Dear Mr. Darwin
I have gathered you some seeds of Ononis minutissima which I enclose.—2 They are the product of fully developed flowers, which are the only ones out now & seem to be amply fertile.3
About the Peas;—when I was leaving London I went to Butler & M’Culloch’s, Seedsmen in Covent Garden, & bought packets of each of the varieties of Sweet Peas & two of the most marked forms of eatable Peas for sowing here.—4 I then asked the ⟨third of page excised⟩
⟨ ⟩ varieties I am selling you are artificial hybrids, as for example this one’, & he took up a packet marked ‘Clarks hybrid’.5
I asked the same question of an intelligent gardener here at Mentone, & he likewise said that these plants are always separated when seed is wanted from different varieties—.
These answers may perhaps only point to a common prejudice in favour of separating all varieties for seed; & I shall try to get evidence of spontaneous crossing if possible—6 ⟨third of page excised⟩
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-5272,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on