My dear Sir
I thank you for your very kind letter. My book will not be ready for, probably, a year, as my health lets me work so very slowly & I have found sexual selection a most laborious subject when treated in detail. My publisher wished so much to insert a notice of my Book that I could not refuse.2
There is no man in Germany I shd so much wish to translate any book by me as yourself, for I shd then feel quite safe.— I demurred to agreeing at once to M. Koch, as I had formerly been more annoyed, than you will readily believe, by thinking that my last Book would prove not worth translating.3 Moreover it has occurred to me, but on that head I must make enquiries, that I ought to receive some small payment for the right of Translation, as my Books seem to sell well.4 But as I have said I must make enquiries on that head.— Already one publisher in Germany has made offers to me but I gave him no definite answer.—
I shall be delighted to make your personal acquaintance when you come to England.5
Believe me | My dear Sir | Yours sincerely | Ch. Darwin
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-6954,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on