and XL) of her son Francis, Violetta Galton gives numerous instances of his literary aptness. Thus at the dame's school to which he went when five years old one of his schoolfellows was writing to his mother at Madeira, as he had just heard that his father was in danger of being shot on account of Don Miguel's usurpation. " What shall I say to my mother about my next morning, such a red little thing — and how we all loved you, and then how we used to quarrel for the honour of holding you in our arms, etc. But to return to seculars...." (Letter of Adele Bunbury, Feb. 23, 1864.) Mr Hodgson was sixteen years later the helpful friend who assisted Francis Galton at the start of his medical studies. 64 Life and Letters of Francis Galton father," he asked Francis; "I have said I am very sorry." Francis immediately replied from Walter Scott, "I think this would do: ' And if I live to be a man My Father's death revenged shall he.'" "Thank you," said the little hoy, and added it to his letter. And again, in the first year of his going to school at age five, the maid who went to fetch him home found a group of boys teasing him. Francis kept them all at bay with his arm straight out : " Come one, come all, this rock shall fly, From its firm base, as soon as I." Another day about this same time his mother took him into a field where the servants were trying to catch some geese. Francis immediately ran amongst them and seizing the old gander by the neck brought him to his mother, muttering to himself the lines of Chevy Chstxc : "Thou art the most courageous knight That ever I did see." On another occasion Francis fell oft' his pony into a very muddy ditch, and, as he was dragged out by his legs, he sputtered out half- choked with mud to his brother Darwin the lines of Hudibras : " I am not now in Fortune's power He that is down can fall no lower." As his mother depicts him for us in the first half-dozen years of his life Francis was a boy of mettle, full of strangely assorted know- ledge, but naturally rather shy. A pretty story is told in Mrs Wheler's Reminiscences, which brings together two noteworthy English characters. Mrs Fry (see Plate XLVII) was a second cousin of Hudson Gurney, whose wife, Margaret Barclay, was a great-aunt of Francis Galton. Hudson Gurney was himself son of Agatha Barclay, first cousin of Lucy Barclay, Francis Galton 's grandmother1. Aunt Gurney's house in St James's Square was the centre from which the young Galtons became acquainted with London life, and here they met Mrs Fry— " a very striking person, tall and dignified and yet so kind and motherly, one felt one could open one's heart at once to her." In 1824 Mrs Fry came to Birmingham and went to stay with 1 Mrs Fry was also a granddaughter of Catherine Barclay, who was sister to the first Lucy Barclay and to David Barclay of Youngsbury (see Pedigree Plate C). Thus she was second cousin to Tertius Galton. Childhood and Boyhood 65 Grandfather Samuel Galton at Duddeston, where a large party was asked to meet her. " She told my mother," writes Mrs Wheler, " that she would like to see Francis, then a year and a half old, as her youngest child was about the same age. My mother said she would fetch him, but he was so shy, she feared, he would not make friends with her. Mrs Fry said, ' Oh, never mind, I think he will.' My mother brought him into the room, where seeing so many people he hid his face on his mother's shoulder and would not look up. She sat down by Mrs Fry, who took no notice of him ; soon after she took a little box full of comfits out of her pocket, and held it out towards the child but looking the other way, and talking to the company. My mother whispered ' Look, Francis,' and the child seeing no one observed him, sat on my mother's knee looking at the comfits. By and bye, he slid down, seized a comfit and ran back ; Mrs Fry took no notice, ijnd he soon stood by her helping himself. She then gently lifted him upon her knee, taking no notice, when he soon began talking to her himself." His sister Adele's education, besides providing him with modern English poetry, taught him to appreciate the Iliad and Odyssey. Leonard Horner, paying a visit to Tertius Galton in 1828, would frequently question the little Francis about points in Homer. At last Francis grew weary of the cross-examination, and one day when the usual questioning began, replied : " Pray, Mr Horner, look at the last line in the twelfth Book of the Odyssey1," and ran oft'. So excited did he grow over the Iliad, that as a partizan of the Greeks he was known to burst into tears, when he came to the part where Diomed is wounded by Paris. Probably apart from poetry his sister Adele — a child herself— rather forced the pace. He knew his capital letters by 12, and both his alphabets by 18, months of age. He could read a little book Cobwebs to catch Flies when 2^ years old, and could sign his name before 3 years. I have before me his actual signature on January 10, 1825, as witnessed by his sisters Adele and Emma. From his fourth year a laconic letter2 has survived : 1 " But why rehearse all this tale ? For even yesterday I told it to thee and to thy noble wife in thy house: and it liketh me not twice to tell a plain-told tale." Butcher and Lang's version, p. 206. 2 A similar letter to his father, dated Sept. 26, 1826, thanks him for the gift of a toy. There is also a quaint little paper book containing two paper pages stitched in blue paper ; the first, second and part of the third side are occupied by two scripture texts written by Francis when four years old, but the remainder of the third and fourth side are filled in the same round hand with the remark : " Papa why do you call my books dirty that come f £om the Ware-house 1 I think they are very clean." P.O. 9 66 Life and Letters of Francis Galton " My dear Uncle we have got Ducks. I know a Nest. I mean to make a Feast." It is written between pencil lines in a round hand, and there is an endorsement by his mother Violetta, saying that Francis wrote and spelt it entirely himself. The day before his fifth birthday he wrote a letter to his sister Adele. The handwriting is now much more formed and the ruled lines have disappeared. He writes : MY DEAR AD^LE, I am four years old and I can read any English book. I can say all the Latin Substantives and Adjectives and active verbs besides 52 lines of Latin poetry. I can cast up any sum ill addition and can multiply by 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, [9], 10, [11]. I can also say the pence table. I read French a little and I know the Clock. FRANCIS GALTON. Feb^uary-15-1827. The only misspelling is in the date, which is corrected as indicated. The number 9 has been carefully erased with a penknife and the number 11 has a small square of paper pasted over it ! Little Francis was evidently conscious that he had claimed too much, but as ex- perience showed that penknife erasure tore the thin paper, the paste- pot was used to obliterate the second unjustly claimed multiplier ! In a letter written by a visitor to the Larches on December 28, 1828, we read: " We are both delighted with the girls particularly the two eldest — they are so pleasing and unaffected, and so very amiable. The youngest child Francis is a prodigy. He is 7 next February, and reads and enjoys Marmion, The Lady of the Lake, Cowper's, Pope's and Shakespeare's works for pleasure, and by reading a page twice over, repeats it by heart. He writes a beautiful hand, is in long division, has been twice through the Latin grammar, all taught by Adele. Bessy and Lucy are very modest girls with a constant habit of being employed." It is pleasant to catch this impression of an onlooker as to Francis Galton and his relatives written 85 years ago ! When he was in his fifth year his sister Adele thought it Childhood and Boyhood 67 desirable, as he had no children to play with at home, that he should go to school. He was accordingly placed under the care of a Mrs French who kept a school for 25 little boys about a mile from the Larches'. Here Francis distinguished himself from the beginning by being head- boy, although there were many several years older than himself. He remained at this school for three years, until he was eight years of age, and in the last half-year had daily private instruction from the Rev. Mr Clay, master at the Birmingham Free School. The good dame at the head of his school reported very highly of little Francis, and once added, " the young Gentleman is always found studying the abstruse sciences." This was probably a protest on his part against the over emphasis of Latin in small boys' education — a matter on which Galton wrote very strongly later (see p. 88). When he left this dame's school at 8| years of age, he had read and learnt the following books : Eton Latin Grammar, Delectus, Eutropius, Phaedrus' Fables, Ovid's Metamorphoses as far as the Medusa incident, and three- quarters of Ovid's Epistles. His mother, writing indeed of her Benjamin, in 1830, when he was leaving Mrs French's school, says : "Francis from his earliest age shewed highly honorable feelings. His temper, although hasty, bore no resentment and his little irritations were soon calmed2. His open candid disposition with great good nature and kindness to those boys younger than himself, made him beloved by all his schoolfellows. He was very affectionate and even sentimental in his manners. His activity of body could only be equalled by the activity of his mind. He was a boy never known to be idle. His habit was always to be doing something. He showed no vanity at his superiority over other boys, but pitied them, and said it was a shame their education should have been so neglected8." 1 The school was at Balsall Heath House, and four communications to Tertius Galton from his son have survived — a rough drawing of a suspension bridge with a ship passing under it, a more tidy drawing of a wooden shed or house, and a neat little painting of decorative sweet peas, and lastly a dated letter, June 1st, 1830, stating that the holidays would commence on the 19th, that he thought he had much improved in his Latin and Greek with Mr Clay : "I shall soon be in Greek Delectus and Sense verses, for you know that I have nearly done with Nonsense verses." 2 His mother once said to him at a somewhat later age : " Francis, how can you keep your temper as you do?" " I don't," he answered, "but I've found out a capital plan. I go to my room as soon as I can get away, and I beat and kick my pillow till I'm tired out, and by the time I've finished, my temper's all gone." He continued metaphorically " to beat his pillow " under great provocations in later life. 3 This is aptly illustrated by his great concern on going to Mrs French's because he thought that his mother would not let him remain at that school — the boys were so commonplace they had never heard of the Iliad or Marmion ! 9—2 68 Life and Letters of Francis Galton Such testimony from a mother might mean little had it been written when her son had reached distinction. But Violetta Galton appears to have written only thus of one son, and of him only before he was nine years of age. Did she see in her youngest son something of her father, or did her acquaintance with many men of marked intellectual ability enable her early to appreciate nascent signs of remarkable power? It must not be thought that Adele's scheme of education had not a modern side. Seeing how fond Francis was of natural history, she taught him a good deal of entomology, a study he became particularly fond of; and soon the boy's perseverance and activity in collecting insects were noteworthy1. He was also fond of studying the history of birds. Geology he was deeply interested in, and when he went with his mother on his second visit to Ramsgate in 1829, " he would entreat her to let the post-boy stop whenever he saw granite, or chalk or any mineral showing itself in the hills." Some idea of Francis' pursuits and interests can be found in a will he made, boy fashion, some few months before his departure to a school at Boulogne. It runs : I, Francis Galton of the Larches near Birmingham make this my last Will and Testament — I give to my dearest sister Adele for her great kindness in teaching me all my English Books, my Watch, and all my Compound Money and Collection of Beetles — 1 It is interesting to find in this very year when Adele was teaching Francis entomology a notice in the records before me of Charles Darwin. Mrs Wheler writes : " In September (1828) Lucy and I were invited to Osmaston for the Derby Music Meeting, but when the time came Lucy had one of her rheumatic attacks, and Emma went in her place. Catherine Darwin came to us from Shrewsbury and we travelled together. Charles Darwin joined us at Osmaston, and we were a merry party of cousins. ... William Fox was making a collection of butterflies, and Charles Darwin immediately began to do the same, and this was the beginning of his interest in collecting. He and William Fox struck up a friendship which continued all their lives." MS. Reminiscences, p. 113. Mrs Fox was the daughter of William Alvey Darwin, a brother of Erasmus Darwin. Charles Darwin was at this time 19 years of age, and in his Autobiography he tells us that his passion for collecting had been developed before 1817 (Life and Letters, I, p. 27). At that time Darwin was leaving Edinburgh and just going up to Cambridge, and he was already familiar with many men studying natural science. On the other hand Mrs Wheler's incident confirms what Darwin himself tells us (I.e. p. 51) : "I was introduced to entomology by my second cousin W. Darwin Fox, a clever and most pleasant man, who was then at Christ's College and with whom I became extremely familiar." XI.I ( IIARLKS DAHNVIN (1809—1882). In later life. From a photograph liy his sciii Major Leonard Darwin. CHARLKS IXMIU'IN (1809—1882). In early manhood. From a print in Mrs Wheler's MS. "The Galton Family." fe Plate XLII ERASMI s <;.\i;r<>.\ (isis— 1909). In liiw uniform as a " niidily," aged 13. Klder brother of I'Yanri* (ialton. See Gallon's }>. 10. Silhouette in the possession of Mr Wheler Ualtou at C.'laverdon. CliUdliood and Boi/lnnx! 69 'I'.. Bessy, my Minerals and Shells— To Lucy my Hygrometer and Desk — To Emma my Medals — To Darwin all my parchment and my share in Aab and Poss [? ponies] — Tn Erasmus my Bow, Arrows and Steel Pens — To Edward Levett Darwin1 [his cousin, son of Sir Francis Darwin] my Skates and latin and greek Books — I make my dearest sister Adele my Executrix. Signed, sealed and delivered by the within named \ Francis Gallon on the 14th day of February V FRANCIS GALTON. One thousand eight hundred and thirty Witness S. TERTIUS GALTON VIOLETTA GALTON. Francis Galton himself feared that the educational efforts of his sister Adele might have had a disastrous influence : "In middle life,'' he writes in his .Wi-morifn, p. 14, "I feared that I had been an intolerable prig, and cross-questioned many old family friends about it, but \v .-is invariably assured that I was not at all a prig but seemed to 'spout' for pure enjoy- ment and without any affectation ; that I often quoted very aptly on the spur of the moment, and that I was a nice little child." As a rule the presence of elder brothers and sisters, ready to do a little hustling and teasing when occasion requires, suffices in most cases to check any priggishness in the youngest member of a family. But there is another point from which the matter may be judged. Galton suffered in later years from occasional mental weariness, the effect of over-strain, and there is just a sad note in an answer his mother has preserved for us, given to his father who had been examining him in arithmetic when he was five years of age. Asked if he was not tired, he replied : " I am not tired of the thing, but of myself." It is possible that with an ambitious, mentally active boy8, such as Galton undoubtedly was — a boy who was easily ahead of his compeers in his first two schools — a little holding back would have been the more judicious course. There is a plaintive note too, with perhaps a deeper meaning 1 Edward Darwin went to school with Francis at Mrs French's. 2 When four years old Francis was observed to be very careful of every penny that lie received, and upon being questioned what he was saving for replied : "Why, to buy honours at the University." lie once also told his father on being asked what he would like most: "Why, University honours to be sure." The influence at work is not clear, the Gallons tlirni^-U rs did not spring from academically minded stock, and the University careers of his unrlrs Charles and Robert Waring Darwin were of tin- distant past. His cousin Charles h.-id not, yet gone to Cambridge. 70 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon in the phrase he used to mutter, at four years old, when his sister called him to lessons : "Oh stay thee, my Adela stay, She beckons and I must pursue." Still there is another side to the picture, and we note that at three years and a quarter the small Francis was able to trot, canter, and gallop upon a large Galloway. The Galtons certainly encouraged outdoor sports and exercises. In 1830 a great change came over Francis' life. Although only eight and a half years old his father determined to send him to a large boardino- school at Boulogne kept by a Mr Bury. It is difficult to appreciate now-a-days the motives which induced parents — in an age when the child death-rate was appalling even in the upper middle classes — to place quite young children in distant boarding schools. Francis Galton himself (Memories, p. 16) suggests that he was sent to Mr Bury's to acquire a good French accent. ' What I did learn was the detestable and limited patois that my eighty schoolfellows were compelled to speak under the penalty of a fine," and the final judgment he gives on this school with its apparently poor feeding, frequent birch- ings and bad supervision runs as follows : " The school was hateful to me in many ways, and loveable in none, so I was heartily glad to be taken away from it in 1832." Violetta Galton in her little record endeavours to assure herself of the happiness of Francis. He had left home on September 3, 1 830 with his father ; they had slept in London that night, and they had visited St Paul's and its dome next day. At 1 1 o'clock they em- barked on the " Lord Melville " steamer for Calais, where they arrived late at night. The next day they went by " The Telegraph " to Boulogne, and in the evening, after seeing the sights, his father left him at the school in the old Convent, close to what is now the Cathedral. Tertius Galton waited a week in Boulogne " to assure himself of the dear child's perfect happiness. He did not shed a tear, or seem at all uncomfortable at parting with his father, but to the last repeated how happy and comfortable he was, and how kind Mrs Neive, the housekeeper, and every- body was to him." So Violetta Galton tried to console herself, but she sat down and wrote the little record of her son which has been preserved to this day, and she placed at the front the silhouette, which I have reproduced — Childhood and Boyhood 71 the earliest portrait of Francis Galton. Before her also she doubtless had two of the three little packets which lie on my table as I writ-- this: the first is entitled, "Baby's Hair," a fine golden shade, the second " Baby's Hair, Fras. Galton " was preserved by his sister Emma Sophia, and is of a paler shade and probably earlier, and the last " Francis' Hair, 1829(?)," a bright light brown, must represent him much as he was in Boulogne. At the school he was placed in a high class, although the boys' ages ranged to fifteen. A collection of eight letters written from Boulogne were copied into a notebook by his sister Adele, and the originals of five of them have also been preserved. These letters are boyish letters, referring to the animals at home, his garden patch, the doings of his sisters and brothers, and of his grandfather at Duddeston. The letters are probably not quite characteristic, for I shrewdly suspect they were supervised by the master, who occasionally adds a footnote of his own, and in one case cross-writes a good deal of the note. Most of the letters begin with a statement that Francis is very happy at the school, but in later life Galton always spoke of his unhappiness there, and the reiterated statements of happiness and the kindness of the other boys do not seem spontaneous. Here are samples of these boyish letters : BOULOGNE SUR MEB, Saturday, 30th Oct., 1830. MY DEAR ADELE, I am very happy at School. The Boys are all pretty kind to me. I am growing very tall, and in better proportion, for I am just able to clasp my wrist. I am invited out every Sunday which I like very much. I was put in the third class a little while ago, because I was not able to keep up with them in lessons. I am reading a French book called Robinson, for I have just got out of the Grammar. I do Florilegium which I think is very hard in some places for they are taken out of the end of the Delectus, but some are very easy. I have not begun to learn either fencing or dancing — but I think I soon shall begin. Tell Emma to take great care of my garden, and to see that none of the sisters take any of my Hollyocks up, else I shall be in a most terrible rage when I come home. I like Cowper's Poems very much for there is at the end a very entertaining account of some Hares. I hope that the Pigs, Dogs, Horses and Cows are quite well. Please don't feed Ringwood so much if you think it will make him a bad Dog. Give my best love to Papa and Mama, Sisters, and to Grandpapa and Aunt Sophia, And believe me always, Your most affectionate Brother, FRANCIS GALTON. 72 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon A month later Francis writes : BOULOGNE SUE MER, Nov. 30, 1830. MY DEAR MAMMA, Thank you for your nice letters, but in your last letter you have no need to praise me for mine, for I had put nothing in it hardly, for I had but a quarter of an hour to write it in. When I said I was put in Robinson, I meant Robinson Crusoe, which I like pretty well. I hope you will come over soon here for I should like to see you, and to go out with you, for I miss dear Papa's greengages, which he used to give me when he was here Tell Papa to bring at least two bottles of caustic, for what you will hardly believe when I tell you that I have one hundred and forty-two little warts. Unfortunately I have had a cold which kept me from going out yesterday, and even I am now in the sick-room whilst I am writing this letter. I have been ill once before, last Saturday I could hardly speak, and yesterday which was a going out Sunday, I was kept in bed all day. I am getting on with my Latin pretty well, but now I must end my letter for its getting very dark. Good bye and believe me always Your most affectionate son, FRANCIS GALTON. In the next letter, we learn that little Frank, as he was called at home, had spent his Christmas vacation as he did the following Easter holidays at Boulogne. Nor had there been a parental visit. After the usual phrases about liking the school and the kindness of the boys, and spending the holidays very happily, Frank continues : " Please to tell Emma and Bessy to take the greatest care of my carnations, and other flowers, for when I come home, I shall expect to see about twenty roots — and please take up all the weeds that you can All my warts are gone off — except one that is remaining. Thank you for saying that you would keep a bit of caustic. My flannel drawers and waistcoats are very comfortable. I am very glad that you have left off being a Banker1, for you will have more time to yourself and better health. I must now leave off', so good bye, and believe me Always your affectionate Son, FRANCIS GALTON." The next letter preserved follows the Easter holidays, and Francis thanks his father for buying five shillings' worth of flower seeds for his garden. He notes also that it now will not be more than three months to the Midsummer holidays — when the precious garden and all the domestic pets from dogs to Alderney cows would again be actualities. 1 The Galton Bank was closed on May 31, 1831, and Tertius Gal ton removed at the end of this year from Birmingham to Leamington. Childhood and Boyhood 73 Frank returned home on June 30, and had only a clear day at home. On July 2 he went to the Colonnade House, Worthing, for the holidays. On August 31, Tertius Galton took his son up to London to join Mr Bury for Boulogne. In a letter three weeks later (Sept. 20, 1831) Francis announces his safe return to his mother. After the usual phrases as to the happy character of the school, Francis continues : " I arrived here very safely. It was very calm indeed I think, but all the other people thought quite the contrary. There was a very fine Newfoundland Dog, but he was very tame indeed. Almost all the women were seasick. I lost my Berth, but even if I had not, I would not have slept in it. When I was asleep we past the Hector (the sliip in which Captain Parry sailed to the northern regions), but when I awoke I found myself just opposite Gravesend. There were many Brigs and Frigates. One of them fired two guns, which I suppose was a salute. I did not see Sheerness, nor any three- deckers anywhere up the Thames. We past the Wellesley and the oUter ships at the Downs " The boy of nine was developing into a good traveller. The last letter but one of the Boulogne series may be given in full : \\th November, BOULOGNE, 1831. MY DEAR MAMA, Please will you send the desk1 which you gave me, by somebody that comes over here, or in anyway that you can, furnished well with wafers, sealing-wax, a gimblet (for mine is broken), a turn-screw, good paper like that which you write on to Erasmus and a little packet containing about twenty nails, and the same number of screws, with a file. All the wire is come off that chain which Adele bought me, so I am obliged to tie my keys to the buttonhole of my jacket by a piece of string. I have got the key of my playbox, which I quite forgot to tell you in my last letter. My Greek Lexicons have not become of great use to me, but I think they will soon, but I am always wanting my Classical Dictionary when I do my Virgil. I am quite well and I hope that you are also. I get better notes a great deal than I did last half-year, and am much happier. One of the Masters saw my candle in my desk which I brought last half, and he slyly took it away and put it on his desk, intending as I thought to keep it, but as soon as he was gone to the other end of the room, 1 sneaked it up and took it away and put it in my cap, — but alas ! he found it out, and I do not think I shall get it again ; so please add a Taper to the various articles and a pretty seal. Desks are so much in fashion this half, that there is hardly any big Boy that has not one. Send a quantity of pounded gum arable, as I cannot manage to get it here. Send in my desk 1 In the following letter he writes : " I am so desirous of having my desk, that I am making a very nice place to put it in, where no Boy can get, and I am always thinking of it." P. G. 10 74 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon with the other articles a great quantity of impressions of different seals, for a great many Boys are always asking me to give them the seals of my letters (as I have the most) for gum seals, which indeed are very pretty. I quite long to see my gallant desk arrive. Edward Fisher is not come to school. Schonswar is very kind to me, and he always gives me wafers when I want them, but now in the Even8 we are not allowed to stir from our places, and in the morning he is doing French. So good bye, and believe me, Your affectionate Son, FRANCIS GALTON. The last letter undated is written two weeks before the Christmas holidays, again to be spent away from home. Clearly Frank had heard of the coming change to Leamington. " I wish very much indeed" — he writes to his father — "just to go to Birmingham again and to see the Larches and Dudson — and other parts of Birmingham again." In the following year, when Frank came home for his holidays in June, he left Boulogne for good. But besides the change of home to Leamington, other marked changes occurred for the Galtons in 1832. Towards the end of January Grandmother Darwin — Elizabeth Collier — became ill and died on the fifth of February. She had always been a marked feature of the Galton circle. The visits to BreadsalJ Priory (see Plates XLIII and XLIV) were frequent1, and Grandmother Darwin's visits to Birmingham were much appreciated ; thus her death was a source of great sorrow to her grandchildren. She had had 12 children, 41 grandchildren and 28 great-grandchildren and at her death 60 descendants survived her. On the 10th of June of the same year Grandfather Galton also died ; he was buried in the Quaker ground at Bull Street. Thus the visits to Duddeston, made by the grandchildren hitherto two or three times a week, came to an end, and the influential Quaker element2 disappeared from their lives. With the death of his father Samuel, Tertius Galton — already a fairly wealthy man — became more so, and the future independence of the members of his family was assured. It was largely the wealth acquired by his grandfather Samuel Galton the second, that freed Francis Galton from any necessity 1 Francis with his father, mother and sisters had had a very happy visit there in 1827. One evening they got up a country dance, their grandmother Elizabeth Collier- then in her 80th year — joined in and heartily enjoyed it. 2 The influences were of an intellectual kind also. Tin; drawing room and dining room at Duddeston were large rooms, three sides of the latter and part of the former were lined with books of history, botany, natural history, poetry, etc., and the grand- children had the advantage of being allowed to borrow any book they liked. Plate XI.1I1 -, ! - '!'• . • ,*,k j •t-t IJ .= -~ \\ i 5. .2 o = 1 a! i g -c s T 2 C o » iS -c is ' < -S| S ^ I •a £ 3 i .= 3 •f "3 I"5 O it 1 I ~ -. • 2 s I /'////,- XL1V • \ BREADSALL < III'IK II. From a sketch. This Church contains tlie tuinlis of Krasnius Darwin and his widow (Kli/abeth Collier) with those of other members of the Darwin family. BRKADSALL I'KIORY. Purchased by Erasmus Darwin the Younger, afterwards occupied by Erasmus Darwin the Elder, and later by his widow. From a water-colour sketch at Claverdon. Plate XLV &£/. • & ' £ 1 J • ?/„_„. • i I .' I'lau of The Larches, the birthplace and home of Francis Galton's boyhood, with two inset aspects of the house. From a plan by Violetta Galton (nee Darwin). U'e see the road to Mrs French's school and the meadows where Charles Darwin rode and -licit with the Galton boys. Childhood and Boyhood 75 for following a profession, and knowing Samuel Gallon's character as we do' we may feel confident he would have approved his grandson's final disposition of a large portion of it. With his return from Boulogne the first period of Francis Galton's life closes ; his childhood is over and his boyhood begins. The letters we have quoted from these early years may appear to the reader to contain little of note. They are indeed just what a healthy normal child would write, but it is that very fact that makes them essentially human documents and gives them their fundamental interest. We rejoice to see that men who have laid their mark on their age are in constitution just such human beings as we ourselves and closely akin to the childworld with which we are all so familiar. Need we attempt to see signs of exceptional ability or to discover foreshadowings of future achievement in the outpourings of healthy childhood ? I do not think we can say more than that Francis Gal ton was a normal child with rather more than average ability, and that possibly only his mother, Violetta, realised instinctively that he was not just like the rest of her children. From plans and sketches of the Larches drawn by Violetta Galton and her daughters Bessy and Emma we are able to realise the home of Francis Galton's childhood, which appeared to him so delight- ful, not only from the distance of Boulogne, but from the distance of later life. The house was a spacious one three storied in front and five-windowed across, two tall larches2 overtopping the roof stood as sentinels right and left. Two wings went out from the rear, that on the left faced a garden with terrace leading to a summer house. This wing had a bay window, and made the house on this side also three storied and five-windowed across. The right-hand wing ran back to the stable and brewhouse, which had once been Priestley's laboratory. At the back of the house was a large yard terminating in poultry-, coach-, and pig-houses, with cow sheds leading directly to the fields, where the boys used to scamper about on their ponies. We see the very spot where "Ringwood" and his fellows were kept, and the archery ground, and wonder which out of the many flower borders was the patch tended by Frank, where his beloved hollyhocks and 1 See pp. 43—48. 2 Mrs Wheler in her Reminiscences says these trees were among the first larches brought to England. 10—2 76 Life and Letters of Francis Galton carnations flourished. Undoubtedly it was a spacious, pleasant home and one round which many childish memories would grow up still more spaciously and pleasantly (see Plate XLV). It is in the essence of childhood to have but one real ' home ' and we may question whether Galton ever felt to 44 Lansdowne Place, Leamington, as he felt towards the Larches. Francis, as we have seen, carne back at the end of June to England, and on July 11 following, a month after his grandfather's death, we find him on what was probably a last visit to Duddeston : MY DEAR PAPA, Last night I caught four perch and this morning I had much better luck for I caught in about the same time three perch and four roach. When I was corning to Nole a carriage arrived just before in which was a Lord ; as the servants were handing his wife out all of a sudden she fell on the pavement and was hurt very much indeed. I and Adele made a very good dinner on the biscuits which I brought with me. Good bye. Aunt Sophia sends her best love to all. F. Were the birds (see p. 41) still on the lake as Francis caught his fish ? Francis' reputation as a fisherman seems to have been a family joke, and two years later provoked a retort in sketch caricatures of a shooting expedition of his brother Darwin (see Plate XLVI). " DEAR DAR, so I hear that no horses were strained to death in carrying your game, but however I send you some caricatures below." The sketches are somewhat crude, giving little sense of Francis Galton's later power with his pencil. They open with Darwin giving instructions to Ben to provide a waggon with four strong horses to bring the game home, then we see Darwin in a gig with keeper and guns and three dogs. Thirdly comes the death of one dog, and the partridges' mocking flight, " Hee, Hee, Hee ! " Fourthly the arrival of the waggon and waggoner " I have brought the waggon and four stout horses." " Why I have only been able to kill my dog," says Darwin ; " however buy 1 hare and 6 brace of partridges and put them in the cart." The last picture represents the return of the sportsman to the family circle : " Well, what news ? " says Mamma. "Why, I couldn't kill anything but the dog, it must have been the fault of my gun ; but at the end I murdered 6 brace and 1 hare." Chorus: " Hum, bad Carpen- ters always complain of their Tools." Papa : " Who was it I saw buying partridges for one Darwin Galton ? " Plate XLVl KKASMI S DARWIN (1731—1808). (iramltather of Charles Darwin mill Francis (ialton. From a painting by Wright of Derby. DARWIN GALTON (1814—1903). Kldest brother of Francis (ialton as sportsman. From a picture by Oakley at Claverdon. See p. 7». Childhood and Boyhood 77 " You see it is now tit for tat, the birds are not more afraid of you than the fish are of me. Hope Delly1 is well, give my love to all. Good bye. F. GALTON V After the home was transferred to Leamington, Francis was sent to school at the Rev. Mr Atwood's, who was Vicar of Kenilworth. This was a small private school with about half a dozen boys. Atwood was a relative of the inventor of Atwood's machine, a man who, to quote Galton's own words, " without any pretence of learning, showed so much sympathy with boyish tastes and aspirations that I began to develop freely3-." At this school Galton came in touch with the two Boulton boys, Mathew P. Watt and Hugh William, grandson of Boulton of the Lunar Society and the close friend of Samuel Galton, Wedgwood and Erasmus Darwin. Mathew Boulton became an intimate friend of Francis Galton, and one of the inspiring influences of his life4. At Atwood's school carpentry and turning appealed to Francis' special and boyish instincts. Bird trapping, slings, archery, cricket helped to fill up the time. But he had got even beyond this, the summer holidays had been spent at Aberystwith and he had shot with a gun for the first time. Half a dozen Kenilworth letters have survived. The first shows us that Mr Atwood did not fail to mingle a spice of theology with his other teachings : December 30, 1832. MY DEAREST PAPA, It is now my pleasure to disclose the most ardent wishes of my heart which are to extract out of my boundless wealth in compound6, money sufficient to make this addition to my unequalled Library The Hebrew commonwealth by John A Pastor advice Hornne's commentaries on the Psalms Paley's evidence on Christianity Jones' Biblical Cyclopoedia 9 2 4 2 10 27 All books much approved of. 1 Adele. 2 Letter to Darwin Galton, Sept. 8, 1835. 3 Memories, p. 19. 4 I.e., p. 20. 8 This and the reference in the Will, p. 68, suggest that Tertius Galton had put by certain monies for Francis at compound interest. 78 Life and Letters of Francis Galton Francis' spelling and writing do not improve, and this confirms my view of much supervision at Boulogne ; but all things become freer and more natural. On February 7, 1833, Francis writes : DEAREST PATER, I wish you would send me as soon as possible three boards just like those which you gave me to carpenter upon on for very particular circumstances and send them as quick as possible. I intend to direct the letter to Adele for fear if Pater should not be at home you may keep it for him the directions for the size are about 1 inch in thickness and a foot in breadth F. G. [Miss A. Galton, No. 44 Lansdowne Place, Leamington.] When capitals and all stops disappear that boy is full of his own ideas and supremely happy ! The Boulogne statements as to " happi- ness " have wholly vanished, and Francis is really happy. Again : MY DEAREST FATHER, I have enclosed this note to Mrs Yard (?) as you desired me and I also hope that you will put its direction on it as I do not know it. Please ask Dely to send one rat of those steel iron traps like the one in which you caught your fingers with teeth and tell her I will discharge the immense sum of Is, 3d at the Easter Holidays. FRANCIS GALTON. And again : MY DEAREST PATER, Please would you let me stay here till next Tuesday because I think that I could [learn a] deal more at [?from] Mr Churchill than otherwise for he teaches famously. I have no more time to write so Good bye, FRANCIS GALTON, alius Snog, Lord Torment and Tease. When a boy asks to stay longer when the Christmas holidays are arriving in order presumably that he may "learn a deal more" all must be well with him ! Who Mr Churchill may have been, I don't know1, but no man ever received a higher testimonial to his teaching. The Christmas holidays of 1833 had been memorable in the Galton annals. An attempted robbery was made at Lansdowne Place, only to be consummated some weeks later. Francis Galton gave an account of the event 65 years afterwards: Possibly a teacher of chemistry, for according to another memorandum Francis began to study chemistry at this time, but the teacher is said to be French. Childhood and Boyhood 79 "I was at home during the Christmas Holidays when an attic was my bedroom. Awaking one morning before daylight, when a faint light came from the street lamps, I saw vaguely, the dark form of a man, standing by my licdside, but saw very clearly the white blurs made by his face and hands, for he was on the side opposite the window. Still it was impossible to be sure of the reality. I was but a small boy, in so great a terror that my tongue refused to artinulate properly, when I tried to speak. Then with a great effort, I sprang out of bed and pushed at the figure. My hand came against the body of a man. Forthwith I pulled the bedclothes over my head, expecting every moment to be stabbed through the counterpane. Thus I lay in agony until the day broke and light coming through the clothes made it seem safe to look out. When I told my story at breakfast, I was laughed to scorn, they said it was a nightmare, but I knew better1. The robbery took place a few days later, when I had returned to school and the attic was empty. The thieves gained access through that room, entering through the window from the roof and leaving the dirty marks of the slippers they wore all about the floor. The servants then said that similar marks but fewer of them, hail been seen the morning after my adventure. My conclusion was that the man by my bedside, was a reality and no dream, and that he had entered, it might be merely to prospect the premises, believing that the attic was vacant, more probably that he came with the intention of making the theft, but finding the attic occupied and fearing an alarm, he decamped, to return on another occasion, when assured that the occupant of the room was gone. He doubtless heard through an accomplice servant that no credit had been given to my tale. FRANCIS GALTON, Sept. 2, 1898." In this robbery at Lansdowne Place Francis lost his watch2, and the accompanying letter received March 1, 1834, reminds his mother that a year has sped without a new watch. MY DEAREST MATER, I now write this letter to you on particular business to remind you of some- thing which although you may have forgotten is still as fresh as possible in my memory which is that a few days after the robbery (the day of which was yesterday) you did, for the purpose of solacing and comforting me on account of the watch, faithfully promise that if that said article was not discovered another exactly similar to that 1 An almost identical incident occurred to the present writer as a child of nine, except that the man — lunatic or sleepwalker — was seated on the edge of the bed and visible in the moonlight that fell on him from the open window. I recollect keenly to this day, the effort to test the reality and the solidity of the man, then the hours of torture under the bed-clothes, to be told it was a nightmare, but I too knew better, though no demonstration of its reality ever came to justify me! 2 In the police advertisement : £50 Reward, Robbery of Jewels etc., February 23, 1833, we read among other things: "a small silver French Hunting Watch, supposed to have F. G. engraved upon the Back." It is probable that this watfch was a present from Francis' grandfather Samuel, from whom a nice letter is still extant to his son Tertius ; this letter covered a draft to purchase watches for the grandchildren. 