
When a young writer lands in a fledgling New Zealand settlement just as Charles Darwin’s Origin of Species bursts onto the scene, his curiosity sparks a bold experiment in public debate. He fashions a concise dialogue that lays out the new theory in plain language, and the piece appears in the colony’s first newspaper in December 1862. Its clarity catches the eye of local commentators, igniting a spirited exchange of letters that runs for months and draws the attention of readers far beyond the Pacific rim.
The work preserves that original dialogue alongside the ensuing newspaper commentary and a remarkable correspondence between the author and Darwin himself. In these pages, listeners hear the excitement, skepticism, and genuine curiosity that marked the early reception of evolutionary ideas, offering a vivid snapshot of intellectual life in a young colony and the unexpected connections it forged with one of science’s greatest minds.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (80K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2002-06-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1835–1902
Best known for the satirical novel Erewhon and the posthumously published The Way of All Flesh, this sharp-minded Victorian writer loved challenging accepted ideas. His work ranges from fiction and essays to lively arguments about religion, evolution, and society.
View all books