My dear F.
They have sent a magnificent bush of Porliera covered with leaves—2 Compare twig with your plant— no vestige of bloom— To day cloudy every leaf wide awake! Will have it in study to night & see how it sleeps, if it does sleep.—
I am dead with work & talk with McLennan, but have splendid success with radicles of Maize.—3
Case just reverse of bean— must be kept hot & then every single radicle with squares on tips on cork hooked & wound like French Horns—whereas 20 radicles with no squares as straight as arrows— Case splendidly conclusive. But the bother is great of finding out temperature at which radicles become sensitive.4 Therefore I shall not do many more, as we have a Dicot. & Monocot.
Yours affect | C. Darwin
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-11593,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on