to study medicine, at a time when
its new buildings (shown here) were still under construction. View along
South Bridge Street, towards the bridge crossing high above the
Cowgate. On the left, South College Street leads up to Lothian Street. In October 1825, Darwin went to
Edinburgh University to study medicine, accompanied by Eras doing his external hospital study. For a few days, while looking for rooms to rent, the brothers stayed at the Star Hotel in Princes Street. They took up an introduction to a friend of their father, Dr. Hawley, who led them on a walk around the town. They admired it immensely; Darwin thought Bridge Street "most extraordinary" as, on looking over the sides, "instead of a fine river we saw a stream of people". The brothers found comfortable lodgings near the University at 11 Lothian Street, on 22 October Charles signed the
matriculation book, and enrolled in courses.
Andrew Duncan, the younger, taught
dietetics,
pharmacy, and
materia medica. Darwin thought the latter stupid, and said Duncan was "so very learned that his wisdom has left no room for his sense". but they usefully introduced him to the
natural system of classification of
Augustin de Candolle, who emphasised the "war" between competing species. From 10a.m., the brothers greatly enjoyed the spectacular chemistry lectures of
Thomas Charles Hope, but they did not join a student society giving hands-on experience. Anatomy and surgery classes began at noon, Darwin was disgusted by the dull and outdated anatomy lectures of professor
Alexander Monro tertius, many students went instead to private independent schools, with new ideas of teaching by dissecting corpses (giving clandestine trade to
bodysnatchers) – his brother went to a "charming Lecturer", the surgeon
John Lizars. Darwin later regretted his own failure to persevere and learn dissection. The city was in an uproar over political and religious controversies, and the competitive system where professors were dependent on attracting student fees for income meant that the university was riven with argumentative feuds and conflicts. Monro's lectures included vehement opposition to
George Combe's daringly
materialist ideas of
phrenology, At the end of January, Darwin wrote home that they had "been very dissipated", having dined with Dr. Hawley then gone to the theatre with a relative of the botanist
Robert Kaye Greville. They also visited
"the old Dr. Duncan", who spoke with the warmest affection about his student and friend
Charles Darwin (Darwin's uncle) who had died in 1778. Darwin wrote "What an extraordinary old man he is, now being past 80, & continuing to lecture", though Dr. Hawley thought Duncan was now failing. Darwin added that "I am going to learn to stuff birds, from a
blackamoor... he only charges one guinea, for an hour every day for two months". The brothers kept each other company, and made extensive use of the library. Darwin's reading included novels and
Boswell's
Life of Johnson. He had brought
natural history books with him, including a copy of ''A Naturalist's Companion'' by
George Graves, bought in August in anticipation of seeing the seaside. He borrowed similar books from the library, and also read
Fleming's
Philosophy of Zoology. The brothers went for regular Sunday walks to the seaport of
Leith and the shores of the
Firth of Forth. Darwin kept a diary recording bird observations, and their seashore finds which began with a sea mouse (
Aphrodita aculeata) he caught on 2 February and identified from his copy of
William Turton's
British fauna. A few days later Darwin noted "Erasmus caught a Cuttle fish", wondering if it was "Sepia Loligo", A few days later, Darwin returned with a basin and caught a globular orange zoophyte, then after storms at the start of March saw the shore "literally covered with Cuttle fish". He touched them so they emitted ink and swam away, and also found a damaged starfish beginning to regrow its arms. Eras completed his external hospital study, and returned to Shrewsbury, Darwin found other zoophytes and, on the shore "between Leith & Portobello", caught more sea mice which "when thrown into the sea rolled themselves up like hedgehogs." On 27 March, Susan Darwin wrote to pass on their father's disapproval of Darwin's "plan of picking & chusing what lectures you like to attend", as "you cannot have enough information to know what may be of use to you". His son's "present indulgent way" would make studies "utterly useless", and he wanted Darwin to complete the course. Darwin wrote home apologetically on 8 April with the news that "Dr. Hope has been giving some very good Lectures on Electricity &c. and I am very glad I stayed for them", requesting money to fund staying on another 9 to 14 days. During his summer holiday Charles read
Zoönomia by his grandfather
Erasmus Darwin, which his father valued for medical guidance but which also proposed evolution by acquired characteristics. In June he went on a walking tour in North Wales.
