Down. | Bromley. | Kent. S.E.[6 Queen Anne Street, London]
Nov. 14th
My dear Sir
I am very much obliged for your kind wish to send me some of your [graft]-hybrid Potatoes, but they will be much better cared for in your hands.—2 In the spring my gardener transposed the eyes from a negro (a black) & white potato, & the eyes grew up well, but neither the foliage nor tubers were in the least affected; each kind kept true.3
Will you tell Prof. Weismann that I have received his address & ⟨1 word illegible to copyist⟩ read it with very great interest & care.4 It seems to me a very able & valuable discussion, from which I hope to profit.—
Please tell him that the addresses are5
A. R. Wallace Esq
9. St. Marks Crescent
Regents Park
London
and
Dr. Alex. Wallace
Colchester
These gentlemen are not relatives.— I feel almost sure that Mr. Wallace cannot have spare copies of his paper. It was published 2, 3, or 4 years ago (I am writing away from home) in the Transactions of Linnean Soc. (in quarto) & is finely illustrated. It is a truly admirable paper & well worthy of careful study.—6
Dr. Wallace is a very good Lepidopterist & has lately attended much to the breeding of the Ailanthus moth.—7
A friend of mine has just been studying your book on the fertilization of plants & is enthusiastic in his admiration of it.8
Believe me my dear sir | Yours very sincerely | Ch. Darwin.
Ask Prof. Weismann whether he can give me any notes on the courtship or making love of Lepidoptera.—
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-6459F,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on