More Letters Of Charles Darwin Volume 1 A Record Of His Work In

Chapter 403

Chapter 403255 wordsPublic domain

1866].

Again thanks for your letter. You need not fear my not doing justice to your objections to the continental hypothesis!

Referring to page 344 again (368/1. "Origin of Species," Edition III., pages 343-4: "In some cases, however, as by the breaking of an isthmus and the consequent irruption of a multitude of new inhabitants, or by the final subsidence of an island, the extinction may have been comparatively rapid."), it never occurred to me that you alluded to extinction of marine life: an isthmus is a piece of land, and you go on in the same sentence about "an island," which quite threw me out, for the destruction of an isthmus makes an island!

I surely did not say Azores nearer to Britain and Newfoundland "than to Madeira," but "than Madeira is to said places."

With regard to the Madeiran coleoptera I rely very little on local distribution of insects--they are so local themselves. A butterfly is a great rarity in Kew, even a white, though we are surrounded by market gardens. All insects are most rare with us, even the kinds that abound on the opposite side of Thames.

So with shells, we have literally none--not a Helix even, though they abound in the lanes 200 yards off the Gardens. Of the 89 Dezertas insects [only?] 11 are peculiar. Of the 162 Porto Santan 113 are Madeiran and 51 Dezertan.

Never mind bothering Murray about the new edition of the "Origin" for me. You will tell me anything bearing on my subject.