80 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon should fill up my watch-pocket and as the aforesaid article has not been found in the hands of anybody I do assuredly hope and expect that the next time my foot shall cross the threshold of No. 44 a silver watch shall be given into the hands of me. Herein fail not. I have been going on with my chemistry very hard and please give a thousand thanks to a-an/p for Turner since it is of a deal of use to me. As the sole import of this letter is to remind you, mammy, of the watch I have nothing else to say so good bye Tut Squagde. One more letter, written to his sister just before the summer vacation to be spent at Weymouth, and the happy days at Kenilworth come to an end. [Before June 12, 1834.] MY DEAR AD£LE, I think that when you write to me you might possibly remember to put where you live for the letter that you last sent to me had not the direction in it so that when I come to Weymouth I shall not know where to go unless you write. (Please don't read the following loud but let it be secret. Coax Pater as much as you can to get me a gun and ask him when he is not at all in a.black humour and I leave the rest of it to yourself.) I hope that Poddy has quite recovered her fright arid is much better and I wish I had been there to enjoy the fun1. I wish that you had not gone to Weymouth for you said in your last letter that it was a large place which makes it as bad as even Brighton. Try and get a great many eggs of rare sorts but not of the common for I have a great many of them and cover them with rather weak gum and water instead of blowing them and try and learn their names. I am coming on the 19th and are there many places for fishing Atwood is gone out for three days and Hugh Williams goes on the 12th. Good bye and remember what I asked you. FRANK GALTON. Fishing, birds'-nesting, possibly I fear shooting sea-birds, such were the occupations of Frank's summer holiday. Soon after his return home a new school was found for him. Tertius Galton retained the Quaker dislike of public school education and he still held to the Birmingham tradition. Had the former been based on the perception that a classical education was idle for Frank, it had been justified, but he sent him into the centre of a big town — to obtain a suitable education as its justification ? No ! to obtain precisely the classical drilling which at least he would have obtained under healthier environ- ment in several public schools. It is remarkable to look now on the 1 I think this must refer to the following incident : Mr Galton had purchased horses for his daughters to ride, and when two of them were out passing the barracks, the drums began to beat, and one of the steeds bolted with its mistress into the barrack yard and took its place at the head of the regiment — it was an old troop-horse. Childhood and Boyhood si intellectual activity of Birmingham, on Priestley, Watt, Boulton, Samuel Galton, and their association with the Wedgwoods and Darwins, and realise that no attempt was made to free Birmingham from the trammels of mediaeval education. Samuel the first had indeed sent his son to Warrington Academy to study under Priestley and Enfield, but the younger generation, the sons and grandsons of the men, who had made Birmingham and their great fortunes out of Birmingham, fell back into the old theological and educational ruts. It is one of the most interesting chapters in the life of Francis Galton to read on the one hand the letters of Dr Jeune, headmaster of King Edward's School, Birmingham1, then called the Free School, to Tertius Galton, and compare his views on education with those of his pupil Francis Galton, a boy in his teens ! Galton lived in Dr Jeune's house at Edgbaston, and walked daily through a mile of streets to school and back. He started with ill luck, for some weeks after going on Jan. 26, 1835 to the school, he was invalided home and the attack proved to be one of scarlet fever. Francis had been in the doctor's hands in the previous Christmas vacation and was possibly specially receptive, and the attack undoubtedly left him languid and inert. The epidemic was a severe one, for the headmaster wrote that he felt convinced by his late fatal experience that however disguised it might be by other symptoms it would turn out as in every recent instance an attack of scarlet fever. "It is a subject of congratulation rather than of regret that he should have undergone the trial, as the complaint I understand never returns." Little Johnny Booth, stepson of Galton's aunt, Adele Booth, who had been at Boulogne with him, and then gone to the Free School died from the fever. The life of another boarder was despaired of for some days. We have indeed to remember that we are back in the days when healthy children were put to bed with one that had the measles, in order that they might " get through them." When Francis got back after Easter, he was far behind his classmates and he was removed from the second into the third class at his own desire. Probably he never properly recovered from this Dr Jeune afterwards became successively Dean of Jersey, Master of Pembroke College, Oxford, and Bishop of Peterborough. He was a man of distinction and had a distinguished son. He was only 28 when he went to Birmingham, and he remained there from 1834 to 1838 just the time of Galton's career in the school. At Oxford he was a reformer, and, perhaps, his experience at Birmingham was of value to him later, p. G. 11 82 Life and Letters of Francis Gait on throw-back in his school work. Writing before the attack to his father on February 2, 1835, for his foils, he appears fairly cheerful : "I am very happy here, and we have everything almost we could wish. We do an immense deal of work hut nevertheless I should like to fence as we should have quite 3 quarters of an hour to ourselves after fencing for an hour on half-holidays. All this week there have been only two boys caned and none flogged they are in such capital order, but the rules are pretty strickt [sic!] and the Doctor does not allow us to make a mistake in our Grammar." But this tone of commendation very soon ceased. Of the rest of this year we have no further records in letters, but we know that the summer vacation was spent at Castle House, Aberystwith — the second visit to that place ; that the mode was shooting — in which sea-gulls and water wagtails met their fate. Here too Dr Jeune was invited to come for a few days' change — not wholly to the satisfaction of Francis— and the family learnt how a very clever man may be ignorant of every- day customs1. One day in July the family was alarmed by hearing that a mad bull had got loose and was tearing round the town. He had tossed a small man onto the top of a fish -stall. "We all went out in front of our house, which was enclosed and so quite safe, to watch. Just under our wall was a flight of six or eight steps, and some children were seated on them. The bull rushed by, clearing the whole steps, children and all, without hurting them, and rushed towards the sea, the men following him with pitchforks only made him worse, and he darted into the sea and swam away. The butcher not wishing to lose him got a boat and rowed after him. The poor beast thoroughly tired, allowed them to put a rope round him and tow him back, when he dropped down on the sands unable to stir. The butcher went to get something to put an end to him, when, on his return, the bull jumped up and charged him. Away scampered the man and it was some time before the bull was caught, I think he was shot at last for no one dared go near him. Francis drew a caricature of 'All the Taffies put to flight by one John Bull,' and showed it to our Welsh cook, who was very angry with him. She had offended him by throwing away some rooks he had shot, instead of making them into a rook-pie, so he had taken this means of punishing her" (Mrs Wheler's Reminiscences, p. 192). Returning home Darwin drove Francis back in a "dogcart out- rigger." The servants went by coach, which was overturned at Bewdley Francis went to Aberystwith in May— probably to recuperate — and we find him on May 20, 30 and June 1 sending with brief letters to Dr Jeune long translations from Cicero, Greek exercises, translations of the Medea, Latin verses, etc., and asking the Doctor to forward his Donnegan, Ains worth, and Lempriere. Clearly the terrible Doctor and his classical torments followed him into his Welsh holiday! Childhood and Boyhood 83 Bridge, the maids escaping but the butler being injured. The family usually posted, sometimes in their own carriage '. It is worth recording that the first mechanical design of Francis that lias been preserved dates from July 17, during this Aberystwith stay. It is entitled: "Francis Galton's Aerostatic Project, 17 July, 1835." It represents a flying machine with five passengers, a pilot and (?)an engineer. It was apparently designed to work by rather large flapping wings, with a sort of oscillating steam-engine. The mechanism of the flapping indicated in two additional rough sketches is not very clear. I do not know how far it was suggested by his Grandfather Erasmus' lines on air-ships2. The only record of the autumn of this year is a letter from Dr Jeune of August 26, reporting the marked throw-back in Francis' educational progress due to his illness. He reports him, however, in excellent health and spirits with a good appetite, and notes that his vigour in cricket and football promise well for the continuance of his health. From the beginning of 1836, however, we have a small pocket diary. It is full of the frank outpourings of a, very healthy boy, who has clearly no one to guide his tastes and sympathies. I shall give a few extracts : Saturday, Jan. 2. Took Pincher with a cord and Crab and Game a walk. Darwin came back from Brum. I went to the Younge's party, pretty good tuck. Monday, Jan. 4. Went to shoot at Claverdon, killed a partridge. Went to Wood's party. Friday, Jan. 7. Invited to Mrs Proby, did not go. Went hunting, pony fell over me and hurt my leg ; they had a run of an hour and 10 minutes. Wednesday, Jan. 13. Thawed. Went to Mr Curtis who gave me some feathers, and taught me a good deal about artificial flies. Thursday, Jan. 14. Had a dinner party ; the Dr3 came here, much against my liking. Wednesday, Jan. 20. The old Dr went away with Dar to Brum. I walked out with Jones to fire my cannon. 1 Earlier when Grandfather Galton took his family to Tenby, in Wales, he used to hire the only two hackney carriages in Birmingham to take part of his party. " Or on wide-waving wings expanded bear The flying-chariot through the fields of air. Fair crews triumphant, leaning from above, Shall wave their fluttering kerchiefs as they move ; Or warrior-bands alarm the gaping crowd, And armies shrink beneath the shadowy cloud." The Botanic Garden, Canto i, 1. 291. " There seems no probable method of flying conveniently but by steam or some other explosive material, which another half century may probably discover." Note to 1. 254. Dr Jeuue. 11—2 > 4 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon Monday, Jan. 25 is called " black Monday " and framed in blacl- border, because of return to school. Tuesday, Jan. 26. The Dr flogged a chap. The Dr's father was buried. Friday, Jan. 29. Got 50 lines of Virgil for going down to school in the evening without Earp's1 permission, which he called an insult to his dignity. Saturday, Jan. 30. A bit of a row at school got 30 lines from Gedge* for throwing chewed paper at the fellows' heads. The dame3 tremendously cross. Sunday, Jan. 31. The dame pretends she's half dead with a headache. Monday, Feb. 8. Got an imposition for knocking down an umberella (sic!). Tuesday, Feb. 9. The Dr in a tremendous rage, because I let a chap copy his exercise from me. Wednesday, Feb. 10. The Dr came upstairs after we had gone to bed and caught us making a row ; gave the chaps he caught tremendous impositions. Thursday, Feb. 11. Got half the syntax to write out for not being able to say my lesson. Dr very sulky. Friday, Feb. 12. Dame received a valentine, which told her that she liked a pot of beer, which I think is pretty true. Friday, Feb. 19. Saw a stuffed cat with 6 legs 4 ears 2 tails and one eye. The rest of February, while well tilled with notices of imposition and " tremendous rows " with the Doctor and Earp, is also noted by young Jeune and another boy getting the small-pox. Most of the boys went home, but Thursday, Feb. 25. Saw Pater who told me I was not to go home, which I did not much like only 2 left(f) in the 1st class. March shows the same round of severity : Tuesday, March 15. One boy was expelled and another flogged. Thursday, March 17. Dukes was expelled. Saturday, March 19. Took a walk to Edgbaston park. Earp bought a swing for us, to put which up we had to cut away some shrubs ; we expect a row. Sunday, March 20. Foe preached. The Dr made a tremendous row about the swing and said that it should be taken down. Monday, March 21. The swing was taken down. We set up some leaping posts. Tuesday, March 22. The Dr caught us looking over our books at school, a tremendous row. One of the blagards gave 1 a crack in his face4. Saturday, March 26. Bought a cat's gallows. Got caned. Monday, Mar. 28. Got caned. Good Friday, Api-il 1. We were made to fast, but we went over to the grubshop and got plenty. Saturday, April 2. The Doctor did not go round with his cane. 1 Presumably an usher at the Doctor's house. • Francis' form master. 3 Presumably the matron. There were continual fights with the street boys of the roughest kind. Childhood and Boyhood 85 Wednesday, April G. 1 was examined by Gedge in mathematics, the examiners were Cramer, Johnstorfe and Mery vale (?). Thursday, AprUT. Was examined in classics. I was 2nd in class. Tom I 'rice got the prize. Bates and Holmes accesserunt. Came home. After return to school the rather unedifying life begins again : Monday, April 18. I knocked a fellow down for throwing a brick at inc. Tuesday, April 19. I thrashed a snob for throwing stones. Wednesday, April 20. One of the boys bought a half-crown trumpet which made a tremendous row. Thursday, April 21. We bought a birch pro bono publico for 15 shillings. Friday, April 22. A tremendous row in the streets, on account of a blaguard thrashing one of our boys. Monday, April 25. Saw the 1st swallow this year. Tuesday, April 26. Got 30 lines of Virgil. Wednesday, April 27. Got 20 lines of Virgil. Tuesday, May 3. Got the syntax to write out for drawing a picture of a race. Sunday, May 8. Arnold preached. A fellow gave me a thrashing in the street. During the period May 2 — 20 measles broke out in the school, and Galton appears to have been ill and some days staying away from school. Possibly he had a mild attack. On the 20th " mater " wrote to ask for Francis to come home for Whitsuntide. But he is soon back again at the old round : Thursday, May 26. Got an imposition in algebra to do for Gedge. Monday, May 30. Turner became a day boy, because he had not sufficient attention shewn him. Tuesday, May 31. A complaint in the Journal on account of the Dr sometime ago, setting a boy 100 lines for talking. Friday, June 10. The Dr took away a knife which I had bought with Pater's tip the day before. Thursday, June 16. Fletcher knocked the cricket-ball into the ivy and lost it. The Dr was black as charcoal. Friday, June 17. Had to bring up a tremendous imposition to the Dr. Tuesday, June 21. The Dr stayed at home, so we could not have any bolstering or fighting. Came home by the Regulator. The summer holidays seem to have been spent at home ; the weather was very hot — 85° in the sun. Darwin had bought a pony, and the new pony and the old were driven tandem. Francis went to stay with his sister Lucy (Mrs Moilliet), and shot thrushes and even a swallow (" 1st shot"), and caught perch and other fish. Later in the holidays he is shooting rabbits. This holiday also records : Monday, J/i/y 1 8. Went to Stourbridge in the gig with Pater to see the locomotive engine. 86 A/A 'ii"f I'i'lti'i'* <>!' W, 'tin' *ili< i/, Jiil;/ '20. \\Ynt tu Kenilworth to see a new school opened, and electrified the cat and girls. •• //, July 22. Went with Emma to Kenilworth to sketch: On August 8 Francis goes back to school, anji the old state of warfare is resumed. On the 1 1th the impositions' begin ; then the boys go to bathe in the canal, but the Doctor stt>ps it, and they go to Ladywell bath. August 22 and 23 there are further impositions ; on August 24 Hawkins gets thrashed. Sept. 1st Galton took a walk in the evening by French leave, but was seen by the servants. Sept. 7 and 10 there are impositions, and on the 9th Galton is nearly thrashed by the Doctor for not knowing his lesson. Sept. 12 there is another imposition, but perhaps consolation in the record that the cat has run away with one of the partridges presented to the Doctor ! Saturday, Sept. 17. Walked out, had an imposition. Dr in a black humour. Sunday, Sept. 18. Had cider for dinner. I think the Dr is getting rid of it, for it tasted very sour. Tuesday, Sept. 20. A row between Hawkins and the blackguard ; had two chases after him, but at last lost him. Wednesday, Sept. 21. Lines missed for the 1st time since he [?the Dr] has come to the school. Thursday, Sept. 22. Was too late for school got an imposition. For change on Sept. 27 there was a "regular row" with the dame, and so through the months of October, November and December we have the usual round of boyish pranks and punishments, inter- spersed with touches of more general interest, e.g. Oct. 20 " The gas was lighted for the first time," and Oct. 21 "The gas all of a sudden went out. Got 40 lines." While on Oct. 22 "We walked to see the railroad ; had some fun, was not in time for breakfast." On the 27th of October Francis sends a very piteous letter to his sister Adele : MY DEAR ADELE, Thanks for the paper. I have not been able to write on account of the hard work and many impositions I have lately had— 30 one day and 10 pages of Gk. grammar to write out, the next 40, and the next 40, so that I have not had the least time. Another boy has left and is believed to be in a consumption. Indeed I never knew such an unhappy and unlucky school as this ; 2 more will leave at Christmas, and I would give anything if I could leave it too. There has been a great row about some chaps getting books from a neighbouring circulating library, one book the Dr cribbed and another Earp threw into the fire, and some of us were called into the study, and he accused us, telling the greatest story possible but luckily he was found out in most of Childhood and Hoyhood 87 them (sic). I do not like the Dr taking our class at school, he expects the grammar said more perfectly than we can, it only 94°. Are you aware that when the temperature of the air exceeds that of blood heat it is apt to be trying?' (I could quite believe it !) By and bye he asked uie whether it would not be pleasant to wash our face and hands? I certainly thought so, but did not see how it was to be done. Then, with perfect simplicity and sublime disregard of appearances and of the astounded looks of the other occupants of our compartment, a very much 'got-up' Frenchman and two fashionably dressed Frenchwomen, he proceeded to twist his newspaper into the shape of a washhand basin, produced an intinitesimally small bit of soap, and poured some water out of a medicine-bottle, and we performed our ablutions. I fear I was too self-conscious to enjoy the proceedings, but it never seemed to occur to him that he Was doing anything unusual ! " It needed African travel to enable Francis Galton to throw off a certain self-consciousness ; I have heard acquaintances, who knew perhaps little of his true simplicity and his width of toleration when intellectual values were under consideration, speak of him as conven- tional. He belonged, indeed, to an old-fashioned school, which liked good manners, which preferred its women to be pretty and dress gracefully, and which appreciated without worshipping the conveniences of wealth. But these conventional things were for him but grease to the wheels 'of life, to be put aside, whenever they interfered with the greater aims of existence. He might not have found it as easy as W. Kingdon Clifford did, to call in at the butcher's and walk home with a leg of mutton under his arm, but assuredly if "Universe" were to be solved on the homeward walk, he would have kept Clifford company regardless of the joint. Francis Galton's conventionality in boyhood and youth was largely shyness and self-consciousness — in manhood it was a traditional courtliness not without its protective advantages, and wholly disappearing before the warmth of his affection, when acquaintance had ripened into intimate friendship. Our youthful travellers voyaged down the Thames and across to Antwerp, thence to Brussels, Mechlin and Liege (see Plate XLIX). Many of the letters to his father Tertius tell us of the usual travellers' sights, the churches, the pictures and museums, but occasionally we pass to things more suggestive, as the ornithological and geological collections at Brussels, and then to the first pleasures of the Rhine, arid of the strangeness of foreign life. " I really am quite full of obligations to you for letting me take this trip. I have been as happy as possible. You must excuse my writing longer letters, as after being out all day, coming into the coffee-room tired, you are stupefied with baccy smoke puffed out of the mouths of some CO people. Then writing a long journal, it is rather tiring." Plate XLIX i ... Sketch l>y Francis (ialton of the Bishop's Gateway at Liege. Visited 18S8. Lehrjahre and Wawlerjalirr !i.~> The " tags " to his sisters (see Plate L) follow as usual : " DEAR EMMA, since I wrote the first part of this letter I have been sketching most tremendously — I took 33 drawings in the space of 4 hours or so in going from Bonn to Ooblentz. I have taken also a great many others. I am so very tired, that good bye and believe me ever your affectionate F. Galton. DEAR BESS, I have duly kept your precepts in mind about the immeasurable superiority of Englishmen. 1 have not looked out yet for vellum for you, because of carrying it such a distance. DEAR DELLY, I am very glad I did not bother my head with Dutch lingo. Get 20 phrases in your head, and in a few weeks you will speak German like a house on fire. Give my love to Erasmus and Darwin. Good bye, FRANCIS GALTON." In several towns the hospitals are visited. In Frankfort we read : "They say that this is a very clean hospital, but I never fully appreciated the value of fresh air till I found myself without its wards." Then followed Darmstadt : " Looked up the Museum ; the ja wlwne of the Dudotherium and all that sort of fossil nonsense (!) " Then to Heidelberg and on to Stuttgart and Augsburg with the Danube and Vienna as goal. Francis writes very patriotically; he is thoroughly enjoying himself, but his mind is expanding : "There is certainly nothing more useful than travelling. The more you seethe more you are convinced of the superiority of England. However nothing can be so admirable as a German or Frenchman who loves his country ; it must be a great and genuine patriotism to be able thus to prefer it I wish you were there to see all the beautiful scenery we have passed through. The views were by far the most splendid I have ever seen. The architecture is very curious there is a great deal of the old Roman style. I have never seen a perfect building of that style in England." And again of Cologne Cathedral, "it is most splendid...! never saw anything like it in England." Francis had yet to learn that the existence of patriotism is not contingent on the possession of the best ! In Heidelberg there was also experience of first class medical ability : "Tiedermann a top-sawyer of the medical line and a whole quantity of others. There was also a Dr Cobalt to whom we had letters of introduction, a doctor who has made himself celebrated by transferring a wax candle (without the wick)from a candlestick into some holes in a skull i.e. as M.D.'s would call it, injecting the veinous system of the bones with wax (I think that is the phrase)." In a letter from Munich we see that Francis has now to excuse his coming conversion to Bessy. "DEAK BESSY, I always keep your precepts in mind, but after all the Germans are not so bad. Remember that as you told me the Hanoverians are our cousins, and the other states are brothers to them, and so they are related to us. Also smoking is not 96 Lif<' find Letters of Francis Gallon their nature— for had it gone by blood, it would have descended through the female HUP which is not the case...." Then after attributing most of their faults to smoking, Francis continues : "So evidently their nature is good but unfortunately much spoilt. And their Eilwagen— their jolting is awful. N.B. (Don't read this aloud) I have got one boil and two blisters in such awkward positions that when sitting back I rest upon all three ; when bolt upright on two, and when like a heron, I balance myself on one side upon one !!! My feet are in a worse predicament having 3 blisters besides two agricultural crops. This is all from their Eilwagen or Diligences. Next time I go abroad, I shall most certainly get my mackintosh double behind and blow it up like an air cushion.... I am getting more contrite about not learning the lingo. I certainly shall next time." Then from Munich through the Tyrol, and the Bavarian light blue and white colours — "trop tendre" for national colours as a Frenchman observed to Francis — are replaced by the yellow and black, the "awful Austrian stripe." " But it was to be gone through, accordingly the coach stopped before the bar, when out popped an Austrian officer with mustachios like sweep's brushes looking thunder and lightning. ' Kein Tabac' growled or rather roared the officer in interrogation (Tobacco is an imperial monopoly). Three ' Kein Tabacs ' followed each other uttered in a most submissive tone of voice from us, like the echoes of Oberwessel. The officer's eyes flared. He pointed to the luggage, down in the twinkling of an eye it came and was opened. He looked awful at my green bags with black strings, in which two or three dirty shirts were esconced, and terrible at the other luggage ; he made signs that every thing must come out, when in the moment 3 Zwanzigers (a coin about lOrtf.) touched his hand — a galvanic shock seemed to thrill his whole system. The sour of his disposition, like the acid in Volta's pole seemed only to increase the change. The flare of his eye changed in an instant to a twinkle, the baggage was shut up and the officer fell into a ' paroxysm of bows ' and away we drove. Got into Linz at 3 in the morning of the 26th and at 7 we were steaming down the Danube in one of the early voyages of steamers on this part." Again there is a fraternal "tag" to this first Vienna letter: " DEAR BESSY, You will be glad to hear for the honour of our country that the steamers on the Danube like those on the Rhine are all worked by English Engineers, and the orders all given in English." In Vienna Dr Seligmann took our travellers the round of the hospitals1 and museums : 1 In his letters from Vienna Francis does not mention the incident of the young and buxom female lunatic, who, on a visit to the asylum female ward, rushed forward and clasped him tightly to her bosom as her lost Fritz! (Memories, p. 25). He was probably too shy to record it then. Plate I. II < 2 C J < =5 /'{ill,- I, III* ELIZABETH ANNE GALTON (1808—1000), "Sister Bessy." l-'riini a painting liy Eastoti of 1844 in the possession of Mrs T. J. A. Studdy. Lehrjahre and Wanderjaliro !»7 " He has shewn us everything. Tell Bessy that after all some of these Germans are not a had sort of fellows." The route now turned northwards to Prague, Dresden and Berlin. Saxon Switzerland was a disappointment as the Danube had been. From Berlin he gives Sister Bessy a quaint account of his medical comrades : " DKAE BESSY, The boils have subsided without the salt water, but thanks for the receipt. However I must tell of some specimens of professionally in my two com- panions. My foot has been unfortunately exactly like Erasmus' at Weymouth ; that is the nail of the large extremity thereof (which I will call eot for the same reason that you designated part of my fishing tackle tug) most perversely grew in the side causing inflammation. I happened to mention this to them ; a smile of conscious professional power illumined the face of one, a grin of delight that of the other. Both readily profferred their services, and as a backer Russell whipped out a bag containing 2 lancets, 1 spatula, a pot of ointment, a pair of surgical scissors, bandages enough and to spare for any compound fracture, 2 boxes of blue pills, lint, and a sewing up needle. He deposited these in succession on the table, adjusted his spectacles and smiled serenely. However as my foot pained me dreadfully, I made up my mind, and contrary to Gil Bias, accepted the Senior hand of Bowman. Russell disappointed retreated. Well, at last I found myself seated, the sick member was bared, Bowman, sleeve tucked up, advanced scissors in hand. The reflected light from the instrument looked awful. He made a most beautiful circular twist of the hand for what earthly reason I do not know, and brought the scissors to their former place. He then examined my eot, shook his head, ejaculated: 'Bad, — very. Russell, have you a pair of forceps?' 'No' was the response. The two heads were now brought together to discover a substitute for the instrument in question ; at last a bent pin was found to answer. Accordingly Russell had to hold the flesh back, and away went Bowman, — wrenching up the nail, then cutting it snip-snap all round, I writhing. However I could not help laughing at the operators. It was a splendid sight. And to do them justice all pain has gone away " [Sunday Sept xvi. 1838, Berlin]. Galton came home via Hamburg and Hull and his letter to his father from Kirk Ella where he paid a flying visit to the family friends, the Broadleys, may be cited at length : Tuesday [Sept.] 25, 1838. KIRK ELLA. MY DEAU GOVERNOR, I had not room in my last letter to tell you all the news so I will now commence. After leaving Hamburg where we saw old costumes, old canals, cathedrals etc., etc. we had the screws of the boiler get wrong, which caused a delay of about 3 hours. We were then just too late for the tide and stuck on a sandbank where we had to wait for the tide. We accordingly got the ship's boat and rowed to the Danish shore where we rambled about four hours. After that we were too late to be able to see our way at the mouth of the river, where we had to spend the night. Next day we 13 98 Lift- /ii<-ki/n/ird, but you do not become intimate with him, which I am glad to see as I shall be much under him." On Nov. 10 we have an amusing account of work in the Hospital : " There is an immense deal of work here. It does not come in one long pull but in a series of jerks of labour between intervals of rest, like playing a pike with a click reel. I will give you a sort of diary of the evening of the day before yesterday. \ past 5 p.m. went round all the wards (No joke I assure you) — made up about 15 prescriptions. Awful headache etc. Entered in the Hospital Books records etc. of patients ; writing in my case book etc., hard work till 9. Supper. Went round several of the wards again. Accident came in — broken leg, had to assist setting it. \ past 11, had to read medicine etc. 12, very sleepy indeed, lighted my candle to go to bed. A ring at the Accident Bell ; found that it was a tremendous fracture. Was not finished till \ past 1. Went to bed and in the arms of Porpus. 3 a.m. in the morning : a tremendous knocking at the door ; awful compound fracture, kept me up till 5. Went to Bed — up again at 7 o'clock. — Rather tiring work on the whole, but very entertaining. Attended a post mortem and dissection 2 days ago — Horror — Horror — Horror ! I do not know when I shall get over the impression. It was a woman whose wounds I had assisted to dress. I made her medicine and prescribed once or twice for her. My first regular patient died also, yesterday morning. However as it was a burn, my mind is perfectly easy. Don't tell this it won't sound well. I shall set up a case of instruments soon. I can write prescriptions splendidly, and moreover begin to understand all the humbug of medicine, which is not a little. I am very sorry that you have got the gout, if I were at home I would prescribe for you with great pleasure. Tell Bessy that I have some valuable receipts — such as splendid Tooth-Powders — Glorious Perfumes — Beautiful Varnishes. Also Lucy's Biscuit Pie Crust answers very well. I expect to cut Gil Bias quite out. I can hardly refrain from sending you a splendid receipt for cure of the Gibberish. Good Bye and Believe me ever, Your affectionate, Son, FRANCIS GALTON. Please send my Delphin Horace, and Ainsworth's Dictionary, and Schrevelius' Lexicon." In November we find Galton busy with his German and Mathe- matical instructors ; he is sending for Snowball's Trigonometry. He has had "what they call a grand field-day, six important operations." 'The M.D.s are really most good-natured to me. I am allowed to spend a Sunday every now and then out." A letter of Dec. 5, 1838, deserves reproduction in its entirety — it is so characteristic of Galton's varied interests, of his fund of quiet humour and of his liability to overwork himself! Lehrjahre and Wsindcrjahro 101 Dec. 5, 1838. BIRMINGHAM GENERAL HOSPITAL. MY DEAH GOVERNOR, I should have written before but I was waiting for my instruments, to see if my funds were sufficient. They have not yet come, so I write to you at once. Thank you for your letter. I am very glad to hear you are flourishing. Now for business. My Mathematical Master comes at 7 o'clock Tuesday Evening — my German at i past 6 on Friday Evening. My time is distributed as follows : Up by 8. Breakfast &c. until i to 9. I then go round the House with Mr Baker; afterwards at about 10 I "post- mortemify " should there be a subject, sometimes operations take place etc.; if not, I dispense should there be many out-patients : otherwise I read Medical Books, and go round with the Surgeons and sometimes Physicians (who by the bye are ABOMINABLY unpunctual). However it is impossible to regulate that part of my time, but my hands are full with the above occupations until 2. Not forgetting by the bye 5 minutes as the clock strikes 1 1 which are invariably employed by me in swallowing a Digestive Pill. Well, at 2 o'clock I dine etc. till J to 3, 1 then read Medical Books etc. till \ past 5. Then take tea till i to 6. Then Mathematics till \ to 8. After that I write in the registers I have to keep and [dispatch] a few other little hospital jobs ; also go round a few of the wards etc., and read Horace and Homer on alternate days till \ past 9, when supper is ready. After .supper (at \ past 9) I read German an hour or so according to the state of my headache. I walk out when I can — about 2 or 3 times a week, generally between 3 and 5. When I dine out I read Mathematics from 2 to 5 and return to the Hospital at £ past 8 (if with Dr Booth); only just show myself at supper, so I get J of an hour of medical reading from | to 8 to ^ past 9 and then as before. I also always make this law : should an accident occur such as a fractured leg which takes sometimes 2 hours to set, such as finding splints, making pads etc., I do not continue my studies in my other branches as if nothing had happened, but divide my remaining time between all that I have not done that day. I like Mr Abbot my Mathem. Master very much ; he advises me not to read the Calculus until I have read a little of other branches. I have read in the last fortnight the greater part of Analytical Trigonometry, I have got some way in Conic Sections, which I like very much. I expect to have finished them in about a month or 6 weeks, and then for the Calculus. Ask Bessy not to row me for this writing because I really do generally write better, but I cannot make my pen mark and I have no knife in my pocket. Good Bye and believe me ever your affectionate Son, FRANCIS GALTON. P.S. You ought to see me vaccinate I do so pitch the lancet into the children's arms. If I take wine I should be the only one that does so at table ; accordingly I cannot do so. But the rushlight was not merely burning at both ends, it was in the oven itself, and Francis Galton was soon to feel the effects of this overstrain. A letter of Dec. 22 postpones his Christmas home visit, a dresser was ill and he could get more experience by staying : " Tell Bessy that I am fully aware how wrong it is to violate old customs etc., especially that of meeting on Christmas day, but it can't be helped. Really now that 102 A/A' <(»d letters of Francis Galto» I am tunied ' Doctor ' I find that I can decide on nothing beforehand ; this is not my tirst disappointment. I do not know if I told you what a public character I have become. Four distinct times in walking in Bull Street and New Street have I been surrounded by various juvenile members of the Rag-Tag and Bobtail division of the inhabitants and addressed not with hurrahs, but with 'I say ould chap, gie us some medicine,' also 'There goes the Doctor' and other phrases pointing to my profession." On January the 8th, 1839, Galton is still at his post, and his experience is increasing ! He reports to his father his first experiment in dentistry : " I tried my hand at toothdrawing the other day. A boy came in looking very deplorable, walked up to me and opened his mouth. I looked awfully wise and the boy sat down in perfect confidence. I did not manage the first proceedings well, for first I put in the key (that is the tooth instrument) the wrong way, then I could not catch hold of the right tooth with it. At last I got hold. I then took my breath to enable me to give a harder wrench ; one-two-three, and away I went. A confused sort of murmur something like that of a bee in a foxglove proceeded from the boy's mouth, he kicked at me awfully. I wrenched the harder. When, hang the thing, — crash went the tooth. It really was dreadfully decayed — and out came my instrument. I seized hold of the broken bits — the boy's hands were of course over his mouth and eyes from the pain, so he could see nothing — and immediately threw them on the tire and most unconcernedly took another survey of the gentleman's jaws. The tooth was snapped right off. Well, I pacified him, told him that one half the tooth was out and I would take out the other (knowing full well that he would not let me touch it again) and that it was a double one. But, as I had expected, he would not let me proceed. Well there was another tooth which he wanted out and against which I took proceedings. I at last fixed the instrument splendidly and tugged away like a sailor at a handspike, when the boy, roaring this time like a lion with his head in a bag, broke away from me and the sawbone that was holding his head, bolted straight out, cursing all the Hospital Doctors right manfully. So much for my first tooth-drawing." To his sister Adele he writes under a fortnight later : " I have been rather invalided and was sent off for a few days to Moor Hall to recruit. I shall look you up at Leamington some of these fine days, but not just yet. Hang it, it is now past ten in the evening and a car is just rolling up to the door, so I must finish, perhaps it may be a broken leg, so Good bye, etc." The next day he adds a postscript : "It was only a bad scald. This morning Hodgson gave mo a letter from the Governor to him, and in reply, first of all my arm is all but well, it was an old sore which I had forgotten when dissecting, it broke out of course and then subsided ; about a week or ten days after that it broke out again, and gave me some trouble. Then as to my general health my headaches are better than they were once — a great deal better, and I have of course a little hospital fever ifec., but that is all. About my mind which Lucy attacks I shall not say much, except that it is werry uncomfortable, but I shall soon get over all hospital horrors, etc., etc. I am in a great hurry as I want to get a Ijehrjahre and Waiulerjahro 103 walk out now, not having had one on account of the weather for the 3 last days. Of course I have nothing to tell you, as the medical world is quite a little world of its own and its proceedings I should imagine are not very interesting to the civilised one. < Hi Donner und Blitz ! here is another accident. I must look sharp for my walk, if not kept long by this double calamity both to me and patient. T am calling out — Coming — tar — tar—. PKAS. GALTON." So the months went on — far too much work and too little play- none of the sports and pastimes of our own medical schools. At Easter there was again no holiday : "Can't come — quite impossible. Patients increased — awful number. Cut a brace of fingers off yesterday and one the day before. — Happy to operate on any one at home — I am flourishing — wish I could say same of my Patients. Love to all. Bye-bye. FRAS. GALTON." But by July a change was really needful. Francis is planning a tour and mentions as possible companions his cousins Theodore Galton and Edward Darwin. His last letter from the Hospital to his father runs as follows : 10, 1839. GENERAL HOSPITAL. MY DEAR GOVERNOR, I have been waiting before I wrote to you, to see whether Mr Hodgson would have recommended anything for me, but as he has not, I will tell you what he has done. He called me aside and asked me if I felt unwell or not, I told him that I was, — gave symptoms etc. When Mr Hodgson asked what I had intended to do about this trip that you proposed, — T replied that I had but just heard of it, and that I did not think that I could spare my time. To which Mr Hodgson agreed, said it was a foolish plan &c., &c. (N.B. He was in a bad humour because an operation of his for cataract had not exactly succeeded), and after saying other things of the same import, tooled off. He did not prescribe for me. However I shall do very well. There is capital fun going on here — only think of Dr Booth. Amongst other performances of his when he led the police into the Bull Ring, the people swearing, throwing stones at him etc., etc. The Dr (it being dark) coolly rode to the nearest Lamp Post, put his hand in his pocket and pulled out his Barnacles, inserted it again and lugged out the Riot Act and read away most edifyingly ! By the bye about Mr Abbot— I have had 30 lessons, a brace in November — do. in June and regularly in the intervening months'. His banker is Taylor and Lloyds, and he wishes to have it directed for the Rev. J. Abbot, Free School. Our Matron has had a tremendous epileptic fit ; she is in bed still and very unwell. Quite sorry to hear about your Asthma, but you must I suppose console yourself with the Aphorism of the Cook on the Eels — "Nothing when you are accustomed to it." By the bye I have been on the stage with Van Amburg — -took up 1 This proves that Galton had never taken a week's holiday since he started at the Hospital ! 104 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon his whip and shook it (it is a common horse hair one, but very large, not heavy), and helped to draw the Lions' Cages off afterwards. I am rather badly off for soap. My Books cost a wee and there is my British Association fee £1 (I have kept regular Accounts ! !) Amongst others of my entries is one : Various Charities 4rf. I must look you up some of these fine days. I have got no news watsumever. So bye bye. Your affectionate Son, FBAS. G ALTON. P.S. Mr Thomas Knott the Editor of Aris' Gazette has died suddenly of apoplexy. Of Samuel Tertius Galton it must be said that he knew what his son Francis could stand. The summer trip did come off and what is more Francis did not return in the autumn to the Birmingham General Hospital. On September 21, Francis started with his father and Sister Bessy via Coventry to Liverpool and thence by packet to the Clyde and Dumbarton. The tour went through what is now very familiar country, Loch Lomond, Loch Long, Loch Katrine, Oban and then across to Aberdeen, and Ury, the home of the Barclays. Francis' diary of the tour is still extant, and it comes to an abrupt end on Sept. 10, apparently because he had already filled in the bulk of the remainder of the book with sketches. We know from these that the party were at Inverlochy Castle on Sept. 17th and at Ury on Sept. 21st. There are no less than six unfinished sketches of Ury, three of the outside of the house, one of the chapel and burial ground of the ancestral Barclays, one of the wall — a tremendous looking structure — over which Captain Barclay's grandfather is reputed to have thrown a bull, and lastly the inside of the gothic window above the porch — with the deep window recess showing the thickness of the walls — where Francis' grandmother, Lucy, had sat to work her sampler, according to the custom of the family. Ury must have been a fascinating spot to those whose ancestry had dwelt there, and thus Sister Bessy describes it : " We left Inverness at six o'clock in the morning passed Forres, where the witches met Macbeth, arrived at Aberdeen at 7 o'clock, drank tea at the Inn and then came on to Stonehaven where we slept. After breakfast we drove up to Ury which had belonged to the Barclays for some centuries. Margaret Barclay showed us over the curious old hous« (now blown up and a modern house built by the Bairds), she showed us the Meeting House of the Quakers, close to the house, which all Quakers when travelling in Scotland, came to see ; a tiny closet, out of the large sitting room, is where my 1 The British Association met in Birmingham this August ; and there is evidence from Gallon's accounts that he attended it — it was probably his first meeting. Lehrjalirc and Wanderjaliiv 10.") great-great-great-grandfather Barclay wrote his famous 'Apology for the Quakers.' We went up a small hill at the back of the house to the chapel where all the Barclays are buried. Then into the garden, where my great-grandfather pushed a bull over the wall, 00 feet down. We went over the farm with my uncle Barclay, and walked through a wheat-field, the stalks higher than our heads'. In the sitting-room we saw a moveul>lr panel, behind which was a secret chamber to hide in. Margaret Barclay showed me a lock of Prince Charles' hair and after much urgent entreaty, I got her to give me the one hair T have. She also showed me a miniature of Queen Anne set with diamonds, which Queen Anne gave to my ancestor. She gave presents to many of the Jacobite families, it was supposed with the hope that they would espouse her brother's claims t<> the throne after her death." (Mrs Wheler's Reminiscences, Sept. 1839.) Francis went back with his father and sister to Leamington, and on Oct. 3rd the lengthy letters to his father start afresh. We find him at New Street, Spring Gardens, established in the house of Richard Partridge, Professor of Anatomy at King's College, London. Here Galton had two or three fellow pupils all attending the medical lectures at King's College. These were a distinct advance on the Birmingham system of education. There was preliminary training in anatomy (under Partridge with Bowman and Simon as directors in the dissecting room), in physiology (under Todd, a man whose encyclopaedic works can still be studied with occasional profit) and in chemistry (under Daniell, of battery fame). For the first time Galton came into a more or less modern scientific atmosphere, and a microscope became a necessity. Forensic medicine also was a subject of delight : " It had a sort of Sherlock Holmes fascination for me, while the instances given as cautions, showing where the value of too confident medical assertions had been rudely upset by the shrewd cross-questioning of lawyers, confirmed what I was beginning vaguely to perceive, that doctors had the fault equally with parsons of being much too positive." (Memories, p. 42.) In his first letter Francis expresses pleasure with his environment, his fellow pupils are " two scamps " and one seemingly very nice fellow. In his second letter he gives a more detailed account of his sur- roundings : October 12, 1839. 17 NEW ST., SPRING GARDENS. MY DEAR FATHER, Thank you very much for your letter — uncommonly so for its contents, which I have got duly receipted. This is a very comfortable house and I certainly have many extra opportunities of reading. Our sitting room is quite respectable, well lighted, 1 Captain Barclay was not only a famous pedestrian, lie was also a great agricultural reformer, and did much for Scottish agriculture. 