My dear Gray
I have not written for a long time (& a good job too perhaps you will think), not since receiving your letter written on Jany 19th;2 but I have often thought of you & often wished to write, but either had other things to do, or felt too tired. I have nothing particular to say now, but the grand news of Richmond has stirred me up to write.3 I congratulate you, & I can do this honestly, as my reason has always urged & ordered me to be a hearty good wisher for the north, though I could not do so enthusiastically, as I felt we were so hated by you.—4
Well I suppose we shall all be proved utterly wrong who thought that you could not entirely subdue the South. One thing I have always thought that the destruction of Slavery would be well worth a dozen years war.5 Two days ago a very charming man, enthusiastic for the north, called here, Mr. Laugel, & he does not believe that you will attack us & Canada.6 I fear it will take many years before your country will shake down to its old routine.—
I received a little time ago a paper with good account of your Herbarium & Library,7 & a long time previously your excellent review of Scotts Primulaceæ, & I forwarded it to him in India, as it would much please him.—8 I was very glad to see in it a new case of Dimorphism (I forget just now the name of plant);9 I shall be grateful to hear of any other cases, as I still feel interest on subject. I shd. be very glad to get some seed of your dimorphic Plantagos;10 for I cannot banish suspicion that they must belong to the very different class like that of the common Thyme. How could the wind, which is agent of fert. with Plantago, fertilise “reciprocally dimorphic” flowers like Primula.11 Theory says this cannot be, & in such cases of one’s own theories I follow Agassiz & declare “that Nature never lies”.12 I shd even be very glad to examine the 2 dried forms of Plantago. Indeed any dried dimorphic plants wd. be gratefully received. You made capital remarks, with respect to Mohls little imperfect flowers, on flowers which rarely open—13
Did my Lythrum paper interest you?14 I crawl on at rate of 2 hours per diem with Variation under Domestication;15 & I have begun correcting proofs of my paper on “Climbing Plants”. I suppose I shall be able to send you a copy in 4 or 5 weeks. I think it contains a good deal new & some curious points, but it is so fearfully long, that no one will ever read it. If, however, you do not skim through it, you will be an unnatural parent, for it is your child16
Believe me, my dear Gray, | Yours affectionately | Charles Darwin
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-4467,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on