My dear G.—
I send a note which you can forward to Mr Paul. & so save you all trouble: Also what he wants & which I hope will do, for I do not know what else I can do.—2 I cannot tell you how I & your mother rejoice that your mathematical troubles are come to an end.3 It sounds like a miracle that you shd. unconsciously followed the right course in so awfully complex an affair. I shd. as soon have expected that a man shd have composed a sonata by a fluke—
Please send another card or note with your address, for I gave that received this morning to your mother, & it disappeared for ever like a flash of lightning!!!4
I am tired so no more.— I wonder whether I could solve a mathematical problem unconsciously.—
Yours | C. D.
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-11663,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on