Cambridge,
July 18, 1866
Dear Darwin
I received the enclosed to-day.1 The Appleton’s have the sheets up to p. 288, (to sign n.)2 I have just collated the sheets O, Q, R, (P, has not come), and it is perfectly clear that the Appletons cannot alter their plates so as really to reproduce your revised work.3
I have written to them that the collation I have made shows me that you could not do otherwise than object decidedly, as you did in your letter, to the course they propose to pursue;4—that I am bound to respect your expressed wishes and that I must ask them to return to me the sheets I finished. In consequence there will be no reprint here at present. For no publisher would venture to spite the Appletons by taking it up, without buying up their worthless stereotype plates.
I wish you would arrange to have your publisher supply the U.S. market at a lowish rate, as, at present, the Engl. ed. could well compete with any American one, should such be attempted.5
If the Appleton’s were not in the way, Messrs Ticknor & Fields would reprint the book,6 and pay the author 10 pr cent on retail price of the book.—in the hope of being favored with early sheets of the vol. on Variation & Domestication on the same terms.7
But Dog-in-the-Manger prevents.8
Our July is fearfully hot, so far— I am to be off next week, for a short holiday.
Ever Yours sincerely | A. Gray
Statement of Sales of “Darwin’s Origin of Species”9
to 1st Feby 1866 by D. APPLETON & CO., for account of Asa Gray On hand last account, 197 On hand this date, 290 Printed since, 250 Given away,
Sold to date, 157
— —
447 447 Sold 157 Copies. $2 Rate 5% $ 15.70
Jany 1/65. Copyrights due 69.91
——
$85.61
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-5160,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on