[Lamarck, the Founder of Evolution by Alpheus Spring Packard]@TWC D-Link book
Lamarck, the Founder of Evolution

CHAPTER III
11/15

In it appeared a note relative to Lamarck, which, after stating that, though full of zeal and of knowledge of botany, his time was not entirely occupied; that for two months he had written him in regard to the duties of his position; referred to the statements of two of his seniors, who repeated the old gossip as to the claim of La Billarderie that his place was useless, and also found fault with him for not recognizing the artificial system of Linne in the arrangement of the herbarium, added: "However, desirous of retaining M.La Marck, father of six children, in the position which he needs, and not wishing to let his talents be useless, after several conversations with the older officers of the Jardin, I have believed that, M.Desfontaines being charged with the botanical lectures in the school, and M.Jussieu in the neighborhood of Paris, it would be well to send M.La Marck to herborize in some parts of the kingdom, in order to complete the French flora, as this will be to his taste, and at the same time very useful to the progress of botany; thus everybody will be employed and satisfied."-- Perrier, _Lamarck et le Transformisme Actuel_, pp.

13, 14.

(Copied from the National Archives.) "The life of Bernardin de St.Pierre (1737-1814) was nearly as irregular as that of his friend and master [Rousseau].

But his character was essentially crafty and selfish, like that of many other sentimentalists of the first order." (Morley's _Rousseau_, p.

437, footnote.) [29] Joseph Lakanal was born in 1762, and died in 1845.


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