Cambridge, [Mass.]
Feb. 24, 1868.
My Dear Darwin
Have I told you, and thanked you for the last pages completing the sheets of your 2 noble volumes.1
An agricultural house in New York, in which Prof. Thurber, a good botanist—is a small partner, are considering whether they will reprint your 2 vols,—allowing you a decent copyright, if it sells to pay expenses.2 I tell them that if they pay author a per centage on the sales, you will supply electrotypes of the cuts. Will you?
They are waiting to see my copy of the sheets of vol. 2, before they decide. And I will not spare them till I have written my little announcement and notice of the work, in The Nation.—which as yet I have not the least time to do,—but must do it soon.3
The other evening here, I discoursed at our private Club, by giving them an abstract of the chapters on Inheritance and Pangenesis,—the former for Prof. Bowen’s benefit. He & Agassiz took it all very well.4— And pangenesis seemed to strike all of us as as good an hypothesis as one can now make
Ask Hooker to send you copy of The Nation in which some one, (I know not who) in reviewing Agassiz’ book on Brasil, laughs at him for his iterative refutations of Darwinism.5
On inside of leaf of Dionæa see the copious glands for secreting gastric juice.6
Yours ever | A. Gray
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-5921,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on