To John Lubbock   1 June [1861]1

Down. | Bromley. | Kent. S.E.

June 1st

My dear Lubbock

Many thanks for your note.2 I told William that if the proposition came to anything, he would have to join immediately, & I left the acceptance entirely to his good sense, & he agreed. I am sure he would work hard, for througout life whatever he has done, he has done energetically. He would go down to Southampton at any time, direct from Cambridge; though perhaps it would be best for him on the road to see you & come here. This term ends about 20th & no doubt he could get leave of absence for rest of term; & then he will have kept all his terms, & next year he probably could run up for three days & take his degree, for he has a natural wish (though in fact useless) just to take a degree after having completed his time & worked pretty hard.3 You can, if you like, forward this note to Mr Atherley;4 & I pledge my word not to mention Mr Atherley’s name to anyone, not even to my son William, until the affair has progressed

Dear Lubbock | Ever yours truly | C. Darwin

P.S. | I think if the affair progresses the best plan will be to send to William per Telegraph to come to London & I would meet him there & have some talk with him & then he could go down to Southampton.

Lubbock’s letter has not been found.
William left Cambridge without a degree in the summer of 1861. Having met the residency requirement of attending three terms for three years, he entered for the mathematical tripos examination of 1862 and gained a degree (Historical register of the University of Cambridge; F. Darwin 1914, p. 20).
George Atherley was a partner in the Southampton and Hampshire Bank, Southampton.

Manuscript Alterations and Comments

1.5 time,] ‘t’ over illeg
3.2 to come] interl

Please cite as “DCP-LETT-3172,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on 5 June 2025, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/dcp-data/letters/DCP-LETT-3172