42 Rutland Gate SW
Jan 9/71
My dear Darwin
I had not the least doubt but that I could have sent you before now, definite results about my rabbits but I cannot;—you must have patience with me & wait yet longer.1 The cold has killed one litter to which I had looked forward & I have had a series of other mishaps not worth specifying, the result of which is that I have only one silver grey litter to go by—viz: that of which I told you, which included a yellow one, slaty grey on the belly, with some white on his tail. I should have thought this a great success but it may be pronounced a ‘yellow smut’. Another result is that I have built a good serviceable little house for the rabbits in my own back yard & have all the best of them under my own eye, now.2
The litter that died from the cold, looked very hopefully marked—but I think one cannot trust to, apparently, pied markings in very young silver greys.— I will write again as soon as I have definite results. & when the little yellow fellow is somewhat older, he is now 6 weeks, I will get opinions about him.
Very sincerely yours | Francis Galton
If you can easily lay your hands upon Gould’s anthropol: N. America I shd be grateful for it.3
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-7432,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on