BUSINESS AND SCIENCE 33 



from well and several times in bed for days 

 together. 



" We used to have a good many scientific 

 men at H. E., specially Mathematicians. 



" In the May of this year Wheatstone brought 

 in his new Stereoscope and Pseudoscope. 



" Dined I think for the first time at Morden 

 College on the 24th June. 



" I was working at Crustacea. 



" In December went with my father and 

 mother to stay with Whewell. Met Kingsley." 



His first published paper was a Monograph 

 in the Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 

 for January 1853. It was a description of a 

 new free-swimming species from the Atlantic 

 belonging to the family Calanidae, and forming 

 the type of a new Genus. The specimens 

 belonged to Mr. Darwin's collection. The paper 

 was illustrated by an excellent plate, and he 

 named the Crustacean Labidocera Darwinii. 

 This paper was followed in 1853 and 1854 by 

 three others describing several more new species 

 belonging to the same family, partly from Mr. 

 Darwin's collection, and partly from that of 

 the College of Surgeons. 



The plates for these papers were all illustrated 

 by himself, and he also made for Mr. Darwin 

 some of the drawings which appeared in his 

 great work on Barnacles. 



In 1853 he attended for the first time a 

 meeting of the British Association held that 

 year at Hull. He stayed with Archdeacon 

 Creyke, who had been one of the original Com- 

 mittee of the Association, and from thence went 



VOL. I D 



