Down, | Beckenham, Kent. | Railway Station | Orpington. S.E.R.
Feb. 10th
My dear Hooker
I was very glad to get your letter for I had been wishing to hear from you.— It seems to me an excellent plan, you & Harriet going to Algeria, as it will be so complete a change for your mind & a sort of rest for your body.2 How slow the government is about your affair of the Assist. Secy; I wish it could have been all arranged & that you had Dyer before your journey.—3 I saw in the newspaper that Lord H. had eaten dirt,— that is that he had arranged affairs, & wd. remain in office.—4 I did not tell you before, but the Edinburgh Drosophyllum arrived, owing no doubt to the carelessness of the Railway, with the pot above & below both smashed: we thought the plant was not much hurt, but it never rallied & very slowly died & is now stone dead.5 This is very provoking, but no care was spared.— You ask about my book & all that I can say is that I am ready to commit suicide: I thought it was decently written, but find so much wants rewriting, that it will not be ready to go to Printers for 2 months & will then make a confoundedly big book.— Murray will say that it is no use publishing in the middle of the summer, so I do not know what will be the upshot; but I begin to think that everyone who publishes a book is a fool.6
—Horace showed me a paragraph in the Engineer, with an abstract of an account from Alp De Candolle of what seems a very curious case, of earth which has been covered with slag from the silver mines of Laurium for 1400 years, when uncovered, producing many plants of a Glaucium of an unknown form—ie var or species.— This sounds like a good case in favour of the belief, which I am ready to swear to.— Have you seen any such account.?7
Thank you for telling me about poor old Sir C. L.—8 I feared that after paralysis & epilepsy his mind wd. have been a mere wreck.— Have you ever come across Mivart?9
Ever yours affect | C. Darwin
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-9850,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on