Old Orchard,
Broadstone,
Dorset.
Jany 27th 1913
Dear Mr Marchant
I shall be much pleased to see you whenever you can make it convenient. I was much glad to have your letter of this morning & sent reply by wire as you wished.
Will you be so good as to send me the last letter I wrote you giving the proposed subjects of the additions to this book, as I have no copy [2] of it and I am not quite sure of the points to be discussed as then stated. I wrote it off in a hurry, but I often see more clearly at such times. I do not want to omit anything of importance as I think the book, as enlarged, will be a work of some permanent value both at home & abroad.
Yours very truly | Alfred R. Wallace [signature] [3]
P.S. I should like to see that book of Flinders Petrie's advocating non-interference with selection of man by disease &c. If you can bring it when you come it will do.
A.R.W. [4]
Status: Draft transcription [Letter (WCP6581.7587)]
For more information about the transcriptions and metadata, see https://wallaceletters.myspecies.info/content/epsilon
Please cite as “WCP6581,” in Beccaloni, G. W. (ed.), Ɛpsilon: The Alfred Russel Wallace Collection accessed on 28 April 2024, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/wallace/letters/WCP6581