Many things you people insist play only a small part in evolution....epigenetic, phenotypic plasticity, Lamarckian inheritance....except that they are probably the main drivers of evolution...
Well, in Darwin's case, as Steve and Outrider have said, he did think inheritance of acquired characteristics
might play a small part in evolution. He certainly didn't consider it the main part of his thesis, which is why, when he read abstracts of Alfred Wallace's ideas on Natural Selection, he was quite alarmed that the research he had been painstakingly conducting for many years might be sidelined by another man's studies (but since both Darwin and Wallace were such jolly decent British chaps there wasn't likely to be much animosity).
As for Darwin not considering neo-Darwinism to be the logical outcome of his views, that is of course pure speculation, and rather illogical speculation at that. He was certain that Natural Selection was the main driving force behind evolution, but was perplexed that he could not find a mechanism whereby changes could be passed on from generation to generation. The esoteric researches of an Austrian monk obsessed with cross-fertilising peas took quite some time to be taken up by the scientific community in any case, but Mendel's researches proved to be the missing factor that Darwin had been searching for.
Of course, there may be other factors yet to be established, as others have admitted. It is ironic that Stephen J Gould's ideas of
Punctuated Equilibrium, have just like Denis Noble whom you have cited, been seized upon, distorted and misinterpreted by the 'enthusiasts' of the Intelligent Design camp.