Down, | Beckenham, Kent. | Railway Station | Orpington. S.E.R.
Oct. 29th
My dear old George
I have been quite delighted with your letter & read it all with eagerness.—2 You were very good to write it. All of us are delighted, for considering what a man Sir W. T. is it is really grand that you shd. have staggered him so quickly, & that he shd speak of your “discovery &c” & about the moon’s period.—3
I also chuckle greatly about the internal Heat. How this will please the geologists & Evolutionists.4 That does sound awkward about the heat being bottled up in the middle of the earth.—
What a lot of swells you have been visiting & it must have been very interesting.5
Hurrah for the bowels of the earth & their viscosity & for the moon & for all the Heavenly bodies & for my son George (F.R.S. very soon)6
Yours affecty | C. Darwin
P.S | Proctor has sent me a book just published by him with a wretched title “Pleasant ways of Science”, but several of the essays have proved to me extremely interesting, especially the astronomical ones, & one on Telegraphy.—7 He is a wonderful compiler.—
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-11729,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on