HOME  >  Browse  >  Rare Books  >  Landmark Books  >  On the Origin of Species by means of natural selection, or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life.

fourth edition of On the Origin of Species

DARWIN, CHARLES. On the Origin of Species by means of natural selection, or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life.

London: John Murray, 1866

April 1867 ads. Original green cloth. Very light wear. A fine copy.

FOURTH EDITION. Fifteen hundred copies were printed. “It was again extensively altered, and it was in this one that the date if the first edition, as given on the verso of the half title, is corrected from October 1st to November 24th” (Freeman).

On the Origin of Species is “certainly the greatest biological book ever written” (Freeman) and “the most important single work in science” (Dibner).

Darwin’s theory of the origin of species by means of natural selection arose out of his studies in the 1830s during and after the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle. From 1831 to 1836 Darwin sailed around the world on the Beagle. During this five-year voyage, Darwin and the Beagle visited the Galapagos Islands, Brazil, Argentina, Tierra del Fuego, Chile, Peru, Tahiti, Australia, New Zealand, and other islands and countries, finally returning to England by sailing around the Cape of Good Hope. Darwin observed, “It appears to me that nothing can be more improving to a young naturalist than a journey in distant countries.”

The voyage of the Beagle was “the most important event in Darwin’s intellectual life and in the history of biological science. Darwin sailed with no formal scientific training. He returned a hard-headed man of science, knowing the importance of evidence, almost convinced that species had not always been as they were since creation but had undergone change. … The experiences of his five years … and what they led to, built up into a process of epoch-making importance in the history of thought” (DSB).

Over the coming thirty years Darwin refined the ideas that had germinated aboard the Beagle and finally published them in On the Origin of Species. Darwin concluded his book, “There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one; and that whilst this plan has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.”

Darwin’s ideas about evolution and natural selection are the underpinnings of modern biological science. Moreover, they have given us a new way of viewing and talking about the world. “Darwin not only not only drew an entirely new picture of the workings of organic nature; he revolutionized our methods of thinking and our outlook on the order of natural things. The recognition that constant change is the order of the universe had finally been established” (Printing and the Mind of Man 344b).

Provenance: contemporary inscription “Adamson, The Towers, Didsbury.” Daniel Adamson was an English engineer, boiler manufacturer, and driving force behind the Manchester Ship Canal in the 1880s. His home, the Towers, is sometimes called the Calendar House for its 365 windows, 52 doors, and 12 chimneys.

Freeman 385.

Please Inquire