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Darwin thanks a colleague for sending him his ‘Origins of the Family’

full: “I am much obliged to you for your kindness in having sent your ‘Origins de la Famille.’ The subject is a most interesting one, & as soon as I have finished two books which I am now reading, I will commence with yours. With much respect & my best thanks.” In fine condition.

On the same date that Darwin sent this letter to Giraud-Teulon, the former likewise wrote a brief letter to Scottish lawyer and social anthropologist John Ferguson McLennan, informing him that ‘Giraud-Teulon has sent me his Les Origines de la Famille just published. I have not read it, but can see that it relates to your subject. I will send it, if you care to see it on the chance.’ An interesting association piece given how the title of Giraud-Teulon’s book seems to have been inspired by Darwin’s 1859 classic On the Origin of Species; moreover, the book in question, The Origins of the Family, is nearly the exact same title as an 1884 work by German philosopher Friedrich Engels, entitled The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State. Both works by Giraud-Teulon and Engels are regarded as some of the earliest major works on family economics. Starting Bid $2500

179. Charles Darwin Autograph Letter Signed and Signature in Book. ALS signed “Charles Darwin,” one page both sides, 5 x 8, Down, Beckenham, Kent letterhead, January 13, 1881. Handwritten letter to the writer and critic Sir Leslie Stephen, responding to Stephen’s reassurances after having been attacked by the novelist Samuel Butler. In full: “Your note is one of the kindest which I have ever received, & your advice shall be strictly followed. It was very good of you, busy as you are, to take so much trouble for me; but your trouble will not be thrown away, in so far as when in the dead of the night the thought comes across me how I have been treated, I will resolutely try to banish the thoughts, & say to myself that so good a judge as Leslie Stephen thinks nothing of the false accusation. The Litchfields & some of my other children are intensely curious to read your judgment.” He adds a postscript: “I have written on opposite page my name if you think fit to paste it into the Life of E.D.; but I much wish that you would name one or more of the books, written wholly by myself, which I could treat in the same manner for you.”

Indeed, the dedication, “From Charles Darwin, with kindest regards, Jan. 13th 1881,” has been cut out and mounted on the flyleaf of a biography of Erasmus Darwin by Ernst Krause, published in London by John Murray in 1879. The letter is folded and tipped in before the following page. Underneath the affixed signature, Sir Leslie Stephen has penned an explanation: “The letter upon the next page refers to a silly attack made upon Darwin by Butler of ‘Erewhon’ etc. I had given Darwin the obvious advice to take no more notice of the creature, D. having already made a sufficient acknowledgment of a trifling error. For details see ‘Academy’ of the period. C.D. afterwards sent me the ‘Origin of the Species’ & the ‘Voyage of the Beagle.’ L.S.”

Both pieces are inside a handsome edition of Erasmus Darwin, translated from the German by W. S. Dallas, with a preliminary notice by Charles Darwin. London: John Murray, 1879. Hardcover bound in full brown morocco with gilt edges, 5.25 x 7.5, 216 pages. The letter is folded at the edges and in fine condition; the signature is in fine condition, with some adhesive residue to edges; and the book is in very good condition, with wear to the hinges and edges.

The physician Erasmus Darwin (1731–1802), Charles’s grandfather, espoused an early theory of evolution all his own, which he sketched, obliquely, in a question at the end of a long footnote to his popular poem ‘The Loves of the Plants’ (1789). Samuel Butler rejected Charles Darwin’s theory of natural selection. In his 1879 book ‘Evolution, Old and New’ he accused Darwin of having borrowed heavily from and distorted the Comte de Buffon, Erasmus Darwin, and Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, trying to reinstate these earlier thinkers and with them, the design argument.

Provenance: By descent to Leslie Stephen’s daughter, the writer Virginia Woolf (1882-1941), who left it to her husband, the writer Leonard Woolf (1880-1969). Woolf had the book auctioned at Sotheby’s a year before his death (sale of Feb. 29/20, 1968, lot 279); acquired by a northern Swedish collector, whose descendants returned it to the trade. Starting Bid $5000