Dear Sir
The Bearer will deliver 3 Rabbits (if none dead on voyage) from Madeira.3 Will you take charge of them for me & show this note to Mr Sclater?4 They are zoologically very interesting for they have run wild on little Isld of P. Santo, since year 1420;5 & judging from 2 dead ones seen by me, they have become greatly reduced in size & modified in colour & in their skeletons.6 I want much to see them alive, & to try whether they will cross freely with common Rabbits.— I am going immediately to leave home for two months.7 Would there be any objection to your keeping them for some time & matching them with some other breed; or if you think fit, first try & get some purely bred.—8
I may perhaps be mistaken, but I was very much surprised at many of the characters of the two dead specimens which I saw.—
If anyone shd die I shd like its skeleton. Pray forgive me troubling you, but I know not what to do with them at present.—
If worth consideration, I would of course pay for their keep.—
In Haste— | Dear Sir | Yours very faithfully | Ch. Darwin
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-3159,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on