Thanks for letter. Values CD’s opinion more than that of anybody else.
Perfectly astonished at reception CD got among popular audiences at GJR’s lectures.
Showing 21–40 of 43 items
Thanks for letter. Values CD’s opinion more than that of anybody else.
Perfectly astonished at reception CD got among popular audiences at GJR’s lectures.
Thanks for letter about beet. Will strike out statement about it in MS of new edition of Forms of flowers.
Expresses his gratitude and admiration for AK’s and M. G. Retzius’s Studien in der Anatomie des Nervensystems und des Bindegewebes (2 vols. 1875–6).
Thanks for Origin, 6th ed.
A misprint in Variation.
Such honours as proposal for election to Institut affect CD very little.
GdeS’s idea that dicotyledonous plants were not developed until sucking insects evolved is a splendid one. The suggestion that fertilisation of the surviving members of the most ancient dicotyledons should be studied is a good one. CD hopes GdeS will keep it in mind.
BJS was pleased to see CD’s son [William] and his wife at Charles Langton’s.
His own son is preparing for marriage.
Reports meeting a former Beagle shipmate.
Thanks JVC for a correction [for 3d German edition of Variation]. He is the most accurate translator that ever lived.
Asks for the wing of a goose said to have transmitted effects of an injury by hereditary descent.
Cannot allow WCM to pay extra charge for glass. Rooms all very comfortable.
Informs CD of his work on the "unity of language in its development".
Thanks AG for his kindness in sending his valuable work [Les enchaînements du monde animal vol. 1 (1878)].
Reports on the flowering and growth of a branch of Echeveria stolonifera.
"If you finally succeed in proving that all languages have been developed from a common root, you will indeed have effected a most valuable piece of work."
Reports on potatoes grown from Torbitt’s seed.
Speculation on the process by which tails have been lost; believes he has evidence from man that it is related to spina bifida.
Sends details of H. H. R. Koch’s work on bacteria, including first photographs.
J. S. Burdon Sanderson’s and Koch’s collaboration on systemic fever.
Thinks movement of Francis Darwin’s Dipsacus filaments is an artifact.
Accepts CD’s offer of £50 for portrait of Erasmus Darwin.
Reports, as treasurer, on the financial position of the Club.
His father asks him to thank TAE for sending the curious case of the insects [see 11271].