14 Old Burlington St. W | London
21 Augst. 1871.
Dear Mr. Darwin,
I have seen Mr. Youman & thank you for sending him to me. I do not see that other than good results can spring for any author from an arrangement for having his book brought out in America even shd. he get no “profit”.1 It happens that in despair of finding time to complete my new book soon I have been considering suggestions offered from various quarters for a New Edition of Primitive Marriage which is out of print & in regard to which Yr. own friendly observations must have helped to set people on their enquiry.2 I have promised in the event of resolving on a new Edition to let Mr. Youman have plates for the American Market.—3
I hope you are now comparatively well. When lately at Sir John Lubbock’s it was a disappointment to me to find you were from home.4 I hope that next year I may sometimes have the pleasure of meeting you at the house of my very old & excellent friend Litchfield in whom I am certain you will feel happy as having him for son in law.5
I shd. now be in the North but am detained here by illness—a bad cold ending in congestion of the left-lung which however is yielding to sharp treatment.
Believe me Yours very sincerely | J. F. Mc Lennan.
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-7913,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on