14 106 Life (tint Lcttirx of Frauds Gallon ditto carpetted ; fire etc.; furnished witli a most capital library, about 10 skeletons, etc., a loyal cast of St George and the Dragon, and a bust of Harvey, and I don't know what else. A view from the window of the Admiralty with a telegraph at the top continually working and attitudinizing like a skeleton learning gymnastics ; the Horse Guards etc. My bedroom is small and a garret, but the most comfortable one possible not too large nor too small, with bookshelves and a reading desk where I stew away most com- fortably King's College is a very nice place. I am there from 9 till 4 attending lectures and dissecting. There is a sight there which a Frenchman would give his ears to see, viz. a most splendid collection of large green frogs all alive and kicking and croaking too, kept, however, for Dr Todd's Physiological Experiments. Thank you for the microscope it was just the thing; the shirts too were worry acceptable1. I was quite surprised to hear that you got home without such an amiable personal as myself. I am glad that the tartans were properly appreciated. Good bye etc. FRAS. GALTON. DEAR PEMMY— I want you to be in the very best humour possibly and the reason is this : in my bedroom there is a yellow wall 12 ft. x 5; now this does not accord with my notions of beauty but — remember you are a capital Pemmy — if there were two water- colour pictures to relieve its monotony, it would be most reputable. Now there is not a single engraving that will do in all London, they are all either too large and too expensive or too small and good for nothing. Now if you would but paint me two pictures, each about the size of a novel and send them up by some parcel or other I could get them framed in black for 1 bob apiece. I should like something in a Prout style, not three Turks smoking their pipes in a triangle, with one blue hill in the distance and a white river between them, and something on the hill with two uprights and a cross bar like a gibbet only intended for the ruins of an old temple but some building or other well touched up with Indian Ink and reed pen. I shall take such care of them. Now remember the " aspect " of the room is this : pretty well-lighted, 1 window not opposite the wall, which is yellow. The frame will be black. You will now know what sort of things will suit. Tell Bessy that the paws are improving. Hair very bad. Nails middling but better and that "smutty" week is not quite passed. Good bye — You are, at least will be, a nice Pemmy. Love to all Postscripts and other addenda refer to the presentation of his first cheque at Barclay's Bank. It is clear that Sister Pemmy provided for the artistic element, and Sister Bessy supervised Francis' neatness of attire and personal appearance. Although there are no letters bearing on Francis' transfer from Birmingham to London, it is clear from the next letter I shall quote that his career — a year in London followed by Cambridge- must have been practically settled before he left Birmingham. 1 I have retained any intentional wrong spelling, the unintentional slips are somewhat numerous, they would comfort other sufferers, but I have thought it best to remove them. K. P. Lehrjahre and Wanderjahre Io7 Sunday Oct. Hi'" l.s:i«J. 17 NK\V SHHING GAKUENS, LONDON. MY IJEAU FATHKK, Thanks for your letter. I have been thinking over about another year's Londonizing, and, having crammed up "Whewell's University Education," I certainly think that it would be better to give it and the Laboratory up altogether. As the Dissecting season is over about June (I forget exactly when) my hands will not be full for three months or so before going up to Cambridge, in which time I shall hope to get up uiy first part of Mathematics well, and a fair proportion of the Classics that Mr Blakesley has mentioned. 1 think it would be as well at that time not to touch either Mechanics or Conic Sections, but to exhaust Merridew's shop in scribbling paper for working equations etc. I am as well as possible, getting thorough exercising twice a week at Angelo's either at Carte and Tierce, or else in pitching into a huge Life Guardsman, six feet and a half high in his slippers, or rather in his pitching into me with single stick. I have no headaches or anything of the sort and dissecting increases the appetite wonderfully. I don't send any accounts as there is nothing particular to put down. As for those I sent last time, I only sent the General not being very fond of Double Entry, though I have the particulars safe in my account book. For instance I did not write 2 ounces of Epsom Salts — 2d., having included that in the Washing Bill, since it was most undoubtedly for a cleaning out that I bought them, and' so for the rest1. Pemmy, you are a most dutiful sister. Pictures splendid, the framemaker nearly broke his windows when he started back in admiration ; they are hung up with my little Ariadne between them. Are they real scenes? However, don't ask me whether I admired the perspective. And now in return I will show you what a deal of attention I bestow on them ; I will just make a calculation. I am, on an average, 5 minutes dawdling in getting up, 10 minutes ditto in going to bed. During this time I must necessarily look at one side of the room or the other, and as the room is bare on the other side that can be no attraction in looking there. Therefore at least -5 or 10 minutes will be daily spent in looking at your pictures, besides this I am always awake about ] of an hour before getting up, when I cannot help seeing them as they are just before my nose, that makes 25 minutes a day, or 12 hours nearly a month or 156 hours or 19 J days of 8 hours each yearly ! Dear Bessy, I did not receive your missal ; of course it was an accident. I didn't ask for it by letter, as I knew you would draw it intuitively ; it will look so pretty, especially as it will be about the size of Emma's pictures, rather larger perhaps but same shape. Paws vastly improved, but horrors ! about a week ago a huge crimson boil appeared a little to the left of my nose ; it was as large as a fourpenny piece and seemed 1 Samuel Tertius Galton was most particular as to his son's accounts, and we find specimen accounts with various methods of keeping them sent to his son Francis. He endeavoured to inculcate thorough business habits in his children, while at the same time he was most liberal in his remittances and preserved to his death the most intimate confidence and friendly familiarity of his son Francis. 11—2 108 Life (tint Li/fiT* of Francis (ration tn increase "wisibly afore my werry eyes." What could I do? Partridge said it was a carbuncle, but I knew better. For I had as soon as I had seen it, read 12 diHVivut authors on that point, and thus prepared, I was determined to fight vigorously. I pitched a lancet into it, poulticed it all night, swallowed a fearful dose of blue pill and colocynth, and an ounce and a half of salts next morning. They felt very aggravating in my stomach, but at 3 p.m. the boil was almost colourless and gone down wonderfully. Tuesday, fast improving, lancet cut healing. Wednesday, all but well, left off sticking- plaster. Thursday, cured. Extreme cases, require extreme measures. Please write and tell me when the Gurneys come. How often ought I to call on the Homers — ditto on Chas. Darwin, who left his card here the other day. I drink tea with Mr James Yates1 tomorrow. Good Bye, love to Mammy, Delly etc. Tell Darwin that I have lots of tales to tell him. Partridge [sends] complts. In the next few letters we find the question of future education still prominent. Clearly Tertius Galton was emphasising the importance of laboratory work, especially in chemistry, and there appeared little chance of it at Cambridge. Francis' social side was having considerable claims made on it, and he was working and playing hard at the same time. Again, as at Birmingham, the rushlight was doubled up and burning at both ends. Nov. 5, 1839. MY DEAR FATHER I was invited to tea by the Homers, very kind invite, but unfortunately signed Anne (I think) Horner. Now as I had not the slightest earthly idea whether there was such a person as Mrs Horner or not, I did not know whom Anne meant, and therefore I could not answer, so as soon as I had time I set off to call. But they had directed their note Bedford Street, Russell Square, and when I got to Russell Square, 1 could find no such place. I went to B. Street, Bedford Square, Upper B. Place and knocked at every No. 2 in the neighbourhood. At last I called a consultation of three policemen, who after some debating gave over my case as hopeless ; what could I do? Their name was not down in the Court Guide. The next day I made an expedition to 2 other Bedford Streets, but no go. Then came the day I was to take tea with them, and it suddenly struck me that the numbers in Lower B. Place might be different from those in Upper B. Place. I tooled there and luckily it was right ; the Lyells were there, and one of the Horners had just returned from Germany, St Petersburg etc. ; they were very kind to me. Mr Horner was in the North. I shortly after called upon Charles Darwin2, who was most good-natured etc., he has been unwell. I called upon Mr James The well-known Unitarian and Antiquary of Lauderdale House, Highgate, and founder of the Yates Chairs at University College, London. 2 Charles Darwin had returned from his voyage in the "Beagle"; had been married in January of this year (1839) and was living in Upper Gower Street. Lehrjahrc (titd Wanderjahre 10(1 Yates. I am as well as possible. Cartwright charges awfully, viz. for 1 coat 1 waist coat 2 pr trousers <£9. 19. 6. I have moreover begun fencing at Angelo's Rooms. The charges arc liigh but as for exercise etc., I think it was about the best thing I could do, 3 hours twice a week for the season, almost the whole year, at fencing, single stick or whatever I like, £11. These two have been my great expenses, but luckily they don't come again. The way I spend my time differs a good deal according to the dissection or not, 9 — 10 Anatomical Lecture, 10£ — 1£ dissection, 2 — 3 Chemical Lecture, 3 — 4 Physiological Lecture, 5 — 6 read or walk or fence or something of the sort ; 6 — 7 dinner; doze f of an hour, often a wee more, then tea till 8. Read and mieroscopize till 1 and amuse myself till 2 or 3| according as I am lazy or not. Sleep till 8. So I eat '1 hours, sleep 7, attend lectures 3, read hard 3i, microscopize 1, dissect 3, amuse myself 3, dress etc. etc. 1J. This is something of the way I spend my time. Now for the way I spend my money; this is not exact to sixpences — though N.B. I keep accounts : Cartwright ... Fencing Dissecting Case etc. An upper Extremity of an abdomen Boots & Shoes Stationery ... Luncheon (about 1 shilling per week) Exceedingly diversified Chemical Apparatus .. £ 10 11 2 d. 10 18 14 10 6 Washing Postage 28 17 G 10 4 = £30 nearly. Tell Pem — that she is a nice Pern. Thank Delly for letter. Your microscope is very useful. Mr Partridge has let me have the use of his very splendid one, value £60. But I use your one commonly. Tell Mater that I thought of her and the Pig. I am afraid that the Pork Pie is not quite worth the carriage, although made out of a Claverdon Pig. Loves to all. Tell Bessy that paws are improving though I have got a cut on them. FKAS. GALTON. Daniell's Experiments are most beautiful. He froze some Carbonic Acid Gas the other day by first condensing it to a liquid and then letting it suddenly free, the abstraction of Heat for Latent froze it at a temperature of 130° Fahr. below the Freezing Point, it could be held up as the Carbonic Acid Gas being given off in every direction from it keeps it from actually touching the hand. I swallowed a piece, queer taste. Some mercury was frozen with it in no time. The next letter is of special interest not only for the advice it contains from Charles Darwin, but for the picture of the young medical student, who trusts his sister's home recipes in preference to his own knowledge ! HO />('/' J' rrancis Galton The visit to France did come off, but Tertius Galton and Emma started first, and on April 13 Francis was to have his second near chance of losing his life by drowning. The event is described in the following letter to his sister Bessy1: Thursday, April Uth, 1840. 17 NEW SPRING GARDENS. MY DEAR BESSY, Yesterday at 17 minutes and 45 seconds to 5 (I know the time because my watch was stopped), just when you were puzzling yourself over some cross-stitch pattern and whilst Delly was trying to find out a type in the Old Testament for the fact that St Paul left his cloak behind at Ephesus— well, as you were both amusing yourselves at that said time — I, your humble servant, Lord Torment and Tease, clothes and boots on, was floundering under the wheels of a Steam Packet, the paddles of which were bumping upon my head with a 15-horse power, and some short time afterwards I found myself kicking about some 8 or 10 feet deep, rising to the top, which instead of reaching, I merely knocked my head against a huge piece of wood and sank down again, at the same time gulping in water like a fish and bubbling out air like a blacksmith's bellows, my life worth " a little less than nothing at all," as the sailors say. Well, I am alive, which is a great deal more than I had expected, but desperately beaten about my head. I can't lie in bed, so I'll write you all about it. I went in a Steam Boat to Putney to see the Oxford and Cambridge rowing match. As we were returning, very fast and with the tide, through Battersea Bridge, we ran foul of the middle pier. I, who was behind the paddle-box, saw how we were going just before we struck, and caught tight hold of one of the paddle-box steps, expecting a general smash and determined to have a swim for it. Well, the body of the packet cleared, but the paddle-box, behind which I was, came full crash against the sides of the arch. It split open just before me by the shock. I was thrown head foremost through the cleft, right amongst the paddle wheels, which were still going round, they not having touched the pier, owing I suppose to the recoil from the smash of the paddle box, though when they did, they were doubled up and rendered useless immediately. Well, this regularly stunned me. Thank heavens my neck was not broken in the wheel (Escape No. 1). I was quite insensible, and how I cleared the bridge I have not the slightest conception. I must have been beaten down by the paddle wheels beneath the bottom of the boat — and fortunately enough, otherwise from the shape of the packet which heeled over I must have been jammed between it and the pier [illustrative sketch of packet and pier in elevation], and of course squashed. That 1 The first event occurred in 1833, when Francis was 11 years old; he had been taught to swim. He went to pay a visit to his sister Lucy at Smethwick. He was walking by the canal at the bottom of the garden, when he saw a bird's nest on the branch of a tree and fell into the water in trying to get it. His legs got entangled in the tree so that he was held with his head under water, and no one near to help him. At last with a vigorous effort he made himself loose and swam to shore. (Mrs Wheler's Reminiscences under 1833.) Lolnjalire and Wsuulorjalire 117 makes Escape No. 2. Well, as I said, I was insensible, and when I knew where I was, I found myself under a large piece of wood which proved to be the outer side of tin- paddle box, witli part of the top still attached, thus making an angle in which after sonic floundering I got stuck, and though I dived as well as I could, for I was nearly spent and had swallowed a great deal of water, 1 still on rising bumped against tin- wood. [Illustrative sketch of floating portion of paddle-wheel, showing submerged angle under which F. G. was caught.] I of course gave myself up, but determined to have a regular good push for life. I felt the wood round me and could see a little, and at last I made out the edge of the top part of the paddle-box, grasped tight hold of it, and pulled myself from underneath and cleared it. I then rose rapidly towards the surface, when I bumped against another piece of wood, which, however, I easily pushed aside and rose ; but I rose too high and consequently sank again, but I had had a good breath of air and was a little refreshed. I did not sink I daresay a foot below the surface, but I got entangled in some long bits of wood, which as I was all but spent nearly drowned me, and when I got to the surface they were too heavy to give me any real support, so I looked round and saw the side of the paddle-box, which had before been so much in my way, floating down with the tide. I struck out and soon reached it — and I did feel happy. I climbed onto it and it was a perfect raft. (Escape No. 3.) On looking about me I found that the steamer was 300 yards or so in front and could not stir. I was quite 200 yards and nearly 300 from the bridge, the whole of which distance I had floated down head under water (only one other man went overboard and he merely got a ducking, swam to a bit of wreck and was quite safe). Well, I was in the midst of the river, plenty of boats and watermen were at the shore, those nice dear fellows who when they see you struggling, look on, and never dream of rowing to you till you are either safe or dead — yes, and if safe, they swear they saved your life, inarch off to the Royal Humane Society and get a gold medal for their pains, with a long paragraph in the Times about " unparalleled bravery," and so forth. Well, after waving rny hat, for I don't know how long, oft' some half-dozen came in a body. I was pulled into a boat and felt very seedy, I was dizzy and very sick. However, to put the captain out of his fright, I took an oar, declared nothing was the matter with me and pulled mechanically. I was so dizzy that I scarce knew what I did. On getting to the packet everybody looked horrified, one or two ladies held up their handkerchiefs before their eyes. I couldn't make out what at, but on getting ashore and to an inn, with a looking- glass I found my face, ears and whiskers, shirt, etc., all covered with blood. One nail had hooked me by the side of the nose, another had " sarved " out my face and I had as many cuts on my ear as a Christinas pig. I got to bed, half dried clothes and walked to London. Now don't fancy I am ill. I took enough calomel and salts to do anything, and except a rather torn face and broken head, I really have nothing the matter with me. T have walked out to-day and am going to Lecture in half an hour. I have gained great glory by my splashes under water and it is a very good tale to tell — at least when the pain goes off. T now know something of what drowning is — I felt no pain, but rather dreamy — and I also know what my feeling will be when I am dying, as I firmly believed I was then. Tell Dar that if he had not taught me to swim I should have been stiff by this 118 Life anil Letters of Francis Galtoit time and a coffin in process of being made. I am most grateful to him— and if I have children I'll make them amphibious. Now don't fancy that I am ill — once again. Just send an epistle soon — all about journey to Isle of Man and everything. N.B. The ducking has cured a cold. Yours, etc., FRANCIS GALTON. I have got a relic from the wood which saved my life. It stuck into my waistcoat pocket and broke off as I was getting into the boat, and I send you some enclosed1. My watch is much hurt. In the account Sir Francis gives in his Memories (p. 46) of this event, the reason for his strong feeling about the watermen is mani- fest the men in the first boat asked a sovereign to take him in, but being in comparative safety he was able to resist this extortion ! Ten days later Francis' examinations are over ; he feels he has done well, and, ready for his holiday, he sets out a free man to overtake his father in Paris : BOULOGNE, HOTEL DK GIBRALTAR. DEAR PATER, Couldn't write before on account of the Examination in Anatomy and Chemistry. I will tell you why when I come, but I am too lazy now. Mr, one young Mr, and 3 Miss W (Civil Engineers), were in the Steam Packet with me from Dover to Boulogne. I came very " strong " with one of the Miss W , who says that they are going to stay a week at Paris. I think that we shall travel together tomorrow at 9 o'clock. I being "dished" for this evening and they, I believe, ditto. Hang their Vin Ordinaire, it has diluted my gumption, till it is as weak as their vermacelli soup, which hang also. Travelled by night from London to Dover; got there at 6 a.m., walked without interruption for 5 hours up the cliffs and in every direction, set off at 12 ; got here at 3. I have no particular news worth telling. Tell Emma that I have two views of Dover and one of Boulogne (having invested in a small board Sketching Book). There is nothing to be seen in Boulogne, so I am going to dress and promenade ! ! ! Good-bye. FRA. GALTON. N.B. It is the custom in France to write on thin paper and with a wafer, and not to direct epistles which are written on something very like millboard and sealed with a seal such as a Cardinal would affix to a Pope's Bull to London ; and thereby make the postage 2 shillings and 4 pence. Such was the case with a certain letter I received. N.B. to N.B. (or 1/NB2). I am not sure whether the letter was 1 shilling and 4 pence or 2 shillings and 4 pence. I think the latter. All mistakes to be referred to Vermacelli soup or Vin Ordinaire. 1 I imagine this is the shaving of wood which has been preserved with a small triangular piece of lead in this bundle of letters. Lehrjahre Cambridge — yet an increase of 6 weeks would give me abundance. Secondly, I have already been the cause of so much expense that I have made up my mind not to incur a greater. I called upon Leonard Horner to tell him what I had determined, and to thank him for having made enquiries for a companion, but he was not at home, nor expected till the middle of next month ; so I should be obliged if you would write to him. The cause of the cheapness of the envelopes is this — The stationer who sells them has an advertising sheet printed on their inside, which of course will enable him to sell them at a great reduction. This man has, however, not found them to answer, as ho has no more, but I hear that they are to be got for 9>d. the dozen. I will make enquiries. I call to-morrow on the Huberts. I have not had time owing to Hospital engagements. Everything, including accounts, getting on Sourishly. There will be very near play whoever gets the prize for Forensic Medicine. I do not make myself sure of it. Good bye. Your affectionate Son, FRAS. GALTON." Iii his next letter (June 29) Francis tells his father that he fully understands and appreciates his arguments about the money : "I am most obliged to you for your liberality ; however I think that for many reasons, I had better give up Norway and Sweden and go elsewhere." He suggests a month in Paris, boarding in a family who don't under- stand a word of English — " a large family, as good a class of life as possible — and the most complete innocence of anything like the knowledge of the English language. In case of several equally qualified that those who can talk the most gossip be the chosen ones. This will explain my taste pretty well, — of course if the daughters are comely — why tant gagm." FRIDAY, 10th (I think), 1840, 17 NEW ST., SPRING GARDENS, LONDON. MY DEAR FATHER, Thanks for your unanswered letters — that one which you wrote to Paris really was a perfect specimen of English composition — had it been a will and had £50,000 a year depended on it, I am sure a lawyer could not have picked a flaw in it. ...Everything gets on capitally, especially accounts. When I want to know if I have any coppers in my pocket to give to a begging crossing sweeper I do not condescend to feel but pull out my pocket-book add up and the result is sure to be correct. I shall want some more money, not enough though for the Paris expedition, as I propose to come to you at home first — then Rassy1, and then Paris. Shall I send you my account book or an extract ? [Here follow accounts.] 1 Erasmus Galton, who had given up the Navy and settled down to farm at Loxton. Darwin Galton was farming at Claverdon. Life and Letters of Francis Galtoti So much for business. Went to the Opera last night, Taglioni, last appearance —am quite hoarse with bellowing out "bravo." Aunt Gurney1 has been out of town for 3 weeks, just returned. I went to see Courvoisier hung, and was close to the gallows, poor fellow. I went professionally for death by hanging is a medico-legal subject of some importance. Tell Delly that I have not seen a scrap of her handwriting for ages and that she must send me a letter. What does she do without her school? I am glad that she is going to Somersetshire [Loxton], it will do her back so much good. Nothing is so bad for health, such as hers is, as a sedentary (lying-down-in-a-school-all-day) habit of living and one without variation. If she divides her attention between two sets of objects to both of which she is attached — school and farm — her health will be wonderfully improved, Frampton's pills of health discarded and steel mixtures thrown down the sink. My accounts shall be sent by return of post, if you will tell me in your next letter how you would like me to send them. Good bye. Your affectionate Son, FRAS. GALTON. This is wrapped in an "lid a dozen" cover. The Paris trip was not destined to come off. A new direction was to be given to Francis Galton's plans ; but the goal reached was far from the direction indicated at the start. The Wanderlust had seized Francis, although he was little conscious of it, and laboratories and lecture-rooms were incapable of holding him back. MONDAY, July [13], 1840, 17 NEW ST., SPRING GARDENS. DEAR PATER, Thanks for letter, I am in a great hurry for the post, so I will send accounts to-morrow. Please write an answer and send it with all the speed a penny envelope is capable of. Wm Miller is going to Giessen in Germany, to Liebig's Laboratory — Liebig is the 1st Chemist (in organic chemistry) in the world. In his Laboratory there is every opportunity for getting on, in addition to the certainty of a knowledge of German being acquired. The terms are very low, not more than £5 for admission, though of course there are many more expenses in the way of tests and other documents. Wm Miller tries to persuade me to go with him. I should like to go. Have you any objection ? I write to Hodgson by this post to ask his opinion. Miller is as you know exceedingly talented and will in all probability rise high. My acquaintance with Bowman has proved to be most useful — a similar acquaintance with Miller promises to be so. Liebig's assistance will of course be invaluable to me in after life ; and as his immediate pupil, more especially as I am a foreigner and come with an introduction from Daniell, I shall have every opportunity of acquiring his friendship. Again Daniell 1 Mrs Hudson Gurney : see Plate XLVII. Lehrjahre and Wanderjahre rJ7 will necessarily be much pleased with one of his class, more especially his prizeman, following up so good an opportunity of working at practical chemistry ; he will of course give me introductions to Liebig and will take more interest in me. Liebig's season begins next week and ends Sept. 8th nearly, all which time I shall IK; with him. My going there will not interfere with my Forensic Medicine Examination. I am sure that it is the best thing that I can do. I shall not gain refinement most certainly — but will have every advantage possible for obtaining Chem. Knowledge, and will return as dirty and as clever as can reasonably be expected. Your affectionate Son, FBAS. GALTON. Glad very, about asthma. In Captain Donellan's case you used to tell a story of a Mr Somebody who lent Capt. Donellau some book or other containing a description of the manufacture of laurel water, this book after the Capt.'s execution was found always to open in the place where the process was described. Please give me the names. Attached to the neat account which followed next day, duly headed by the receipt for the last cheque, are a few lines in which Francis states that he should not have time to write to Liebig and wait for an answer, and that if Liebig cannot take him, what is he to do — " Go to Paris or to Switzerland ? " The next letter from Spring Gardens acknowledges the receipt of a credit on Barclay and Co. for £100. Hodgson approved of the visit to Liebig. Francis is in his holiday mood : July 16, 1840. ...You enjoin me not to smoke cigars. I will not, but I will buy a meerschaum with a pipe 4 feet and a half long, and with a bowl that will contain an ounce of Tobacco at a time. Shall I get one for you? I have got my money changed into circular notes at Herries, Farquahar oks I will pack up separately. My chemicals too I had rather were not touched. I have been unavoidably prevented from calling on Leonard Homer. Will you write to him and tell him of my proceedings 1 1 saw the Gurneys to-day. She talks about coaxing Bessy or Emma to Chiswick. As I have much to do, I will wish you good-bye. Loves to all. Your affectionate Son, FRAS. GALTON. Of this " stay in Giessen " Francis's letters must themselves speak. There are two dated Giessen, the others are from Vienna, Buda Pest and Constantinople ! A sketch-book diary shows that Francis, then 18 years of age, went down the Danube to Vienna, thence to Con- stantinople, thence to Smyrna, Syra, Athens. Beyond this records are obscure. Sketches show that he was at the Bay of Navarino on Sept. 13, and at Missolonghi on Sept. 14. A projected itinerary in the early part of the book gave a return by Rome, Pisa, Genoa, Marseilles and Paris. But he was still in Ithaca, when he should have been near Pisa, and from Constantinople he requested money to be sent to Trieste. The brief notes ceased after Sept. 14, and I do not know how Francis got home ! Those who had seen the Wanderlust rising to full intensity in the planned Norwegian expedition might have been fairly sure that Liebig would not hold him. His diary tells only the external side of the attack : "Giessen, July 30th, 4J p.m. Being thoroughly ennuied and kicking about on the sofa, I suddenly thought of a voyage to Constantinople and made up my mind in a quarter of an hour and sent off my passport to be viseed to Frankfurt ; then went to Herr Prof. Adrian for my grammar lesson, who it seems went the same route last year, and who gave me several good hints. Wrote a penitent letter home begging for absolution, and without waiting for an answer packed up." MONDAY, 27 July, 1840, GIESSEN, 1 o'clock. MY DEAR FATHER, I arrived yesterday at Giessen in the afternoon. I find that Liebig's laboratory is under quite different arrangements to those which Mr Daniell, Mr Miller and myself had expected. The plan with which it is conducted is as follows : A number of men (30 at present), who have long studied practical Chemistry, wish Lehrjahre and Wamlerjahre li_".i individually to examine certain organic substances. Now in analysing bodies of this class much tact is required in devising the mode of treating them, and in adapting trains of experiment to the individual case. These men go to Liebig who gives his opinion as to how they are to set to work. He has a room where there are tables and sinks and some furnaces, about a yard's length of table is allotted to each man and there lie experimentalises (he brings his own apparatus and tests). Liebig looks up the men once or twice a day, telling them how to go ou, etc. etc. Their investigations are all published with the name of the experimentalize!- attached. Liebig therefore presupposes delicacy of manipulation, and professes to teach the application of it to particular cases. It is the first part that I wish to practise and, not having done so sufficiently, of course instruction in the after part is useless. Under these circum- stances and with the advice of Mr Miller I have determined not to enter the chemistry class, but shall work at learning German instead. My arrangements I will tell you at the end. I set off from London at 12. Motley assemblage of passengers. Lady Noel on board ; and with the exception of treading upon a little poodle-dog's tail by accident, and making it squeal horribly, and of tumbling against a lady who was trying to drink unobserved a glass of wine, and so causing her to spill it over her neighbours, I got on very well. Calm passage, not sick, good berth, in which I didn't sleep, and splendid appetite. Osteiid at 3£ in the morning, shore at 4J, tooled about, got passport viseed etc., breakfast and railroad at 6. Very agreeable companions they had come with me in the steamboat, and were travelling for their first time, a lady and her Governor ; there were other English also in the same carriage. Stopped an hour at Malines just looked about me. Liege at 4J ; ran about with one of my fellow-travellers, saw everything — dined and set off for Aix at 10 at night ; a couple of Englishmen still sticking to me, one of whom tried to inveigle me into acting as a sort of courier, etc. a " Speed Malise speed," but I dished him nicely. Aix at 4J in the morning, warm bath etc. ; ran about the town, Charlemagne's throne, etc., etc. Good breakfast and set off for Ciiln at 7 J, arrived there at 3£ ; bolted to the bankers ; just had time to look at the cathedral and off in the steamer; we came opposite Drachenfels about £ past 11 at night. I disembarked at Konigswinter ; ran to the top of the Drachenfels and waited to see the sun rise (the steamer would have been in Coblentz by 4 o'clock), bolted down again in 1 3 minutes and £*"», grabbed a breakfast, and off for Coblentz ; found that I could not get off to Giessen till 3 o'clock next morning, so I walked up the Chartreuse, and in every possible direction till I was thoroughly tired (boiling sun) ; reinvigoratecl myself with a brace of ices etc. The men at the inn (Hof zum Riesen) very uncivil, so I knew that if I went to bed they would not awake me at 2 in the morning ; consequently I took my luggage to the Schnellpost office, told the man my unfortunate condition and asked him to let me sleep in a diligence. He immediately took compassion on me and bundled about for the keys of the Passagierstube, but the keys were not to be found so I picked out the most comfortable Postwagen and fell asleep most cosily. However the chocolate ices, bonbons, and coffee that I had taken not exactly agreeing in my inside, I had a desperate nightmare, fancying that 2 vipers were dancing the " Cachuca," whilst an old rattlesnake was posturising in the " La Gitana." At this I squealed awfully and being thoroughly awakened by a desperate rattling at the door, 17 130 Life and Letters of Francis Gait on I found the Sentinel standing with a fixed bayonet. I however kept still and soon went to sleep. Set off at 3 in the morning (Sunday) and got to Giessen at 4i p.m., tooled to the inn and on inquiry fortunately found Miller there. In the evening walked about the town round the ramparts etc., etc. Miller introduced me to Playfair, late chemical assistant to Graham, to Gilbert, also assistant to Thompson, and to Herr Bettenbacher, a Vienna professor, all studying at Liebig's. Went to bed, slept gloriously, up at 6 this morning, went to the Laboratory, heard Liebig lecture, saw all that was going on. Made arrangements with the German Professor for daily lessons. My present plans are as follows. Work hard at Giessen for a fortnight till I can speak it tolerably. I shall then expect letters from you with Berlin, Dresden or Hanover introductions ; go to one of these places, and mix in society and lark for 3 weeks at least, and shall be in England on the 14th of September. — Please write to Hodgson and tell him about my alteration mentioning that Miller thinks it the best thing that I can do. Write an answer please by return of post and another letter with introductions (if you approve of the plan) as soon as you can get them. I am most comfortably housed etc., eating, drinking and sleeping cost 3 shillings a day. I dine with the chemicalizers at 6 o'clock. There are great top-sawyers amongst them. We always speak German. I am much vexed at losing my Chemistry, but I shall gain far more by stewing away at German, than I should had I worked at Chemistry, Liebig's arrangements being as I had expected. I have enjoyed myself excessively, Good bye. Yr affectionate Son, FRAS. GALTON. Miller and myself are great chums and we talk German to each other most unintelligibly. I have no doubt that the linguists at the table d'hote will have much discussion on what the tongue is in which we converse. Of the men mentioned in this letter several reached distinction later. William Allen Miller — also a Birmingham General Hospital man — became Professor of Chemistry at King's College, London, and later, especially in conjunction with Huggins, made noteworthy chemical investigations. Playfair, afterward Lord Playfair, was well-known to our generation both as chemist and politician. But the mood of Francis Galton was at this moment neither for research nor intellectual society. He could not possibly have settled down to either chemical analysis or " stewing at German." The roving lust had seized him and it was to hold him for many years, until indeed it should itself become sub- servient to his love of scientific inquiry. Lehrjahrc and Wiinderjalire 131 GIBSSEN, July 30, 1840. MY DEAH FATHKH, Being thoroughly enuuied at Giesseu and having nothing to do from morning to night1, I have determined to make a bolt down the Danube and to see Constantinople and Athens. I have made all the calculations of time and cost and they are very favourable. Can I take any message to the Skeys 1 I do not wait for an answer before I start for two reasons, I8t that I have not time and 2"dljr as you promised me a good summer's tour to Sweden and Norway, of course you can have no objection to a com- paratively civilised trip. I am getting on in German capitally, and shall learn almost as much of it in these my travels as if I had settled in the midst of Berlin — much more than by staying in Giessen. Another reason for my unhesitating bolt is that as I shall have very little time after I am settled at Cambridge, I had better make the most of the present opportunity. So I will fancy that I have received a favourable answer, and so thank you very much indeed for your consent. My conscience being thus pacified, I will tell you something of Giessen. — It is a scrubby, abominably paved little town — cram full of students, noisy, smoky and dirty. Of these students, by far the best are the Chemicals, they being all firstrate men, wot write books and so forth ; they are one shade less dirty than the others, that is to say they are of the colour of umber, the others being Bt Sienna. They have a table d'hote to themselves at 6 o'clock (at which I join) and they drink much sour wine and Seltzer water. Every now and then they dissipate, i.e. send for a quart bottle extra of Rauenthaler, and drink healths and sing songs. To drink healths you clink your glass with everybody else's glass at table, thereby spilling much wine on the table-cloth and over your neighbours' necks — over which you are stretching. As there were 30 sitting down together at the one which I witnessed, by the simple rule of combinations2, n(n- 1), or 30 x 29, the glasses must have clinked 870 times for each health that was drunk say (at a low computation 20 were drunk) then 17,400 clinks must have ensued!! If one student calls out to another : " Sie sind Doctor," it is a challenge to drink 2 glasses of wine with him ; if " Sie sind Professor," then 4 and so on. They have also a very uncomfortable custom for foreigners which is this — one man walks up to another (whom he knows) and asks him if he has any objection to drink " Schmollens " with him ; the consequence of which ceremony is the calling each other " du " ever after instead of " sie," and in fact making them perpetual chums. The way in which it is performed is by drinking a glass of wine, the arm which holds the glass being put through the corresponding 'arm of the other — and then saluting each other on both cheeks ; this last part to be continually repeated after any absence ! I have not seen it performed, but I was in great fear and trepidation, even more so than when before Mary Luard at a Christmas party. — The 1 Our hero forgets that in his last letter to his father he had arranged to work hard at German for a fortnight ! I do not think that Francis Galton ever obtained more than a working knowledge of German, i.e. that he spoke it fluently or read its literature from inclination. < 2 Francis's mathematics seem to have failed him, or the Giessen custom differed from that of Heidelberg forty years later ; each pair clink only once, not twice. Perhaps he counted a clink to each glass ! 