Down Farnborough Kent
Nov. 5th.
My dear Hooker
I was delighted to get your note yesterday. I congratulate you very heartily, & whether you care much or little, I rejoice to see the highest scientific judgment-court in Great Britain recognise your claims.1
I do hope Mrs Hooker is pleased, & Emma desires me particularly to send her cordial congratulations. Mind my words you will be an awful scientific giant some day, & I shall have the very great satisfaction of having foretold it from the very first days we knew each other.— I pity you from the very bottom of my heart about your after dinner speech, which I fear I shall not hear. Without you have a very much greater soul than I have (& I believe that you have) you will find the medal a pleasant little stimulus, when work goes badly & one ruminates that all is vanity, it is pleasant to have some tangible proof, that others have thought something of one’s labours.2 Goodbye my dear Hooker, I can assure that we both most truly enjoyed your & Mrs Hooker visit here.
Farewell | My dear Hooker | Your sincere friend | C. Darwin
I am glad to hear about Greenland.
What a disgusting puzzle about your Ischian case. I have begun to get some facts about aberrant genera in insects.—3
I cannot possibly come up on Tuesday,4 as we shall have visitors;5 whether I shd. if we had not, shall be left in obscurity.
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-1597,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on