22 Life and Letters of Francis Galton 



English stage at the close of the 17th century by his courageous attack 

 on Dryden, Congi*eve, D'Urfey, and the school of licence in his Short 

 Vieiv 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 ColUer ! 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 Dai'win. 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 XVHI) 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 bi-other 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 diflaculties, 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 



 I have followed Macaulay {Essays, ed. 1874, p. 588, and History, ed. 1876, v. 

 p. 8.5), 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. 