17—2 I:;L» Life and Letters of /''raiicits Gallon Professor who gives me lessons is a delectable old man, quite an original, who has 17 (! !) pipes in his room and who smokes to a corresponding extent. Tell Pemmy that there is a splendid cathedral at Limburg, almost unknown to Englishmen,- — and Byzantine architecture with a touch of Gothic, just like the church of the apostles at Coin, only much more splendid. By the bye in case that you should fancy any part of this letter to be a "take in," I can assure you that I never was more in earnest in my life. Having nothing more to say — with many thanks for your kind consent to my travels. I remain Your affectionate son FRAS. GALTON. P.S. I have just opened to say that I have seen one of the professors here who went a similar tour last year, and the one that we have together concocted is Frankfort, "\Viirzburg, Katisbon, Passau, Linz, Vienna, Constantinople, Smyrna, Athens, Patras, Ancona, Rome, Livorno, Pisa, Florence, Livorno, Genoa, Marseilles and Paris. I have plenty of time. I could see this all very well, quarantines ifcc., and be back on the 18th Sept., but I will take more time. [In pencil.] I start tomorrow at 7 in the morning. In case of a letter from you crossing this Miller will take care of it. Francis actually set off on July 31st with Dr Meyer for Frankfort, the Doctor having parted '•' Schmollens " fashion from several of his fellow-students. The picture the diary provides for us is that of an intensely happy boy — full of fun and feeling himself out for a bit of a frolic truant fashion. At Frankfort, Francis began to drop the unnecessary : " Left in a parcel 1 coat, 1 pr trousers, Liebig's Chemistry Part I., Liebig's Organic Chemistry and the handbook for Northern Germany (1836) with the map torn out." He had time, however, to "scetch " (sic!) very neatly in pen and ink the Katharinen-Kirche and a general view of the town. The next stage is Wiirzburg, with some careful pencil work sketches of the town, and here Galton fell in with a travelling companion : "Aug. 2. Went to sleep on the sofa in the coffee room and on awaking a scrubby- looking little Hungarian addressed me in bad English, asked me my route and said that we should be fellow travellers to Wien. Set off at 1 2 for Nurnburg, a Lady being the only other person in the diligence. The little Hungarian no sooner perceived a petticoat in the diligence than he bellowed out for lanterns most furiously, but notwithstanding his exertions couldn't get one, so cursing awfully sat down with his eyes 3 inches from the girl's face. On passing out we came close by a light which exposed the physiognomy of the girl, and the Hungarian being satisfied commenced a most vigorous courtship. Hi told me that it was quite necessary for me to make myself an adept in the art, and so I tried and with some success fell fast asleep. Any. 3. Awoke and found him holding both hands of the girl and singing love Mmg.s. I accordingly burst out laughing in which they both joined. I then began my ilirtation with much more success than my rival, at which his mustachios desponded and looked sad. Arrived at Nurnburg at 12. Marie, for such she said was her name, gave uie a bit of an artificial flower that she wore, but would not let me crib some of her Lehrjahre and Wsinderjahre I:;:; liidr, because I had only a penknife to cut it with, though she said had I had a pair of scissors it would have been different." Ratisbon and Walhalla followed, the sketchbook showing various details of buildings, rafts, and country folk. At Passau the steamer is found to be injured and on Aug. 6 Galton set out with Major Parry in a boat with one rower to go down the Danube to Vienna, which was reached on the 7th. In Vienna there was sightseeing, opera and gaiety. Then down the Danube to Buda Pest and on to Semlin, reached on August 13th. " The natives beastly dirty, sheepskin clothes, wide full trousers, long greasy hair, turned-up hat. Passed Peterwardein, anything but picturesque. Slept at Semlin having first walked about the dirty town and up to the cemetery, whence is a very good view of junction of the Save and Danube. It was too dark to see Belgrade well. [There is a picture of Belgrade from Semlin by moonlight, Aug. 13.] Sang 'God save the Queen ' and went to bed loyal." Then by way of Sistova, Kustendje, Castle of Europa to Constanti- nople, reached on August 22nd. There is little in the diary here but a youthful traveller's impressions, a long description of the first Turkish bath, the slave-market and the mosques, only seen from outside. From this first section of Galton's tour three home letters remain. The first is from Vienna : VIENNA, Hurrah!!! Aug. 7, 1840. STADT FRANKFORT HOTEL. MY DEAR PATEK. It has just struck uie (i.e. after having taken iny place to Constantinople — not before) that this expedition of mine is about the coolest and most impudent thing that I have done for a long time. But I remember when about 6 yrs old you telling Darwin and Erasmus of an exploit of yours in kindly offering to escort some young lady (I forget whom) from Birmingham for a mile or two, and somehow or other when once in the carriage you thought it better to go on to Bromsgrove merely as a protection to her ; at Bromsgrove of course the same reason held good and so on to Worcester. I thought it then a very naughty thing. Now from Birmingham to Worcester is at least 40 miles and from Fraufort to Constantinople is only 2075 (I have carefully counted them) a leetle more certainly, but not enough to matter, so please be lenient. How I shall get scolded when I return ! But there is one consolation, viz. that I go too fast for any letter to overtake me and disturb my serenity, when once started from here on Monday next the 10th. Now for my diary [Then follows the account of the flight from Giessen and the journey to Linz.] Splendid scenery, dark lovely pine-wood forests, many rapids and boiling sun. Here you feel that it is the sun, it puts life into one and warms one quite into the sublime. Bye the bye I am as nearly mad in that way as a person can possibly he imagined to be, who does not actually turn down his shirt collar and go about without his cravat. On arriving at Lin/ found that the steamboat was, us a waiter who tried to 134 Life «n>/ LcttiT* of Fraud* (,' and the same strong impression received that the race of men from the Neckar to the Danube must be the happiest population on earth ! But if the Wanderlust grips a man, he runs grave risk of never settling down again in this life ; it is one of the fascinating features of Galton's career, that with all the means and tastes to become a wanderer, he yet settled down — after fourteen years — to steady scientific work. Might it not well have been a case of : " What's become of Waring Since he gave us all the slip, Chose land-travel or seafaring, Boots and chest or staff and scrip, Rather than pace up and down Any longer London town?" From Buda Pest Francis Galton writes to his father for a remittance to place him on the safe side on his journey home : "Would you therefore send me to Trieste £15; if the correct way of sending it be in letters of credit please make them payable at several of the places about there, Venice especially. Should you, however, have disinherited me or forbidden my reading mathematics or some equally severe punishment, then please send duplicates of that letter to Malta, Syra, Athens etc., etc., because after that I have read one of them I shall be sure not to enquire after the others, and they will so amuse the postmasters. Well here I am in the most Hungarian town of Hungary, and already fully entitled to the Travellers' Club. There is such a capital specimen of an Hungarian opposite that I must scetch [sic /] him. The hair and mustachios are no exaggeration [sketch of the Hungarian]. I never fully understood what a hot day was till I came here, in trutli sight seeing opens the mind and the perspiratory pores also. The water that I drink oozes through us fast as through a patent filtering machine. I must really invest in a parasol to-day, the heat at midday is absolutely awful. This morning I actually saw a live cow not half-roasted, but really and truly quite dun. I have got a mosquito net of which I shall find the full benefit, shortly, about Skela Gladova (pronounced Skela GladOva). A water coat pea-coat is the greatest comfort imaginable. Yesterday in a storm of rain on the river, which by the bye was much more violent than any Scotch storms, and which looked just as in the scetch [sic!], I coolly posted myself on the top of the paddle box, looking quietly and comfortably witli my hands in my pocket at the poor miserable-looking passengers for whom there was not room in the cabin and who umbrellas being useless, posted themselves as well as they could under the tarpaulin, their exposed parts suffering considerably. I was considered a maniac or something like it, but two or three Newfoundland-dog-like shakes made my peacoat half dry and not an atom of rain had gone through it In 11 days more I am in Istamboul, hurrah ! I remember a bit of advice of Darwin's when I was climbing up a ladder to the cistern in the yard at the Larches, — not to look down, but only upwards and see what was left to be climbed ; just so with my present tour. I fancy myself not much farther than Belgium, quite at home and only calculate what I have to do.'' 130 Life and Lett era of Francis Gallon The last letter we have is that from Constantinople : STAMBOUL, Aug. 22nd, 1840. MR (not Madame) JOSEPHINE'S LODGING HOUSE. MY DEAR FATHER, Here I am at Constantinople— among Turks, Armenians, Greeks, Jews and Franks, in a good Lodging House, as well as possible and happier and happier every day. The Golden Horn is just in front of me, crammed full of mosques and minarets, Seraglios and Towers. Scutari to my left on the other side of the Bosphorus and on bona fide Asia, and I myself in Pera on the top of the Giaour's Hill (remember the " G " in that word is pronounced hard, and it is only two syllables, thus ( *w. ar) the " ia " is just audible). I never in my life had a more pleasant voyage than down the Danube. The funny costumes, and languages, viz. German, Wallachian, Sclavonian, Illyrian, Turkish, Russian, Italian, French and English were all spoken around me. We eat water melons and grapes. I scetched (sic !) a good deal, walked on the land wherever the steamer stopped and really saw an immense deal. Tell Bessy that I passed by the cave where St George killed the Dragon, and sketched too — and that the putrid body of the Dragon gives birth yearly (so says the legend) to myriads of mosquitoes, veiy many of whom bye the bye bit me. At Orsova I went to the baths of Mehadia (see Murray — as you have got my " Southern Germany Murray " you must read up my route) the rapids and between Alt MordOva and Skela Gladova are very fine rough brown mountains on each side, a good deal of wood, a swift stream below, whirlpools occasionally, and splendid eagles soaring about. The Iron Gate is a hum- bug, the rapid is swift enough but the scenery nothing particular. At Orsova (Or-showa) on stepping into the boat we were tabooed for 10 days quarantine had we returned, and we were in a minute among turbanned Turks. The Quarantine laws are a great bore. A Turk has 3 days Quarantine in Wallachia and 10 in Hungary, a Wallachian 7 days in Hungary. So there are 3 nations close together none of whom can trade itc. to any extent, with the other. See Murray as to the way of making exchange, and passing the money through water. Stopped at Czernaboda (that is a Russian name) and went overland to Kustendje — 3 other English with myself made the first English party who had ever done it with the exception of one solitary Englishman about three weeks since. We arrived at Kustendje and the Black Sea (! I) all comfortably (except one breakdown of the axle tree), and found a very good inn and actually Barclay and Perkins' porter, a bottle of which I drank to the health of all at home. Steamer was to set off next morning at 12. Was lent a gun by an inhabitant and so went out a-shooting. Shot a couple of Sea Gulls first, then broke the leg of a heron, when flop flap flap up got an eagle, bang ! Mr Eagle lay a subject for dissection on the ground. Accordingly I did dissect him, at least skin him to the admiration of all beholders (I had my dissecting knives with me)— and I shall bring him to England. It is not a large one, not above 3J to 4 feet from tip to tip of wings, but a very powerful one. (Dinner's ready so I must stop.) Set off in a steamer on the Black Sea having first bathed therein. Very windy — cross sea worst passage since March. My breakfast and dinner were soon food for fishes, if they could digest them — 1 could not, in fact I was horribly squeamish at last having during my short time of health seen a splendid storm, lightning as bright as in the most vivid illumination, a broad glare of sheet lightning Lehrjahre and Wanderjahre |:>7 extendiiig along a quadrant of the horizon concentrated itself together in the middle to a broad band of forked lightning, it was splendid. The Black Sea is really very black, I do not know to what it is owing — rocky bottom?. [We] sailed down the Bosphorus through the Symplegades. Egad the Bosphorus beats any thing in the way of a view I have ever set my peepers upon. The kiosks are so opera-scene-like, so white and so much trellis work about them, the mountains are so grand and the Bosphorus so broad and blue, that (I am stuck fast in the mud about how to finish the scntciii-c being afraid of verging on the romantic). Arrived at Stamboul seeing as Byron says "The selfsame view That charmed the charming Mary Montague." The seraglios are splendid, ditto palaces, such a great deal of trellis work about them, and then there are cypresses, and the veiled ladies just looking out [sketch of one] between folds of gauze and very pretty eyes they have too ; then there are the Greeks, I never saw such black eyes in all my life. I should like to put one of them in a rage ; they must look splendid then. I saw the women's slave-market today — if I had had 50 pounds at my disposal I could have invested in an excessively beautiful one, a Georgian. Some of the slaves had their nails dyed in henna. Most of the black ones were fettered, but they seemed very happy dancing and singing and looking on com- placently whilst a couple of Turks were wrangling about their prices. 1 took a Turkish bath today, such a shampooing and lathering and steaming. Now about getting home. These plaguy quarantines have been extended, though there is no plague now in Turkey (•A great bore for I wanted to see some cases) and that at Syra with that at Trieste will be, I fear 24 days I therefore shall scarcely be able to see you before going to Cambridge. If I can get books I will read away in quarantine at mathematics and classics if I can't why I must learn Turkish or something desperate of that sort. In my last letter (from Pest) I asked you to send me £15 to Trieste— if you have not done so already please send it now — as I shall then have no possible anxiety about money matters. Good bye, loves in all directions. Your affectionate son, FEAS. GALTON. Those who have had the privilege of examining Sir Francis Darwin's journal of his tour in Turkey and Greece, and comparing it with Francis Galton's diary and letters of more than 30 years later, must at once be struck by the close resemblance of the two men ; they sketch much the same objects, in much the same style, and they are both interested in the same sort of things, especially the plague. The impression of the marked hereditary resemblance between uncle and nephew is much strengthened when we read these diaries. Beyond Constantinople the diary— and it is very fragmentary— is all that tells us of Francis's further progress : L8 P. G. 138 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon "Aug. 26. Set off from Constantinople in the Crescent at 4 p.m. Italian captain, English mate. One English gentleman, 4 ditto Ladies; French, Greeks, etc. and innumerable Turks, lying about, men and women, smoking and drinking coffee. They are a great nuisance ; the clear space on the quarter deck is not 18 inches broad and the consequence is that when the ship rolls you are almost sure to tumble over their feet, right into the middle of them, and as they are mostly women, such a position is very indelicate, and as they are all sea sick highly disagreeable also. Very rainy on sotting out; it was soon dark. Entered the Dardanelles at 8 next morning. "August 27 Came to the place where Troy was, thoroughly disappointed. There is no truth in the proverb ' Ex nihilo, nihil fit,' for Homer has shown its fallacy. He must have had a brilliant imagination to make a little bit of plain 2 miles long and 1 mile broad the scene of all the manoeuvres of a ten years' war. The idea too of fighting ten years for a woman ! Catch me doing such a thing for the fair Mary Anne, but the days of gallantry have passed. Achilles' tomb, a little hillock ; as for Tenedos opposite which the Greek toiled a couple of days to reach, I would bet anything that I could row over in 40 minutes (supposing the marsh on which Troy stood to have been increased by alluvial deposit, still Mount Ida and the rocks of Tenedos are necessarily stationary and so there cannot be .much mistake about relative distances). Tenedos is rocky and barren, has a large stone fortress built on it. Mytelene rocky and barren also ; if it used to be in the same state Orpheus must have been a dab hand to find beasts to charm with his lyre. Anchored off Smyrna at 11 p.m " In Smyrna Galton bought two pistols and a rifle barrel and he was "as happy as possible" with his purchase. On August 28 he walked out to the Aqueduct, practising shooting with his pistol and sketching the Aqueduct. "Caught a splendid locust which I keep for Delly; got to the Aqueduct at last having had previously to walk up the middle of the stream on natural stepping stones for about 200 yards and trespassing in orchards innumerable. The Aqueduct is a very large one, I should guess 500 yards and only from 3 to 5 feet wide. I walked on the top from one side to the other, a feat which my valet de place had told me had been once accomplished at great peril by an adventurous Englishman "Aug. 29. Set off on board a French man of war steamer Dante for Syra ; very large and roomy, very slow sailer. Eat a fearfully large breakfast of meat and fruits, drowsiness and some symptoms of multigrub supervened. Passed Scio, rocky und bare. Eat an enormous dinner, terrible cholera, stomach-ache and nausea all night." On Sept. 3 we find Galton in the Quarantine House at Syra, of which he provides a sketch. Here on the 6th he records a dream of ill omen to a friend, Miss Hawke, and adds, " I can't help fancying this true." A note is added at a later date, " which signified nothing." Most persons record such dreams after the event and only when they come off. In this Quarantine House Galton stayed 10 days, then he passed to Athens with a brief visit and so to quarantine at Trieste. Lehrjahro and Waiiderjahre i:;(.i He has himself iu his Memories (p. 55) told us how he escaped three or four days' quarantine at Trieste by the quaint process of making Spoglio. The assumption made is that an apparently healthy human body passed through water is not as dangerous as the clothes it carries. Accordingly a few days before termination of the usual quarantine there is a medical inspection and the doctor directs those who satisfy him, and wish to " make Spoglio," to a covered quay ; opposite to this, at a distance of about 20 feet, is a second quay, the two being separated by a strip of water four or five feet deep. On the second quay are vendors of clothes. " A bargain had to be made with one of the old-clothes men by shouting across the water. I," writes Galton, " was to leave everything I had on me, excepting coin or other metal, and papers which were about to be fumigated, in exchange for the offered clothes. When the bargain was concluded, I stripped, plunged in, and emerged on the opposite quay stark naked, to be newly clothed and receive freedom. The clothesman got my old things in due time — that was his affair. The new clothes were thin, and the trousers were made of a sort of calico and deficient in the fashionable cut of my old ones ; but as it was not then late in the year the thinness mattered little in those latitudes, and I did not care about the rest." From Trieste Galton returned by way of Venice, Milan, Geneva and Boulogne. We have no record of the home-coming beyond what Galton himself has told us : "My dear kind father took my escapade humorously. He was pleased with it rather than otherwise, for I had much to tell and had obviously gained a great deal of experience." Memories, p. 57. But the seed had been sown ; the first attack had run its triumphant course, and the Wanderlust would manifest its power year after year in Galton's life. He himself says : " This little expedition proved an important factor in moulding my after-life. It vastly widened my views of humanity and civilisation, and it confirmed aspirations for travel which were afterwards indulged." 18—2 CHAPTER V LEURJAHRE AND WANDERJAHRE PART II. MATHEMATICAL STUDIES AND CAMBRIDGE PLEASURES IN October, 1840, we find Francis Galton established in Trinity College, Cambridge. It was, he says, a notable day in his life when, escorted by his father, Tertius, he arrived on the top of a stage coach in the town of Cambridge. No man was ever a more loyal son of Alma Mater than Galton, and nothing gave him greater joy in later life than the honours conferred 011 him by his College and University. That the portrait of him — a mere pollman — should hang with those of great heroes in the dining-hall, that he could once again order audit ule and dine by right at the Fellows' table were matters which gave him inexpressible delight. Those who have never left the University have little knowledge of how very tender, and largely unreasoning is the affection of the old Cambridge man to his University. The existing life of the place he feels has nothing to do with him, it is transient, inter- loping. The permanent and substantial is the old environment, peopled with many familiar forms, with the wonted figures crossing the court, the friendly shout from the windows, the tones of voices long silent or now grown unsympathetic, the midnight fireside, the enthusiasms of youth (our youth, of course !), and the seniors with their failings, which have grown to be essential virtues, landmarks of that time, with their indulgent tolerations, and their moulding affectionate sarcasm of our certainties. We own the place, we people it ; the present population are but lessees of our ancestral halls, intrusive, alien, anomalous. The magic fascination of it all is merely thwarted by the reality ; for us "the ideal shall be the real." And when two Cambridge exiles talk together of the place — they unconsciously mingle in one same en- vironment, two races of men separated, perhaps, by a generation. We know them all: Harry Hallam1, "with his singular sweetness and ' Brother of Tennyson's Arthur Hallam. Lehrjahru mid Wmiderjaliiv 141 attractiveness of manner, with a love of harmless banter and p.-iradox " ; F. Campbell1, who set for himself " an ideal of public life too high for his powers "yet who had a disposition unalloyed by pettiness, and when consulted about difficulties " put things in fresh lights, and always with noble intent " ; Johnson2 of King's, the active member of the Epigram Club — of which more anon ; Maine3 of Pembroke, one of the few men as thoroughly at home in Trinity as in his own college ; Kay, the idler of the staircase, but the effective man in later life ; Charles Buxton, with none of the exceptional brilliancy of the others but with " manly virtues and as much common sense as was consistent with a charming dash of originality " ; W. G. Clark4, — who like many men gave promise of high achievement, but failed to fulfil, and could but sing : " Truly there's something wanting in the world " ; Mathew Boulton, the boy known from the old school and from home (see p. 77), and the relative, Cousin Theodore5, to complete the circle. Galton tells us of these friends" in his Memories (pp. 65 — 70) with a few brief lines of characterisation. Surely they are not more his friends than our own ? Are they not types that we ourselves have known thirty to forty years after Galton ? types which, under other names, yet haunt to-day, thirty and more years later still, the old staircases, and even now assemble to express in new language the old dreams and ever new ambitions round the ancient fireplaces, where they seem to our generation intruders, and where we seem to them shadows of a profitless past, which they dismiss as mid-Victorian ! Galton knew and loved his Cambridge right well ; it gave him friends and some mental training. He appreciated the thoroughness of its 1 Afterward Lord Campbell ; he was son of the Chancellor. - William Johnson Cory, the Eton master. 3 Afterwards Sir Henry Maine. Among Galton's personalia I have come across Maine's undergraduate visiting card. 4 Public Orator of the University and Vice-Master of Trinity College. 5 Theodore Howard Galton, see Pedigree Plate A. B They were, apart from degree standard, in many respects a brilliant group. Maim; in 1842, Johnson in 1843, won the Chancellor's English Medal; Clark got the Person in 1843, and the Greek Ode in 1842 and 1843, and the Epigrams in 1842 ; Maine the Latin Ode in 1842 and 1843 and the Epigrams in 1843, and the Camden in 1842 ; M. Boulton the Epigrams in 1841 ; Johnson the Camden in 1844. Maine got the Craven in 1843, Johnson in 1844, Maine and Clark the Chancellor's Classical Medals in 1844 and Hallain got them in 18 Hi. 142 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon studies, but complained — even bitterly — of their narrowness. Luckily for him his medical studies had- supplemented them at the very point where they were most defective — the training in observation and experiment. In 1840 there was no Natural Science Tripos, and of course Moral Science and History had not been thought of. There were Professors of Chemistry, Botany, Geology, Natural Philosophy and Mineralogy, but as the honours students must read for either the Mathematical or Classical Tripos, these professors did not attract the able students who were working for fellowships. Indeed Laboratory and Museum accommodation was very limited in Cambridge in 1840, and the modern idea of laboratory training may be said to have been practically unknown. In a certain sense Galton's training had been of a far more modern character in London than it could be in Cambridge, but at the same time the intensive study of mathematics was a distinct gain and one which was of great help to Galton. His first letter to his father, after the latter's departure from Cambridge, runs as follows : THIN. COLL. CAMBRIDGE. Monday, Oct. [19], 1840. MY DEAR FATHER, Thank you for your letter. Six silver teaspoons will be amply sufficient. If you cannot send wine easily from Leamington, the best plan will be to write to your London wine-merchant as there is a carrier direct from there. There are no letters for you from the post, but I enclose one from Adele which I received today in a letter to me from her. I have had as yet no answer from Leonard Horner. O'Brien has not yet returned to Cambridge, but was expected today. He fell desperately in love at Inverary where he went with a party as tutor. I will write to you on completing my arrange- ments. My rooms are very comfortable. Emma's pictures are quite at home, as usual, in my bedroom, and I am going to invest in a plaster bust of Newton and get it bronzed over and put up opposite the fireplace [see Plate LI]. I have got everything except my linen which is not quite got ready. I shall however be able to send you my accounts in two days. Theodore has returned, but I cannot find him, he arrived about an hour since. Perry1 gave us his first lecture today ; what a pleasure it is to hear a real senior wrangler speak. My organ of veneration is so very strong that I doubt when I shall dare to address him. What a fine sight a surplice night is, the bright light of the wax candles and the white dresses so well contrasting with the dark panelled oak behiud gives no slight resemblance to a scene in Revelations I am as happy as possible and am preparing for a long and strong pull at reading. Love to Mater and all. Your affectionate Son FRAS. GALTON. 1 Senior Wrangler in 1828, Tutor of Trinity, 1837—1841, and afterwards Bishop of Melbourne, 1847—1876. Lehrjahre and Wander jali re 14H The following letters provide a more intimate picture of Galton's life at college : Oct. 23rd, 1840, TRINITY, CAMBRIDGE. MY DEAR FATHER, I did not write before, as I wished to hear whether Mr O'Brien1 would have me or not, before sending my letter. However I have just learnt that he will and 1 begin with him on Monday next ; he recommends me not to go over with him now my old subjects, but to start off and read as I can of Differentials and their application to Statics and Dynamics, and after this term to read over again what I have done against my first examination in May by which I am classed. Thanks for your letter received 2 days since. Port wine not arrived. The communication between the intellectual nucleus of Cambridge and the Boeotian town of Leamington is excessively tardy. I really think that our present economising Government must have made a contract with the carrier for the transmission of the mail-bag, as, if the postmaster at Warwick was not seized with an apoplexy and thereby occasioned a delay, your letters take 3 days to get here. Yesterday I had a letter directed to you in my mother's handwriting (the enclosed letter) sent me which must have slept on the road many days. I for a wager any day would undertake to be on the top of the Draohenfels by Bonn before a letter put in the post at Cambridge at midday, would reach Leamington. I waste paper fearfully, i.e. scribble over both sides of it innumerable x, y's and funny looking triangles. Mrs Hoppit says that : " It's a great comfort to her to have a reading gentleman, because there is then always plenty of stuff to light the fires with." Theodore looks blooming, he hangs up pictures of Cerito2 in his rooms and talks of the O-pey-ra. I tea with Boulton tonight ; he is not much altered, but very shy. Talking of tea, please send me some soon, as there are many sloe leaves in the Cambridge. I have proved this by microscopical observation. H — — is very goodnatured and has introduced me to some nice men ; he was officious at first, wanting I think to make mo as dependent on him as Z. is, but there was tlion a difference of opinion between us, and now we are great allies. Good bye, your affectionate son, FRAS. GALTON. The letter is followed by the usual accounts, which this time include most of a freshman's needs — cap and gown, ironmongery, crockery, linen, etc. There are also a few lines on a little strip of paper somewhat characteristic of the man and rather hard on his father. Leonard Horner had clearly written to Tertius Galton praising the character of his son Francis — how we should like that letter now ! — and Tertius had for- warded it to Cambridge. " Now I don't like being soaped ; in that letter there were 3 words or so on the subject of introductions ; why 1 O'Brien was 3rd Wrangler in 1838 and afterwards Professor of Mathematics at the Royal Military Academy. He has given his name to one or two mathematical demonstrations. ' See The Ingoldsby Legends, "A Row in an Omnibus (Box)." 144 A/7'' (fi"t A'^'^.s of Frond* (!l mechanical originality and his general intei-est at an early age in mechanical problems. But teeming as young Galton was at this time with ideas, he was still equally eager for and markedly impressed by new experiences. His mind was rapidly developing, and each new conquest, as it is made, is at once reported to his home circle. The readiness with which he communicates everything which occurs to his father— absolutely con- fident of sympathy and suggestion — suffices to demonstrate a very rare and perfect relationship between parent and child1. [March t 1841.] DEAR EMMA, I send 17 shillings worth of etchings etc. some of them by C. Schub are exceedingly good. I was unable to get some outlines by Rembrandt, which I was anxious to have done. I am very sorry that my Father is so unwell; perhaps this attack will do for asthma and all. Yesterday I made my appearance before the eyes of wondering Cantabs, where do you think? Why right in the midst of a den containing 1 Lion, 1 Lioness, 1 huge Bengal Tiger and 4 Leopards in Wombwell's menagerie. The Lion snarled awfully. I was a wee frightened for the Brute crouched so. The keeper told me that I was only the fourth that had entered that den. Nothing like making oneself a " Lion " at Cambridge. My Turkish tour and medical education does wonders and my late van Amburg performance promises to crown my reputation. F. G. P.S. I send a view I had of a street in Smyrna — thinking that it would make a very good picture a la Prout. A few days later Francis writes to his father in a hand showing much sign of emotion : Sunday [21 March 1841]. TRIN. COLL. MY DEAR PATH KB, Thanks for your letter. Tomorrow I will see if Mortlock has received the £20. I will send my accounts. Thanks greatly about Aberystwith. I am rather cut up by the sudden death of a College friend of mine. Poor fellow he wined with me last Tuesday, walked with me next day, complaining only of a slight headache. I heard that he was ill yesterday Saturday morning, and going to see him after hall at 5 p.m. found him dying, with what I took to be typhus ; called again at 9, he was much worse and evidently could not hold out 6 hours. An eruption of scarlet 1 It must have existed in earlier generations of the Galton family, for it is evidenced in the story of Samuel Galton's appeal to one of his sons : " Tell your friend, Sammie, all about it, and he will take good care your father does not hear a word of it." 152 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon fever had broken out. He died at 12. He was one of the most kind-hearted fellows I ever met with ; he had just taken his degree and was going into orders and had begun hospital attendance that he might be of use in his parish. He thus caught the scarlet fever and is dead. He was a very great friend of Hughes'. It is curious that I have as yet lost only 7 schoolfellows or fellow-collegiates that I really care for and every one of these have died of scarlet fever or typhus, and all except one within three days warning. How fearfully death intrudes in the midst of enjoyment like the skeleton at the Egyptian's feast. It is remarked by D'Israeli (I think) that the shock from the sudden loss of a friend is the only feeling which the mind cannot become callous to. The frequent sight of deatli seems in no way to diminish it. Patients in a hospital one looks upon as doomed men and their death takes place as in the natural order of things. A friend appears part of oneself, and when he dies, one contemplates the grave where he is laid in as ready to receive oneself ; we then know that we are mortal. However this kind of language is out of place to you at home in the midst of marriage festivities, etc. I received no cake with your letter ! Good bye, Yours truly, FRAS. GALTON. During the Easter vacation, Francis Galton consulted both with Hodgson and Booth in Birmingham, who appear to have given diametrically opposite advice, but the nature of their proposals is not clear. They most probably concerned Francis's prolonged study of mathematics and his neglect for the time being of medicine. He writes to his father, April 8th, 1841 : "I have on reconsidering, reconsulting, etc., etc., determined to abide the Trinity Examination, as I should be sure not to get the Cains prize as they have two very superior men there, and as they take up slightly different subjects — but to do my best for a Trinity first class and to migrate afterwards " It is impossible now to say, but probable that the " Caius prize " referred to may have been a Tancred studentship. There is a good deal of discussion later about the position in the May examination, but no further reference to this migration proposal, it probably arose from Galton's Birmingham medical sponsors urging concentration on medical studies. Later in the same month, with the Darwin omission of exact dating, comes a characteristic letter : TRIN. COLL. April, 1841. MY DEAK FATHER, No letter of yours, whether received at school, announcing that I might come home a week before my time, or whether containing a cheque on Barclay, Bevan, Tritton and Co., ever came more gratefully than the one I have just received to say that Lehrjahrc find Wamlerjahrc l~>:! my Mathematical M.S.S. were at Claverdon. I have been latterly in despair owing to their loss. I had hunted for them before leaving Claverdon, but found them not. I looked everywhere in Cambridge and was equally disappointed. They are invaluable ; all the talent of Perry, O'Brien and Mathison1 are condensed into those papers. There- fore please take the greatest care of them. Burn the Duddeston titledeeds if you will, but preserve these manuscripts. If you have even the compassion that glimmers in a butcher's breast whilst he sticks a pig, or in Majendie whilst he runs needles into the brain of a living dog, send them immediately. Till I receive them I am desperate. I am very glad to hear Holland's report of Bessy ; please tell me all you hear about her. DON'T FORGET THE M.S.S. PAPERS , if you do, may the spirit of gout tweak your remembrance ! ! ! P.S. Please remember the Manuscripts — send them immediately. Good bye, Yours truly, FHAS. GALTON. Saturday, May 1 [1841]. MY DEAK FATHER, I received 2 or 3 days since your letter with good news about Bessy and bad news about yourself, for which thanks (I don't mean specially the latter part). I have also received 1 dozen of port marked " very old." O'Brien told me the day before yesterday that I must certainly read with Hopkins next October, and on my saying that I would rather remain with him he strongly recommended me not. I own this has made me very bumptious ; it does great credit to O'Brien for his openness, as of course tutors prefer to keep the better men. As he stays in Cambridge during the Long Vacation (poor man, he is married), which is very dull and hot during summer, I go with Mathison our Mathematical Lecturer to Keswick in Cumberland with a party to read. The terms are £30 for about 3 months, and the life we lead a very pleasant and inexpensive one, certainly much cheaper than in College. By the bye we are turned out of our rooms during the Long Vacation. I have been obliged to take a half-classical coach for the approaching College examination (in about 4£ weeks). Now you must not expect me to be first Mathematic in Trinity2. I do not expect it myself, as amongst other very good men, there are some who have already read 1 Perry was senior in 1828, Mathison fifth Wrangler in 1839, both were ultimately tutors of Trinity and Perry Bishop of Melbourne. 2 Galton's year (1844) was not a very strong one in mathematics; there was no one who has left a name in that field ; and in particular it was not strong at Trinity ; that College got 6th, 7th and 8th Wranglers only, with men who did not take Trinity fellowships. Of Galton's friends, Hughes was 22nd Wrangler, Stewart and Maine were low Senior Optimes, but first classes in the Classical Tripos ; Dalyell, very nearly " wooden spoon " ; Clark was 18th Senior Optime and second Classic to Maine's Senior Classic. Dalyell also took the Classical Tripos. On the whole Galton's friends were on the literary side. With what we know of his mathematical powers, he might easily have led the Trinity contingent. 20 1 .-,4 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon exceedingly high and who know their early subjects very well. I hope to do better in each succeeding examination, but ill health, for I severely overstrained myself my first term,— and I feel convinced that to have read during the X1""9 Vacation would have been madness,— has necessarily kept me back. But with no more excuses, as there is much in what Dr Jeune used to say. Good bye, Your affectionate son, FRAS. GALTON. Galton appears to have taken only a third class in the Trinity May examinations, but apparently the class was determined not only by mathematics but also by classics : Friday, OLD HUMMUMS [11 June 1841]. COVENT GAKDEN. Left Cambridge on Tuesday, — the classes are just out. MY DEAR FATHER, I am not yet aware what my place is in all the math, subjects. I was fourth in Trigonometry (Matliison told me) and as I did comparatively better in Geometry and Algebra, I probably am higher in those two. Having done but little- classics and that badly I am in the third class I care scarcely at all about being where I am as I am as high in maths, as I expected. You must not forget that, as regards Classics more especially, I have to compete with men who have spent that time on them which I have employed in medicine, and it is therefore improbable that I should take a good place amongst them. The Math, papers were exceedingly easy this year so that everybody, who knows anything about them, must of necessity do three fourths, hence there was little room for a man to distinguish himself in them. In the Algebraical paper there were absolutely only 3 questions not bookwork, that is problems. This is too bad, it is also unusual. I am moving about town, doing one thing or another, dined with the Huberts and Homers. I stay here till Tuesday morning to hear Madame Rachel on Monday. I expect to be in Leamington Tuesday afternoon I have had to invest in a frock coat and two pair of trousers [P.S.] Hence as you observe I have not paid my Classical Tutor £.1, who had left Cambridge without an address. I have not paid for my Frock Coat which will be about £5. I should be obliged for £5 — £10 as my bill at the Old Hummums will be for a week and I take one meal daily. My stock in hand is £6. 19., there being a mistake somewhere of 3 shillings in my account. Somewhere about the October of this year Tertius Galton sent his son Francis an "Essay on Book Keeping." It is a very simple description of how to keep accounts in an orderly manner, but it is of interest as showing us that from July 1st Francis was given a regular allowance, payable in advance quarterly, and thus the minute details of expenditure hitherto transmitted to his father cease. The allowance Lchrjahrc and Wiinderjahre i:>.~> was a generous one, £300 per annum and apparently an extra sum for private tuition. Tertius Galton was no doubt right in impressing upon his son the necessity for accurate record of expenditure — even to mistakes of three shillings. But the almost weekly rendering of accounts without a definite allowance does not provide a young man with the same training in monetary affairs as a definite income with freedom to spend within its limits. We cannot help considering that this statement : " Francis Galton, Esq. in account with his Treasurer," must have been a considerable relief to the undergraduate mind. The summer vacation spent at Keswick was a very happy one ; Francis Galton was in a most merry frame of mind. The final part of the vacation was overcast by the illness of Tertius Galton, who came down to join his son, and caught a severe cold, which caused his first bad illness, lasting four or five weeks. The tutors were Mathison of Trinity, and Eddis, first Chancellor's medallist and fourth classic in 1839, and well-known later as a Queen's Counsel. The members of the reading party besides Galton included Blomefield, Atkinson, Strickland, Young and Cooper1. The house Galton stayed at was Browtop, which stands well upon the Thirlmere road before the old turnpike at the junction with the steep road down to the church is reached. Galton had visited at the end of June the Hodgsons and Booths in Birming- ham, and he had made a flying visit with his Aunt Booth to his sister, Lucy Moilliet, at Selby Hall. On July 1 he writes to announce his safe arrival at Keswick to his father : " I set off [from Birmingham] by the \ 2 o'clock train in the night and slept without once awaking until we were near Preston, we got to Lancaster at 7£ I set off at 8 by mail to Kendal. The town was in a bustle owing to the nomination, flags, trumpets and so forth. I had a very entertaining fellow-traveller; he had a hooked nose, gold spectacles, was a member of the Reform Club, and a ne-plus-ultra radical; he had travelled, and had also been a rowing Cantab. We had a red hot argument on politics, which I firmly believe neither of us knew anything about, but he would talk about them, and as I must answer yes or no, even Bessy will excuse my not assenting to a radical's ideas ; he knew the lakes very well and told me many legends about them. Windermere is said to be a beautiful lake. Wordsworth asserts that it is superior to anything abroad, but I humbly conceive that he thereby shews his patriotism 1 Blomefield was about the middle of the Junior Optimes in 1843, Atkinson 27th Wrangler in the same year and afterwards Director of Public Instruction, Calcutta, Young was Third Class, Classical Tripos and Junior Optime also in 1843; Cooper was a Senior Optime in 1844 ; Strickland was one of the well-known Yorkshire family of Howsham Hall, his tragic end is described in the Memories, p. 64. 20—2 Life and Letters of Francis Galton rather tlmn his taste. It is certainly pretty but very narrow in comparison with its length, and the high mountains on each side apparently reduce this width still more, so that it looks like a river, and not a particularly broad one. [Then follows an account of the well-known road from Windermere to Keswick with slight sketches.] To-day is horribly misty ; Skiddaw is covered with clouds that reach low down as a Quakeress's dress, but those on the chain opposite are more a la Taglioni. I had intended walking up Skiddaw last night to see the sun rise but it began to rain Browtop is a very nice house, the habitable part is quite separate from the kitchen and outhouses ; it is one story high and the passage down the middle with 4 bedrooms on one side, and 4 sitting-rooms on the other side ; thus the whole house is £5 per week, so I pay 25 shillings. I have a beautiful view ; I should have sketched it for you, but there is nothing but clouds this morning. I am the first of the party that has come ; the rest are expected tomorrow. Good bye, Your affectionate son, FRAS. GALTON. Thursday, July 8 [1841]. BIIOVVTOP. MY DEAU FATHER, Being upon my own allowance you must excuse letter paper. In answer to your question : The Apothecaries' bill I owe, though differing some shillings from the one sent to Blakesley. The Hosier's Bill is not mine probably's Theodore's. I do not want the boots at Keswick, certainly not at present, as I always walk in thick shoes. I am very glad to hear about your asthma's want of punctuality this year ; should you have an opportunity I wish you would enquire whether the other asthmatic Leamingtonians, I think 3 in number, have got off equally well, as it would be interesting to find out whether some years are more favourable than others as is apparently the case in typhus and influenza. I never enjoyed myself so thoroughly as at present — Mathison and Eddis are thoroughly goodnatured. When it is fine we walk out in a body from 2 to 5 ; when wet play at battledore and shuttlecock or at fives in a most unstudious manner. Eddis you know is a senior medallist. Blomefield is the other undergraduate staying at Browtop. The St Quintins are very kind and their son (Charles) very agreeable, he rattles off about the Himalaya Passes and the scenery of Thibet, and totally condemns Howqua's Mixture. They introduced me to the Parson, a Mr M. — - who again intro- duced me to a Count O (I purposely write the word illegibly and that for an obvious reason, it consists of " three sneezes and a ski "), who is the lion of these parts, being Chemist, Botanist, Zoologist, etc., etc., and last not least a top-sawyer Animal Magnetiser. I need scarcely say that we got the greatest allies immediately, he is a very gentlemanly man, he shewed me through laboratories, hot-houses and monkey cages He has moreover got me patients to magnetise, lent me books and in short we are the greatest possible allies. He married a rich heiress who is a very pretty girl 18 years old, he is about 40 1 ought to say that as I walked with the Count through his laboratory he introduced me to a Dr Schmidt who was staying with him and working there. T thought I knew both the face and name, and found out that he was one of Liebig's class at (Jiosson, and \ve had great amusement in talking over the wine-parties, etc. after Lehrjahrc and WaiidtTJuhre |:>7 the table d'hote. He was a great phrenologist and I got him to paw my head, he gave me I think a very true character (self-esteem was remarkably full). I have not now the bump of constructiveness very large though he says it is large. Mary's hump is firmness, I described her character and he immediately said that he had observed equally well developed cases'. I have just descended from Skiddaw, it is a very seedy mountain to go up, there being no difficulty whatever, the view is very extensive including the Isle of Man and Ben Lomond. It was very hot and we pitched into much whisky, and on the strength of it cheered 3 times 3 for God save the Queen, Trinity, etc. Whatever Father Mathew may say there is nothing like vast quantities of whisky on a mountain top, it would be a splendid way to subject a convert to temptation. — -Please address in future Browtop as an oblique-eyed intimate of our skullion having nothing else to do brings up the letters. Love to all and each ; may the critical spirit of Bessy smile on this epistle. Good Bye, Your affectionate son, FKAS. GALTON. The Keswick letters show such joy in life, such healthy vigour and a nature bubbling over with such fun that those who read them must feel at once on terms of intimacy with Galton's genial personality. I have allowed his criticisms of Whewell to remain, for they are only the opinions of a boyish undergraduate on the Master of his college2- and most of us remember what fair game the Master must ever be to the world of junior members of his college ! Buow TOP, KESWICK. July 18, Sunday, 1841. MY DEAK FATHER, Thank you for your letter. I am very glad that you talk of coming towards the lakes, as they are well worth seeing, and as a long course of fine weather almost 1 Galton's interest in phrenology was a precursor of his later system of head- measurements. While Francis was a boy at King Edward School, Birmingham, a Cambridge examiner fond of phrenology asked to be allowed to inspect the boys' heads to test his phrenological opinion against the results actually found in the following day's examination. He went into the school-room and was much struck with Francis' head and sent for him for a second inspection. He then said to Dr Jeune, "This boy has the largest organ of causality I ever saw in any head but one, and that is the bust of Dr Erasmus Darwin." "Why," said Dr Jeune, "this boy is Dr Darwin's grandson." Owen, the Lanark Utopian, also noted Galton's head when an infant and predicted from its peculiarity that he would not be a common character. The large organs of causality, i.e. a good temporal development in ordinary parlance were noted by the professional phrenologist, Donovan, who gave in 1849 an amusing estimate of Francis Galton's character as wonderfully correct in some respects as it was absurdly incorrect in others. I shall cite some part of it later. - Whewell was made Master this very autumn. 