68 Life and Letters of Francu Galton 



Such testimony from a mother might mean Uttle had it been 

 written when her son had reached distinction. But Violetta Galton 

 appears to have written only thus of one son, and of him only before 

 he was nine years of age. Did she see in her youngest son something 

 of her father, or did her acquaintance with many men of marked 

 intellectual ability enable her early to appreciate nascent signs of 

 remarkable power ? 



It must not be thought that Adfele's scheme of education had not 

 a modern side. Seeing how fond Francis was of natural history, she 

 taught him a good deal of entomology, a study he became particularly 

 fond of; and soon the boy's perseverance and activity in collecting insects 

 were noteworthy'. He was also fond of studying the history of birds. 

 Geology he was deeply interested in, and when he went with his 

 mother on his second visit to Ramsgate in 1829, "he would entreat her 

 to let the post-boy stop whenever he saw granite, or chalk or any 

 mineral showing itself in the hills." 



Some idea of Francis' pursuits and interests can be found in a will 

 he made, boy fashion, some few months before his departure to a school 

 at Boulogne. It runs : 



I, Francis Galton of the Larches near Birmingham make tliis my last Will and 

 Testament — I give to my dearest sister Adele for her great kindness in teaching me all 

 my English Books, my Watch, and all my Compound Money and Collection of Beetles — 



' It is interesting to find in this very year when Adfele was teacliing Francis 

 entomology a notice in the records before me of Charles Darwin. Mrs Wheler writes : 

 "In September (1828) Lucy and I were invited to Osmaston for the Derby Music 

 Meeting, but when the time came Lucy had one of her rheumatic attacks, and Emma 

 went in her place. Catherine Darwin came to us from Shrewsbury and we travelled 

 together. Charles Darwin joined us at Osmaston, and we were a merry party of 

 cousins — William Fox was making a collection of butterflies, and Charles Darwin 

 immediately began to do the same, and this was the beginning of his interest in 

 collecting. He and William Fox struck up a friendship which continued all their lives." 

 MS. Reminiscences, p. 113. Mrs Fox was the daughter of William Alvey Darwin, 

 a brother of Erasmus Darwin. Charles Darwin was at this time 19 years of age, and 

 in his Autobiography he tells us that his passion for collecting had been developed before 

 1817 (Life and Letters, i, p. 27). At that time Darwin was leaving Edinburgh and just 

 going up to Cambridge, and he was already familiar with many men studying natural 

 science. On the other hand Mrs Wheler's incident confirms what Darwin himself tells 

 us (I.e. p. 51) : "I was introduced to entomology by my second cousin W. Darwin Fox, 

 a clever and most pleasant man, who was then at Christ's College and with whom 

 I became extremely familiar." 



