Down Bromley Kent
Feb. 24th
Dear Innes.
Many thanks for your friendly note.1 You seem all very prosperous, & we are very glad to hear of it.— I have heard of the mule from the canary & other finches occasionally breeding; but it is very rare (except with the siskin where the case is not so rare) & there is hardly one quite well authenticated case of two such mules breeding together.2 I will not forget your offer if I should wish for any observations or enquiries made in the north.
Life rolls on, as you know, very uniformly in Down, & we have no news. Yes, we have, the Butcher has jilted his old love, & is going to be married to a new one!3
We went a few days ago to lunch with the John Lubbocks & they evidently seem thoroughily to enjoy their new home & freedom.4 They gave us a good account of poor Montague.5
We have had the Influenza here very badly— 16 were sick in this house, & at one time six in bed. Etty keeps capital;6 but now we have Horace failing badly with intermittent weak pulse, like four of our other children previously.7 It is a curious form of inheritance from my poor constitution, though I never failed in exactly that way.— I am glad to hear that Mrs. Innes (to whom pray give our kind remembrances) has been out to dinner;8 she beats me, for I have not ventured on such a bold step for an age.
Believe me Dear Innes | Yours very sincerely | C. Darwin
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-3457,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on