Down
June 11th
My dear Hooker
I was glad to see your handwriting this morning.1 I am very sorry to hear an indifferent account of Mrs. Hooker:2 I heard from Miss Pugh (who is here) that she was looking not well.3 How kind Mrs. H. was to Miss Pugh, who by the way is charmed with your Charlie & has repeated to us some of his capital little speeches.4 Emma is at Southampton with Horace (who has got much good from the change) but I have sent your message about trustworthy oldish cook;5 I fear she cannot help. We might have recommended the very woman; but she is going to marry: I wish to Heaven Nat. Selection had produced “neuters”, who would not flirt or marry; I am sure that they would be as useful as neuter Bees. How the Exhibition works you!6 I have had only a glance, & I was not well, & saw nothing, & was dispirited.7 Any time that you are actually inclined to write, I shd. of course be eager to hear about Cameroons.—8
I wish you had time to discuss a little the mundane Glacial period: I still believe it will be the turning point of all recent Geographical distribution. But the case, as I have put it is infinitely weaker than if I had published all the direct evidence of glacial action.9
Did I tell you that pollen placed for 65 hours on the apparent (& I still think real) stigma of Leschenaultia had not protruded a vestige of a tube!! I won’t be beaten & will get a plant.—10
Oliver, the omniscient, has sent me a paper in Bot. Zeitung with most accurate description of all that I saw in Viola.—11
I have had long letter from Asa Gray, (with not one allusion to politicks.(!)) about my orchid book:12 he gives red-hot praise; & did I not know he would not write falsely, I shd. think he was humbugging me; but I am sure he is honest, & his kind sympathy has run away with him.—
Farewell my dear old friend. | C. D.
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-3597,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on