To J. S. Henslow 16 May [1845]
Down Bromley Kent
May 16th
My dear Henslow
The Lyells have been staying here & we have just heard from them that Mrs. Henslow has lately been much out of health. Their account referred to some little time ago, & I sincerely hope it does not now apply: do pray sometime before very long let me have a line to say how she is.
I am at work with a second edition of my Journal for Murray to bring out cheap, viz at 7s’6d in his Colonial Library: I find a good deal to alter in the scientific part: doing this work reminds me regularly of your great kindness in undergoing the wearisome labour of looking through all the proof-sheets. I hope, also, this autumn to get out my last Geological part & right glad shall I be, for I am wearied with S. America; your words’, which at first astounded me, viz that it wd take me twice the number of years of the voyage to publish its results, will be more than verifyed.
I heard lately from Hooker,1 who gives me a wonderful account of the Galapagos plants—12 new genera of the Compositæ, all confined to the group & no one species found on two islands!
I was telling my Father at Shrewsbury (where I have lately been) that you had gone into the Barberry versus corn-question & that you were a disbeliever:2 on which he told me he had once had his attention called by a farmer to a very large field of corn, in the one of the hedges of which there were at almost regular intervals Barberry bushes, & my Father declares, that from each of them a wedge, pointing obliquely into the field, of discoloured corn, was most conspicuous. Next year the Barberries were all grubbed up.
When at Shrewsbury I read an article in the last Edinburgh Review on the Claims of Labour,3 which interested me but I do not know how far you would agree with the writer.— I have often thought that I was foolish to trouble you with my remarks on this subject; but your letter set me thinking, & thoughts whether right or wrong, new or very old, like to make their escape.
Believe me my dear Henslow, ever yours | C. Darwin
Footnotes
Bibliography
Jenyns, Leonard. 1862. Memoir of the Rev. John Stevens Henslow, late rector of Hitcham, and professor of botany in the University of Cambridge. London: John Van Voorst.
Mill, John Stuart. 1845. The claims of labour: an essay on the duties of the employers to the employed. Edinburgh Review 81: 498–525.
Summary
Is at work on second edition of Journal of researches.
Hopes to finish geology of the Beagle by autumn.
Hooker gives "a wonderful account" of Galapagos plants.
Letter details
- Letter no.
- DCP-LETT-868
- From
- Charles Robert Darwin
- To
- John Stevens Henslow
- Sent from
- Down
- Source of text
- American Philosophical Society (Mss.B.D25.)
- Physical description
- ALS 4pp
Please cite as
Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 868,” accessed on 26 September 2022, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-868.xml
Also published in The Correspondence of Charles Darwin, vol. 3