To J. D. Hooker   10 August [1855]

Down Farnborough Kent

Aug. 10th

My dear Hooker

Many thanks for your note with Dr. Lindleys1 invitation. I had so strong a wish to accept it, in order to get to know him, that I accepted it, but the next morning I felt so unwell, together with a note from home made me give it up with great reluctance & I wrote a second note to Lindley. I almost wish I had thrown all the circumstances to the dogs & staid; but it is now too late.

My morning with H. C. W.2 passed off very prosperously & I had much very interesting talk; but he is rather too sarcastic to my taste. He strikes me as a very clever man. Will you sometime look in your Library & see whether you have the Memoires of the Academy of Nancy 1848–1849. for Godron3 It is not in Linnean or Royal Socy.—

I forget exactly when you start, but I shall hear nothing of you now for a long time.4 Adios.—

Watson told me some capital stories of the caution requisite about inferring that seeds have lain long buried from their suddenly springing up: nevertheless I found that he does go a long way in believing that they do sometimes lie buried from cases which he had himself seen.—

Farewell | C. Darwin

John Lindley was professor of botany at University College London, and editor of the Gardeners’ Chronicle.
Godron 1848–9. CD had been looking for Dominique Alexandre Godron’s paper ‘De l’espèce et des races’ since March. See letters to J. D. Hooker, [before 7 March 1855], and to Arthur Henfrey, 17 March [1855].
Hooker was preparing to start on a European tour with Nathaniel Lindley, son of John Lindley. For Lindley’s recollections of the trip, see L. Huxley ed. 1918, 1: 435.

Manuscript Alterations and Comments

2.4 for Godron] interl
3.1 inferring] after del ‘judging’
3.2 long buried] ‘long’ interl

Please cite as “DCP-LETT-1737,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on 5 June 2025, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/dcp-data/letters/DCP-LETT-1737