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Friday
My dearest Fanny
I cannot resist writing one line to thank you for having so tenderly advised me to return to home,1 I am sure I have acted best for Emma’s sake. It is some sort of consolation to weep bitterly together. The more I think of it, the greater the comfort is to me, that one who wept as tenderly as the tenderest parent over our poor child should follow her to the grave. I know of no other human being whom I could have asked to have undertaken so painful a task. God bless you dearest Fanny for it: sometime think with satisfaction how kindly you have acted towards us in our misery. Poor Emma is very firm, but is of course repeatedly overwhelmed with grief. I owe it to you that I am here.
Dear Fanny I cannot thank you. Sometime I shd wish to know on which side & part of the Church-Yard, as far as you can describe it, the body of our once joyous child rests.2
Yours most affectionately | C. Darwin
mention how you are yourself my dearest F. Ch. says you looked quite ill.3
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-1417,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on