Has read CD’s Primula paper.
Regrets to hear that CD and family are victims to the influenza epidemic.
Showing 21–40 of 303 items
Has read CD’s Primula paper.
Regrets to hear that CD and family are victims to the influenza epidemic.
Answers CD’s questions on Australian flora, bees, geology.
Thanks CD for his Primula paper [Collected papers 2: 45–63].
Asks if CD has observed the true oxlip (Primula elatior).
Comments on Hottonia and Stellaria graminea. [See Forms of flowers, pp. 72, 313.]
Will send an Arethusa; offers other specimens.
Dimorphism.
Falconer contradicts Sumatra and Ceylon elephant story.
Lyell as rabid as ever about America.
JDH castigates the Americans after the Trent affair. The value of an aristocracy. How will CD answer Asa Gray’s letter?
His "remarkable plant" [Welwitschia mirabilis] exhibited at Linnean Society.
Genera plantarum is in press.
The Witness attacks THH’s lecture.
Assures CD he spoke more favourably of his doctrines than the reports show.
Agrees with CD’s arguments on sterility of hybrids and predicts physiological experiments will produce physiological species sterile inter se. Has come even closer to CD’s view especially since Primula paper. Will soon be more Darwinian than CD.
He will send CD one of his sketches to add to the two CD has kept since Beagle days.
Asks for FitzRoy’s address.
Has received a satisfactory answer from Lord Tankerville.
Seeks to define oldest fossil cirripede.
Will enclose list of orchids in bloom for CD’s use.
Asks for photograph; her pleasure in knowing CD.
Most interested in the account of pigeons in CD’s book [Origin].
Sends proof-sheets of CD’s contribution to LJ’s Memoir of Henslow.
Reports that the orchids Myanthus and Catasetum are identical.
Thanks for promise of photograph.
Has no melastomads in bloom.
Describes sensitive anthers of Cynorchis.
Thanks CD for "your little pamphlet".
Thanks CD for returned MS and letter with its good opinion. Asks CD to write to Murray.
Grateful for CD’s approval of "Lake-habitations".
The Japan pig, an unusual domestic species with no wild prototype.
Will visit CD on Saturday.
Has sent CD the published part of his work on Carex [Illustrations of the genus Carex (1858–67)]. Hopes to add 200 more figures. Comments on great variability among the 600–odd species, and on their geographical distribution.
Owen’s paper on the aye-aye [Rep. BAAS 32 (1862) pt 2: 114–16];
his attacks on CD and his theories.
Discusses manuscript by H. W. Bates [Naturalist on the river Amazons (1863)].
Mentions CD’s forthcoming book [Orchids].