Natural history in second year In October Charles returned on his own for his second year, and took smaller lodgings in a top flat at 21 Lothian Street. He joined the required classes of Practice of Physic and Midwifery, but by then realised he would inherit property and need not make "any strenuous effort to learn medicine". For his own interests, and to meet other students, he joined
Robert Jameson's
natural history course which started on 8 November. It was unique in Britain, covering a wide range of topics including geology, zoology, mineralogy, meteorology and botany. Jameson was a
Neptunian geologist who taught
Werner's view that all rock
strata had precipitated from a universal ocean, and founded the
Wernerian Natural History Society to discuss and publish science. He encouraged debate, and in lectures pointedly disagreed with chemistry professor
Hope who held that granites had crystallised from molten crust, influenced by the
Plutonism of
James Hutton who had been Hope's friend. In 1827, Jameson told a
commission of inquiry into the curriculum that "It would be a misfortune if we all had the same way of thinking... Dr Hope is decidedly opposed to me, and I am opposed to Dr Hope, and between us we make the subject interesting." Jameson edited the quarterly
Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal, with an international reputation for publishing science. It could touch on controversial subjects; in the April–October 1826 edition an anonymous paper proposed that geological study of fossils could "lift the veil that hangs over the origin and progress of the organic world". It praised
Lamarck's transmutation of species concept that from "the simplest worms" arising by spontaneous generation and affected by external circumstances, all other animals "are evolved from these in a double series, and in a gradual manner." This was the first use of the word "evolved" in a modern sense, and the first significant statement to relate Lamarck's concepts to the geological fossil record. It seems likely that Jameson wrote it, but it could have been a former student of his, possibly
Ami Boué. Through family connections, Darwin was introduced to the reforming educationalist
Leonard Horner who took him to the opening of the 1826–1827 session of the
Royal Society of Edinburgh, presided over by
Sir Walter Scott. Darwin "looked at him and at the whole scene with some awe and reverence".
Student societies To make friends, Darwin had
visiting cards printed, and joined student societies. He attended the
Royal Medical Society regularly though uninterested in its medical topics, and remembered
James Kay-Shuttleworth as a good speaker. and Darwin saw his lectures on the habits of North American birds. Routes to the Firth soon became familiar, and after another student presented a paper to the Plinian in the common literary form of describing the sights from a journey, Darwin and William Kay (another president) drafted a parody, to be read taking turns, describing "a complete failure" of an excursion from the university via
Holyrood House, where
Salisbury Craigs, ruined by quarrying, were completely hidden by "
dense & impenetrable mist", along a dirty track to
Portobello shore, where "Inch Keith, the
Bas-rock, the distant hills in Fifeshire" were similarly hidden – the sole sight of interest, as
Dr Johnson had said, was the "high-road to England". High tide prevented any seashore finds so, rejecting "
Haggis or
Scotch Collops", they dined on (English) "Beef-steak".
Geology and Origin of the Species Jameson's own main topic was
mineralogy, his
natural history course covered zoology and geology, with instruction on
meteorology and
hydrography, and some discussion on botany as it related to "the animal and mineral kingdoms." Lectures began on 9 November and were on five days a week for five months (ending a week into April). Zoology began with the natural history of man, followed by chief classes of vertebrates and invertebrates, then concluded with philosophy of zoology starting with "Origin of the Species of Animals". As well as field lectures, the course made full use of the
Royal Museum of the university which Jameson had developed into one of the largest in Europe. Darwin's flat was near the entrance to the museum in the western part of the university, he assisted and made full use of the collections, spending hours studying, taking notes and stuffing specimens. He "had much interesting natural-history talk" with the curator,
William MacGillivray, who later published a book on the birds of Scotland. The geology course gave Darwin a grounding in mineralogy and
stratigraphy geology. He bought Jameson's 1821
Manual of Mineralogy, its first part classifies minerals comprehensively on the system of
Friedrich Mohs, the second part includes concepts of field geology such as defining
