9 February 1826
My dear Sir
You will have received this morning a very good days report, and I trust we are by no means at the end of our list.
I have to return you thanks for your many communications and assure you that the correction of addresses [illeg.] already proved of the greatest use.
I take the liberty of putting under cover to you a rough book containing the greatest part of what now remains to be explored on the various points already referred.
I remain
D Sir
very faithfully yrs
L. Sulivan
Please cite as “HENSLOW-852,” in Ɛpsilon: The Correspondence of John Stevens Henslow accessed on 29 April 2024, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/henslow/letters/letters_852