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Marchant, James

"Alfred Russel Wallace: Letters and Reminiscences, Vol. 1"

He who has once
in his life experienced this joy of scientific creation will never
forget it; he will be longing to renew it; and he cannot but feel
with pain that this sort of happiness is the lot of so few of us,
while so many could also live through it--on a small or on a grand
scale--if scientific methods and leisure were not limited to a
handful of men."--PRINCE KROPOTKIN, "Memoirs of a Revolutionist."


The social and scientific atmosphere in which Wallace found himself on
his return from his eight years' exile in the Malay Archipelago was
considerably more genial than that which he had enjoyed during his
previous stay in London following his exploration of the Amazon. His
position as one of the leading scientists of the day was already
recognised, dating from the memorable 1st of July, 1858, when the two
Papers, his own and Darwin's, on the theory of Natural Selection had
been read before the Linnean Society.
During the four years which had elapsed since that date the storm of
criticism had waxed and waned; subsiding for a time only to burst out
afresh from some new quarter where the theory bade fair to jeopardise
some ancient belief in which scientist or theologian had rested with
comparative satisfaction until so rudely disturbed.


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