strike and dip of strata. Darwin heavily
annotated his copy of the book, sometimes when in lectures (though not always paying attention), and noted where it related to museum exhibits. He also read Jameson's translation of
Cuvier's
Essay on the Theory of the Earth , covering fossils and extinctions in
revolutions such as
the Flood. In the preface, Jameson said geology discloses "the history of the first origin of organic beings, and traces their gradual from the monade to man himself". The lectures were heavy going for a young student, and Darwin remembered Jameson as an "old brown, dry stick", He recalled Jameson's lectures as "incredibly dull. The sole effect they produced on me was the determination never as long as I lived to read a book on Geology or in any way to study the science. Yet I feel sure that I was prepared for a philosophical treatment of the subject", and he had been delighted when he read an explanation for
erratic boulders. Jameson still held to Werner's
Neptunist concept that phenomena such as
trap dykes had precipitated from a universal ocean. By then, geologists increasingly accepted that trap rock had
igneous origins, a
Plutonist view promoted by
Hope, who had been
James Hutton's friend. From hearing exponents of both sides, Darwin learned the range of current opinion. His grandfather Erasmus had favoured Plutonism, and Darwin later supported Huttonian ideas. Almost fifty years after the course, Darwin recalled Jameson giving a field lecture at
Salisbury Crags, "discoursing on a trap-dyke" with "volcanic rocks all around us", saying it was "a fissure filled with sediment from above, adding with a sneer that there were men who maintained that it had been injected from beneath in a molten condition. When I think of this lecture, I do not wonder that I determined never to attend to Geology."
Sealife homologies and monads In his
autobiography, begun in 1876, Darwin remembered
Robert Edmond Grant as "dry and formal in manner, but with much enthusiasm beneath this outer crust. He one day, when we were walking together burst forth in high admiration of Lamarck and his views on evolution. I listened in silent astonishment, and as far as I can judge, without any effect on my mind. I had previously read the Zoönomia of my grandfather, in which similar views are maintained, but without producing any effect on me." Grant's
doctoral dissertation, prepared in 1813, cited Erasmus Darwin's
Zoönomia which suggested that over geological time all organic life could have gradually arisen from a kind of "living filament" capable of heritable self-improvement. He found in
Lamarck's similar
uniformitarian theoretical framework a similar idea that
spontaneously generated simple animal
monads continually
improved in complexity and perfection, while use or disuse of features to adapt to environmental changes diversified species and genera. Funded by a small inheritance, Grant went to
Paris University in 1815, to study with
Cuvier, the leading
comparative anatomist, and his rival
Geoffroy. Cuvier held that species were fixed, grouped into four entirely separate
embranchements, and any
similarity of structures between species was merely due to functional needs. Grant favoured Geoffroy's view that similarities showed "unity of form", similar to Lamarck's ideas. Like Lamarck, Grant investigated
marine invertebrates, particularly
sponges as naturalists disputed whether they were plants or animals. After specimen collecting and research in European universities, he returned to Edinburgh in 1820. Many species lived in the
Firth of Forth, and Grant got winter use of
Walford House,
Prestonpans, with a garden gate in its high seawall leading to rock pools. He kept sponges alive in glass jars for long term observation, and at night used his microscope by candle light to dissect specimens in a
watch glass. In spring 1825 at the
Wernerian, Grant dramatically dissected
molluscs (
squid and
sea-slugs) showing they had a simple pancreas analogous to the complex pancreas in fish, controversially suggesting
shared ancestry between molluscs and Cuvier's "higher"
embranchement of
vertebrates. In the
Edinburgh Philosophical Journal Grant revealed that sponges had
cilia to draw in water and expel waste, and their "ova" (
larvae) were self-propelled by cilia in "spontaneous motion" like that seen by
Cavolini in "ova" of the soft coral
Gorgonia. In October he said simple freshwater
Spongilla were ancient, ancestral to complex sponges that had adapted to sea changes, as the earth cooled and changing conditions drove life towards higher, hotter blooded forms. his conclusions published in December included a detailed description of how sponge ova contain "monads-like bodies", and "swim about" by "the rapid vibration of ciliæ".