158 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon invariably sets in about this time. I do not know of any house in Keswick which you could take (bona tide) as they are all small and mostly dark and dirty. The inn is very good, good bedrooms etc., and has been honoured by Queen Adelaide's sleeping in it, if that be any inducement to you, but Ambleside has many good lodging houses. 1 received the enclosed letter from Christian the day before yesterday. We have had beautiful weather the last 4 days, and have already been making several excursions, to Buttermere, where the celebrated beauty whom Hatfield the robber eloped with some 20 years since, lived, and where several uncommonly pretty girls keep up the character of the place still. We have also been up Helvellyn. They said it would take us 3 hours to reach the top, but it occupied only 2f to get up, stay 25 minutes at the top, and be at the bottom on the other side. The country people are exceptionally hospitable, they give us no end of milk, oatcakes, home-made cheese etc., and it is difficult to make them take anything in return, so our plan is to ask if they have any children and pick out one of the curly headed young scrubs, and visibly slip a shilling or two, according to the probable extent of our united appetites, into his hand. Yesterday after taking a stroll up Skiddaw we went to the perfection of a farm house. A very pretty Creole niece of the farmer chatted, smiled, gave us milk etc. and set off a musical snuff-box playing, then brought a nosegay, and lastly sat down with us to grub. She asked if we were any of the Cambridge gentlemen, arid on our saying that we were she told us that 2 or 3 years ago there was a large party at Keswick who were a " sad set of scamps." So you see what a reputation Cambridge has got. Whewell, wonderful to say, has fallen in love with an Ullswater beauty, Miss Marshall, and is going to marry her. She is very rich and of very good family, hence our continual conversation at Browtop is in surmises as to how Whewell would set to work to make love, he is nearly 50, she a little more than 20 We like Browtop excessively, the only fault in the situation of Keswick being that it is in a wide valley, so that there are but few walks within a short distance. The hills are all quite green so that we can run down them at a capital pace. Mathison tried sliding down one of them, but he reached the bottom a complete cherub having scarcely whereon to sit, owing to the friction We hear that a party of Cantabs at Ambleside think of migrating to Keswick, it will be a great bore if they come as we are enough already. Armitage the to-be senior wrangler of the February after next is one of them. Dear Bessy I know that this letter is a stupid one but I really have nothing to say for myself. Write soon and tell me about Scarborough. Good-bye and believe me ever your affectionate \ ^ (^ Brother J FUAS. GALTON. MY DEAK FATHER, BKOWTOP. Sunday, Auy. 1st, 1841. I received this morning £15 all correct enclosed in an envelope stamped "too late"; for which thanks. The letter before this one was dated from "N.g. cliff." Lehrjahrc and Wander jahre 1.r>9 Do they ticket the houses as cabinet curiosities? It is certainly novel and decidedly literary. I suppose that Lucy and James have already arrived, what with them and my two uncles, the Galton family will inundate the place, and if the ordinary appetite that accompanies the several branches of the family be present at Scarboro' it will give a very satisfactory interpretation of the N.g. ticketing. Whewell is undoubtedly under the guardianship of Hymen, though an oyster may be affected by love, a Whewell can't, for he has (I understand) been so involved in the metaphysical line that he looks on the approaching event with the most philosophical indifference. In 3 weeks Keswick is to be turned topsy-turvy with amusements. Inprimis a 4-oared race in which your humble servant is to pull, as we get up a boat for the honour of Cambridge. (The names of the crew are Atkinson, Strickland, Young, Galton and Cooper steersman) £12 prize. We really shall have a very fair chance, for though the Keswick boatmen are trained to pulling from their sash and petticoat age yet they are more in the cart horse line, whilst the description that I heard given of our crew was that they are "intensely plucky." We have great amusement here in scrambling about. Mathison is a capital walker but not a dab at climbing, consequently he occasionally sticks amongst the rocks like a saint in a niche and immovable without a miracle. We get on capitally at Browtop. The order of the day is — Breakfast finished as the clock strikes 9. Reading till 1 or li. Lunch, walk till 5, dine and chat till 8, Read till 10, tea to 10|, Read to 11 or 12. When a long walk is taken we eschew dinner put our leathern whisky flasks in our pockets, which I am convinced is the true interpretation of " seven leagued boots," and walk from 1 to 8 or 9. We certainly do great things in the walking line instead of " manage-ing nos forces " after the Swiss regime. We scamper up the hills and somehow or other don't get tired. To-day I ascended more than f(l9 of the height of Skiddaw (driven back by mist) in 35 minutes, about 2200 feet, this was in Sunday costume and without puggyfying to any extent. DEAR BESSY. How's the bathing? and how are Emma's freckles? The amount of sunshine here is by no means dangerous to beauty as the sun has generally a mass of mist rather thicker than Skiddaw is high to shine through. It has been miserably cold so that I read with a pea-coat on and with my feet on the fire hob. In your letter in a quotation from Aunt Hubert a word occurred "odm...ts." I have looked in Johnson's Dictionary but can find nothing corresponding to it, so I presume that it must have been coined since his time. Again, there was a passage in your letter ending with 4 notes of admiration combined. This is an excess. Thirdly, I should recommend a more refined choice of phrases than such as the " weather taking up " and others of a similar nature. You state " The air is delightful, and a beautiful walk along the cliff." I am not aetherial enough to enter into your delights — (I must bully you). How has Lucy's bazaar gone off? Please write of tenor. Tell me what you had for dinner if you can think of nothing else, but do write. Good-bye, your affect. Brother, FBAS. GALTON. 160 I<(fe and Letters of Fran cist Gal ton KESWICK BROWTOP, August [13] 1841. MY DEAR FATHER, You talk of "fear of annoying me with a formal visit" etc. I can assure you that I should enjoy nothing so much as Atwoodizing you over the country. We can give you dinner occasionally at Browtop. You will find Eddis and Mathison very agreeable, and I really think that the very best thing that you can do is to settle in Keswick for a fortnight or 3 weeks. If you will give me a commission for lodgings, I will make every enquiry. Our boat-racing scheme has been given up for on enquiry we find that the competitors must pull on pins, not in rollocks [sketches]. To pull in that manner we unanimously decreed was below the dignity of a Cambridge " oar " as all the beauty of and skill of rowing consists in correct feathering which of course is impracticable with pins. It is altogether a ridiculous piece of business. There actually is no practising on the lake and consequently the pulling at the race must be wretched Poor Chance my old schoolfellow and chum is dead. He was my chief friend at Dr Jeune's and also at King's College, where he read classics. He was one of the best fellows that I have met with; he was expected to have distinguished himself. Poor fellow — he died of consumption Yesterday morning I walked up Skiddaw to see the sunrise. I got to the top of the eastern peak which is not 150 feet lower than the highest one in 40 minutes. Of course saw nothing but mist. I shall, however, try it again tonight — We have got some sails to our boat at Keswick, it is curious how frightened all the boatmen here are of them, they never use them. Even the attendant " cad " upon the party, a man ready to poach, knock down, do anything on an emergency, refused to go into the boat on the ground of having a " wife and 5 small children1." The postscript to sister Bessie propounds on this occasion a problem in etiquette. Galton and others had dined with the Russian Count, and the Countess had not received them in very friendly fashion. Meanwhile " the Count (a very punctilious man) had left the town, leaving the Countess behind." Galton had not called since the dinner, ought he to do so ? The final story of the " Count " is told in the Memories, p. 63. BROWTOP, August 19:; might have been for after reading them through carefully 5 times I abandoned all hope of making out the meaning of any one single line in utter despair. The words appear all bewitched for I can't make out which is substantive and which is nominative case etc. etc. As a specimen "Debtor to balance agreed £. ."—Should you have spare time, would you be so kind as to write two or three lines in account book style with their interpreta- tion in popular English and then I have no doubt but that I shall make out the rest of the paper, which you so kindly sent me. My box arrived safely and the books inside in good preservation, with the exception of one book right through which, like Sisera's temples, a hobnail was driven — however it was only some temperance tracts bound up and therefore it is quite immaterial. Emma was not sure whether my D'Israeli's Curiosities of Literature was packed up — it is. I like Hopkins more and more every day, and I never enjoyed Cambridge so thoroughly. Love to all. Goodbye, Your affectionate Son, ERAS. GALTON. The following letter gives a vivid picture of a famous mathematical coach and enables us still better to realise the Cambridge life of those days : TRINITY, Thursday Evening, MY DEAR FATHER, Nov. [11] 1841. Thanks for the second edition of my accounts which I received this morning, and still greater thanks for the explanatory notes by Bessy thereunto attached1. Hopkins progresses capitally. I had forgotten to tell you that I find that his charges are only £72 per annum instead of £100 as currently reported : this will make a jolly difference to my finances. Hopkins to use a Cantab expression is a regular brick • tells funny stories connected with different problems and is no way Donnish ; he rattles us on at a splendid pace and makes mathematics anything but a dry subject by entering thoroughly into its metaphysics. I never enjoyed anything so much before. I made my first acquaintance with Laplace today, in one of his theorems, greatly to my satisfaction. H — - has not returned to Cambridge. He is an utter Puseyite, he dances much and instructs his partners in the " Fathers " and in their controversies. Eddis and Mathison both bloom. I wined with the former last night, who decidedly has not recovered from tender impressions received at Keswick. He spoke on walking in the cloisters by moonlight, and quoted Byron. He is therefore hopeless. I am going to become a member of the Camden Antiquarian Society as being a gentlemanly thing and really very amusing. The subscription is 7 shillings a term until £3 has been paid when the subscriber becomes an honorary member, and is released from further subscription retaining the same privileges. Whewell is expected next week in Cambridge. He is not Vice-Chancellor this year as Dr Archdall of Emmanuel has been elected to that office. 1 " Lord Torment and Tease," as he had been called at an earlier date, neither di 'served that second edition nor the commentary ; the accounts were beautifully simple and clear, and we may shrewdly suspect he understood them. 21—2 164 Lift' ."> The Glaciarium is composed of a mixture of carbonate and sulphate of potans which deliquesces in their water of crystallisation and afterwards hardens. This Miller told mo, who himself had heard it from Faraday. I have not seen the specification. I shall be quite dissipated next week. Monday I dine with Dr Fisher and go to an evening party at Hopkins; Tuesday, Bachelors' Ball ; Wednesday, I go to Keswick etc. Good bye, your affectionate Son, FRANCIS GALTON. In this letter Galton returns to his original and later usual form of signature, but it took a long time to re-establish it. The letter of March 19th tells us more details of the Little-Go and Galton's work at mathematics : TRINITY, CAMBRIDGE, March 19, 1842. MY DEAR FATHER, I enclose you the Little Go list. I ought to have sent it yesterday, but was not in my rooms till after post-time. I have I consider had 3 grand escapes in my life- time : 1st walking into a Lion's den and coming out undigested, 2udlJ' bathing in a frosty stream at moonlight and not remaining at its bottom in an apoplexy, 3nUjr going into the Little Go when I had not read over half my subjects and coining out unplucked, not, however, that the pluck would be of any consequence. I have never the less been the gainer by this examination for calculating the advantage of being in the first class to be estimated at sixpence, I went to a man yesterday and bet a shilling I would be in the 21"1, thus leaving 2 sixpenny pieces to luck, which as you see I have won. I am much obliged to Bessy for the melancholy news about Miss H. I was, however, aware of my misfortune the same week that the engagement took place, but had not been informed who Mr E. was ; there is one thing that acts as a poultice to my wounded feelings which is that that small chimpanzee Mr S. is not the happy man. Time has done wonders for me in soothing etc., but, oh Bessy ! ! Miss D. has done much more ; she is without exception the most beautiful etc., etc., etc. I have ever seen. I was at a hop at her Ma's house the other night (I know most of the families in Cambridge now), I was dancing with her (the daughter not the mama) in a quadrille with one of my Little Go-Examiners for a vis-a-vis. Today as the sun was shining beautifully I decked myself ovit in resplendent summer apparel, light trowsers, light waistcoat (those that I had last year) to make a call upon this fair creature, but as I was fast finishing my toilette, and was " throwing a perfume over the violet " in the way of arranging my cravat ties, the wind blew and the rain fell horribly, and the streets were one mass of mud. I was in despair, but reflecting that if Leander swam the Hellespont for Hero, / was duty-bound to ivade as far as the Fitzwilliam for Miss D., off I set. When, however, I arrived at their door, I wisely reflected on the splashed state of my trousers before I knocked, and then retreated crest-fallen. Tonight I hang out (otherwise give a spread) in oysters ; I have been all anxiety to get a dish of frogs as an adjunct and yesterday I made tremendous efforts to catch some with the annexed apparatus [sketch of triple hook attached to a line pendent to a walking stick] Hit; Life and Letters of Francis Galton but quite unsuccessfully. I could not see one although with another man I patrolled every imaginable ditch within reach. I firmly believe S' Patrick had got the start of me, for Cambridge without frogs is quite an anomaly. Hopkins gave up for the term on Wednesday ; before he left he called me to him and complimented me no end on my mechanics, which has made me quite jolly. I wish though that I were a better analyst. Buxton and Kay are going to leave his class as their health won't stand it. I shall certainly stay with him during the Long Vacation, and if the Dons won't let stay in Cambridge I propose quietly taking lodgings in Grancester [sic/] (1^ miles off) and coming over to him every morning. For want of room Good bye and believe me ever Your affectionate Son, FBAS. GALTON. (It's vacation time now.) But how was Francis Galton's own health standing the strain is the question which arises in our minds as we read this letter ? A letter written a few days later shows that the strain was beginning to tell : TRINITY, Tuesday [March 22, 1842]. MY DEAH FATIIKI:, On thinking over about the approaching Scholarship Examination, I so plainly see that I have no chance whatever of getting one this year that I really think it quite useless to compete. The mere going into an examination for a few days is a thing of no great labour, but I am of course anxious that if examined I should do the mathematical part as well as I am qualified to, and not place myself below my level for want of preparation as would be the case with me now. I have at present read 14 different mathematical subjects1 ; now to get up all these sufficiently well to undergo a good examination in them would necessarily require very considerable application, which would be better bestowed on the subject (Mechanics) that I have now in hand, inasmuch as the fact of having them now well prepared would in no way assist me in any future examination, after a year's interval for instance. I spoke to Hopkins about it a fortnight ago ; he strongly recommends me not to put myself out of the way for the examination, should I be inclined to go in for it. I find that it is impossible to get up my subjects without doing so and therefore think it preferable not to go in at all. I would, however, have possibly tried my best, but my head is already rather bad from having overworked myself in attempting to get up these subjects as well as doing what Hopkins has set us for this vacation, so that in the short time that is left I could do but very little. There is one other reason remaining namely that I should not know my standing in Maths, in the College from the result of this examination any better than 1 In a postscript Galton says : "The subjects I have read are : (1) Algebra Parts I and III (2) Algebra Part II (3) Euclid (4) Trigonometry, Plane (5) Spherical (6) Conic Sections (7) Theory of Equations (8) Newton (9) Differential Calculus (10) Integral Calculus (11) Differential Equations (12) Statics (13) Dynamics (not finished) (14) Geometry of 3 Dimensions." — Astronomy and Optics (of which he had certainly read some) were needed to complete the old two years' course, leaving the physical subjects for the third year. Plate LI I Pen and ink sketch of Ely Cathedral from a letter of Francis Gallon to his Father. 1842. I'fii and ink sketch of King's College Chapel from the field by the Mill, 1843. Sketches from Gallon's Cambridge Letters. Lehrjahre and Wander jalnv 1<>7 I do now as those with whom I have to compete read with Hopkins, — viz. Walker, Hotham and Bowring' (Kay, and Buxtoii and Edwards have been obliged to leave off). I should therefore much prefer not to go in at all, subject however, of course to your wishes. I can easily get off on the plea of ill health which will be in a considerable degree a true one and can leave Cambridge for 5 or 6 days during the time of the examination. Should you agree with me will you let me know your plans for certain, that I may make mine accordingly. I have no news to tell you at present, so I remain, Your affectionate Son, FBAS. G ALTON. This letter indicates much to those that read between the lines. In the first place Galton was staying up during the Easter vacation ; in the next there is little doubt that he was or had been seriously over- working. Galton could not work under pressure, he had to do his work leisurely, and this he was to learn by sad experience before it became the practice of his later life. He was so keenly excited by many things that he could not repress his instinct to carry on numerous pursuits at once. Of the relics of this Easter vacation I note a visit to Ely Cathedral and a careful sketch of its western tower (see Plate LII), sent to his father ; there is also a long poem on the birth of the Prince of Wales (Nov. 9, 1841), with the motto Tu Marcellus eris ; it is dated March 31, 1842, and was probably composed for the Chancellor's medal. The Chancellor's English medal is for a subject given out at the end of the Michaelmas Term, and exercises are to be sent in on or before March 31st following. The subject for 1842 was actually Galton's theme, and the medal was obtained by H. S. Maine, of Pembroke, one of Galton's friends and afterwards the distinguished Master of Trinity Hall. Galton's poem has rather the roll of Erasmus Darwin's poetry and its theme the infant prince considering the deeds of his ancestors, some of whom — Edward I, and Edward II, first Prince of Wales — were as much Galton's ancestors as King Edward VII's : " How different is thy lot to Edward's son, Born in the land his sire had scarcely won, 'Midst warriors rude within that turret tall That beetles o'er Carnarvon's massive wall, Coldly through grated loopholes streamed the day Lighting the couch where Eleanora lay." 1 Walker was 8th Wrangler, Bowring 23rd Wrangler in 1844. Hotham graduated in the same year, but, I think, must have taken a poll degree. 168 Life and Letters of Francis Gait on From April and May of this year no letters have survived ; we do not know whether Galton went on reading with Hopkins or went in for his College May. We lose also all account of how he came to join a reading party under Cayley and Venables1 which went in June to Aberfeldy, in Perthshire. On June 15 he is staying with the Kays at Terrace House, Battersea, and writes to his father that he is leaving by boat for Dundee in an hour and a half. He describes his journey to town, how he has dined with Partridge, seen the Missourian (which he holds to be falsely articulated in order to increase the apparent height), and heard Robert le Diable — all told with the usual quaint humour. The first letter from Aberfeldy is five days later and some of it may be given here : ABERFELDY, June 19, 1842. MY DEAR FATHER, My proceedings have gone on splendidly but the voyage from London to Dundee was all that could be horrible; instead of taking 36 we were 50 hours, a swell of a most abominable description inclined slightly to our course so that the rolling was dreadful. Everybody (104 in all, 30 was the usual number) was wretchedly sick. I as usual dreadfully so. — Otherwise we had a jolly voyage; most of our party on board and the two tutors. Cayley is unanimously voted a brick and a most gentlemanly-minded man. Some of the passengers too had seen much life. One was a traveller in the interior of Africa, shot elephants, lions, etc. etc Perth is beautiful to a degree, ditto the lady inhabitants I hear Sir Neil Menzies is a most hospitable person, but I have not yet sent my letter of introduction. In haste Your affectionate son, FRAS. GALTON. The reading party on this occasion consisted of the two Kays, Fowell and Charles Buxton, Galton and Yeoman2. We may reaspnably expect that play rather predominated over work. The reading party gave a ball : The Cambridge party requests the honour of - - company on Wednesday the 31st instant. Dancing will commence at 8 o'clock. BREADALBANE ARMS, ABEKFELDIE. There were 29 " Dancing Ladies " and only 22 " Dancing Gentle- men," but as " 7 Cantabs " are included in the latter we may safely 1 Venables, afterwards Canon of Lincoln, was 33rd Wrangler and in the second class, Classical Tripos. - Yeoman was 27th Wrangler, and third class, Classical Tripos in 1845, I think the Buxtons and Kays took poll degrees. Lehrjahre and Wanderjahre conclude that Cay ley did his duty on the occasion. A draft pro- gramme prepared on a rough piece of paper by Francis Galton, giving the names of the guests, the dances and music, the supper menu (somewhat substantial), the flower decorations, the directions — " many candles," "polish the coffee pot," "pins, needle and thread, and looking glass," etc., showing how completely and carefully he provided for all contingencies, has survived to the present day. It was wrapped round some fishing hooks and flies, and enclosed with a piece of ribbon worn at the Highland wedding of Margaret Carmichael, described in the letter below. ABERFELDY, Monday [Any. 1. 1842]. MY DEAR FATHER, We are enjoying ourselves very much at Aberfeldy, there is unfortunately much monotony in the walks, as the village is situated on the side of a broad strath through which runs the Tay, and itself formed by high barren moorlands. We have just witnessed a true Highland wedding, and absolutely danced with only 1-J hours altogether intermission from 3 in the afternoon till 4 the next morning. I myself was pretty con- siderably knocked up, but several of the villagers did not go to bed at all and really did not seem much the worse for it the next day. The Scotch reels are great fun, for after every one is read}' and before the reel is played, a particular squeak is given on the fiddle and every one kisses his partner, and if they are obstreperous there is a fine chase and scramble. We are really very much liked at Aberfeldy, and have been huzza'ed more than once as we walked up the town. When we were invited to the wedding, we eacli subscribed 2 shillings and so bought the bride a very good looking tea tray, 2 jolly brass candlesticks and snuffers, which overwhelmed the lady. The Scotch air has done wonders for my general health, but my head scarcely improves. I have been able to do but little reading since I have been here and altogether am very low about myself. Lady Menzies has been most kind to me and other neighbouring residents have been exceedingly hospit- able to the party. Will Bessy thank Mrs Cameron for the note of introduction when next she sees her. Goodbye, Your affectionate son, FRAS. GALTON. The next letter is from Edinburgh after the reading party had broken up : EDINBURGH, THE QUEEN'S HOTEL [Sept. 14, 1842]. MY DEAR FATHER, I left Aberfeldy very early yesterday morning with Eben Kay1 and went thro' Crieff and Stirling to Edinbro', really quite sorry to part with the Highlands. We left in high feather, knowing every family well in the Strath, some of them intimately and altogether have, I really think, left a very good name for Cambridge. Our ball went off superbly. I wrote a description of it to Emma who has possibly forwarded it on to 1 Afterwards Justice of Appeal; Joseph Kay was the "Travelling Bachelor" who wrote on education and challenged Whewell. He was later a Q.C. 22 170 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon you. We went to the Queen's reception at Taymouth1. Major and Mrs Menzies took me with them in their carriage. The Highlanders looked very well, drawn up in files round a large quadrangle in 4 bodies dressed in the Campbell and Menzies dress and hunting tartans respectively. The Queen and Prince Albert looked most gracious, but were not cheered half enough. I am sure we Cantabs did all we could, but everybody else did nothing but gape with astonishment. The evening illuminations were most perfect, everything in such perfect taste I saw Mr Dalrymple in a splendid highland dress among the lookers on; he did not recognise me and as I scarcely knew him, I did not address him. We "hung out" fireworks the other night and had several persons to come and see them; they went off very well. We subscribed 10 shillings each and got about 30 rockets, a dozen and a half Roman candles, many wheels, etc., etc. I will write to you again from Inch Dairnie (where Aytoun of Trinity lives), he has written to ask me to stay as long as I possibly can, and I am thinking of spending a few days there; it is near Kirkcaldy to which place there are steamers every 2 hours from Edinburgh. Goodbye, Your affectionate son, FRANCIS GALTON. For those who have carefully read these Aberfeldy letters, there will I think be little doubt that Galton was nearing a breakdown ; the uncontrollable joyousness of the Keswick correspondence has gone ; there is little about work or long expeditions, there is a sub-tone indeed of depression. This finds its full utterance in the first letter that has been preserved from Galton's third Cambridge year. It seems to me as powerful an indictment of the competitive examina- tion system as Galton's earlier attack on a classical school education. Before studying these Cambridge letters, I had imagined Galton's breakdown to be individual and due to his own constitution, but these letters directly show it to be the outcome of a pernicious examination system (superposed on great social and mental activities), which ruined the College career of men who distinguished themselves in later life, and whose University work ought to have been not only a delight to them, but of real service as a training for the future. TRIN. COLL., Nov. 2, 1842. MY DEAR FATHER, I forgot in my last note to go into proper raptures about Stultz; he really is a wonderful man. I had no idea that it was in human power to make such extraordinary improvements in my personal attire as the combined geniuses of Stultz and Gobby have effected. Consultations of course had to be frequent during the course of the Friday and Saturday that I was in Town, but 1 at length emerged from my chrysalis crust of Cartwright and James' manufacture to the butterfly adornments of Messrs Stultz. My head is very uncertain so that I can scarcely read at all; however I find that I am not at all solitary in that respect. Of the year above me the first 3 men in their College examinations are all going out in the poll, the first 2 from bad health and the 1 The seat of Lord Breadalbane. Lehrjahre and Wanderjahre 171 third, Boulton, from finding that lie could not continue rending as he used to do without risking it. Powell Buxton is quite knocked up and goes out in the poll, so does Bristed one of the first classics in our year, in fact the whole of Trinity is crank. Two other men Hotham and Edwards who read with Hopkins and at the same time were very superior classics (Hothain was Newcastle scholar at Eton, which is the highest classical honour they can get there) have both given up classics finding their two subjects are too much for them. It is quite melancholy too to see the men who stood high in the College, but did not get scholarships this year in May; they seem most of them quite broken spirited. Our man Stokes who was considered sure of being Senior Classic of his year, who used to be the merriest fellow going, lost his scholarship from not doing his Mathe- matics, he scarcely ever perpetrates a laugh and so also with the other men. Johnson also (Adele knows Mrs Johnson) is quite cut up. Joe Kay has left from illness produced by reading and won't come back till next term. I feel more convinced every day that if there is a thing more to be repressed than another it is certainly the system of com- petition for the satisfaction enjoyed by the gainers is very far from counterbalancing the pain it produces among the others1. I have not after all entered a boat club but patronise hockey and made my first debut yesterday at it. Montague Boulton is a very nice fellow and uncommonly sharp, I do not know what his chance is considered to be in Honours. Charley Buxton's and my debating club gets on famously. We have just enrolled Hallam2 (the youngest and 1 To go out in the Poll was according to Bristed (Five Years in an English University (1840 — 5), 3rd ed. p. 216) the course which many a man took at that date out of pride when from early idleness, ill health or other cause his degree would not be equal to what he thought his abilities deserved. Of the men mentioned Hotham must have finally taken a poll degree, but he was elected to a Trinity fellowship in 1845; Edwards was a very low wrangler; Stokes did not graduate at all or took a poll; Charles Astor Bristed was an American, he is referred to in the Memories, p. 77, and was a great friend of Henry Hallani. He gave an obituary notice of Hallam in the New York Literary World, which is cited by Maine and Lushington and carries us back into the circle of the "Historical." — "He was the neatest extempore speaker I ever heard; his unprepared remarks were more precisely and elegantly worded than most men's elaborate written compositions. He had too a foresight and power of anticipation uncommon in such a youth, which enabled him to leave no salient points of attack and made his arguments very difficult to answer. He was always most liberal in his concessions to the other side and never committed the fault of claiming too much or proving too much. His was not a passionate oratory that carried his hearers away in a whirlwind, but a winning voice that stole away their hearts, the am celare artem, the perfection of persuasiveness." — These lines are a striking testimonial to the powers of Hallam, but also indicate the nature of Gallon's personal circle. Bristed was next but one to "wooden spoon " in the mathematical and second in the second class of the Classical Tripos in 1845. I have already referred to Fowell Buxton and the Kays. 2 This is the "Historical Society," and we may fairly assume it was founded by Galton and Buxton. In the Memoir of Henry Fitzmaurice Hallam by Henry Sumiier Maine and Franklin Lushington, which is published in the Remains in Verse and Prose of Arthur Henry Hallam (new ed. 1862, p. Hi), it is said of Henry Hallam: "In the first year of his College-life he became the virtual founder of the 'Historical' debating 22—2 172 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon only surviving sou of "Middle Ages") among our members and spout away most learnedly once a week on subjects in the ethical line. There are 9 of us altogether and I shall be president next week and shall array myself in Stultz for the occasion. We keep it very secret and meet in each others' rooms in rotation under the pretext of a wine party; then the man who gives the spread is president and at \ before 5 sports his door and the debate be bodily fear. So they went down into the cloisters. On arriving there C — - asked him if it was true that he had spread the above report. P replied that he had struck him in the Union. C- — drew out his horsewhip and held it over him and said : Consider yourself horsewhipped. P said: You have not struck me. C dropped the whip on his shoulders. P drew out a life-preserver and struck C ferociously over the temples which quite confused him ; he however closed in when X and Y actually pinioned C- - and whilst C 's two friends were trying to tear them off, P de- liberately hit C several times on the head. P trotted away and said I have witnesses that you first struck me. He since owned that the whole affair was prearranged. All C— — 's friends were of course almost mad. It was beneath his dignity to challenge him '. To skip over all the different plans that were proposed and laid aside it has ended in laying the matter before the College authorities who have rusticated P "sine die," which is the same as expelling him, for they take his name off the boards and they have not allowed C to reside this term which is almost a nominal punishment as he is a bachelor scholar, and in no way to be injured by such sentence. I need not add that P— - is universally cut and I understand that he has threatened being revenged on me. C was a good deal hurt. A large committee of whom I am one are always together either at C- 's or some others' rooms. He breakfasts with me tomorrow before going down and the whole of Trinity will probably see him off. The motion for P— — 's expulsion comes on tomorrow evening. Denman, son of Lord Denman, and senior classic takes the chair. A printed statement will be published as soon as the Magdalene men have been punished and I will send you one. The tests for arsenic are very easily applied and quite cheaply, but the 4 pounds is I believe the Chemist's fee. Your affectionate son, FRAS. GALTON. I fear the shortness of the above statement will not give you a very clear notion of the way matters stand. There are no further letters relating to this remarkable episode in the life of the Union2, but a few verses — apparently by Galton — among his papers show that he saw the humorous as well as the serious side of the matter. They run : Horsetvhip and Life-preserrer. P I'll face it out and 'stead of dawdling Go and see my friends at Magdalene ******* 1 On the proposal to challenge : see the Memories, p. 75. 2 Among Mr Harold Wright's gleanings from the minutes we find a motion by Galton "That the restriction by which the Library Committee are prevented from purchasing novels be done away with" (October 29, 1843). The motion was lost. His name also appears (March 28, 1843) at the end of a report of a committee appointed to consider the question of the Union giving a ball. The Committee strongly opposed the suggestion. Galton was proposed on Jan. 31, 1842, by Housman of St John's for the office of President, but was defeated on a poll by Crawshay of Trinity. Some account of this disturbance at the Union will be found in Bristed, loc. fit. p. 1C9. 176 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon My friends I've told you once that really I did hit C most severely Who answered nothing when I whacked him, But now some plucky friend has backed him, And made him threaten me a dipping Or a sanguinary whipping. X and Y together D — n it if he don't deserve a Licking with a Life-preserver, Up! and, when your coat is put on, Buy the instrument at Mutton. Versification was indeed very much in Gallon's mind at this time and on April 5, 1843, he writes to his father : TRIN. COLL. MY DEAR FATHER, I am having the greatest fun imaginable in getting up an "English Epigram Society'" which is to meet 3 times a term, the members are to send in their epigrams anonymously and they are to be read by some one chosen by lot. The subject is to be chosen out of those proposed by a majority. I have got the first in the University among the rising men to join it, two young Fellows of Trinity and bachelors, etc., so T expect that some of the Epigrams will bo first rate. The society consists of 12. All the men I have spoken to have jumped at the idea, and I have great hopes of its working exceedingly well. I think I shall be able to come down this week, when I would coach it to Hatton and then walk on. I send you a poem, 1 have just sent it for the Camden medal and fear it will not interest you much as it is all relative to the present great controversy as to whether man has a conscience (innate I mean) or not. Paley and Locke and many Greek philosophers as you know against it, Plato and Bishop Butler and some German metaphysicians and Whewell on the other side. Stewart seems to be for it, but does not give a decided opinion one way or the other. The mottoes I have chosen explain the point of the whole; I take the paraphrase of the one from Plato to be: "They have ever in their soul a specimen of the Divine nature, lasting and bright as silver or gold." I was obliged to print it before sending it in. I leave it on the honor of the Family that it be not shown to any besides themselves I mean my Father and Mother, Bessy, Adele, Emma, nor in any way to be spoken of to others. Your affectionate son, FRAS. GALTON. The poem is of deep interest — not as a poem, it gained no prize 2- but as evidence of Galton's faith and view of life at this period of his 1 See Bristed, loc. cit. p. 214. * The prize was won by Galton's friend, W. Johnson of King's. As Mrs Browning puts it: Many fervent souls Strike I'hyme on rhyme, who would strike steel on steel If steel had offered, in a restless heat Of doing something. Aurora Lf.it/fi, 22nd ed. p. 34. Lehrjahre and Wanderjahre 177 career. He had not yet realised that the social virtues were the products of a long evolution, he considered that mercy, justice and truth were absolute ideals, and that a knowledge of what they consist in was divinely planted in every human breast. The world for him was a degenerate world : " The heart of man is intellectualized, " And the high souls of other days are gone." Its salvation depended not on a forward progress, but on a return to some earlier ill-defined state, where conscience had held more complete sway, and Divine rule had been more fully recognised. "Well may we loathe this world of sin, and strain " As an imprisoned dove to flee away; "Well may we burn to be as citizens "Of some state, modelled after Plato's scheme, "And overruled by Christianity, "Where justice, love, and truth, and holiness " Should be the moving principle of all, " And God acknowledged as its prop and stay. " I am no ingrate foster son to thee, " Granta, revered mother, in thy lap " Have good men grown to their maturity, "Nourished and strengthened by thy wholesome lore, "And thence have proudly walked before the world " As statesmen, poets and philosophers. " Still thou art but a corner of the earth, " Wherein a penitent may weep and pray, "While all abroad is rough disquietude." There is no doubt that Galton was at this time in a depressed frame of mind, and therefore too much stress must not be laid on such opinions as those conveyed above or in the words : " How foolish and how wicked seems the world, " With all its energies bent to amass "Wealth, fame or knowledge." But the poem does form an index to his standpoint at that time, and enables us the better to appreciate those fetters from which, be tells us, Darwin's Origin of Species emancipated him (see p. 6). The time was yet distant when he too would hold that to increase the bounds of knowledge was, perhaps, the "most respectable task" a man could set himself in life, or when he would settle down to 23 P. G. 178 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon ascertain how the social virtues arose from the evolution of the herd or endeavour to inquire statistically into the efficacy of prayer. The following letter must have been written shortly before the Long Vacation, which Francis was planning to pass in Germany with his sister Emma. TRINITY [Date?]. MY DEAR FATHER, I do not think I can get any Weimar introduction from my London medical friends though they may have some acquaintances in Jena. Jena is I find a stage from Weimar. I am making all enquiries I can, and from all I can gather Weimar is decidedly the place for us. The Historical Society flourishes. I speechified there the last meeting. The Epigram Society appears most prosperous, we had its first meeting last night. A great many were sent in, and 5 chosen out of them by ballot. Then we have subscribed for a superb manuscript book with AMOENITATES CANTABRIGIENSES on it, in which such epigrams as are chosen are inserted. I have not time to write out for you the five in question, but they were very fair. I ought to say that we take the word epvjram in its most general sense, that is any poem of any character on a given subject with or without point. The subject was Via trita, via tuta (the worn way is the safe way) the Duke of Norfolk's motto. The verses I sent in, they were one of the five, were : " A plucky lad was he, " Who fastened quills together, " And tried to cross the sea, " In spite of wind and weather. "Though better to have wept " In silence Minos' ire, " Facts only prove he leapt, " From frying pan to fire. " Shareholders save your load, "Save money, save material, " So keep the turnpike road "And sell your steam aerial." Your affectionate son, FHAS. GALTON. The last letter from Cambridge this term is undated but it must have been written in the first few days of June : Wednesday Evening [Date ?]. MY DEAR FATHER, Thank you very much for your kind present to me which will be very accept- able as I (In not doubt but that my journey will be somewhat expensive. I will be with you on Monday Evening, as I propose to leave Cambridge for Claverdon by the Eagle on that day. Then I was thinking of staying with you there until Wednesday or Thursday and then joining Emma in London and starting off with her on Monday. I cannot write a longer letter now as we are being plagued with an Examination, in which, however, I am not trying to do much, as I am quite indifferent as to my place Lehrjahre and Wamlerjalire 17ft in the Classes and only want to avoid being posted which is a bore because the name is published in the newspapers as such and relations are generally ignorant of the nature and character of these examinations. I have prepared literally nothing but trusted tn the light of nature which has been very useful so far, and T think I have already avoided a post1. If it had not been so, I should only have had to cram for any one of the later papers over night and that would have done perfectly. Henslow the botanical lecturer has been very good-natured to me about Saxe Weimar; he says he would have given me introductions, but he has never himself been abroad, but he advises me to ask at once if there be any resident botanist, to go to him and to state my case, and to ask him what are the valuable flowers in the neighbourhood, etc. He says there is a kind of freemasonry among naturalists, that it is very little trouble for a professor to open his herbarium and to shew a few leaves of it, and it may be of great service and therefore they never hesitate a moment about doing so. I shall certainly follow his advice. Goodbye, my dear Father and with many thanks for your kind letter, I remain Your affectionate son, FRAS. GALTON. The next letter finds Galton in London (June 10, 1843) preparing to go to Dresden with his sister. He has seen " the farce of Fortunio at Drury Lane, which is certainly most absurd and contains more puns than it has hitherto fallen to my lot to listen to even from your- self [S. T. G.]