My dear Gray
How good you have been to take so much trouble about the Expression-queries.— I wish I had thought earlier of having them printed, for in that case I might have sent a dozen to each of my few correspondents, as it is I can think of no one to send them to, so do not want any more.2
By the way I have just thought of Thwaites in Ceylon & will send him a couple.3
I have been lately getting up & looking over my old notes on Expression, & fear that I shall not make so much of my hobby-horse, as I thought I could: nevertheless it seems to me a curious subject, which has been strangely neglected.4
I have seen no one for months (but Hooker I rejoice to say will be here next Saturday)5 & have no news.— I am plodding on heavily correcting, & trying to make an atrociously bad style a little better, my book “on the Variation of Animals & Plants under Domestication”: I would offer to send you clean sheets, but I do not think you would care to receive them. There is not much about plants, & what there is, is almost all mere compilation; it will be a fearfully big book in two vols. & I shall be the next 5 or 6 months merely correcting the press: it is enough to make one curse one’s fate in being an author.—6
I manage to get a little amusement by some of my experiments.— I have proved that the trimorphic species of Oxalis behaves in exactly the same complicated manner in regard to their fertilisation as Lythrum.—7 I am going on with my trials of the growth of plants raised from self-fertilised & crossed seeds, & begin now to suspect that the wonderful difference in growth & conststitutional vigour occurs only with exotic plants which have been raised by seed during many generations in England, but which are not properly visited by insects & so have been rarely crossed.—8
I have just heard of a case which has interested me hugely, & which I am inclined to believe is true; namely that by cutting the tubers of differently coloured potatoes through the eye, & joining them, you can make a hybrid or mongrel. I am repeating this experiment on a large scale, for it seems to me, if true, a wonderful physiological fact.9
Here is a long prose all about my own doings.
Farewell with many thanks | Yours most sincerely | Ch Darwin
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-5442,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on