25 DARWIN’S SINGULAR NOTION
a Bencion is t ion . Often y minutes at a stretcimes not t.
Muc of ime ed to a series of increasingly desperate treatments—icy plunge batric c subjectedo small jolts of current. , seldom leaving , Dos upon moving to to erect a mirroroutside udy ify, and if necessary avoid, callers.
Dar o orm it es aiges of tural ory of Creationroused muco fury by suggesting t es tance of a divine creator. Anticipating tcry, taken careful steps to conceal ity, from even friends for t forty years. Some hor.
Oted Prince Albert. In fact, ttis Cance to reveal icaldimension as ed from pulpits t Britain and far beyond, but also attracted a good dealof more sced nearly an entire issue—eigo pulling it to pieces. Even t. ion, attacked t thor was a friend.
2Dar migill for an alarmingblo arrived from t in tcontaining a friendly letter from a young naturalist named Alfred Russel allace and tof a paper, On tendency of Varieties to Depart Indefinitely from type,outlining a tural selection t o Dar jottings.
Even some of triking coincidence,”
Dared in dismay. “If allace sketcten out in 1842, ter s abstract.”
allace didn’t drop into Dare as unexpectedly as is sometimes suggested.
t migerest. In tly of species creation as erritory. “t note-book, ontion of ies differ from eacten to allace some time earlier. “I am noion,” really.
In any case, allace failed to grasp rying to tell ical to one t Darwo decades.
Dar to preserve y,aking