Sorry that his health prevents him attending a meeting to honour Adam Sedgwick.
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The Charles Darwin Collection
The Darwin Correspondence Project is publishing letters written by and to the naturalist Charles Darwin (1809–1882). Complete transcripts of letters are being made available through the Project’s website (www.darwinproject.ac.uk) after publication in the ongoing print edition of The Correspondence of Charles Darwin (Cambridge University Press 1985–). Metadata and summaries of all known letters (c. 15,000) appear in Ɛpsilon, and the full texts of available letters can also be searched, with links to the full texts.
Sorry that his health prevents him attending a meeting to honour Adam Sedgwick.
Thanks for CD’s regrets at AWB’s leaving Nature.
Plans English editions of Asa Gray’s books [How plants grow; How plants behave].
Other publication plans.
Thanks for congratulations on appearance of abstract of HA’s paper [Nature 7 (1873): 343–4].
Explains again his theory of "contraction with twist" by which compact buds and a spiral phyllotaxy have evolved. Explains how the peculiar phyllotaxy of the teasel is explicable by this process of "condensation".
CD’s notice in Nature [Collected papers 2: 171–2] induces WP to send letters from correspondents recounting stories of a dog that learned to open a door and of another that found his way home from London to Cowes.
CD has discovered correspondent intends to present a petition to the House of Commons on which CD’s is the sole signature. Asks that his name be erased unless other signatures are added.
Two students express their gratitude and admiration.
Does not understand TM’s views on sex and vitality.
Agrees no real "essences" in genera, only broken groups of species.
Thanks WP for his accounts of sagacity of dogs. "I can believe almost anything about them."
Compares sense of smell in dogs and cats.
Responds to AN’s observations on sense of smell in cats and dogs.
Sends £10 subscription for James Murie.
An admirer sends clipping from Bremen newspaper on hybrid between orange and lemon.
Describes his critique of natural selection [Die Lehre Darwins kritisch betrachtet (1871)].
Gives some information on variation of ocelli between sexes in butterfly species.
Proposes publishing a series of papers on mimicry.
H. W. Bates says CD is in town. WWR would like to call.
Thanks RM for note on ocelli.
Discusses expression among the Chinese. Reports certain physical characters and the practice of certain unusual customs.
Thanks for Indian [Medical] Gazette. Comments on article.
Has read several of CD’s books; is curious about his remarks on "movements which are no longer useful but still inherited". Asks CD’s opinion on why people still swing arms with opposite leg in walking.
Thanks CD for photograph – sends one in return,
questions CD on his religious views.