Darwin Voyage On Ship Essay, Research Paper
Voyage of the H.M.S. Beagle: The making of a naturalistHow Darwin’s years on the Beagle were instrumental to his development as a naturalist Charles Robert Darwin was a man of many hats. He was a friend,colleague, son, father, husband; but above all, he was a naturalist. Through his dedication and perseverance did he manageto, in less than a generation, establish the theory of evolution asa fact in peoples’ minds. In fact, “[t]oday it is almost impossible for us to return, even momentarily, to the pre-Darwinianatmosphere and attitude” (West 323). Darwin formed the basis of histheory during the voyage of the H.M.S. Beagle, on which vessel hewas posted as it travelled around the globe. During that five-yearspan, this young man saw foliage, creatures, cultures that he hadnever known first-hand before. He was exposed to environments thatnot many of his contemporaries saw and lived the life that few did. Was his epic journey merely a series of trips to strange and exoticlands, or was Darwin affected by his experiences in more profoundways? Charles Darwin was born on February 12, 1809; the same daythat another great man, Abraham Lincoln, was born. He was no childprodigy; he “was considered by all [his] masters and by [his] Father as a very ordinary boy, rather below the common standard inintellect” (Barlow Voyage 28). The one trait in him that standsout in his formative years is a taste for the outdoors; he loved togather shells, seals, franks, coins, and minerals. The passion for collecting, which leads a man to be a systemic naturalist, a virtuoso, or a miser, was very strong in [him] and was clearly innate, as none of [his] sisters and brother ever had this taste. (Barlow Autobiography 23) He grew up in Shrewsbury, and attended the local grammar-school there. After graduating, he entered Edinburgh University with the intent of studying medicine, but he found anatomy boring and his lack of sketching skills hampered him. It was decided between Darwin and his father that he should pursue ecclesiasticalstudies at Cambridge. Those subjects did not enthuse him either, but he discovered a “spontaneous and exceptional interest in natural history” (Moorehead 25). Academically, “he scraped through…with a pass” (Moorehead, 25) but socially, he enjoyed himself greatly, as he had fallen in with a crowd of sportsmen and naturalists. As well, he developed strong ties with his botany and geology teachers, Professors Adam Sedgwick and John Henslow. Henslow was indeed a true friend; he did Darwin the greatservice of notifying him when, soon after graduation, the professorlearned of a great opportunity. Captain Robert FitzRoy of the H.M.S. Beagle was looking for someone to take the post of unpaidnaturalist while his ship did cartographic surveys of South America. “[Henslow] wrote Darwin candidly that he thought him thebest qualified person who would accept such a ’situation’” (Darwinxiv). His father objected at first, but Darwin’s “Uncle Josiah Wedgwood…intervened and the coveted blessing was obtained” (Sears30-31). In his interview, Darwin and FitzRoy got along famously and became good friends; the young nature-lover was accepted, andhe and the captain were to share a cabin. Darwin was an easygoing man, and so he and his roommate gotalong quite well. The captain had a dynamic temper and was subjected to fits of sullenness, but also “combined a strict senseof duty with a very high sense of justice and regard for specialconditions. He had courage and was capable of magnificent seamanship under severe conditions” (Dibner 13). Darwin always heldhis companion in the highest regard, even when they did not sharethe same views. Their five-year journey, originally to be two years in length, took them around the world. This trip reinforced in Darwina thousandfold his passion for botany and geology, and “his intention to become a priest…died a natural death on the Beagleexpedition” (Sears 31). They travelled to Brazil, Argentina, Tierra del Fuego, Chile, the Gal pagos islands, Tahiti, New Zealandand Australia. Darwin quite fell in love with the rainforest. Hisfirst encounter with it was the fulfilment a long-held dream to travel to the tropics; “the delight Darwin felt amidst the quiet gloom of a tropical forest [was] indeed unspeakable, never to be forgotten, and certainly not to be described” (Dorsey 55). Hisappreciation of the natural world deepened daily; he gloried inevery detail. During a day in the jungle, he noted a “most paradoxical mixture of sound and silence pervad[ing] the shady parts of the wood…such a day…[brought] with it a deeper pleasure that he [could] ever hope to experience again” (Darwin 12). This passion brought out other sides to his own nature thathe had never seen before. Darwin also found within himself a previously-unknown courageof the physical kind. He “suffered greatly from seasickness” (Sears31), but said little, for fear “that FitzRoy [found] him too softfor the voyage….he could only complain as little as possible, sethis teeth and hold on” (Moorehead 42). He was frequently laid lowby bites and scratches that became easily infected, but rarely layidle if he could help it. Otherwise, he was physically fit; he climbed several mountains and crossed the Andes. Darwin discovered a sense of adventure that accompanied hiscourage; he rode overland from El Carmen to Buenos Aires througharea that “was a no man’s land where the Indians make spasmodic raid on travellers whenever and wherever they could” (Moorehead 109). He also proved to have a touch of the bloodthirsty buccaneerin him; when an armed Argentinian guardship stopped them at Rio Plata, “Darwin’s blood was up. [He said,] ‘Oh I hope the guardshipwill fire a gun at the Frigate. If she does it will be her last dayabove water.’” (Moorehead 80). Certain events also brought home to Darwin what kind of world
he was momentarily inhabiting. The most momentous of these was a great earthquake, which lai
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