To J. D. Hooker   [6 November 1847]

[Down]

Saturday

My dear Hooker

I have just received your note with sincere grief: there is no help for it. I shall always look at your intention of coming here, under such circumstances, as the greatest proof of friendship I ever received from mortal man.— My conscience would have upbraided me in not having come to you on Thursday, but as it turned out I could not, for I was quite unable to leave Shrewsbury before that day, & I reached home only last night much knocked up.— Without I hear tomorrow (which is hardly possible) & if I am feeling pretty well, I will drive over to Kew on Monday Morning, just to say farewell: I will stay only an hour. But I beg you not to stay at home on any account, I shall arrive pretty early, leaving my Phaeton at Dulwich & taking a fly: but it must depend on my stomach & that has been lately very bad.—

Even if you do not sail till the 15th, you must not come over here: it is not fair for your relations or for yourself with all your business.—

I will write a letter on science which you can read on board.

I thank Miss Henslow most sincerely for her kind wish to see me.

Yours affectionately | C. Darwin

I congratulate you heartily on the completion of your great Flora Antarctica.1

I will come about 12 oclock on Monday, if able to come.—

The last number of Hooker’s Flora Antarctica (J. D. Hooker 1844–7) had been published on 2 October 1847 (Wiltshear 1913, p. 357).

Manuscript Alterations and Comments

1.2 such] before del ‘an’
1.6 day,] added
7.1 to come—] over ‘—’

Please cite as “DCP-LETT-1133,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on 5 June 2025, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/dcp-data/letters/DCP-LETT-1133