King’s Coll: Lodge
29th. April 1879
Dear Sir
I am sorry I was not able to see you when you called upon me yesterday— I was thoroughly fatigued with ye proceedings of ye previous ten days and was afraid I had taken cold—
The Letters about which you enquire I remember seeing when I was a lad and they were in my father’s possession—1 I have an impression that my Father gave them to Dr. E. Daniel Clarke for preservation in the Univy. Library—and that, when I was an Undergraduate, I saw them there.2 But since my return in 1850 I have been too much engaged with things new to care, as I should like to do, for things old.3 My Grandfather, who has been a Fellow of this College, finally practised at Exeter, where he died, and was buried in ye Cathedral.4 The two names of his Correspondents of which I have ye clearest recollections are “Meade” and “Boerhave”—5
But Mr Bradshaw, our present Librarian, could tell you in a moment, whether my impression that my Grandfather’s collection of Letters is in ye Univy. Library, is correct or not—6 I wish I could help you better—
Yrs. Very truly | Richd. Okes
George Darwin Esqre.
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-12016,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on