– Carbasea'' is similar. Coldstream assisted Grant, and that winter Darwin joined the search, learning what to look for, and dissection techniques using a portable microscope. On 16 March 1827 he noted in a new notebook that he had "Procured from the black rocks at Leith" a
lumpfish, "Dissected it with Dr Grant". Two days later he recorded "ova from the Newhaven rocks" said to be of the
Doris [sea slug] "in rapid motion, & continued so for 7 days", then on 19 March saw ova of the
Flustra foliacea in motion. As recalled in his autobiography, he made "one interesting little discovery" that "the so-called ova of Flustra had the power of independent movement by means of cilia, and were in fact larvæ", and also that little black globular bodies found sticking to empty oyster shells, once thought to be the young of
Fucus loreus, were egg-cases (cocoons) of the
Pontobdella muricata (skate leech). He believed "Dr. Grant noticed my small discovery in his excellent memoir on Flustra." '' (Skate leech) The
Wernerian society minutes for 24 March record that Grant read "a Memoir regarding the Anatomy and Mode of Generation of Flustræ, illustrated by preparations and drawings", also a notice on "the Mode of Generation" of the skate leech. Three days later, on 27 March, the Plinian Society minutes record that Darwin "communicated to the Society" two discoveries, that "the ova of the flustra possess organs of motion", and the small black "ovum" of the
Pontobdella muricata. "At the request of the Society he promised to draw up an account of the facts and to lay them it, together with specimens, before the Society next evening." This was Darwin's first public presentation. In the next item, Browne argued that mind and consciousness were simply aspects of brain activity, not "souls" or spiritual entities separate from the body. Following a furious debate, the minute of this item was crossed out. After recording more finds in April, Darwin copied into his notebook under the heading "20th" his first scientific papers. Newhaven dredge boats had provided the
Flustra carbasea specimens, when "highly magnified" the "ciliae of the ova" were "seen in rapid motion", and "That such ova had organs of motion does not appear to have been hitherto observed either by Lamarck Cuvier Lamouroux or any other author." He wrote "This & the following communication was read both before the Wernerian & Plinian Societies", and wrote up a detailed account of his
Pontobdella findings. At the Plinian meeting, on 3 April, Darwin presented the Society with "A specimen of the
Pontobdella muricata, with its ova & young ones", but there is no record of the papers being presented or kept. Grant in his publication about the leech eggs in the
Edinburgh Journal of Science for July 1827 acknowledged "The merit of having first ascertained them to belong to that animal is due to my zealous young friend Mr Charles Darwin of Shrewsbury", the first time Darwin's name appeared in print. Grant's lengthy memoir read before the Wernerian on 24 March was split between the April and October issues of the
Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal, with more detail than Darwin had given: he had seen ova (larvae) of
Flustra carbasea in February, after they swam about they stuck to the glass and began to form a new colony. He noted the similarity of the cilia in "other ova", with reference to his 1826 publication describing sponge ova. In European university practice, team leaders reported research without naming assistants, and clearly the find was derivative from Grant's research programme: it seems likely he had already seen the ova, like the sponge ova, moving by cilia. Grant phased announcement of discoveries rather than publishing quickly, and was now looking for a professorship before he ran out of funds, but young Darwin was disappointed. As Jameson noted in October, back in 1823
Dalyell had observed the
Pontobdella young leaving their cocoons. In notes dated 15 and 23 April, Darwin described specimens of the deep-water
sea pens (from fishing boats), and on 23 April, "with Mr Coldstream at the black rocks at Leith", he saw a
starfish doubled up, releasing its ova.
Summer 1827 Darwin left Edinburgh in late April, just 18 years old. In 1826 he had told his sister he would be "forced to go abroad for one year" of hospital studies, as he had to be 21 before taking his degree, where Charles fended for himself for a few weeks: recently graduated Plinian society members, including Browne and Coldstream, were there for hospital studies. By July, Charles had returned to his home at
The Mount, Shrewsbury. While indulging his hobby of
shooting with his family's friends at the nearby
Woodhouse estate of William Mostyn Owen, Darwin flirted with his second daughter,
Frances Mostyn Owen. Coldstream studied in Paris for a year, and visited places of interest. His diary notes religious thoughts, and occasional anguished comments such as "the foul mass of corruption within my own bosom", "corroding desires" and "lustful imaginations". A doctor who befriended him later said that though Coldstream had led "a blameless life", he was "more or less in the dark on the vital question of religion, and was troubled with doubts arising from certain Materialist views, which are, alas! too common among medical students." ==University of Cambridge==