My dear Darwin
I send herewith enclosed 2 pitchers intertwined of Nepenthes lævis, I find that all the species climb in the same manner.2
Thanks for your capital long letter of 23d.—3 I am so glad that you have begun the “opus magnum”4
I have sent the recommendation of Gærtner to Stainton5 & backed it.
What a good thought, of Wallace for Royal Medal6 I have been in despair for a good man, & here is one to our hands.
Harvey is here & I have asked him about the desert climbing plants,7 they are species of Asclepiadeæ (Ceropegia) & of Convolvulaceae, of which all the native specimens he has are stemless, flowering at the ground, but which when grown from seed in Dublin Gardens, send up climbing stems. I have seen specimens, & do not doubt its being a very common occurrence.
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-4623,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on