Dear Eyton
I have just been using your capital facts on the skeletons of Pigs in Zoolog. Procs. 2 & I want very much to beg a favour of you,—it is to know whether the offspring of the African pig & common were fertile.3 If you do not know, would it be asking too great a favour to beg you to enquire of Lord Hill;4 & let me publish the answer on your authority; for this would complete the evidence in regard to fertility.5
Also can you tell me whether Ld. Hill’s African pigs appeared domesticated? Do you know what part of Africa they came from?
I am getting on with my collection of Pigeon skeletons & have every breed alive. I have not yet compared carefully the skeletons; but when I do I shall probably have occasion to beg your assistance; for it would greatly add to value of any few remarks which I might make, if I could say that you had seen them & thought my remarks accurate.
I am working away very hard in compiling my Book on Variation, but hardly know when I shall be ready to go to press, for I find it very slow work.—
I hope Mrs. Eyton6 is better than when I last heard of her, now sometime ago.—
How I wish that we lived nearer each other & could sometimes meet. Believe me | Dear Eyton | Yours very sincerely | Ch. Darwin
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-1942,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on