." There are a few days of seeing friends — Partridge, Kays, Homers, and relations Hubert Galtons, Charles Barclays, Gurneys — and a new acquaintance, Denham Cookes, is made. " He has the funniest head I ever saw, is exceedingly agreeable, and at his ease ; nobody except his lawyer knows where he lives, under cover to whom all communications are addressed. His hair is yellowish red ; his face something like this [sketch of a face with bizygomatic much greater than minimum temporal breadth]. He told us a great deal." Then brother and sister are off via Hamburg to Dresden. In Dresden they appeared to have stayed till August 16, but only one joint letter of Francis and Emma to " Father, Mother, Bessy and Delly " has survived. Emma writes : " We enjoy ourselves much, it is most kind of you allowing me this journey, I feel most obliged to you for it. Francis has been busy with his Doctors lately. He asked Dr Todd of London and his brother to tea ; Fras. makes a capital host, and we hang out tea, bread and butter and cherries. We leave on Thurs- day for Tetschen to stay till Saturday at Mr Noel's The Hallams and ourselves are prodigious friends. They leave on Monday." Henry 1 Galton got a fourth class in the May Examination, 1843. 23 -2 iso Life and Letters of Francis Gallon Hallam and his sister had also gone to Dresden. Francis himself writes in something of his old light style on people and customs : "We are in full preparation for leaving Dresden early the day after tomorrow. NVc go by steamer to Tetschen to the house of Mr Noel, Mr Woodness's friend; lie called upon me the other day whilst I was snoozing in bed at 9, and was very good-natured to Pern and asked us to stay in his house on our way to Prague. Accordingly we go to him on Thursday and stay until Saturday, which time he wrote to say would suit him. Coombe, the phrenologist, is I believe staying at Tetschen; at least Mr Noel came to Dresden to meet him and afterwards returned with him in the steamer home. Mrs Noel is a Bohemian lady of very good birth and sister to Count Thun, who is a great man in these parts. His face is plain, but the bumps on her head are undeniably gotxl, Mr Noel himself being an authority on that subject1. Emma suggested that Lecky who was second in the late duel might be my old schoolfellow at Boulogne ; have you any means of ascertaining whether such be the case? I do not remember him personally, though I remember passing a Sunday at Colonel Lecky's. The Hallams go on Monday but we have made arrangements for meeting them two or three times on our way southwards and then they will stay 10 days at Munich." There exists only Emma Galton's diary, which tells us that the party went to Prague (August 22), Carlsbad, Regensburg, Munich (September 2), Augsburg, Constance, Hollenthal, Cologne, Ostend and so to London (September 31). Miss Galton notes that there was a fearful storm ; Francis Galton records that he was nearly drowned off the Goodwin Sands, but I can find no details. Galton was back in Cambridge on October 20 begging his father and Emma to come down there for the visit of Queen Victoria. " Mrs Hoppet is all anxiety to see you." Miss Galton's diary does not refer to the visit so that probably it did not come off. The following letter indicates that Tertius at least was not present. THIN. COLL. [31 Oct. 1843]. MY DEAR FATHER, I have been talking with Dr Haviland about the lectures I have to attend. He tells me that if I put a "spurt" on and go to 4 lectures a day, that I shall be able to finish with Cambridge by the end of next term; he absolves me from hospital practice in Cambridge and accordingly I shall be able to practice (if I like) next June 2 years. I have without hesitation adopted his plan. I must pass an examination by each of the Professors separately and the examination takes place at the close of their lectures. Whether I shall feel myself strong enough to go in for all four or any of them at the end of the course I attend I do not know; if not I shall do so next year. I am woi'king 1 Mr Noel formed a fine collection of casts from living heads — taking those of men noteworthy for either ability or crime. This collection has recently been presented to the Galton Eugenics Laboratory by Lady Lovelace. i. in Emma Galton and Julia liallam. j ( ' "Sister Emma." From Francis Gallon's sketchbook of the German tour in 1843. Plate LIV /fa? a&a^r jfa&t&~- Letter of Francis Galton to Tertius Galton announcing his graduation. /s$ IT: ~ ~^ >^ The last meeting of the Caseo-Tostic Club, 1843. Present: Stewart, Clark, Dalyell and Galton. bist Days iii Cambriclge. Sketches found in letters. Lehrjahrc and Wanderjalirc 181 ferociously at present. First for ray degree and secondly on the 4 different subjects, Anatomy, Practice of Medicine, Chemistry and Forensic Medicine. I did at one time know these same subjects well enough, hut they slip in an extraordinary degreo out of the mind. I am writing in the Union and waiting for some motions to come on that I was pledged last term to open. I wrote you a note by this morning's post. My gown was not among the number thrown down for the Queen to walk upon and caught up before the maids of honor (bless their pretty feet) could do so, as I had no inclination to assimilate my loyalty to that of the Aldermen of Southampton. Goodbye, Your affectionate son, FRAS. GALTON. The postscript of this letter contains a long description with sketches of " the jolliest dodge imaginable to supersede the old plan of holting the left door into which the right door locks " of any two-door cupboard. The contrivance is one in which the shutting of the right door automatically fastens the left. In November Galton found that he would have to stay in Cam- bridge till June to complete his medical work. He proposes to go to St George's Hospital to complete his medical education. He con- siders that London would be the best place after leaving Cambridge and before the winter medical session begins he could learn Botany and Materia Medica, together with some degree of hospital practice. " If not, I could dissect in Paris, though, after all, minute anatomy is really useless to a practitioner who does not operate, and I think I know quite enough of general anatomy." He thinks of taking rooms in King's College as more suited to a medical student than lodgings. A letter without date of January 1844 contains on the first page a sketch of a handsome young bachelor. MY DEAR FATHER, Your affectionate son is B.A., the ceremony having taken place this morning and I now wear a flowing gown with ribbons hung in front over either arm. I send you a list. I am 44th at which I highly pride myself, the Classics being below par and Medicine etc. only allowed me a month to get my subjects up. I was third in Mathematics but would have been first only for a misunderstanding in one question which lost me fifteen marks. The place however in the Poll signifies nothing. I see Hopkins occasionally who often asks me out; he has asked me to dinner tonight and again on Tuesday night. Thank you very much about the carriage to the Stratford ball. It will be most convenient and capital for me. Please tell Emma that I fear my Schiller will not do for her on account of the type, besides I think that I had rather keep it. Tell her I was much obliged for her remembering my offer of selling it. Your affectionate son, FRAS. GALTON. 182 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon Apparently shortly before taking his degree Galton drew up a petition concerning the badness of dinner "at Hall." The fate it met with — if ever presented — I do not find recorded1. To the, Master and Seniors of Trinity College. We being the whole of the undergraduate pensioners of Trinity College who are now in residence, beg to call your attention to the very uncomfortable character of the dinners at Hall. It had been intended last year that a memorial to this effect should have been sent. But it was understood that the Steward of the College expressed his wish that such a measure should not be resorted to, as he was then preparing a report in his official capacity, one which we hoped could not fail of meeting with attention as the evil arose not from the smallness of the sum we pay for our dinner, but from the mismanagement of it. On this account the memorial of last year was not proceeded with, but the Steward's report having failed in producing any improvement we take these means of calling your serious attention to the subject as strongly as is consistent with the respect we owe you. We complain of the dirtiness of the waiters, the bad state of the cutlery, and the pewter dishes, which with the character of the meat give the tables an appearance far from gentlemanly and very inferior to that of most of the Cambridge smaller colleges and all of the Oxford ones. And this appearance has created a very general feeling among visitors to the prejudice of Trinity, which for the honour of our College we would gladly see removed. We make no petition for unnecessary luxury at Hall, but only desire that our meal there should not be inferior to what is usual in society at the present day and to which therefore as gentlemen we feel ourselves entitled, and more especially so when it is acknowledged that the sum we now pay for it could by management fully satisfy our requirement. Possibly a hunt in the Trinity minute books might provide the reply of the Master and Seniors to this petition. Such a body has generally a ready answer, as when at the beginning of the century the undergraduates of another large Cambridge College petitioned for dinner at 1 o'clock instead of 12, stating, for one reason, that it would give an hour longer for the morning's work, and the Master and Seniors replied that they thoroughly approved of their reason and that to meet their views in future chapel would be at 6 a.m. instead of 7 ! 1 Bristed writes : " The tables of the Undergraduates, arranged according to their respective years, are supplied with abundance of plain joints and vegetables, and beer and ale ad libitum, besides which, soup, pastry, and cheese can be ' sized for,' that is, brought in portions to individuals at an extra charge; so that on the whole a very comfortable meal might be effected but for the crowd and confusion, in which respect the hall dinner much resembles our steamboat meals. The attendance also is very deficient and of tlic roughest sort." Five Years in an Enylixh University (1840 — 5), .°.rd cd. p. 35. Lehrjahre and Wander jahre A whole series of epigrams and verses touch on the Fun ;ind frolic of this last year of Gallon's College career. The first, I quote, refers to the Historical Debating Society founded by Galton and his friend Charles Buxton. On the cursed Gift of Oratory. Within the Black Bear's ancient walk, Sit the young Historical. Sambo Sutton once fought there, Once a meeting met for prayer, Once a Tory there did try Election bribes successfully. But now worthier than all Sits the Sage Historical. Look at him that now is pleading, Gravely, earnestly, His hands against his lips applied, Swaying about from side to side, Ever with uneven motion, Like a barrel on the ocean. The while some one idea he lays Before the club in many ways. Or, there was satire of some well-known member of the circle : Nature when she built you Taffy, Made a lion too, For whom she found a soul so gruff And one so meek for you. She had in the live-coal Far too many irons, So the beast got Taffy's soul And Taffy got the lion's. Taffy's heart of steel Knows not fear at all, But the lion he must feel Particularly small. Towards the end of his Cambridge time Galton became for a short while a teetotaller, and possibly the following lines commemo- rate the episode : Ode to Milk Punch. When first I met thee warm and young There shone such truth about thee, Such fragrance o'er thy surface hung I did not dare to doubt thee. 184 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon I sipt and next a bumper tried, My friends' prediction scorning, Then reeled and told them all they lied, But ah ! the following morning. Then go, Deceiver go, Those tongues whose lust could make them Trust one so false, so low Deserve salines to slake them. Away, thy charms their bloom have shed, Now failing to adorn thee, While men who loved thee once have fled And teach the world to scorn thee. Milk Punch, bland hypocrite be gone And my worst wishes to ye You ne'er do good to any one, But screw the hands that brew ye. Then go, Deceiver go, etc. etc. Some of these points are again illustrated in Galton's six months as a bachelor at Cambridge. He returned there on Feb. 13, 1844, and reports to his father that he is working hard at medicine and that Dr Bond has offered him a clinical clerkship on the next vacancy. He encloses the following Bulletin : Case of Francis Galton. Year. 1844. Trade. Cantab. Month. Feb. Disease. Extreme appetite. The patient states that he left Leamington by the coach on Feb. 3rd: the day was cold and rainy. At Southran he purchased some captain's biscuits which he continued eating till Northampton, at which place he invested in a pork pie. His appetite continued extreme even more so than natural. Present state. Face flushed, which he accounts for by a violent walk, appetite remarkable. [March 6, 1844.] MY DEAR FATHER, Will you tell Bessy that I received her letter just after I had put my last into the post and thank her much for it. I see young Barclay occasionally we have breakfasted at each other's rooms and are good friends when we meet, but I have now so little spare time at my disposal being the whole morning in attendance on medical lectures etc., that I have been unable to go out much lately and consequently have rarely met him. I get more and more fond of medicine every day. I am trying some new ways of taking cases, or rather the outlines of cases by lines drawn under each particular symptom and varying according to its severity, every day or every Lehrjuhrc ami Wundcrjahru 185 second iliiy as t.lio case may be. In fact like the ordinary plan of statistical chin It seems of great use for noting cases quickly, since you can do nil you want by the bedside of the patient and when going round with the physician which w'1 be quite uiit of the question in the ordinary way of proceeding, and then many CUM'-, are noted which would otherwise be neglected. Do you remember my mother and myself talking about the connection of gout and asthma? T asked several medical men whether they had over observed any and they all said no, when curiously enough yesterday Dr Haviland stated in his lectures that "from a wide observation he c'1 not help thinking that gout and asthma had certain connections which have not yet been investigated." I shall certainly look out for cases that way, for it would be very curious if such apparently unlike diseases were after all related. Dr Haviland spoke much of very strong coffee as often being of MTV great service in asthma; — that or tea, which is much the same, for their active principles are identicwt, I know you have found good only you don't take the former strong enough. Does my mother still adhere to her intention of accompanying me to Shrewsbury next Easter, will you ask her to write about it t I shall have I hope nearly a fortnight altogether, but must spend a week at home to talk over our future plans and Bob Sawyer dodges, for getting into practice and so on, with you3. You will probably have heard from Emma, who found it out through the Hallams, that I am a tea-totaller of about a month's standing. It suits with my constitution gloriously — but warm advocate as I am of the cause, whatever you do, my dear Father, don't lower yourself, as wine is a most necessary medicine for you. I am very glad I have taken the pledge. I told Delly my reasons, who will tell them you. It was not done without a term's previous consideration. Your affectionate son, F. G. Tertius Galton was slowly failing in health during these years and very tender and playful are the letters of his medical son. On March 9, 1844, he writes: Saturday morning. MY DEAR FATHER, As I was not able myself to enter into learned consultation with Pritchard and Dr Jephson I cannot altogether give up my privilege of " family doctor," and so will write this letter full of prescriptions. But first I must truly congratulate you on your convalescence which Delly tells me is in capital progress; and as I presume 1 The suggestion becomes clear when one has seen the elaborate statistical charts of the grandfather — Samuel Galton — covering most complete records of his household economy. 2 From about this date have survived two plans, one an elaborate arrangement of the inside of a doctor's carriage with sleeping things, escritoire, pots and pans of all sorts ; the other a description of a physician's waiting room with a number of devices to impress the patients with the scientific character of the consultant and some humorous items as "folio works of various authors, too large to be abstracted." 24 P. G. l/,f( ami Letter* of /''m//r/x Kaltuit unly wanting a little hospital patient discipline to make it perfect. Now my pre- scriptions are : 1st. That the Hospital Patient do on no occasion feel his pulse. 2nd. That the H. P. do never look in the glass to see whether his eyes are red. 3rd. That the H.P. do never examine his own health with a view to self-doctoring. 4th. That the H. P. do make improvements at Claverdon, and commit prisoner* at Leamington when so inclined, but that he never attend canal-meetings, nor put himself to inconvenience or anxiety. 5th. That the H. P. do henceforth enjoy an "otiuin cum dignitate" and leave hard work to younger heads for whom it is a duty. And now my dear Father I have finished doctoring for the present, hut shall go on writing doctor's letters until I hear that you obey my rules, and that you treat your own constitution with the respect it deserves 'for having brought you through asthma, hard work at banking and anxieties of all sorts for so long. Indeed it is a highly meritorious constitution and fairly deserves rest.— I hope to be with you in about a fortnight but the exact time is not yet fixed, however I shall know before another three days, when I will write. At present 1 still continue full work at medicine. I am reading Hippocrates and Aretaeus in which we are examined for the M.B. degree. It is now my lecture time, and so not to lose a post I send my letter unfinished but will write again on Monday. Your very affectionate Son, FRAS. GALTON. During the Easter Vacation following Francis Galton went visit his uncle Dr Robert Darwin and there is a letter dated Shrews- bury, Wednesday, and endorsed by Tertius Galton, April 10, 18441. At 3 p.m. yesterday I arrived at my Uncle's gates ; the palms of my hands were decidedly moist — the courage was oozing. The fly drove up to the door and I was heartily welcomed by my cousin Susan. I made many apologies which were directly stopped short as everything was made up and excused. And then I was taken into the dining room to eat luncheon and then in came my uncle who welcomed me if possible 5 times more heartily and who also stopped short all apologies, having, how- ever, first shewn me the delinquent letter, which was wonderful free from all dates. Not a word have I heard of my iniquities since then up to the present time. And they have all been as goodnatured and as warm-hearted as possible. They wanted me much to stay, but I thought I had better not, lest my uncle should feel the excite- ment too much2, and also because they wanted me to have some amusements all day, and Shrewsbury does not afford any, and so I fear they may be afraid that they are 1 There is a letter from Violetta Galton to her son Francis from about March of this year, saying how the health of both Tertius and herself has failed: "I dare not make any positive engagement to take you to Shrewsbury, but if I cannot do so, I propose, as soon as you come home, to write to my Brother and say how anxious I am to Introduce my youngest son to him." 2 Dr Darwin was then 78 years of age; he died four jears later. Lehrjahre ami Wamlurjalm- Is; not as hospitable as they might be which is far from the case, but still they might think it. My uncle is very much better and .stronger than I expected, and I haw- enjoyed my visit extremely. Your affectionate son, F. GALTON. At the beginning of May, Galton was back in Cambridge full of his medical studies and pointing out the value of a Cambridge degree for a medical man. " Robert Frere who was my senior at Partridge's, and who has indeed taken a surgeon's degree has had this fact so much urged upon him by different London Doctor that he intends coming to Cambridge as a freshman next term. So I was right after all, notwithstanding Hodgson's forebodings, in wishing for a Cantab, education Tell Delly that as soon as I came up, and through the medium of Tooke I served a writ for total abstinence on Selwyn. He professes himself not quite decided as yet, though undoubtedly in favour of the cause. Tooke introduced me to him the day after. The Epigram Society flourishes in great vigour, we meet next time to write epitaphs on the various dons now in authority. Selwyn I hear desires to join us. The Kays come up next week to take degrees in Freemasonry1, and then they are to tell me about any lodgings near them they have found out for me in town." [May 1, 1844.] Only two more letters of the Cambridge period have been pre- served— indeed we shall soon reach the end of our material of this kind ; for with the death of Tertius there was no other member of the family who preserved Francis' letters with the same tender care. At the risk of wearying the reader, I give them both. Minti.lay Morning [May 6, 1844]. MY DEAR FATHKI:, Thank you very much for your two letters and I have just received Emma's also with the account of Miss E. I should think Mr T. was not a person of very sanguine temperament. What is the correct thing for a lady to do under those circumstances? I always thought that the bridegroom was made to breakfast with the bridal party before the ceremony, and never lost sight of till after it was over, lest he might bolt. It seems so odd to make an appointment to meet and be married at a given hour at a church. Had Mr T. only been a disciple of my Father's, he would ha\e been shivering at least half an hour liefore his time waiting for the church-door to open, and not be so grievously late. I am glad Mrs Onslow is getting better, did you say the hall went right through her? My old friend, Joe Kay, is in Cambridge and he tells me of several lodgings about where T should like to bo in London. I have not actually 1 Francis Galton himself was initiated on February 5, 1844, into Scientific Jx>dgc No. 105 of the Ancient, Free and Accepted Masons, held at the Hed Lion Hotel, Cambridge, and on March 1 ->, l*l">, he was registered on the hooks of the Grand Lodge', London. 34— a 1 ss • Life nail Letters of Francis Gallon fixed upon the street but certainly should prefer one of those running out of Park Lane, for then I shall be near St George's Hospital and the Park, and close by the Kays, Campbells, C. Buxton and not far from Mr Hallam, and indeed some others. I fancy that I shall get from Kay's description quite as good rooms as I shall want for 20 shillings a week We had sucli a glorious May day here. I determined to improve upon my last year's one and together with two other men raised a shilling or sixpenny subscription to £3. With this we got 80 buns, 240 oranges, GOO small biscuit cakes and materials for 8 gallons of tea (to be made ready sugared etc. in cans) ; then we got a maypole 9 feet above the ground [picture], with a great wreath on the top and two flags one on either side fastened to sticks and held by boys. Then an arch through which only 2 could pass at a time, receiving each of them a bun or 2 or three biscuits and an orange (in transitu). Then we chose a Queen of the May, the prettiest little girl I ever remember to have seen [portrait] and Mrs Hoppit took her in charge and washed her and attired her in a royal diadem and then the undergraduates present, about 60 shoved their way in to the maypole and took hands and spread out leaving a large vacant ring, in the centre of which was the maypole and the Queen of the May. She choose her partner and with five other girls and their partners danced the College hornpipe. Then we let in a number of other smaller girls who took hands and danced in a wide ring round them and the maypole, and after that another ring concentric that danced the opposite way round, so all three were going at once. We had one of those street hurdy-gurdy things for the music. So the plan of the proceedings was thus : [Diagram of the dancing circles, the outermost sketched below in elevation consisting of undergraduates in caps and gowns with stretched linked hands and outstretched legs — outside these a crowd of undergraduate onlookers]. There were more than 200 children and the undergraduate arms were at full stretch. The maypole was put up in the college green. Riddle. If a man wants to obtain a vegetable time piece at what hour should he rise? Answer. He must get " up at eight o'clock " (must get a potato clock). Goodbye. Your affectionate son, FRAS. GALTON. P.S. I will always write on Mondays as on this and last week. THIN. COLL. [May 13, 1844]. Tuesday (instead of Monday). MY DEAR FATHER, Pray excuse this small sheet of paper, for I have so much of it on hand that I can find no way for its disposal. A number of my old college friends have come uj during the past week, and most of them gone down again. Mathew Boulton jus appeared for two days and a night to take his degree. He asked me much to come to Tew, and I have accepted his invite gladly for some far future time as I am afraid that I shall have no time for holidays in London. Everybody is making up long vacation parties and ] have had earnest entreaties to travel with different allies to St Petersburg, to Madrid and I don't know where else, but after all it is satisfactory to have something better to do than to join them. Fowell Buxton has also been here, Lehrjahre and Wanderjalirr • ls<» he is working at the brewery in London but unfortunately keeps a long way oil' from where I shall. The 2 Kays came up, one to be made a Freemason, the other to be passed to the 2'"' degree and I was raised to the third on the same night. Frederick Bristowe has been in Cambridge the last week to see his brother, who takes his degree next year. At the Epigram meeting last time we had the most amusing collection that as yet we have been favoured with. One short one was on Griffin, a Jolmian Senior Wrangler, who lias \\ ritten the most stale, abstract and uninteresting books on optics it is possible to conceive and quite spoilt the beauty of the science. I ought to say the subject given was "An Epitaph." It was : "Who'll weep for Griffin? "Not I said the eye, "He has made me so dry, " I cannot weep for Griffin1." Bessy wrote to me the other day, it was principally on good advice. The Kays tell me that they are going to build a splendid street in London longer than any at present existing and closed at either end with large metal doors and archways; it is to be by Kensington Gardens. Westmacott has nearly finished his bas-reliefs for the basement of the new Royal Exchange; they are said to be splendidly executed. I do not know how the figures are grouped, but they form an allegory relating to Commerce, and the figures are in modern not ancient dress and I believe not unlike those on the old penny postage envelope. The British and Foreign Institute is going to build extensively; there are now 1250 members, the prices for dining arc the same as those of the Athenaeum, which are high. A very fair library has suddenly sprung up by all the principal publishers giving very handsome presents of books to Buckingham as a return for his exertions in that part of the copyright bill by which the number of copies of each publication that must be sent to different libraries has been diminished, and these books he has made over to the Institute. Are Lucy's kinchins still with you 1 Give my love to them, if they are and also to Lucy. Your very affectionate son, FRANCIS GALTON. How is my mother's health? and do yon still teach Adele's school -children? Your chess-board is invaluable ; we lie lazily on the banks of the river in the suit playing chess after hall, which is luxurious to a degree. I didn't read the speech of Sir RolxTl you mentioned but should have been very glad to have been able to have cheered him for the passage in question. 1 N. W. Griffin: A Treatise on Optics, Cambridge, 1842. The last information as to the Epigram Club I can find is in a letter of Nov. 10, 1844, received by Francis Galton on Dec. 16th. It is from Charles Evans who hopes Galton has not lost all interest in his old /trotegee, which is flourishing satisfactorily. The subjects for the next meeting were "Much cry and little wool," "Fools enter in where angels fear to tread" together with the "current epitaphs." Evans states that they miss Galton very much in the colony, for though his old rooms are occupied by a man known to both of them, he being a fellow-commoner and rather antique did not associate much with them. In the postscript comes the query, "Is the pledge still inviolate?" 190 Life anil Letters of Fraud* (l«lton The following dateless letter is written soon after Gal ton had settled in London again : MONDAY. MY DEAR FATHER, T am afraid that I have two unanswered letters on the score against rue, and thank you much for the letter of introduction to Mr Walker contained in the last. I will tell you the result after I have taken it. I meet with numbers of my Cambridge friends so that I am pretty sure of a call everyday and this with working till about I at medicine, and again before going to bed makes my existence about as jolly and as cozy as I ever expect to aspire to. Mr Hallam gave me a ticket for the private view of the fresco-paintings now in Westminster Hall (on Saturday). They are said to be decidedly inferior to what was expected, and nearly half of them were rejected as unworthy of exhibition. The two best (and I had come to the same conclusion without hearing it before) are considered to be "Rachel and Jacob" by Cope and a study by Armitage, a female figure looking something like Britannia1. Armitage and Cope were two of the three that got £300 prizes for their cartoons last year. Dr Todd is very good natured to me. He has invited me to spend next Sunday with him at a country cottage of his near Streatham Common. I enclose you two scrawls on one piece of paper intended respectively to represent different views of my room. Tell Bessy that since she was in it, my landlord has allowed me a glorious damask green little bit of a sofa which fits as snugly as possible into the room. [Picture of a most uncomfortable-looking, philistine piece of furniture.] Sir Arthur Brooke said he would take me to see Alexis the mesmcriser about whom so much has been written in the Times, Clt r«ni< •/>• and Herald by and in reply to Colonel Gurwood. I thought 1 had better go as he is said to be by far the most successful clairvoyant; he won't exhibit publicly and this time Mr Ramsay Clarke had him in his room. It was entirely a failure, he certainly played at cards with his eyes blindfolded but that is not conclusive; but in not one instance could he read words written aside, and put into boxes, which he professed to be able to do. Will you be so kind as to let me know on what days Warwick Castle is visible as Mr Hallam spends a day next week over Warwick, Coventry and Kenilworth, not Leamington. If you have any thin guide book to those places which might be sent easily by post I should be much obliged if you would send it to me, as I want to do everything obliging for the " Antik Vogel." Emma will explain. Your affectionate son, F. G. [P.S.] Dear Emma, She is sweeter than ever. F. G. We know that Francis was in Cambridge on May 13, probably June, July and August were the extent of his stay in London and the limit of his medical studies at St George's. His address seems to have 1 It may comfort some of my readers to know that Francis (lalton thrice wrote this name and crossed it out, before lie reached the above spelling. Lehrjalire tnnl Wanderjalire 191 IHTII 16 King's Street, Covcnt Garden1. Frauds Galton li;td manv friends aliout him in London; the friendship with the, Hallains liad strengthened since the German visit. Emma Gallon was .staving witli tlie Gurueys in St James Square in Fehruary, and had visited the British Museum with Mr and Miss Hallam, meeting there Miss Edge- worth, Samuel Rogers and Macintosh, and in July of 1845, she was staying at Nailsea with the Ilallams. Tertius and Violetta Galton were in London in February and calling on the Hallams. But the friendship of Francis Galton and Henry Hallam seems to have ripened most in the latter part of 1844 and in 1846, from which years several very affectionate letters from Hallam to Galton have survived, to which some reference will be made in the following chapter. Very tender are the letters from Tertius to his son Francis during the last nine months of his life. He was clearly very anxious that Francis should concentrate himself on medicine and should follow a definite profession in life. Nor does he fail to remind him of family claims. " I hope you will go to Shrewsbury at Easter as you ought to see Uncle Bob before he dies "-—is the prompting that comes from home before the Easter visit (see p. 186), which had doubtless been several times postponed. On Feb. 4th, 1844, Tertius writes: "As Bessy has no doubt given you much salutary advice as to exclusive attention to medicine, I forbear repeating to you all that Horner said to me on the importance of it to success in London practice as founded upon his own observation and the remarks of many leading medical men of his acquaintance." And again on March 9th : " I am extremely glad that you take so fondly to your profession upon every act-mint, as an occupation useful to yourself and to others, and as a source of pecuniary inde- pendence, which, after all, it is among the number of our duties to promote I admire your courage in taking the pledge, and your motives for it, and am glad that the plan agrees with you. Adele tells me that in your case unlike that of the gin-drinking lady, resolution was rewarded beforehand." Emma Galton, writing on March 4 of the failing health of her father, Tertius, says, " My father has said over and over again ' Give 1 A letter from Tertius Galton to Francis, dated June 30, 1844, and enclosing the last Cambridge College bill is thus addressed. Tertius speaks of himself as still weak and restless. 192 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon my affectionate love to my dear Francis1.' " There can be little doul that Francis was his Benjamin, and when on September 9 Tertius goes to St Leonards in the hope that a change of air may effect some good. Francis was chosen as his companion and nurse. The picture of father and son together in the last few weeks of the former's life has been preserved for us in the letters of Tertius to his home circle. They went by way of Tunbridge Wells, whence Tertius writes to his daughter Emma of a drive round the rocks with Francis. From St Leonards we hear : Francis has sketched a little. He is an excellent travelling Physician and docs not buckle on the muzzle too tightly as he used to do. You know my detestation of being valetted, so when John comes in the morning for orders, I tell him to make himself scarce; he employs much of his time in fossil-hunting and for ought I know the rest of it in taking private lessons in the Polka to qualify him for dancing with Buswell and t lie- rest of the maids on his return. I have not heard from Claverdon or of Mrs Cameron. I hope tomorrow's post will bring me a letter. I am getting wonderfully stronger and can climb hills a la chamois. If it were not for the dread of Hodgson blowing me up, I should plunge into the sea—- but Prudence and gout dictate that I should remain altogether a terrestrial animal. Francis sends his love. Your affectionate Father, S. TKHTIUS GALTON. Give my kind regards to Mr and Mrs Gurney [Emma was at St James Square] We are just returned from the aforesaid Meliboeus [Fairlight Glen trip], but could not quite distinguish Louis Philippe on the other side of the Channel. A few days later Tertius writes cheerfully again : " The sea air has done wonders with me and tells every day — so do not be surprised if you see my name in the papers as having gained a prize at a cricket match. Francis and myself have an occasional game at chess, but have not yet put the pack of cards into requisition." These last weeks of affectionate intercourse remained a life-long memory to the son. When 65 years later he received the Copley Medal of the Royal Society, his first thought was how the news would have delighted his father. It seemed a justification for deserting a profession his father had chosen for him. From the date of these letters onwards Tertius' health failed rapidly. On September 30 Emma Galton joined her father and 1 Emma Galton writes again: "It would please him very much, if in a day or two ...you would write him an affectionate letter. ..a letter from you is as good as a dozen draughts." Lehrjahre and Wandcrjahre lit:: brother. On October 9 the party moved to 57 Marina, where Mrs Galton and her daughter Bessy joined them. A fortnight afterwards (October 23) Tertius Galton died, and to Francis Galton fell the melancholy task of accompanying his father's coffin to Claverdon, where the funeral took place on October 31. Bessy, writing to her aunt Hubert Galton soon after her father's death, says : " Yet none but his children can know what a daily, what an hourly loss he is to them. All our occupations and pleasures were so connected with him, that everything now seems a blank and it will be a very long time before we shall cease to be constantly reminded of him in everything we do." Such losses leave always a deep impress on our feelings, and often a still deeper impress on our careers, but as in the case of the death of Samuel Galton the loss meant a shifting of responsibilities and the members of the younger generation stood free to follow their individual bents. Some changes bearing on Francis Galton's future life must here be noted. The home at No. 29 Lansdowne Place was given up ; Mrs Galton went in the May of the following year to live at Claverdon. On May 13 Adele Galton, " Sister Delly," was married to the Rev. Robert Shirley Bunbury, only to be left a widow in the following year with one child, Millicent, afterwards Mrs Lethbridge, Francis Galton's much loved niece. On December 31, Elizabeth Galton, "Sister Bessy," was married to Mr Edward Wheler, and on November 13, 1845, Emma Galton started on extensive French, Italian and German travels which lasted till June 5, 1846. She was again abroad from May to November of 1847, thus illustrating the hereditary Galton Wander- lust. The independence that had come to each member of the family with the death of Tertius influenced not less the life of Francis. There can be little doubt that had Tertius lived Francis would have followed the strong desire of his father and would have had a profession in life1. To those at that time viewing his actions, there must have been some hesitation in judgment ; the next five or six years were to be spent without definite object, apparently in the pursuit of rather idle pleasures, 1 Bessy Galton writes emphasizing the gravity of her father's illness in 1844. " He regrets not hearing from you so do, dearest Francis, write immediately a nice steady letter telling him what you are studying etc., and talk of your profession with pleasure, it would do him more good than anything, and make a point of writing at least once a fortnight." The home letters to Francis Galton show how keen Tertius Galton was that his son should follow a definite profession, and how anxious the family circle had become about his roving tendencies — both in space and in mind. 25 P. G. 194 Life and Letters of Pnntcia Gallon and those who loved the open-hearted joyous youth best must havt felt, if they did not give expression to the feeling, that the loss of his father was an irreparable loss, which had spoilt Galton's career. Knowing what we now do of Galton's later work, we can see that this period of freedom may not have been wholly without value. Yet we may wonder whether had his medical education been completed and the freedom come later, Gal ton might not have entered on his life-work with somewhat more knowledge and with even greater insight into its scope and the possibilities of his mission to his fellow-men. It would be difficult to sum up the balance of good and ill which flowed to Galton from his Cambridge career. He went to Cambridge keen to observe and measure, full of the creative, inventive, contriving spirit. In these directions Cambridge gave him little or nothing. The mathematical tripos was the only door to an honours degree, and he never passed fully through the analysis, which should have led him to the physical branches, where he would have profited most highly. Even there he would have met theory alone — no observation and no experiment. Hopkins and Cayley were not the teachers for a man like Galton — such a man would have developed rapidly under a Franz Neumann, a Helmholtz, or a Kelvin. As it was his thoughts turned largely into other channels than the routine work of mathematical honours. He became a centre of much social life, of literary ambitions and of varied and somewhat scattered purposes. I do not think that we can fairly say that the competitive work for the mathematical tripos was the sole source of Francis Galton's breakdown at Cambridge. It had largely to do with his mathematical studies, but it was the impossible attempt to combine those studies with a very wide range of other interests and occupations, which finally led to his academic failure. The men with whom Galton associated, the Kays, Buxton, Johnson, Hallam, and Maine were not men of one interest or a single idea. Galton, as well as his friends, strived to cram too much into the brief years of undergraduateship — hard work, hard play, late hours and conviviality all told : — the renunciation of honours, the eager return to medical studies, the pledge in the last year of college life, were not isolated factors, but symptoms of a growing restlessness,— not one thing alone accounted for his breakdown. He tried too much and he failed. Cambridge had not given him the training he needed, it did not bring him in touch with the helpful older mind, that it Lehrjahre and Wanderjahrc provided for his cousin Charles Darwin, but it stirred an already too active mind intensely, and brought it into touch with many young, keen and sympathetic spirits. The long period of fallow years which followed Galton's Cambridge career, was partly due to a mind recovering from overstrain, partly natural in a youth to whom pleasure was possible, but who had not yet measured its insufficiency. We have so little evidence bearing on Galton's mental evolution during the next six years of his life, that we can but speculate on what those years did for him, and what might have been, had school and college training been individualised. The "Sturm- und Drang Periode" of our lives are claimed by Alma Mater, and she ever afterwards is glorified in our minds by their enchantments, but it is possible that the child gives more than the mother, and that the more brilliant her children, the less she regards their individual needs. Why should she make so little attempt to chart the course, which would lead the adventurous mind to those fragrant isles, whose enticing scents ever summon it, luring but illusive, across a barren sea ? Why is the personal influence of the older on the younger mind, the unwritten experience, which lies so far above all regular tutelage, and which the sympathetic master- mariner alone can give to the apprentice hand, so rare an item in the debt her more famous children bear to Alma Mater ? Is it due to the want of a thought-out system of education, to the want of the right men, or to an inherent principle in human nature which asserts that real ' education ' is only attained during the solitary cruise " by chartless reef and channel " ? Visiting Card of Dr Erasmus Darwin. 25—2 CHAPTER VI FALLOW YEARS, 1844—1849 ON October 23rd, 1844, Tertius Galton had died. Francis Galton returned to town and took rooms at 105 Park Street in association with W. F. Gibbs, who afterwards became tutor to Edward VII when he was Prince of Wales, and with H. Vaughan Johnson, who had lived on the same staircase with Galton at Trinity, a man whom Galton describes as singularly attractive and with quaint turns of thought. But we have no letters of these years to guide us ; the letters to his father of course ceased; the letters to his mother and sisters have perished, and even the letters of his sisters to him, which would have given clues to what Galton was thinking and doing — letters which Galton included in an index to his papers made late in life — have been destroyed before his papers reached the hands of his biographer. We have no evidence of what this young man of twenty-three, with ample means and intensely vigorous mind and body, was either doing or thinking, reading or observing. Yet we can be certain that in these fallow years, when nothing was published, nothing even written that has remained, there was much ferment and much change. Francis ceased any longer to be "little Francis," the controlled of older brothers and sisters. His desertion of medicine, a profession, hereditary on the maternal side and ardently desired for him by his father, — his gradual change from orthodoxy towards agnosticism, were probably disapproved by his family ; his brothers and sisters were settling down to their own individual lives and in more than one case their ideals were not his ideals. As Galton himself expresses it : "I was therefore free, and I eagerly desired a complete change ; besides I had many ' wild oats ' yet to sow1." 