Dear Sir
Your kind note & Review2 & Uriconium3 have been forwarded from my home & have reached me here today.— I have cut the pages & have glanced over the pages (which shall hereafter be carefully studied) & can see that all your criticisms are written in a perfectly fair & kind tone. I thank you sincerely. I will not trouble you with any discussion, but will consider all your points.
I think it is a pity to mingle science & religion;4 but that you say you have done from conscience; & I entirely believe you.— I did not enter on case of man, from its extraordinary difficulty & from believing that the case of man will follow that of other animals, whenever my views are finally rejected or admitted.— This rejection or admission will require, I have always seen & I now see still more plainly, many years.—
My opponents would have lost nothing if they had all treated me as fairly as you seem to have done.
With my sincere thanks | pray believe me | Dear Sir | Yours very faithfully | Charles Darwin
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-3208,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on