Down. | Bromley. | Kent. S.E.
Oct 21.
My dear Sir
Ill health has prevented me from sooner thanking you for your very kind letter, & several Memoirs.1
I have been very much pleased to see how boldly & clearly you speak out on the modification of species. I thank you for giving me the pages of reference; but they were superfluous, for I found so many original & profound remarks, that I have carefully looked through all the papers.2 I hope that your discovery about the Cynips will hold good for it is a remarkable one,3 & I for one have often marvelled what could be the meaning of the case.4 I will lend your paper to my neighbour Mr Lubbock who I know is much interested in the subject.5 Incidentally I shall profit by your remarks on galls: if you have time I think a rather hopeless experiment would be worth trying; any how I should have tried it had my health permitted— it is to insert a minute grain of some organic substance together with the poison from bees, sand wasps, ichneumons, adders, & even alkaloid poisons into the tissues of fitting plants, for the chance of monstrous growths being produced.6
My health has long been poor & I have lately suffered from a long illness, which has interrupted all work, but I am now re-commencing a volume in connection with the “Origin7
With sincere thanks for your letter & kind present | Pray believe me | my dear Sir yours sincerely | Charles Darwin
P.S. If you write again I should very much like to hear what your life in your new country is. What can be the meaning or use of the great diversity of the external generative organs in your cases, in Bombus, & the Phytophagous Coleoptera? What can there be in the act of copulation necessitating such complex & diversified apparatus.—8
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-4640,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on