1 Memories of my Life, p. 85. Fallow Years, 1844—1849 197 Not a single letter is available, not a record of the winter 1844 5 in Park Lane ; but in the later part of 1845, the Red Gods' call reached Gal ton, the spring-fret was on him1 : Velvet-footed, who shall guide them to their goaU Unto each the voice and vision : unto each his spoor and sign — Lonely mountain in the Northland, misty sweat-bath 'neatli the Line — And to each a man that knows his naked soul ! Let him go — go — go away from here ! On the other side the worlds he's overdue. 'Send your road is clear before you when tlie old Spring-fret cornea o'er you And the Red Gods call for you ! The Red Gods called, but for Galton the road was not clear before him, not for another five years did he know his soul ! Galton's visits to Egypt and later to Syria were aimless, they were the restless visits of the well-to-do young man, seeking travel-pleasure in the routine way, without scientific object and without archaeological or linguistic know- ledge. Yet there were epochs in them — as the meeting with Arnaud and the death of the faithful Ali — which influenced Galton permanently. Above all he gained two experiences — first that mere travel without aim does not give the highest pleasure, and secondly that travelling is itself an art. and needs training — training in what to take and what to observe, training in how to meet and how to handle men. Think only of the Galton, the boy of 23 years, who set off to Khartoum without a map and without purpose, and who in Syria wished to sail down the Jordan on a raft based on inflated waterskins without thought of current or season of the year — think of these things, and then of the cautious preparation, the thought-out purpose of the African journey of six years later by one who after six fallow years had become a man in bearing and in power of achievement ! The young medical student of the Birmingham General Hospital and the freshman at Cambridge impress us with the power of observa- tion and the capacity for action. The last year at Cambridge, the year in Egypt and Syria, the years to come of social life, hunting and shooting, bring before us another aspect of a many-sided nature, which had under the influence of the " spring- fret " to test many things before it knew its "naked soul." As Galton himself has said, there were 1 Rudyard Kipling: "The Feet of the Young Men" in The. Five 198 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon "many wild oats yet to sow." Yet in the sowing of them a trans- formation took place from the pleasure-seeking boy of unformed character controlled by any of many inherited tendencies, to the purposeful man seeking to extend human knowledge and with a character moulded firmly to opinions, which changed relatively little during the remainder of life. How sad it seems that all power of tracing the transformation of these fallow years has perished with the letters from and to him of this period ! The account Francis Galton has provided in his Memories of the travel in Egypt and Syria was written in 1908. It is more elaborated than the few simple notes he put together in 1885, twenty-three years earlier, of the same journeyings. In Chapter VI of the Memories Galton gives no date to his departure for Egypt. In the account of 1885, he states that he "started for the East in September (I think) 1845." But there is in existence a playful letter from his friend Henry Hallam, dated Wraxall Lodge, Thursday, October 3rd, without year. The contents of this letter seem to indicate that Galton had asked Hallam to accompany him to Egypt, and if this be so, Galton did not start till somewhere near the anniversary of his father's death1, and thus we have lost the record of one whole year of his life. The letter from Hallam runs : MY DEAR GALTON, — I have been deliberating since I received your letter on the desirability of joining you, and though finally overcome by the prospect of minor and highly conventional difficulties relating to degrees and other matters equally con- temptible, I envy you exceedingly. The pleasure of shooting at so large a mark as a hippopotamus of respectable size is peculiarly attractive to the mind of the infant sportsman, who like myself has been vainly endeavouring to rid creation of an orthodox number of partridges during the last month. I trust, however, that the terror of my arms is beginning to be spread in the neighbourhood, as I have been given to under- stand that a number of highly respectable pheasants, the fathers of families whose custom it has been for many years to insure their lives on the first of October have this year been either totally refused or accepted only on the payment of such an extravagant sum by their respective offices as must obviously have reference to the introduction of some new element into the sporting world to which it would be indelicate in me to refer more closely. Still, as I said, I gasp after the blood of Pachydermata, and under proper encouragement would direct my artillery with great hope of success against any inoffensive animal of large size, and easily vulnerable whom I might find sitting on the banks of the Nile. 1 It may be doubted whether the legal business of winding up an estate like that of Tertius Galton could be completed much under a year. Fallow Year*, 1844— 184! • !'.»!» Duty, however, calls on me to be serious. It is incumbent on me to point out the vast moral responsibility you incur, to warn you of the irretrievable disgrace in which all your friends will hold you, if when you are fairly committed to the pellucid streams and bracing atmosphere of an Egyptian river you stop short of penetrating to the Court of the Negus and reposing for awhile under the shadow of the Asylum of the Universe. If you will follow my advice you will go right ahead till you reach the Mountains of the Moon, then taking the first turning to the right continue your course until you tint I it, necessary to ask your way ; by which means you may immortalise yourself by the discovery of the great Central Sea, and by which time I hope to be able to join you there or anywhere else. As you are anxious to have your dignity supported at foreign courts you may rely on a handsome case of brickbats with " Robert Peel " or " By Her Majesty's command," "From the East India Company, private " etc., addressed to you at every large town, postage of course not paid. Are you going before the end of next week? On Friday the 10th or Monday the 13th at latest I shall make my transit over the London disk, and will attempt to find you, if possible. I am sorry you never came into this part of the country as we should have been delighted by a visit. I am grown tremendously agricultural, and intend to come out strongly on the Potato disease next term. Yours most sincerely, H. T. HALLAM. One wonders how the Egyptian and Syrian journeys would have worked out had Galton had Henry Hallam for his comrade. As it was Galton started alone. In the following memorandum we see how forty years later he described the events of those days : EGYPT, SOUDAN AND SYRIA 1845—6 F. GALTON written from memory 1885. After my Father's death, October 1844, finding I had a competent fortune and hating the idea of practising medicine, also being disheartened by the sense that the medical knowledge to which I had access was very lax and that its progress seemed barred — I don't do justice I know to the state of the case, but only describe my feelings fresh from the rigorous methods of proof- at Cambridge — that I determined to give it up. My passion was for movement and travel and I ultimately started for the East in September (I think1), 1845. On going by diligence south from Paris, I found myself with Denham Cookes as a companion. He was charming and full of anecdote and fun ; we travelled together to Avignon, where we stayed some days and there I left him. He was killed at a steeplechase in Florence soon after. Stopped at Malta where Temple Frere was with his Uncle Hookham Frere2. On reaching Alexandria, (or was it 1 From what has been said above this is probably incorrect and the middle or lnt in- half of October more likely. - In his Memories, Galton regrets not having, owing to Frere's ill-health, been able to talk to the man whose Loves of the Triangles had given the "coup de grdce to the turgid poetry that had become a temporary craze in my grandfather's time " (p. 85). •200 Life and Letters of Fraud* fr'alfun rn route after Malta?) I met with Montagu Boultou and his travelling companion, Hedworth Barclay, intending to go up the Nile; they having just toured in Greece. \\V went together to Cairo in barges, towed up the Nile by a tug — a most luxurious and charming night. At Cairo we three agreed to make a party together up the Nile. Barclay had a courier, a Greek, Christo, who would act as cook. Boullon had a very smart courier, Evard by name, who had been once groom of the chamber, he said, to Lady Jersey. He would be butler and I undertook to engage a dragoman as my sprcial servant and he was Ali (Mohammed, — Sureyah = the little). We spent one day boar shooting, got no boar but wounded one and when among the tall reeds holding my gun vertically above my head, as the only chance of making way, a litter of wild pigs ran through at my very feet. I was quite helpless, could not get down my arms, but the sow did not pass me. We had to give a name to our boat and register it with its flag, and Boulton suggested an Ibis with the motto "Ttitissimus," which we adopted. Barclay had a pointer for quail shooting. My impressions of the Nile were those that so many have expressed. Especially the pleasure of living all day barefoot and only half dressed, and of waking oneself by a header into the river, clambering back by the rudder. We lived in style and state. I think the awfulness of the Old Temples impressed me most at Carnac, going among them alone by moonlight and the silence broken rarely by the jackal. The feeling was so strong that it nearly made me faint away. A little above the first cataract, when near Korosko, the stream being swift, we went as usual by virtue of Barclay's firman to impress men to tug our boat, but found they had all been already impressed by the owner of a small and dirty looking Egyptian boat, who they told us was a Bey. We went to him and spoke impudently, like arrogant Britishers and discussed loudly in English together whether we should not pitch him into the river. He shortly astonished us by speaking perfect French and after a while discovered he was a much more interesting person than we had dreamt of. He was Arnaud, a St Simonian exile, in service of Mehemet Ali, who had lately returned from Sennaar where he had been sent to look for gold. He invited us to his mud house, at which I was charmed. Perfectly simple, clean, matted, with a barometer and thermometer hung up and other scientific gear, books, mediculeizing is a great blow ; who is henceforth to tell me pleasant stories about lupus, and purpuristic elephantiasis of the pia mater; you had much better not become a parson, but come with me to Maimachtin in 3 or 4 years. Ever most sincerely yours, H. P. UALLAM. There is little doubt that Galton's view of life was indirectly widened by his residence among and friendship with Mohammedans. He had in later days a great respect and admiration for them ; during his stay in Syria he conformed largely to their way of life and possibly, in a measure, to their religion1. Experience of another great religious faith, the devout followers of which compared in conduct at many points favourably with his own co-religionists, led Galton to a wider view of the origin and function of religion in general, and there is little doubt that from this period he ceased to be an orthodox Christian in the customary sense. Writing in 1869 (see Plate II), Galton says that "the Origin of Species formed a real crisis in my life; your book drove away the constraint of my old superstition, as if it had been a nightmare, and was the first to give me freedom of thought." I think this really means that Galton owed to Darwin a positive faith; his negative attitude towards the old views had arisen thirteen or fourteen years before the publication of The Origin, and had formed to some extent a division between Francis and the more orthodox members of his family. The first blow to orthodoxy came from the experience that more than one religion helped men efficiently in the conduct of life, and brought the ideal into closer touch with the actual as a controlling and purifying factor. Galton taught absolute toleration, both in religious belief and in formal observance ; he was prepared for family prayers, if they aided anybody in his household, and he would have accepted a fetish, had he thought the fetish -worshipper thereby better able to face the moral difficulties of life; he had none of the intellectual hatred of Huxley or Clifford for what their minds recognised 1 Bosworth Smith, who advanced the view in 1874 that Mohammedanism was in some respects better suited than Christianity to the Oriental races and to the negro, writes to Galton in 1875 : " Your view of Islam as compared with Christianity would, I fancy, from what you said to me, be even more favourable than mine." 208 Life and Letters of Francis Galton as unreasoning. Speaking on his own initiative to the present writer about a friend who had then recently joined the Catholic Church, he said : " Yes, I think it will be a real help, a controlling factor in X's conduct," and then he added: " How impossible it would all be for you or me !" It appears to the writer that the recognition of the relativity of religion and its individual temperamental value was attained at this time, if a positive view of life which suited his own temperament only came to Galton with the Origin of Species. Much light would doubtless have been thrown on this point had the Egyptian and Syrian letters been preserved. But the fact that they did contain evidence of Galton's religious development may be the very reason why they have wholly perished. The years which succeeded Galton's return from Syria are a blank except for what he has himself told us in his Memories, Chapter vm. The four years in question, he himself entitled "Hunting and Shooting." He writes : "I returned to my mother and sister, who then occupied Ulaverdon, much in need of a little rest. I was also conscious that with all my varied experiences, I was ignorant of the very ABC of the life of an English country gentleman, such as most of the friends of my family had been familiar with from childhood. I was totally unused to hunting, and I had no proper experience of shooting. This deficiency was remedied during the next three or four years " (Memories, p. 110). We find Galton for the following three years spending part of his time in Leamington, hunting with a set chiefly noteworthy for their extravagance and recklessness ; part of his time on Scottish moors, shooting grouse, or sailing in the Hebrides, and lastly part of his time —which amounted to weeks and months — in London, walking and riding with friends or attending meets of the Royal Stag Hounds. A few letters of Henry Hallam, spared apparently from the holocaust, indicate the thoughts most prominent in the minds of both young men — their ambition was to shoot 100 brace in a day, to kill 87 hares in a quarter of an hour, to avoid the tailor-like habit of putting a bullet into the haunch of a stag ; the most provoking thing was to fail in a shot, — " I would have given my eyes to have brought the animal down." Landseer was not the man and the artist, but "the crackshot never missing and quite up to all the dodges of the sport ; he had got and shot and killed his animal very neatly." The shoot- ing experience was undoubtedly of value to Galton in his later Fallow Years, 1844—1840 African work, but the strange thing is that it seemed to absorb his whole nature, and to be done not for the sake of the experience, but in the pure pursuit of occupation. He tells us himself that he "read a good deal all the time, and digested what I read by much thinking about it" (Memories, p. 119). But Galton was never a great student of other men's writings ; he was never an accumulator like his cousin Charles Darwin ; and the most well-read and annotated books in his library certainly belong to a later date and to periods of definite lines of research. Perhaps the words which follow the above quotation, " It has always been my unwholesome way of work to brood much at irregular times," better explain his development during these fallow years. Be this as it may, Galton's pursuit of travel and sport for pure amusement's sake lasted fully five years, but came to an end almost as suddenly and inexplicably as it commenced ; Galton — to use his own words — had finished sowing his "wild oats" by the summer of 1849, and was returning once more to those scientific pursuits, which had been his delight in 1840, and which he was never again to desert except under stress of ill-health. Nearly all record of developmental influences during this period having perished, we are thrown back on surmise and hypothesis to account for these fallow years in the life of a man who both before and after was conspicuous for intellectual activity. Naturally we turn in the first place to the many hereditary strands blended in his character. On the one side we have the manifold scientific tastes of the Darwin stock, combined, however, with love for purely country pursuits and with sporting tendencies which have dominated not a few members of both the Darwin and Galton families ; on the other side we have the social aptitudes and the keen love for the pleasures of life, which marked and led to the downfall of the Colyear and Sedley stocks, strangely united with the business aptitude and disciplinary sense of the Quaker blood of Farmer and Barclay. If we examine most of Galton's relatives we find one or at most two of these very different hereditary strands manifest in the same individual ; but in Galton himself, and probably as source alike of his mental width and of his charm of character, we find these various strands commingled — the word is here better than blended— in a single nature. To speak for a moment in the crude language of a current theory of heredity, it is as if opposite allelo- morphs could be united in the same zygote and alternately dominate 27 P. G. 210 Life awl Letters of ATw//m (lalton its characteristics. These fallow years show the dominance of deter- minants of which we are fully conscious in tracing Galton's family history, but which after 1850 play only a subordinate, albeit a graceful part in his character and activities. In 1849 Galton's mechanical tastes revived and his scientific bent came once more to its rights. When the " spring-fret " again came o'er him, he knew his " naked soul " and had found a congenial purpose in life. In the failure of any record of environmental influence1, we can only attribute the difference between the Soudanese and the Central African journeys to the not unfamiliar experience of different hereditary tendencies developing potency at successive stages of an individual's growth. Charles Darwin was a student and naturalist from his College days ; Francis Galton's six fallow years threw back his work in life, so that much of it was achieved at an age when most minds g quiescent. But the delay was not greatly to his, nor, in the long run, to the public disadvantage. His earlier papers on the improvement of the human race by conscious selection were nearly stillborn, they faced a world quite unripe for the ideas Galton had to teach. The acceptance of the principle of Natural Selection and the recognition of science as a capital authority in human affairs had to make marked progress before Galton's teaching could reach its audience, and produce its effect. 1 We know how the publication of the Origin of Species moved Francis Galton. At first it seemed to the writer of this biography that the voyage of the " Beagle " might have turned Galton's thoughts to scientific travel, but the Journal of that voyage appeared in 1837, five or six years after the voyage, and there is no reference to it in Galton's letters of that date or later. The famous Linnaean Society publication made. jointly with Wallace dates from 1858, when Galton had already settled down to scientific work. V ri,,tf LV i w x CHAPTER VII THE REAWAKENING: SCIENTIFIC EXPLORATION IN the absence of records for the period 1844-9 we are unable to trace the outside influences, if any, which again stirred Galton's latent scientific tastes, awakening once more those instincts for the production of work of social value, which for six years had been lying fallow. We do not suggest that these years were without any profit for Galton's ultimate career. The accumulation of experience — how- ever apparently aimless — is always capital of a final interest-bearing value to the man who has by heredity a receptive mind and an unusual power of storing observation. The knowledge gained hap-hazard in the Soudan and Syria, the pursuit of grouse on the Scottish and York- shire moors1, the shooting of seals in the Hebrides, the observation of bird and beast, the ready presence of mind, which the hunting field encourages2, the knowledge of human motive and human weakness in the gambling, wine-loving, tale-capping3 set of the Hunt Club at Leamington, whose typical representatives were the Jack Myttons, father and son4, — all these experiences were not without profit in later life. Even their value in African travel was not to be despised ; it is only their incongruity with the youth of 1840 and the man of 1850, 1 Well for Galton that it was before the days of the modern " drive " ! 2 In later years Galton with characteristic modesty and the love of a joke even at his own expense, would say that he had learnt by experience to reduce falling off to a fine art. 3 The relief at hearing the simple truth told in simple words was, Galton once remarked, one of the new and pleasurable experiences associated with the family circle which his marriage introduced him to. 4 The life of Jack Mytton, Senior, has been written by " Nimrod " (J. C. Apperley) under the title : The Life of John Mytton Esq., of Halston, Shropshire, with his Hunting, Racing, Shooting, Driving and Extravagant Exploits (with colour illustrations by Alkcn and Rawlins). Jack Mytton, Junior, inherited his father's recklessness; he also got through a fortune and died prematurely. " There was no question of his ability or power over others," wrote Gallon in his Memo/rift, p. 110. 27—1' 212 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon which must puzzle the onlooker unacquainted with that strange mixture of Stuart arid Barclay, of Colyear and Darwin blood. The first sign of the reawakening of the old tastes is the endeavour of Galton in 1849 to design a printing telegraph. The account of this instrument was printed in 1849, but post-dated in the publication June 1850, two months after Galton had left for Africa. The pamphlet gives very extensive details of the mechanical parts of the apparatus. In order to appreciate what the " teletype" meant in those days, we must remind the reader that telegraphy, then recently introduced into this country, was not carried on by the Post Office but by a number of commercial companies, and a printing telegraph had not yet been achieved. Galton's instrument looks cumbersome with our modern experience of tape instruments, but there are some ingenious ideas involved. How far it was ever actually constructed it is now perhaps impossible to say, but from the wording it might be supposed that portions at least had been actually made ; Galton speaks of the instru- ment as the result of many experiments1, and dealing with his method of intensifying the mechanical effect of the slight touch of a needle he writes : " It is very interesting to watch such a series in operation ; how the delicate, scarcely perceptible touch of the first arm causes an influence that travels on, almost as if by instinct through the whole series ; how each arm hands it to the one beyond it ; its available power increasing at each delivery2." If the whole or parts were constructed, they do not appear to have been preserved, or at least to have reached the Galton Laboratory with the long series of his models and other instruments, which we possess. Galton's teletype involves three wires to connect sending and receiving stations. The needle of a galvanometer may remain stationary, turn to right or turn to left. Thus each wire can send three signals, or the system of three wires 27 signals, enough for the complete alphabet. Now consider a lever in the form of a rectangular frame balanced about a median line or axis; suppose a key slightly longer than the parallel sides of the rectangle turning on the same axis, then if the frame be horizontal and the key pass over the perpendicular edge of the side of the frame it will depress it, when itself depressed. The depression causes contact 1 The Teletype: a printing Electric Telegraph, by Francis Galton, Esq., M.A., Trin. Coll., Cambridge. John Weale, 1850, p. 32. 2 Ibid., p. 10. Plate LVbix CO CO CO I— I o : 3 -a a _5 2 x "d 3 -4_> CO < >-s 3 £ a S i f 0> PH e 03 I-H , | ^ "§ OJ H -*^ bjl ry: c tft o ^ -C s< x The and a positive current is transmitted. If a piece of the breadth of the key be cut out of the edge of the frame of depth equal to the play of the key, no motion of the lever takes place. A second similar rect- angular frame inside the first may be depressed and give a negative current, or again may have a piece cut out and give no current at all. Tims one key depressed can give any of the three possible signals on the first wire. With three pairs of such rectangular frames and 27 keys all the possible combinations of signals can be sent through the triple wire. The keys may be given any letters or numbers, four wires and eight rectangular level frames on the same axis would give 81 signals. Elsewhere in the paper (p. 29) Galton indicates how with eight frames, two wires only, but two battery strengths for each wire, five signals might be got on each wire and so twenty-five signals in all. This roughly describes his third section, the determination of the proper movements of the needles for any given letter by touching a key. In his first section he considers how the weak movements of a needle may govern the movements of a heavy arm. He does not achieve this, as we might anticipate, by electromagnets, but, discarding these, by a somewhat elaborate mechanical device, which directs in a given manner the energy of wheels kept rotating as nearly uniformly as possible. We must refer the reader for the details of this part of the teletype, as well as for those of the manner in which the appropriate letters are to be actually printed, to the pamphlet itself; they have now only historical interest, but they suffice to indicate a mechanical versatility which was later to come to fuller fruition. Various additional possibilities are then indicated, thus, on making certain signals, mechanical effects other than printing letters, e.g. the sounding of a bell, can be obtained ; methods are given by which the combination of one signal followed by a letter shall print a capital or a figure; and again processes fin- messages to be printed in cipher are indicated. Lastly Galton's concluding words may be cited here, for they anticipate much that was to come later — the transference of the tele- graphs to the Post Office, and the modern development of the telephone: "If telegraphs, that worked and printed satisfactorily were once found practicable, most large houses, public and private, would soon become supplied with them. The communication being so immediate, answer following question as soon as it is put, affords much more nearly the advantage of a personal communication than the best regulated post office ever could. Any scheme to introduce telegraphs generally, would 214 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon probably be first confined to London. There would be central offices, and from these bundles of wires would radiate to numerous branch offices; from the branch offices again wires would pass along the adjacent streets, and supply houses as they passed. The expense of distributing wires in this way could not be extreme, for, if the branch offices were as numerous as the branch post offices now are, the distance that the wires to each private house would have to traverse would never be great" (p. 32). The perfect system of house to house telegraphy will probably only be reached when we return to the recorded signal, to the true telegraph, to the written instead of the spoken word. But in a large measure Galton's anticipation of 1849 has been realised. Before, however, the world could express any opinion on the value of his teletype, the " spring-fret " had again seized him. Galton was off for the " misty sweat bath 'neath the line," but this time with a definite end to his travels — the exploration of a little known tract of Tropical Africa. When and how the idea of a journey of explora- tion in Africa occurred to Francis Galton we cannot now ascertain ; the reader will remember his boyish admiration for Captain Sayers (see p. 113), which was doubtless not without permanent influence. Oswell, Murray and Livingstone had just reached Lake Ngami, pro- ceeding from the Cape, while ten years earlier Captain (later Sir) James E. Alexander, starting also from the Cape, had twice tra- versed the country of the Great Namaquas, and travelling almost due east and west along Lat. 23° S. had linked Walfisch Bay with the country of the Damaras of the Hills. North of 23° S. from Walfisch Bay to Lake Ngami, of the land of the Damaras of the Plains and of the Ovampos, but little was known; it was to this land that Galton's attention was ultimately directed. Oswell and Livingstone were already at work to the north of Lake Ngami, and there seems little doubt that Galton for a considerable time had in mind the linking up of the districts traversed by them with the West Coast. But this was hardly his original project ; that appears to have been to reach Lake Ngami from the Cape and then proceed northward by means of the rivers flowing into that lake1. For this purpose his equipment contained originally two boats which were discarded at the Cape. Galton's friend, Dalyell, was acquainted with Sir Roderick Murchison, at that time President of the Royal Geographical Society; Galton's cousins Charles Darwin and Captain Douglas Galton were 1 Colborne's Neiv Monthly Mnydzine, November 1850, p. 3.50. \IA I'latt- LVI SKETCHES FROM GALTON'S AFRICAN DIARIES. Photograph of a rough water-eoleui sketch of gun set as a trap for a lion ; the beast in pulling off the lump of meat at the muzzle discharges the gun. v_. H Sample page of one of Galton's (liary-sketchbookgj illustrating his pencil snapshots. The Rcdicttkcniitf/: Scientific K,,'/>/<>nitioi, fellows, and at the suggestion of the latter, Galton consulted the officials of the Society as to his journey. He was elected a menil»T in the spring of 1850 and thus begun his relationship to the Royal Geographical which lasted so many years. According to the minutes of the Society Galton submitted, on March 25, 1850, a scheme for his journey to the South African lake and the route he proposed to take. This paper was not published in the Society's Journal and it has not been possible to obtain access to the papers of that period in the Society's archives'. The matter is probably of small importance, for had Galton gone up from the Cape to Lake Ngami, he would have found Living- stone already at work exploring the district he had thought of, and it was probably therefore providential that on his arrival at the Cape he found himself cut off from Ngami by the great trek of the emigrant Boers, who had "wrested the whole breadth of the habitable country north of the Orange River" and cut off all communication northward. After some doubts as to proceeding to Lake Ngami from the Portu- guese settlements on the east coast, Galton determined on starting from Walfisch Bay on the west and crossing Damaraland. This roughly enabled him to fill in the unknown district between Alexander's west and east line, Livingstone's Lake Ngami work and the Portuguese possessions on the west coast, that is to say the upper half of the present German South-west African colonies. The account of Galton's journey was published by Murray in 1853", and a new edition by Ward, Lock & Co. in the Minerva Library of Famous Books in 1889*. A succinct account of the journey — Recent Expedition into the In- terior of South- Western Africa — was given at meetings of the Royal Geographical Society, Feb. 23 and April 26, 1852, and is published in their Journal, vol. xxn, pp. 140 — 163. The paper which imme- diately follows this is by Livingstone and Oswell giving an account of their explorations to the north of Lake Ngami. A common map of the Galton and Livingstone explorations (p. 141) is of much interest 1 I have to thank Dr J. Scott Keltie for most kindly examining the minutes of the Royal Geographical Society for the years 1850-2 for references to Francis Galton. 2 The Narrative of an Explorer in Tropical South Africa, with coloured Maps, Plates and Woodcuts. One of the maps gives a most valuable scheme of the routes of various explorers up to 1851. The cuts are after sketches in Galton's note-books. 3 This edition has a most interesting Appendix by Galton on the later history of exploration, etc., in Damaraland. It wants, however, most of the cuts of the original and the small map is inferior. •jit; /,//<• «n,-<(> nm •_'!'.» CAPE TOWN, CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. 8th July, 1850. DEAREST MOTHER, We arrived here safely and all well a fortnight ago— and this is the first mail that has left since then, so that what with our very long passage and tin; other delay, you will I fear have wondered where in the world I am. I found 1 Inn I letters of introduction to everybody worth knowing in Cape Town. Sir Harry Smith is most civil, and I feel just as much at home here as in Leamington. Andersson is a right good fellow and particularly well. He desires to be very kindly remembered to all of you. I found out an old Leamington acquaintance of yours, or rather she found me out, a Mrs Menzies, who was there in 1840 and knew Admiral Christian well. She is the wife of the Chief Justice here and is a particularly nice person. I daresay Emma will recollect her. My old ally, Hyde Parker is here in command of a ship and has just taken some prizes — another friend also, a Cantab whom I had my Xmas dinner with, on the Nile, is settled here. The news as regards my future plans, is somewhat chequered : Four clays after I arrived news came from the frontier, that the Rebel Dutchmen (Boers they call them) had entirely stopped every route, and were on the point of themselves, going immediately to the Lake in order to keep it for themselves and had stopped parties of English Travellers and robbed them. My plans have been therefore changed. I intend either to go round by Natal near Delagoa Bay, or else on the western coast by Walfisch Bay, so as to turn their flank. Government, i.e. Sir H. Smith, desires me to take some letters to the Chiefs about, with reference to this movement of the Boers — in order to resist them. It has been, and still may be for aught I know, seriously contemplated to annex this wide country to the Colony. Anyhow I shall know all about it in two days. I have offered to do whatever Government wishes, and I should not be surprised if I had orders of some importance to carry out. Till then as my plans are so unsettled I cannot say more but I am ready for a start any day and as soon as a decision is come to shall very likely be packed off at once ; so I may have to leave Cape Town this week. I have received no letter from England as yet. Please direct them, Cape Toum — Cape of Good Hope, unless I write again to the contrary as I have no chance whatever of going within 500 miles of Colesberg. Andersson is delighted at the prospect of anything like a scrimmage — and the fact of there having been £1000 ottered for the capture of one Boer, and £500 for another — on account of previous enormities quite unconnected with the present business gives an extra zest to the fun of his present destination. If I go to Natal, I shall recollect to enquire about Darwin's prote"g£ Mr Hume, and will report on the state of his farm. Sir H. Smith has a glorious team of beagles — they don't run half as fast as those at Edstone did, and if possible make more noise. They run about in front of Government House and have been trained to chivy any strange dog that may approach too near, which they do at full cry. Give my love to everybody — babies and all. I will write by next mail, which must leave in 10 days I should think. Ever your affectionate son, FRANK G ALTON. WELCH'S HOTEL, CAPE TOWN. August 5th, 1850. My DEAR DAHWIN, In an hour more and I shall be off, with I think nearly as efficient a lot of men and cattle, as could possibly be met with. I have been obliged to 220 Life and Letter* of Franc!* (,'ulton freight a small Schooner to take me and my traps about 1000 miles up the Coast to Walfisch Bay where I land and go towards the interior. The assistance and kindness in every possible way, both of Government here and of all the people, has been extreme. I take out credentials for establishing friendly relations between our Government and different tribes, in opposition to the movement of these Dutch Boers, and they have given me an immense parchment passport, engrossed and in English, Dutch and Portuguese, with a hugh seal 8 inches in diameter, set in a tin box and dangling on to it, so I go as a great swell1. Sir Harry made a long speech to me the other day after dinner at Government House, to say, I was a good fellow — and he spoke very kindly indeed. Andersson is a right good fellow, and does whatever he is told, which is particularly convenient. My head-man is one of the best known servants in Cape Town. He is Portuguese — has travelled all his life, speaks Dutch and English perfectly and lias always been liked by everybody. Then I have a Black, to look after my nine mules and horses. He calls me " Massa " and that also, is very pleasant. He is a tall athletic well built fellow, who has worked uncommonly well in Kaffir land. Next comes a smart lad to help him, and then I have 2 Waggon drivers and two leaders for the Oxen. One of the Drivers has worked 4 years together at a blacksmith's and waggon maker's shop here, and is a very good workman, so that he can repair anything that goes wrong in my waggons, and one of the leaders can also drive. Our party therefore consists of seven servants Andersson and myself, and except Juan, the head-man, their wages run from £3. 10. 0 to £1. 10. 0 a month. I have been obliged to lay in a very great quantity of stores, for the place where I am going to land, has no communication established with any other port, and nothing that is forgotten can be replaced, of these things about half go to exchange for oxen, of which there are plenty there, and to get me guides and so on, of the rest I leave one half as a depot at a missionary Station, so that I have always a place to fall back upon. If the roads are good, I go with my waggons and my cart, if there is doubt about water ahead, I send on my cart alone with the mule — and if the road is execrable, I hunt about for a better one, using my mules as pack animals. The country is utterly unvisited by any White, after the first 300 miles, no traveller or sportsman has ever been there at all, only a few missionaries and traders — but the universal account from the Natives is, that the further you go, the richer it becomes. There is this large reported lake, Lake Demboa, only 200 miles from the furthest missionary Station. It will be my first object to reach this, and trace the rivet- that flows out of it, and which is said to be a branch of the Cunene to the sea, and if the river be as large and the country as fertile and healthy as it is declared by the natives to be, it will most assuredly rise soon to great importance. The Cunene is the river that bounds the Portuguese possessions on the West coast, to the South. I daresay I shall bring back a lot of ivory and gold dust from there, for I shall certainly swop any of my stores for them, if I can do so to advantage. I am comfortably provisioned, barring meat, for two years and have an immense quantity of the things, that these 1 This remarkable document is now in the Galton Laboratory. According to Galton's own account the seal had originally been attached to a royal mandate creating a deputy or lieutenant-governor of the colony. Sir H. Smith wanted something to impress the natives, so he cut it off and attached it to the aforesaid parchment ! The Reawakening: Sricufijic K.,-/>l 'oral 'Ion ±>1 savages are understood principally to fancy. All this has cost a lot of money, but like buying a ship, unless she is wrecked, you will sell her again. T have been obliged to draw a bill on Barclay for ,£400 beyond my letter of credit, at 30 days sight, and I leave behind me about £350 in cash, to pay the wives and mothers of my men, in case of any possible emergency. I wrote duplicate letters to Barclay, which I gave my Bankers here, to send with the bills, to ask them to advance what balance there may be against me, at a usual rate of interest, but that if it was not convenient for them to do so, I had left a power of attorney with you, to sell out some shares and requested them in that case to communicate with you. But I hope they will advance the tin, as it is a bore selling, and I cannot draw any more money, till I come back. I take £50 in my pocket in case of any possible accident, but I am assured that money is no earthly use where I am going, everything is done by exchange for cloth and iron or something else. My two large boats I am compelled to leave behind as my present route lies over a hilly country, where I could not possibly take them. But, if I make out the Cunene satis- factorily, they may yet have to carry me. I shall be able to write one more letter, that you will get in a reasonable time and that will be when the vessel leaves me in Walfisch Bay. After then I will leave one or two with the Missionaries, and when I quit them, if all goes well I may soon get within messenger reach of the Portuguese settlements. I have of course to write to Sir H. Smith and I think I will do so to I/ord Palmerston and to the Geographical Society, so that letter sending will be a great object to me and I will do all I can to contrive it successfully. Well, I have now done with myself. It is no good asking questions about home because I do not expect to receive a letter until I return. I have had none from England yet, your hunting season will be just beginning when you get this, I suppose. I am curious to know if you have been yachting this yea;-. I think if you were suddenly transported here, you would like the place amazingly so many horses all with a deal of blood in them. Every cart goes at a trot and is driven 4, 6, or even 8, in hand. Sometimes you see a set of tearing horses and a young strip of a lad only, with an immense whip to manage them. I have only 4 dogs. Well the sheet is out, so goodbye. I often think of you all at Edstone and Claverdon and regret the Sunday evening rides. Give my love to my Mother and all, and send this letter as a circular to them. I will give you pictures in my next. When you write, address to me care of Messrs Van der Byl and Co., Cape Town, Cape of Good Hope. Goodbye old fellow. FRANK GALTON. WALFISCH BAY, SOUTH WEST OP AFRICA. 