Charles Darwin's famous journey on The Beagle started in December 1831. He was sick from the moment he stepped on the port, before embarking on the ship, and did not stop vomiting until he disembarked back in England, five long years later.
While still rewriting his Journal in 1836, Charles began editing and publishing the expert reports on his collections. He obtained a governmental grant to publish his huge work, Zoology of the Voyage of HMS Beagle, and stretched the funding to include his planned books on geology. He unfortunately agreed to unrealistic publication dates with the publisher. The financial and time pressure must have been enormous, so Darwin's health suffered. Only in his 20s, Charles’ heart pain was alarming, his depression was severe and insomnia was ever present.
In 1837 he went to stay with family in the countryside, to relax, and it was there Charles’ very cultured cousin Emma Wedgwood came into the picture. This was a very clever family, on both sides. But I wonder how restful this break was. Darwin took on the duties of Secretary of the Geological Society, questioned every scientist in the country and wrote as fast as his fingers would go.
In 1838 Charles was fit enough to get married and to father children. Over the next seventeen years Emma gave birth to ten babies, three dying in early childhood and seven living normal adult lives.
1838
Yet Darwin was often bed ridden with stomach problems, headaches and heart symptoms. For the rest of his life, he was often incapacitated with episodes of depression, vomiting, severe boils and palpitations. The cause of Darwin's debilitating illnesses remained unknown but it was noted that when he was presenting his papers to scientific meetings, the violent vomiting attacks would increase. Fear of leaving home made him house-bound for years.
Friendly commentators believed Darwin’s weak constitution could not deal with having to expose his radical ideas to academic critiques and to Christian outrage. That is, his symptoms were largely psychosomatic, probably starting with his unresolved grief over the death of his mother when he started primary school. Creationist enemies, on the other hand, suggested his ill health was totally faked.
Charles' older brother, Erasmus Darwin, was born in 1804 and died a single man in 1881. The two brothers had been emotionally very close all their lives and it was assumed that when Charles heard of Erasmus’ death, the news provoked an even greater strain on an already ill functioning heart. Charles Darwin died soon after Erasmus; both brothers had reached a decent age.
Yet Darwin was often bed ridden with stomach problems, headaches and heart symptoms. For the rest of his life, he was often incapacitated with episodes of depression, vomiting, severe boils and palpitations. The cause of Darwin's debilitating illnesses remained unknown but it was noted that when he was presenting his papers to scientific meetings, the violent vomiting attacks would increase. Fear of leaving home made him house-bound for years.
Friendly commentators believed Darwin’s weak constitution could not deal with having to expose his radical ideas to academic critiques and to Christian outrage. That is, his symptoms were largely psychosomatic, probably starting with his unresolved grief over the death of his mother when he started primary school. Creationist enemies, on the other hand, suggested his ill health was totally faked.
Charles' older brother, Erasmus Darwin, was born in 1804 and died a single man in 1881. The two brothers had been emotionally very close all their lives and it was assumed that when Charles heard of Erasmus’ death, the news provoked an even greater strain on an already ill functioning heart. Charles Darwin died soon after Erasmus; both brothers had reached a decent age.
Now John Hayman has changed 130 years of guesswork in his paper Charles Darwin’s Mitochondria. Darwin’s illness, the illnesses of his brother, their mother, maternal uncle Tom, and a child belonging to the maternal generation etc showed a genetic pattern of maternal inheritance that was the hallmark of mitochondrial mutations. The symptoms were exactly right – severe depression, shaking, fainting, nausea, anxiety, vomiting, visual hallucinations, headaches and cardiac palpitations. The Creationists were exactly wrong.
Prof Hayman then looked at Charles' brother. Erasmus Darwin had graduated in medicine from the University of Edinburgh but had never practised. Instead he spent a life in London as a chronic invalid, suffering from abdominal pain and lethargy. His symptoms suggested that Erasmus had the same DNA mutation as his younger brother.
caricature of Charles Darwin by James Joseph Jacques Tissot
Prof Hayman then looked at Charles' brother. Erasmus Darwin had graduated in medicine from the University of Edinburgh but had never practised. Instead he spent a life in London as a chronic invalid, suffering from abdominal pain and lethargy. His symptoms suggested that Erasmus had the same DNA mutation as his younger brother.
caricature of Charles Darwin by James Joseph Jacques Tissot
Thanks Hels. A fascinating insight.
ReplyDeleteAndrew
ReplyDeleteThe history of medicine is always interesting, but this story seems to be much more.
So many 19th century people seemed to fear Darwin's science... and so they were in no hurry to understand his illnesses. He received lots of attacks and little sympathy from the God Squad.
I feel sorrier for Emma. She was pregnant or nursing non stop for decades plus had a husband to nurse. She must have been one tough woman.
ReplyDeleteHello Hels, I am definitely due to read a biography of the Darwins. His dedication while enduring these medical problems calls to mind Rachel Carson's writing Silent Spring while suffering from cancer.
ReplyDelete--Jim
Deb
ReplyDeleteWhen Charles Darwin was very old and frail, he thanked his wife and children individually for looking after him.... for decades. He understood how much energy they had to put into him, at the expense of their own priorities,
Parnassus
ReplyDeleteThe man was a brilliant thinker, writer and scientist, despite having the most miserable ill health I have heard of. So yes, get onto a great biography.
Darwin should be a role model for us now .. he took intellectual risks that modern academics wouldn't touch with a barge pole.
Darwin was a fraud and it showed in his work...(1859) The Origin of Species. The original title for this book was On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or THE PRESERVATION OF FAVORED RACES and the STRUGGLE FOR LIFE http://www.creationstudies.org/articles/races/390-darwins-theory-racist
ReplyDeleteThe Theory of Evolution and Natural Selection with the CHOSEN SPECIES took intellectual risks that modern academics wouldn't touch with a barge pole.
Darwin’s Theory is Racist
Today, our country is being destroyed from within by the unseen enemy who seeks to divide and conquer all of humanity with his fear-based lies, John 8:44. He inspires race baiters and those they influence. Most of them are woefully ignorant of the root causes of the racism they so passionately decry. This loathsome creature infects and corrupts the sciences with the false belief system of goo-to-you evolution. While Darwin’s theory masquerades as scientific fact, racism continues to dominate our society, some real, some feigned, but always rooted in the godless worldview called Darwin’s Theory of Evolution.
Do not be deceived, Darwin’s theory is racist. When Darwin is properly understood, it leads to the justification for believing that certain races of people are by birth and nature superior to others and that is the definition of racism.
Submitted by Steven Rowitt, Ph.D.
Steven
ReplyDeletemany thanks for the detailed response.
I have no problem with the idea that Darwin's theory was racist... the book title you found, THE PRESERVATION OF FAVOURED RACES, was very telling. But I would argue about Darwin "inspiring" race baiters and creating a justification for believing that certain races of people are by birth and nature superior to others.
Racial hatred has existed for ever, long before Darwin had his work published. So the most we can say is that Darwin gave a more "scientific" rationale to people who already hated other races.