12 Jan 2014: "Alas! it ejected some intensely acrid fluid, which burnt my tongue so that I was forced to spit the beetle out, which was lost, as was the third one." Darwin autobiography
Darwin loved hunting and fishing, he loved cavorting with his college buddies. But nothing compared to collecting beetles. This wasn't a casual interest. This involved wading, ripping apart dead trees. There was pride at stake. Collections were a big deal. Eggs, bird skins, beetles, butterflies, and artifacts were to be shown off, compared, envied. Here, in his excitement, Darwin probably threw what was a blister beetle in his mouth to catch third beetle.
W. Darwin Fox, his second-cousin, introduced Darwin to insect collecting. Once started, he became obsessive and his collection became well known among English naturalists. He received his first acknowledgement in Illustrations of British Insects. He gave up beetle collecting later in life but replaced it with experimentation and documentation.
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