Royal Gardens Kew
June 15/72
Dear Darwin
A thousand thanks:— you were right to return the address to Tyndall. I quite expect that it will make Gladstone frantic— he is already utterly out of temper with my affair—but I must put a good face on it.— I don’t tell Tyndall this.1
The Govt now regret having granted Ld Derby the correspondence in the upper House! I have obliged Lubbock to postpone this moving from there in the lower till Monday—2 this looks fishy as the boys say.
My wife is at St. Albans for change of air, not that she is ill but terribly harrassed with this affair she returns on Wednesday.3 Thank God my mother4 does not yet know of it. Ld. J. Manners is very kind, he reminds me that it will render it impossible for Ayrton & me to hold our relative positions.5
I hold to my old motto “Servate animam æquam”6 with what tenacity I can, but need hardly conceal, that my frame of mind is hardly philosophical, under the circumstances of the last few weeks!
I do long for rest
Ever dear old friend | Yours | J D Hooker
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-8386,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on