Down Bromley Kent
March 9th
My dear Fox
I have just been quoting in my M.S. on your authority from an old letter that you crossed White Muscovy Drake with slate-coloured duck & that the young were always pied black & white like the common or aboriginal breed.—1 I have many analogous facts in common Ducks, fowls, & pigeons & the case interests me much. Now can you tell me do the White Musk & Slate-coloured musk, (when not crossed) each breed quite or nearly true?
Again in same letter I have quoted that “12 white ewes of Mr Woodd’s had 23 coal-black lambs by a Ram that had a small patch of black only”.2 Can you tell me what breed these ewes were? Was Ram of same breed? Do you know how big & where the black patch on ram was?—
I should almost expect that if two very different breeds of white sheep were crossed there would be some tendency to dusky lambs; & so with horns, if two hornless breeds were crossed; but I know not where to enquire. I am even inclined to suspect that there is a tendency to a return to primordial wildness in hybrids between two domestic species.—
I enjoyed much seeing you in London.—3 My London trip did me some good; but I have since had a very bad fortnight; & Emma declares, I fear with truth, that we must all go for 6 or 8 weeks to Malvern.4
My dear old friend | Yours ever sincerely | C. Darwin
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-4033,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on