Receiving deputation gave CD pleasure.
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Receiving deputation gave CD pleasure.
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Explains delay in printing proofs [of Movement in plants?].
Thanks for CD’s letter, and further discussion of the sale of Tromer Lodge.
Thanks for copy of Movement in plants; CD’s discovery of a "nervous system without nerves" will have important bearing on origins of animal nervous system.
Discusses matters relating to Great Western Railway Company stock.
Sends the Yorkshire Naturalists’ Union’s publications prior to the visit to Down of its deputation.
If every copy [of Movement in plants] is sold at 15s, CD will lose about £50.
Thanks CD for his reply to her letter.
Offers to send him a copy of her book on her expedition to Patagonia [Across Patagonia (1880)].
Six hundred copies of Movement in plants were wanted [at Murray’s annual sale] – a good start.
He has observed several instances of animals’ tails lying to the left in rigor mortis. Is this a general rule?
Has spoken to Wallace to see if reluctant to accept a Government pension. He would accept if CD and Huxley believe it justified. Encloses details of Wallace’s efforts to obtain a position as naturalist and his claims for a pension.
Response to CD’s notes [on Island life]:
1. On relation of paucity of fossils to coldness of water;
2. Cessation of the glacial period;
3. Rate of deposit and geological time;
4. The importance of preoccupation (by plants) in relation to plants arriving later.
Charge of speculative explanations is just.
Defends plausibility of migration of plants from mountain to mountain.
Thanks for information about Wallace. Is preparing memorial to be submitted to Government [seeking pension for Wallace].
Movement in plants needs only the index. Distressed by CD’s dissatisfaction with the indexer.
Eight hundred copies have now been sold. Type will be kept up.
Decision on printing additional copies should await reviews.
Sorry he forgot the gardener’s address. Having a very nice time in Cambridge, and is almost finished the bramble paper. Drawing room is upside down, so living in Horace’s working room and dining room. Greek question was lost in the Senate House. George dined there last night. Too muddy to bicycle. Has some stuff for spectacles.
Has found three zones of stones in the Welsh and Pennine mountains which he accounts for by elevation and subsidence. Does CD think that these movements in historical times have been caused by earthquakes or by slow and gradual movements?