Down
23d.
My dear Hooker
My eczema is well & consequently till it comes on again, I am languid & bedeviled & have1 writing & hate everybody. No, that is not true for in my worst state I do not hate you; but I have not had spirit to thank you for two pleasant notes.—2 John Scott of Edinburgh is very grateful for what you say about keeping him in mind.3 I almost think he doubts his power to manage a great private establishment & leans to some foreign place; but I suspect that he is too modest.4 He has asked me whether he might send you his orchid-paper when published; I told him by all means to send it—5 About Haasts letter all right; you wrote some time ago saying that you thought you had lost one for me.—6 I shall be very glad to see the account of his Explorations.7 He seems a fine fellow. Thanks for sending Sneezing paper; how curious the case is, but how weak the explanation of origin at end.—8
The more I think of Bentham’s address the more I like it. I quite enjoyed the snubs to Owen.—9 You ask what I think of Herbert Spencer’s great book: I never attempted to read any except last Part;10 & that greatly disappointed me—all words & generalities, like Sir H. Holland’s writings,11 & I could grasp nothing clearly. But I suppose this is all my stupidity; as so many think so highly of this work.—
If Oliver knows “Beer’s Morphologie und Biologie der Orchideen”, I shd. like to know whether it would interest me: it is just published price 30s .—12
I shall enjoy extremely seeing you, if you can run down for a Sunday & I hope to God I may be decently well to enjoy it; but this gets rarer & rarer with me.
Farewell my old friend | C. Darwin
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-4218,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on