My dear Huxley
I write one line merely to thank you for your pleasant note & to say that I will keep your secret.2 I will shake my head as mysteriously as Ld. Burleigh.—3 Several persons have asked me who wrote that “most remarkable article” in the Times. As a cat may look at a king, so I have said that I strongly suspected you.— Mrs Hooker (do not repeat this) was so sharp that the first sentence revealed to her the authorship.4 The Lubbocks Father & Son (God save the mark) thought it was Owen’s!!!5 You may rely on it that it has made deep impression, & I am heartily glad that the subject & I owe you this further obligation. But for God’s sake take care of your health: remember that the Brain takes years to rest whilst the muscles take only hours.— There is poor Dana to whom I used to preach by letter writes to me that my prophecies are come true:6 he is in Florence quite done up, can read nothing & write nothing & cannot talk for half-an-hour
I noticed the “naughty sentence about Owen, though my wife saw its bearing first.—7
Farewell you best & worst of men.— Most sincerely Yours | C. Darwin
That sentence about the Bird & the Fish dinners charmed us.—8
Lyell wrote me style like yours.—9
Have you seen the slashing article of Dec. 26th in Daily News against my stealing from my “Master”, the Author of Vestiges.—10
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-2633,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on