My dear Hooker
My note on papilionaceous flowers crossed yours on the road; & for it I am much obliged for it told me a good deal of news. Though that about Henslow I am truly grieved to hear; I had thought his heart had got quite right again.—2 I saw the death of Miss Jenyns in the paper.—3
I enclose some queries for Dr. 4 but I suppose he will think them too troublesome & trifling to be attended to.
I do not see that the musk ox, of which remains have been found in Siberia, is any great difficulty for I have never for one second doubted the possibility, nay probability of such slight changes as the union of the shallow Behring’s Straits.—5 Your Indian Mysore & Carnatic plants in tropical Australia seems to me a more curious case.6
I am very doubtful whether I shall be up for Club;7 owing to Boys holidays drawing to a close, & sickness in our house. My wife often ails, & Lenny has very frequent bad days with badly intermittent pulse.—8 We escaped a considerable anxiety in George having apparently a regular low fever, but it died away & has spoiled only a fortnight of his holidays.9 Oh health, health, you are my daily & nightly bug-bear & stop all enjoyment in life. Etty keeps very weak.—10 But I really beg pardon, it is very foolish & weak to howl this way. Everyone has got his heavy burthen in this world.—
I shd. like to come up; if it were only just to see you & Lyell, who must be brimming full of geological news.11
Farewell | My dear Hooker | Yours affecy | C. Darwin
P.S. | I have just got your letter for which thanks. The Clover case was published in the “New Zealand Journal” date not given but republished in Gardeners Chronicle Dec. 16. 1843.—12
Humble-bees, I believe, are mundane in their distribution; but I do not know how it is in small islands. Bees are more confined in their visits to particular flowers, than you seem to be aware.— I daresay the Clover case may break down, & I shd. not have thought about it, had not so many facts, all vague, all pointed in same direction.
I cannot come up so soon as Tuesday, for we have relations in House:13 I doubt much whether I shall be up for Thursday
Farewell
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-2203,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on