My dear Lindley
I suppose that it is a sin against propriety, but I really cannot resist expressing my cordial thanks for your most kind review of my book.2 One quarter of the praise which you have bestowed on it, coming from you to whom I have long looked up, would I assure you have much more than satisfied me. Considering that you are the great authority on orchids the cordial tone of your article strikes me as something much more than merely kind. I was led to publish the book almost by accident; for whilst I made all the earlier observations I had not the least intention of publishing even a separate paper on the subject, but was led to it by finding that some persons were interested by what I showed them of our British species. And you in one of your letters when I had looked at only two or 3 foreigners, encouraged me, & to a great extent led me to go on.—3
Accept my cordial thanks & forgive me for troubling you.
Yours very sincerely | Charles Darwin
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-3723,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on