My dear Sir
I am especially obliged to you for your beautiful plates and letter press;2 for no single point in natural history interests and perplexes me so much as the self-fertilisation of the Bee orchis.3 You have already thrown some light on the subject and your present observations promise to throw more.4
I formed two conjectures first, that some insect during certain seasons might cross the plants, but I have almost given up this; nevertheless pray have a look at the flowers next season. Secondly I conjectured that the Spider and Bee orchises might be a crossing and self-fertile form of the same species.5 Accordingly I wrote some years ago to an acquaintance asking him to mark some Spider orchises and observe whether they retained the same character;6 but he evidently thought the request as foolish as if I had asked him to mark one of his cows with a ribbon to see if it would turn next Spring into a horse. Now will you be so kind as to tie a string round the stem of half a dozen Spider orchises and when you leave Mentone7 dig them up and I would try and cultivate them and see if they kept constant; but I should require to know in what sort of soil and situations they grow. It would be indispensable to mark the plant so that there could be no mistake about the individual. It is also just possible that the same plant would throw up at different seasons, different flower scapes, and the marked plants would serve as evidence.
With many thanks, my dear Sir, | Your’s sincerely | Ch. Darwin
P.S. | I send by this post my paper on climbing plants parts of which you might like to read.8
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-4914,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on