Brieven van Charles Darwin op internet
Evolutionary theorist Charles Darwin thought the voyage of the Beagle was a "magnificent scheme" allowing him to spend time "larking round the world". His delight at the five-year cruise is chronicled in a letter, available online for the first time.The note is one of nearly 5,000 from and to the scientist held in a database at the University of Cambridge. The Darwin Correspondence project includes summaries of a further 9,000 letters, written from the age of 12. In some of his earliest letters, he recounts talking to his sister Caroline, who had asked him about his personal hygiene. "I only wash my fe[e]t once a month at school, which I confess is nasty, but I cannot help it, for we have nothing to do it with," he wrote.
Dr Alison Pearn, co-director of the Darwin Correspondence project, says it is insight like this that makes the letters so special. "I think the human side is what is arresting about the letters," she said. "There is such an interesting and exciting mixture of very cutting-edge science and very personal revelations about his life and family."