21th August, 1850. DEAREST MOTHER, At last I am fairly on the desert with everything before me quite clear and apparently easy. I have, I iiud, made a most fortunate selection of men. They work most willingly and well, and nearly all know some kind of trade. When I arrived here some 3 days ago, the Missionaries came down to meet me, and have been most civil. I am sure I have selected a far better route than my first one, for now I am quite as near the undiscovered country as I should have been after 3 months land journey from Algoa Bay. Ostriches are all about round here, though I have seen none yet. We got 5 eggs and ate them the other day. Lions infest the country about .30 miles off; if they don't eat my mules I shall have delightful shooting. The ship unexpectedly is on the point of starting, so my dear Mother, a long intended letter is •22'2 Lift and Letters of Francis Gallon spoilt. It appears the weather glass has unexpectedly fallen, and the vessel is ob to be off some hours before her time. Many of my intended letters are therefore stopped, pray tell Douglas and Uncle Hubert I had intended writing to them, you will hear no more from me, for I fear a very long time. I explained the reason why in full to Darwin, in my letter to him. Goodbye then, give my affectionate love to all the family. I start into the country in 4 or 5 days. Ever your affectionate son, FRANK GALTON. Andersson is an excellent fellow and desires to be remembered to you. Lat. 22.7, Long. 17. About Deer. 1850. DEAREST MOTHER, This letter cannot I think be less than 6 months on the road, as it is pretty far by land from the Cape. In the first place we are all in excellent health, high spirits and thorough travelling order, though we have had an immense deal of trouble and some hardships. The weather too is warm, 157° (one hundred and fifty seven degrees) Fahrenheit in the sun at midday and from 90° to 100° in the coolest shade, under thick trees and that sort of shade about 110° to 115°. This appeared quite incredible to me, but I have compared 7 thermometers of 5 different makers and they all agree, so there can be no doubt about it. The air is not oppressive at all — we are at the furthest missionary station and not further, and now I will tell you all the story in order. The ship sailed away from Waltisch Bay which is 3 miles of heavy sand from fresh water ; we were employed about 10 days in getting every thing thence to the water in the cart with the mules. When there we were 18 miles from a Missionary Station. It took nearly 3 weeks to get everything there. It is the only liveable place in that part, as the water at the first place was execrable, so bad that I had to distill every drop we drank. I kept a still going night and day and so we were supplied. After resting the mules we packed plenty of iron things, guns and so forth, making a very heavy load in the cart, to buy oxen with about 180 miles up country. I got 3 oxen here on the backs of which, some more things were packed and with a good sort of ruffian, originally a Tailor, subsequently a kind of Missionary, and now a ruined cattle dealer for a guide away we went. The men had all to walk. Andersson crossed 40 miles of desert in great style and made another 24 miles journey after, when the mules were sorely knocked up ; we were obliged to let them and the horses feed at night in the river and seeing no tracks of lions about, we did so without much fear. What was our horror the next morning on going down — when we saw, not a mule or a horse, but their tracks going full gallop in a drove, and by their side, the tracks of six lions, full chase. A little further on, my pet mule lay dead, and a lion eating it ; by the side a wolf waiting for his turn, again a little further my biggest horse just killed and nothing more to be seen. We ran up to where the cart and encampment was, 2 miles off at the top of the steep banks of the river ; provisioned and armed 4 men for two days and sent them off after the mules, and the rest of us hunted the lions, but unsuccessfully all day. They had got among the rocks and we could not track them. In the evening we went down to get the flesh to eat, for all our live stock had perished and we were very hungry and then Andersson (who is the best fellow in the world) and myself went up well armed, to watch the carcass of the mules from a charming place in the rocks just over it, and which we agreed no lion could possibly climb and made sure of making a good The Reawakening: Scientific K.ri>lm'fec. >fcc. and we stopped and gorged ourselves for two days. So we went on, and on the fifteenth day reached Rehoboth1. The men were tired and partly mutinous, and the Namaquas (a sort of Hottentot) had driven every native away and all their cattle, and not one was to be got. Fortunately an American lived there, who had 50 oxen to sell. I took him into my service and bought his oxen at 25s. each — half of them being broken in. To break in the remainder was a dreadful labour, but now all 47 (3 being killed in the process) are excellent draught oxen — 6 or 7 of them good riding oxen — and we think nothing of packing the wildest beast. The men have been tossed about a little, and I got a vicious poke made at me, when on horseback, but turned the horse 1 In January, 1 909, Professor H. H. W. Pearson met at Rehoboth an old woman, Mrs Bassingthwaite, who remembered distinctly Galton visiting her father's house when she was a girl, seven years old. He was the " very intelligent Englishman, a blackmith," Dixon by name, mentioned in Tropical South Africa, 1st edn., p. 117. For a lifetime she had wondered what had become of him and why he never came back ! 224 Life and Letters of Francis just in time to receive it only slantingly, so that the skin was not broken. All this breaking work my new man Hans, under Andersson's management did. Of the three men who were chiefly mutinous and who also were convicted of stealing, one went away, and Andersson flogged the two others most severely — and with the best effect — and now everybody works well and willingly. Waggons and all are brought here, and we shall soon start. The murdering and stealing of the Namaquas against the Danuims is horrible, they cut off the hands and feet to get the iron bracelets. About 25 thousand head of cattle have just been stolen. I have been diplomatising, in pursuance of my instructions, but with very little effect, and must now push my way between all these ruffians. The only fear I have is of the oxen being stolen at night, when we should have to walk, which is very severe work in this weather, but go I will, and we are strong enough to astonish a great number of the natives, if we blaze at them. My remaining horse and 3 mules have died of the horse distemper. I have now 5 mules and 51 Oxen. My cart I shall leave behind as it is hardly strong enough. Andersson went down to fetch the waggons with most of the men and shot a rhinoceros — but there is very little game, and now, as I have to hunt entirely on foot, I seldom go out, it is no joke in this weather. I have picked up a little of the Ovaherero language, which is spoken most extensively I find. I go northwards and shall thence probably get a letter to you, through the Portuguese. Every step now is exploring. The season is now unfortunately at its dryest, but I think I shall get on. Ten days journey to the North, will put me beyond all desert and among kindly negroes who garden and plant. My black man speaks very fairly the language, it is so like to his own. Where I shall next be heard of, if not through the Portuguese, I can give you no idea, I have of course received no letter whatever from England, since I left it. This goes by a kind of clubbed up post, from Missionary Station to Station. The map I sent you, turns out to be simply traced from an English map made by a theorising map maker, which the Missionary had.— He adopted the outline, just to put in what he conceived to be the positions of the Stations and for no other purpose. It is therefore totally valueless. You know I write this letter to all the family. It is quite a round robin — and therefore I send no special message to anybody. Andersson desires particularly everything civil, ,titi<- K. try to get to the north and start in a fortnight; we have got no distance as yet an I had first to buy the oxen and then which is no joke to break tln-m in. Fancy having two heavy wagons on the one hand and fifty wild oxen on the other that toss and kick and roll and are as vicious as young "thorobreds" it took time before we could make them pull kindly. The plan is to drive the oxen together all in a heap, and then one man, who must understand the work takes a long cord with a loop at one end and this he holds twisted round a stick and two or three others hold the loose end, then he creeps up behind the ox that he wants and as the ox is shuffling about he slips the noose round his leg, and then such a confusion! The ox pulls frantically, runs at the men who have hold of the rope and they hold on all the same, at last they pull him down and catch tight hold (3 or 4 of them) of his tail and turn him on his back and then they tie all four legs together and leave him, so they treat as many as they want, then they yoke them as they lie and let them loose. My horses and most of my mules are dead so we hack oxen; my hunting saddle fits an ox's back excellently, but it is not a sporting beast to put it on. I don't like the horns, an ox is a difficult beast to have a firm seat on as their skin is so loose, they also kick and jump very short so that a rider's seat is severely tried; if you fall the horns are much in the way, especially as they usually butt at you as you fall, and kick afterwards. The country here is in the wildest disorder, murdering and cattle robbing are of every day occurrence ; I picked up a poor wretch with his neck cut down behind to the backbone, and did what I could but he died. A set of lawless ruffians many of whose leaders were born in the Cape Colony do all this; they destroyed a missionary station 9 miles from here a few days since. I have been making all use I could of the instructions Sir Harry Smith gave me to stop this, but with no avail. Immediately after I wrote to these men (the Namaquas) they set out, attacked twenty-five different villages took very many of the women and children as slaves and all the cattle, which last can hardly be reckoned at less than 18 thousand in number. The scoundrels too cut off the hands and feet of any of them that they catch in order to get off the iron bracelets that they wear and which otherwise would take them 4 minutes to do. I have seen two wretched women who crawled here for refuge thus mutilated, they told me that they stopped the blood by poking the limb in the sand. All the natives here believe every white face to be their enemy, and very naturally too, I shall have to force my way through them in a fortnight as I best can. We should make a fair resistance to a very large body of natives and to a good-sized force of Namaquas; so that if they don't steal our cattle and leave us a wreck on the plain we shall da 14 days journey North will carry us through all this ,•_' 7 neiglibourhood, and within the probable reach of her future commerce, and which were understood to be in danger of oppression fn.m certain British subjects and others who are in no way connected with your [Jonker's] people. Now this specified tract of country includes Daman land and my instructions are of so general a character that although not framed with a view to oppose Namaqua oppression in particular, yet in so far as it is oppression, carried on in part by British subjects and in this part of South Africa it becomes my immediate duty to act upon them." [Letter to Captain Jonker Afrikaner from Barmen, Nov. 25, 1850.] Even while Galton was waiting for the answer to this letter to Jonker — which answer the latter sent 300 miles round — the Hottentots burnt eleven of the remaining 15 werfts of Kaitchene" ;ind eleven others belonging to other Damara chiefs, corresponding according to Galton's calculations to about 18,000 head of cattle raided. Galton could not possibly go forward through the middle of this ravaging, and with characteristic pluck, and probably disregarding entirely his very nebulous instructions, he determined to frighten Jonker into more orderly behaviour. His fairly stern letters had produced no effect. Such was the origin of the "red hunting-coat" expedition as described in the above letter. The end might have been very different, but Galton faced the danger, got abject apologies to the missionary Kolbe and to the British Government signed, and laws proclaimed by the Hottentot chiefs to rule their relations to the Damaras. We reproduce Captain Jonker Afrikaner's promise to the British Government: see Plate LVIII. Translated freely by Galton it runs : I acknowledge that I have done much wrong in this land, but I pledge my word to the English government that from this day forward I will abstain from all injustice to the Damaras. I promise that I will with all my power keep peace with them and that I will use my influence as well as I can to persuade the other Captains to do the same. [Signed] I am, JONKER AFFIUKANER. Witnesses to this signature : FRANCIS GALTON. TIMOTHEUS SNEEWE. Interesting are the notes Galton, then aged 29, wrote for the speech he made as first lawgiver to this lawless crew. They run as follows : Speak about the signatures, strength of England, could furnish every Damara with a gun, Qould cut off trade to south. (1)' What is "justice," explained by these laws. 15 laws cannot meet every , but they will lay down a base on which very many cases may be treated. If The numbers refer to the remarks on the special laws which follow this. 228 Life and Letters of Francis Galton J. acts well on the whole, it will be known, if ill, also. No enquiries need be made into special cases. It is the office of a Captain to take the labour and anxiety of judging on himself. A man who does not do so is not fit to be a chief. (3) Better ten guilty escape than one innocent suffer. (4) Against the practice of retaliation (indiscriminate). (5) Speak very strongly about this — it shows the Naipaquas are cowards — say they are drunkards too. (6) Very much punishment must be left to the discretion of the judge; this explains the principles on which it is regulated. Crime is never checked by severe and uncertain punishment. If too severe it raises sympathy on behalf of the criminal and the laws are hated. (7) Speak much on the advantages of certainty and quickness of punishment towards checking crime. (8) J.'s simple justice. J. must not keep the [stolen] cattle for himself, but return the stolen — and half the "Regt's Beesten1" to the Damara. (9) I conceive that in the long run the "Regt's Beesten" will defray the costs of justice. A sufficient number of the stolen cattle must of course be found to warrant acting under this law. (11) To receive oxen in compensation for punishment would be in most cusrs simple bribery in order that oxen might be stolen. J. might be glad to have a watcher killed that he might demand oxen. (12) Great honesty must be shewn in regard to the "Pand Ossen" and simple suspicion must never warrant their being taken. Culprit must be brought to Jonker's place to ensure a cool enquiry into the case and proven identity. N.B. For frequently repeated thefts stronger measures must of course be taken. (15) Allude again to No. 11. Police Badge. Here follows Galton's code2 put into the mouth of Jonker and read out in Dutch to the assembly : (1) I have pledged my word to the English Government that I will act hence- forth according to law towards the Damaras. (2) Now I give these laws for myself and for my people. (3) I will not treat the innocent as I treat the guilty. (4) I will not fire off an innocent werft to make amends for stolen cattle. (5) I will not allow that women and children have their hands and feet cut off and suchlike mishandlings. (6) I will not punish a thief with death, and I will not give heavy punishments for small offences. (7) But I shall do my best that no offence against me or my people shall remain unpunished. (8) I will also punish my own folk, who do injury to the Damaras, with the same penalty and law as I punish the Damaras with, who do injury to me or my people. 1 I.e. the judicial fine measured in oxen. 2 The Dutch version is in the folio volume; a much overwritten and rewritten English original in one of the pocket-books in Galton's hand. The Reawakening; ,sv-/V/////,v- A'.,y,/o/v///o// •_>•_», (9) But when beasts or cattle are stolen from .,„. ,„• niy ,„,,,,!,., ( wi|| two-fold as many from the thief, or from those who have aide.l tl,,. thief. „-/,.•„ it proven. That it to say, I will take again the beasts which have, been stolen, or when I cannot find all, so many as the number is. And I will also take the same nun,l.,, as "Regt's Beesten" (that is to say, cattle taken to pay for the trouble and OOtl (10) Also I will punish the thief with forty liishes. (11) When one of my watchers on the feldt has been murdered, ami my rattle stolen, then shall the murderer be brought to my place and put to death. 1 will take no payment from the murderer in any form whatever. (12) From him who hides a thief, I will take 10 oxen as pledge oxen (Pand Ossen), and retain them until the thief is brought out to me. T will take I'd pledge oxen from those who hide a murderer. I will give these back when the evil doer is brought to me. (13) If the thieves drive ray cattle away to a werft, and the werft will not give the thieves up when my men go there and ask for them, then T will not fire that werft, neither will I take all their oxen, but I will take back the beasts that are stolen, and from their beasts will drive out " Regt's Beesten " for the werft is guilty, and besides these I will take the pledge oxen. I will not take more. (14) Furthermore if the men of the werft have fled when they see my men coming and have left their cattle loose on the feldt, then I will not take all be, that they have, but I will take the stolen cattle out from among the others, and then over and above the "Regt's Beesten" and the pledge cattle. I will take no more. (15) The half of the "Regt's Beesten," shall go to him from whom the cattle have been stolen. The other half goes to me. The pledge oxen I take in charge. A primitive law code it must be admitted! But this Galton- justice ruled for many months on the borderland of the Namaquas and Damaras, and half-a-dozen honest Englishmen with fifty Cape mounted police could have maintained order and developed trade for many years in that district after Galton's visit. As it' was the British Government idled and faltered, until Germany stepped in to reap where Galton had sown. Imagination dwells pleasantly on the youthful law-giver fresh from his fallow years of shooting and hunting facing this population of "O'erlams" — a mixture of Boer and Hottentot blood — the greater part of whom according to him had the common "felon face." A note made on Jan. 24, 1851, in one of the pocket books is, how- ever, worth reproducing : "Jonker is decidedly a talented man and seems in full vigour, his shrewd remarks, concise descriptions and keen observation shows him to be no ordinary man. He came out quite as a diplomatist in the long conversation I had with him about the interior, artfully contriving to turn the conversation to his own ends." •_':;o Life and Letters of Franci* Galton's influence not only over Jonker, but over Cornelius, Swartboy and Amiral, was marked, and it is characteristic of the man that but little of it is manifested in his published book. The whole episode of his attempt to establish order in Namaqua and Damara- lands must be studied in the MS. notebooks. The following is the bare account which reached the press of that day of Galton's proceedings. CAPE NEWSPAPER. 22nd August, 1851. Mr Galton's Expedition. Letters have been received from the enterprising traveller Mr Galton who our readers will remember started for the Great Lake via Walfisch Bay in September last. Mr Galton writes, under date the 1st March from Lat. 22° South, Long. 10° 49' East. Mr Galton arrived in the Damara Country in October, he reports constant fighting and wars of reprisals between the Damaras and the Namaquas, which commenced 4 years ago but had lately increased in ferocity and extent ; Jonker Afrikaner being a principal mover. The destruction of the village of Damaras, gathered around Mr Kolbe's mission station reported in the papers at the time, and the purchase of plundered cattle by white men, had led to difficulties in the way of Mr Galton's progress, and to the prospects of commerce. Mr Galton, on his arrival in that country wrote to Jonker Afrikaner, acquainting him with the instruction he had received from the Governor to establish friendly relations with the native tribes on the route to Lake Ngami, with a view to prepare a way for future commerce and to warn them against any attempts to dispossess them of their country ; and intimating the displeasure of tin- British Governor at the oppression of the other tribes by the Namaquas. Jonker's answer was delayed a month and was unsatisfactory, and Mr Galton then rode straight to him with an escort of only three followers, and succeeded in thoroughly alarming him. He made Jonker write a most ample acknowledgment of his wrong to Mr Kolbe ; and advised him also to make the same acknowledgment to the British Governor, which he did, and sent it by a messenger forthwith to the colony. Mr Galton also made Jonker send. for a neighbouring captain of the red people, and made him also solemnly undertake to leave off oppressing the Damaras, and wrote out a few simple laws to meet cases of cattle stealing, which were cordially agreed to. One of these laws provided for the equal punishment of Namaquas with that of Damaras for stealing. Some of their own disputes were also voluntarily referred to Mr Galton as umpire. Mr Galton has received much valuable and interesting information respecting the transactions in that part of the country for some years past, from the diary of Mr Hahn, the longest resident missionary among the Damaras. Mr Galton, at the date of his letters, was to start for the interior in two days, but intimates his intention of returning that way in about six months. A considerable impression has been made on the native minds by Mr Galton's visit, and a way appears to be prepared for the progress of European commerce and civilisation in that direction at no very distant period : but very much will depend on the conduct of those here, who hereafter attempt to open nut further relations with the natives. We shall endeavour to procure for our readers if possible, further details of these must interesting communications. The Reawakening: s<-ici,tijic We may now return to the home letters. Feby. 22nd [1851]. Tjit. 22, l,mg. I* :,n'. DBARBST MOTHEK, We are all well provisioned hero, 1 liave alxjut 85 :!4 Life and Letters of Francis Galtoii a few days about 300 miles to the East for a little Elephant shooting. I can get horses now, and after all my trouble I want a little amusement, and I expect to gain some information that I want in that direction. A ship comes to Walfisch Bay in January and by it I shall go if all is right to St Helena on my road home. I cannot express the interest I feel to hear about England. No post has come here since I arrived but the ship is to bring everything. We have been most fortunate as regards health none of us have ever as yet suffered from illness, and everybody did his duty with the greatest good humour. For myself I feel in better health than I ever did in England. I hope that your occupations have not induced you to abandon the noble sport of fox hunting. I have now tried many sorts of hunting but I cand[idly assert] that fox hunting will bear comparison with any. T[here may be] greater excitement (but not much) in going after a large and vicious be[ast, but] the excellent horses of England, the music of the houfnds and the nice] society are wanting in this country. I don't know that I have had any particularly hair breadth escapes ; perhaps the one that was most so was in running up a hill I was quite blown and jumped up on a ledge of rock, when I had a little lost my balance. It happened that I had leapt on a large serpent's tail, one said to be of the most venomous kind, a black creature 7 feet long. He was up in an instant as high as my face in a fearful wrath, and drew back his head to dart at me ; but I had recovered my balance, and did not wait for him, for I leapt clean down the steep rock near. He came down too, but when I at last found a stick he was going best pace among the bushes, and though I had a long chivy after the rascal, I could not kill him. Pray remember me to Lady Stratheden, and to your party and believe me ever sincerely yours, FRANK GAI/TON. I regret much that I could get only a bag of the new corn for the Harmonicon that I was entrusted with. EIKHAMS, NAMAQUA LAND, S. AFRICA. Augt. Ifith, 1851. DEAREST MOTHER, I have a long s|ory to tell, so long that I think it will tire you to read it, all about captains and chiefs and all that sort of thing, which interests people in these parts, but about which you cannot be expected to care. I have returned after a journey not so long as I had hoped to have made, but still extensive enough to my credit as a traveller. Of bran new country I have explored about 500 miles out and then went back again by much the same route. The Portuguese and the magnificent intervening river, of which the Cunene is but a branch, I did not quite reach. Those abominable waggons have been like a drag chain upon me. All has ended well and we have had no sickness whatever. Andersson is a right good fellow and I have had plenty of occupation in mapping the country, so that altogether the time has passed pleasantly. Of game there is next to nothing, my guns have been quite idle. — After leaving the farthest Missionary Station, I got just between the two principal Black chiefs, who were on the point of fighting. I managed to get myself and party clear of the massacre, and without guides had the good luck to find a sufficient quantity of water from pla< place for ourselves and oxen, so that we had no hardship that way. The country was a dense mass of thorns, not simple straight thorns like a quickset of hedge, but curved like fish hooks, the oxen would not face them, it was terrible work getting them on. I often tried the strength of these thorns by fastening a bit of rag to a spring balam e and pulling till the thorn broke— one thorn stood a pull of 27 Ibs. — just conceive. Our The Seawakening : Scientific E.ri>l/<>rn -_'4i I should very much like to hear something about your brothers Darwin ami Erasmus: I very distinctly remember a pleasant visit at the Larches, l|(-a\.-n km.«-. how many years ago, and having many rides with them on ponies, without stirrup. The only member of your family whom I have seen for years, is Emma, who gave myself and wife a very cordial greeting at the British Association at Birmingham, some few years ago. T do not know, whether I ought not to apologise for troubling you with this note, but the spirit which makes me write, must be my excuse. Pray believe me, Yours sincerely, • C. DARWIN. In the summer of 1852 (June 14) Galton wrote a letter to the Koyal Geographical Society urging the' want of proper instruments for travellers, and. we note -therein the development of his interest in the study of the art of travel, to which we must return later. But he needed rest and he appears to have suffered from low fever, which was not com- pletely dispelled by a yachting tour with Sir Hyde Parker to Scotland and Norway. The winter was therefore spent at Dover, his mother and sister Emma nursing him. Here at a Twelfth Night party in 1853 Galton met for the first time Miss Louisa Butler. Early in March Miss Emily Butler writing to her brother A. G. Butler reports that " the lion-killer certainly seems smitten." Galton returned in March and Miss Butler in April to London, where they again met, went together to the Crystal Palace, and returned engaged. On the day- April 27 — of Miss Butler's return to Peterborough, Galton finished his Tropical South Africa; three days later the Dean, her father, died suddenly at luncheon, and Francis Galton arrived the same evening t.. look only on the dead face of the man, who should have welcomed his daughter's future husband. There is little doubt that this sad initiation bound with unusual closeness the links between Galton and his wife's family. Only one other characteristic picture of the Galton of these days has reached my hands. It is again in a letter of Miss Emily Butler to her brother of May, 1 853. "Mr Walton's book is vary jolly, and gives one a high idea of his resolve and prudence ; the latter quality is so strongly developed that he has to have hats made for him ! He has got such a fine medal from the R. G. S. When it was given him. the President said very fine things of him, but regretted that so spirited an adven- turer was going to be spoilt and married. Mr G. says it was very well put ..r he would have thrown the decanter at the worthy President. 31 L'4l' Lift' flint Lt'tti'rx <>/' l-'mncix •' Mr G. came yesterday t'resh from the Derby I J felt so pleased tu have sueli a sportive relation. It was a splendid day at Epsom, and he was very liappy wandering among the gypsies etc. He tells such rich stories and very neatly. He has been to spirit-rappings1 and had another conversation in Dumara with a deceased chief of that tribe. Is not that wonderful, for Mr Qalton is the only man in Europe who knows Dainara. The chief promised to go abroad with him, which is a pleasant look-out for Loui ! " The marriage of Francis Galton and Louisa Butler took place on August 1, and was followed by a tour in Switzerland and Italy, the winter being spent partly in Florence and partly in Rome. The return to England in March, 1854, was largely followed by visits, and on August G the Galtons again left for an extended tour in France. Hardly till the summer of 1855 did Galton settle down to steady research, but from that year onwards there is scarcely a year which does not bring its definite piece of noteworthy research, and Galton 's scientific production now becomes the story of his life. The extended continental tours ron- tinned throughout a long life, but they were holidays, and, however they extended his field of observation, they had no longer to do with scientific exploration. But what Galton had learnt in his African journeys, became the fund on which he drew for his Art of Travel, 1855, and for those lectures at Aldershot on the Art* of Campaigning (1855-6), by which he endeavoured to supply the " helplessness of our soldiers in the most elementary matters of camp-life," a helplessness the Crimean War was emphasising in the most potent and cruel of manners. These subjects will be dealt with in the following chapter. 1 Francis Galton enters under the events of 1853 — "spirit-rapping mania." /'/,//, /..V/ j = ^ X -^ X p 2 -,;' ^. Plate LXII I a .1 i — ~ "?. rt- — »- •i- X 08 SC '£ if, .a r :; >. ^ rt aT ao -M /= a . c '5. APPENDIX NOTE I PORTRAITS OF THE DARWIN FAMILY PORTRAITS of the more immediate .ancestors of Charles Darwin and Francis Gallon exist at Creskeld Hall, the seat of Francis Darwin, Esq., and at Newnham Grange, Cambridge, formerly the home of Sir Georuv Howard Darwin. Of the pictureo at Creskeld, the most noteworthy are those of Robert Darwin (1682—1754) supposed to be by Richardson about 1717, and of his three sons: William Alvey Darwin (1726 — 1783) by Wright of Derby, Robert Waring Darwin (1724— 181(i) aged .">!, painted by John Borridge, 1775, and Erasmus Darwin (1731 — 1802), painted by Wright also. See our Plates VI, VI1"" and VP". I have heartily to thank Colonel C. W. Darwin for photographs of the pictures of the elder and younger Robert, and Mr William Erasmus Darwin for a photograph of that of William Alvey Darwin. The general resemlilann- to Erasmus of these portraits is striking. Some of the Darwin portraits at Elston Hall were sold by William Brown Darwin, and in part have been repurchased by members of the family. Sir Francis Sacheverell Darwin had a copy made of the portrait of his grandfather, Robert Darwin, and he further purchased, about 1850, from a dealer in Newark, a Darwin portrait with which he had been familiar in his youth as part of the Elston collection. These two portrait- descended to his grandson, Sacheverell Darwin, by whom they were left to Sir George Howard Darwin. They passed for many years traditionally as those of Rolwrt Darwin (1682—1754), and of his father, William Darwin (1655—1682), and photographs of them formerly in the possession of Sir Francis Galton are so entitled. An examination of the photographs convinced me, however, that the portrait of the so-called William Darwin must be of a later date than that of Robert Darwin, and could not possibly represent his father. By the kindness of Lady Darwin I was enabled to examine both pictures at Newnham Grange, and also to see various correspondence concerning them. Sir George Darwin, I then learnt, had himself felt in doubt as to the William Darwin portrait. The Robert Darwin portrait is rightly ascribed and its ascription agrees with that of the original at Creskeld; the copyist has, however, lost something of tin- delicacy of the original. The history of the "William Darwin" picture is very definite : it includes a written statement by Reginald Darwin' as to liis father. Sir Franri-. finding the picture at Newark, and its being then identified as "William Darwin. ' Tin- Director of the National Portrait Gallery has most kindly examined a photograph of this 1 Letter to George Howard Darwin, Esq., Nov. 5, 1890, and also a footnote to a MS. memoir of the Darwins in the possession of the Rev. Darwin Wilmot. :; i •_' 244 Life and Letters of Francis Gallon "William Darwiu " for me, and he dates the painting from the wig as belonging to the period 1730 to 1745. The only "Williams" possible are therefore William Darwin of Cleatham (1681 — 1760), elder brother of Robert Darwin and uncle of Erasmus Darwin, — who would have been 49 in 1730 and rather old for the portrait — William Morgan Darwin, his son (1710 — 1762) — who would have been much the right age, but little likely to have a portrait at Elston — and William Alvey Darwin (1726 — 1783), as a very young man. The latter is the only alternative that seems probable, and the portrait is not wholly unlike Wright's portrait of a later date. It seems therefore reasonable to ascribe this " William Darwin " portrait to William Alvey Darwin although probably no certainty will ever now be possible. The Newnham Grange portraits are reproduced on Plate XLII. There is a miniature at Creskeld Hall of Ann Lascelles, that is, Ann Waring (1664—1722), whose first husband was William Darwin (1655—1682), the mother of Robert Darwin (1682 — 1754), and grandmother of Erasmus. A portrait of the Rev. John Darwin (1730 — 1805), another brother of Erasmus and Rector of Elston — artist and date unknown — is at Elston Hall. Finally we may note that there exists in Mr William E. Darwin's possession a very fine portrait, also said to be of a "William Darwin." This portrait, an undoubted Romney, is dated by the Director of the National Portrait Gallery 1780 — 1783 ; it represents a very young man. There appears to be no " William Darwin " of this date ; and the only Darwins at all of an appropriate age would be the sons of Dr Erasmus Darwin by his first wife. The portrait bears no marked resemblance to Erasmus or Robert Waring, nor is there any knowledge of a portrait of Charles. Its history before purchase appears to be unknown. The difficulties that have arisen in this case may emphasise the importance of returning to the good old custom of painting on the canvas itself the name of the subject. NOTE II ON THE HOWARD ANCESTRY OF CHARLES DARWIN (See Pedigree Plate E) While working on the Darwin side of Francis Galton's pedigree, 1 came across a good deal of material bearing on the noteworthy ancestors of Charles Darwin, and it occurred to me that, as it might be many years before any one else again went through the same material, it would be worth while forming a pedigree of the; noteworthy ancestors of Charles Darwin. Accordingly I determined to put together a pedigree for Charles Darwin similar to the one already issued by the Galton Laboratory for Francis Galton. In this task I have received great assistance from letters to me of the late Sir George Howard Darwin touching on points I had asked him about with regard to the latter pedigree, and referring to papers in his possession bearing on family history. Through the kindness of Lady Darwin and Mr William Erasmus Darwin and with the per- mission of Mr Charles Galton Darwin I have been able to examine a variety of documents bearing on the matter ; the most valuable of these documents were drawn up many years ago by Erasmus Darwin, son of Dr Erasmus Darwin; he must have had a very extended antiquarian and historical knowledge of genealogical facts, which more than a century Plate LXIII THOMAS FOLKY (K;I 7—1077). Founder of Old Swinford Hospital, from tin- cn^raviiiff in Nasli's /llx/itri/ <>f Wwrxtrmlnn- after tlie painting of l(i~0 by William Trabtite in the Hospital. A direct ascendant of Charles Danvin. - •_•»;, ago' was much harder to acquire than at present. His accuracy is "M.-n pwter lli.in that provided in the more elaborate pedigrees of the present day. I him- had, of courne, to judge occasionally between conflicting statements, hut if tlic reader finds my pedi. differs at points from other' versions, it lias not been done without, inquiry ami i-on sideration. It is impossible here to defend in detail the version actually pi 'ovided. 'it course the present work differs absolutely in character from the excellent, privately printed, /',',/!,,,;•,• ,,/' //„> l'',,,nili/ <-/' l),i,-ii-',,,, ISSS, compile42) without regard to their achievements. The scope of the present pedigree is to follow back from ( 'h. Darwin himself those lines which lead us to persons noteworthy in the history of this country, or noteworthy from the standpoint of European history. It is needless to say that in a certain sense such a pedigree cannot he complete. Further research would lie certain to lead us to still further instances of noteworthy men or women. Indeed to keep the pedigree within anything like reasonable bounds T have had to indicate occasionally only final ancestors, and in other cases to entirely omit lines I perfectly well knew to be of distinction, but for which no space was available. The reader who studies this pedigree alongside that of Francis Galton will bo struck with many similarities, but some marked differences. The turning point, of course, lie- in the Howard marriage of Erasmus Darwin. That marriage brought into the Darwin stock the sound commercial energy of the Foleys (see Plate LXITT), who like Gallons and Farmers had amassed large wealth by iron-foundries. It gave also to the Darwin stock their share of aristocratic and ultimately royal blood through Pagets and Devoreux, an acquisition which the Gallons had made through the Barclays ; it supplied also a pleasure pursuing element in Lettice Knollys and Penelope Devereux, which may be paralleled in the Colyear strain of Francis Galton ; but it failed to provide anything of the strong religious nature that we find the Quakers contributing to Francis Gallon's stock. V\V largely miss too the strong admixture of Scottish blood, though possibly the Butlers, de Burghs and Fitzgeralds may supply Celtic imagination. It is of interest to note thai (Jalton and Darwin were linked together by common blood in a variety of ways wholly independent of Erasmus Darwin. I should not wish the reader to look upon a pedigree like the present as an amusing tour deforce. I think, on the contrary, that it illustr a principle expressed by Galton himself on more than one occasion, namely that those who have chiefly made the history of this country, we may indeed say of Europe, fall into relatively few strains and these strains are closely linked together by blood relationships Distinguished leaders of men— judges, Speakers of the House of Commons, leaders of commerce, warriors, diplomatists, and men of affairs— are all there in the background and linked by ties of blood with the modern leaders of men — the originators of idea-. which govern human progress — with men like Darwin and Galton. I have not reproduced fully Mary Howard's immediate relatives. They belonged to a strain almost as physically delicate as the Buttons (see p. 36 above). Charles Howard, .Mary Howard's father, died at 64, her mother at 40, their daughter Klixabeth lived 1 His single pedigrees of various lines do not reach back to the same distant ancestry as mine do, but they have been very helpful. 1 See the quotation from a letter of Gallon's to Nudnv given on p. •'• above. 246 Life awl Letters of Francis Gallon three years, Penelope one year, Mary herself lived to be thirty, his son Charles died at 48 years, his daughter Frances lived six years and his son Thomas only a few months. 'The Howard lino lias been solely preserved through the one child of Mary, Robert Waring Darwin, that survived to have children, and through her brother's child, Mary Ann Howard, who married Sir Robert Wilnibt of Osmaston. In both these lines there has been noteworthy achievement. I have filled in at the bottom of the pedigree two connections of some interest, namely, first the pedigree of the Earles of Heydon (see Plates LXIV to LXVI) as far as known to me, and secondly a pedigree showing how the Saeheverells, through the Warings, link Darwins, Poles and Howards together. 1 t has been suggested that Erasmus Darwin met Mrs Pole, his second wife, solely as a medical attendant. T think there was a recognised Sacheverell relationship. In the first place Charles Howard, grandfather of Dr Erasmus Darwin's wife, made Mary Sacheverell, the wife of the famous Dr Henry Sacheverell, an executrix of his will. This lady was the sister of Edward Wilson, a former bailiff and (1687) mayor of Lichfield, and is said to have been a first cousin of Charles Howard's wife, .Mary Bromley. She first married George Sacheverell, High Sheriff of Derbyshire, 1709, and secondly his distant relative, the famous Dr Henry Sacheverell. Elizabeth Collier's first husband, Edward Sacheverell Pole, was a son of Elizabeth Sacheverell of Morley. Elizabeth Sacheverell and Erasmus Darwin were distant cousins by common descent from Robert Waring, who died in 1662. Thus Erasmus Darwin probably appears as medical adviser to the Poles owing to the Sacheverell or Waring relationship, and in marrying Mrs Pole as his second wife, he was linking himself to a family already con- nected by marriage with both Warings and Howards. I am inclined to take the view that Erasmus Darwin gave the name of Francis Sacheverell to his second son by Elizabeth Pole, not after her first husband, but after the family, which itself dying out, had yet linked by intermarriages Darwins, Wilmots, Poles, Howards and Warings. Edward, Emma and Yioletta Darwin (mother of Francis (ialton, on the right), children of Erasmus and Elizabeth Darwin, Derby, 1800. From a picture in the possession of Mr \Vlieler (ialton at Claverdon. CAMBRIDGE : PRINTED BY JOHN CLAY, M.A. AT THE UNIVERSITY PHESS. /..v/r = ^' 2 -::• 5 is. " I = -;; I; * 1'lnl, /.AT KKASMCS KAKLK (!.-,!«) li;(!7). Great-great-grandfather of Krasmus Darwin. From the portrait Itv XIM-.I Ileydou Hall in the posscssinn of \\ . I), linlwer, Ksy Xoest at llcyilon Hall in the possession of \\'. I). Itnlurr. Ks<|. BIOMETRIKA 1 JnriliVAL FOR THE STATISTICAL NTl'ity ni' lUnl.onii'M. /•//"/;/. AM/. FOl'NDKD |;v W. F. II. WELLHJN, KARL PEARSON AM, FlJANdS GALTOM KDITKD IJY KARL I'KAIiSON ii appears about four times a year. A volume containing about 500 pages, with plates and tallies, is issued annually. The subscription price. pavalile ill advance, is 30*. net iS7..">"' pel- volume ..post free); single pails |(U. not (82.00) each. The current volume is Volume X, the tirst part of which has just appeared. Volumes I— IX (1902—1913) complete, 30,<. net per volume; bound in buckram, 34*. Vvi. net per volume. Till further notice new subscribers to Biometriku may olitain Vols. 1— IX together for £10 net, or in buckram for £12 net. Some idea of the scope of the journal may lie obtained from the following list of topics which ha\e been discussed anion^ otliers in the first nine volumes of Biometrika :— Cfa/doiiteli-y. Prehistoric Egyptian Crania ( Favv cett), 17th century English Crania (Maedonell), l,on;^ and Round Barrow Skulls (Schuster), Negro Ci-a.nia from Caboon and Congo (Benington), Pigmy Crania (Smith), Cranial Type Contours, Internal Capacity from External Measurements, Study of Special Crai lial Bones, Nasal < 'ontours, Oraniologioal Notes, etc., etc. Anthropometry. Of Criminals in New South Wales and in England (Powis, Maedonell, etc.), of Scottish Insane ^Tocher), Survey of School Children of Sc,,t land .Tocher), Influence of Pigmentation on Disease', Measurements of Brain Weight (Pearl, Gladstone, Blakeman), Correlation of Hair, Kye Colour, and Age (Pearson), Expectation of Life in Ancient Egypt and in Rome, Relation of Intelligence to Physical Characters Pearson >. Correlation of Bones 'of the Hand, Measurements from Oxford and Cambridge Anthropornetric Laboratories, Fertility and Degeneracy, Anthropometric and obstetric Studies of the female Pelvis, etc., etc. Medicine. Vaccination and Recovery, Measure- ments of Severity of Disease. Cancer and Diabetes. Multiple cases of disease, 'Cancer Houses,' Incidence of Syphilis, Mosquitos and Malaria, Number of Krythrocyte.s and t he Alt itude. Spin i,,ot 1 1. i ties, Albinism typhoid Inoculation, the (Ipsonie Index. \\Vi-_- human Viscera. Tiehalds. ll'-i-i'> Si ••/«'/••/ contains many standard tables : for ( iiHnlnev> ,,f Kit (Eldcrton), of the Prol«ibility I Towers oi' Natural Nuniln-rs. r-fiinctions, Ci and Deviates, of Probable Krroi's. Tetr.ieh..| i, Kunc- tions. and ineoni|ilet<' Moment Kunction There are many papers on the Theory of Correlation, of Association and of random 3 on Inter- polation, the construction of Mortality and Sj< k Tables, Index-distributions, etc. . eti . \^ who have contributed are A. O. Powvs. \\'. I'. I; Weldon, E. \\"arren. ( >. 11. Latter. F. Lu .: \V. K. Maedonell, Francis Calton. W. F. Shcppard, E. H. Schn ! Hc-nui, W. P. and E. M. Kldcrton, C. Diincker, li. I1- (!. II. Shall. (Jcof. Smith. Major ( Jrccnvvoml. .1. \V. Jenkinson, F. V. F.dgeworth. .1. F. Tocher. ( '. D. ctt, A. Lee, A. Ii. (Jalloway. K. .1. G J. Brownlec, F. de Eelguero, K. C. Punnett. Edmund (iain. F. K. l.ut/t, K. Tschepourkoi Major W. F. Harvey. II. 11. Stannus. K.I'. SIH.W. J. A. Harris, and many others. Cambridge University Press ( '. F. CLAY, Maliaovr Liind'ni : Kt'ttrr Lune, E.C. Chicago: The Univn-sity "t ChicM-o 1'ivss THE FHAXCIS CALTON LAIU >1!AT< >KY K()H NATIONAL KTCKNH'S KrCKNICS LABORATORY LECTURE SERI KS 1. Tin1 Scope and Importance to the State of the Science of National Kngenics. By KARL PEARSON, F.R.S. Issiied. Third Edition. Price Is. m-t. . II. The Groundwork of Eugenics. By KAIJI. PEARSON, F.R.S. /.«»,,/. price Is. net. III. The Relative .Strength of Nurture and Nature. By IvriiEi, M. KI.I>KI:IO\. Issued. Price Is. net. IV . On the Marriage of First Cousins. By ETHEL M. ELDERTON. /*.-•//«< reached is th:» rather than Mi PLEASE DO NOT REMOVE CARDS OR SUPS FROM THIS POCKET UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO LIBRARY Q 143 G3P4 v.l Pearson, Karl The life, letters and labours of Francis Galton P&ASci