Canterbury Pieces by Samuel Butler
page 7 of 53 (13%)
page 7 of 53 (13%)
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My dear Sir,--I thank you sincerely for your kind and frank letter,
which has interested me greatly. What a singular and varied career you have already run. Did you keep any journal or notes in New Zealand? For it strikes me that with your rare powers of writing you might make a very interesting work descriptive of a colonist's life in New Zealand. I return your printed letter, which you might like to keep. It has amused me, especially the part in which you criticise yourself. To appreciate the letter fully I ought to have read the bishop's letter, which seems to have been very rich. You tell me not to answer your note, but I could not resist the wish to thank you for your letter. With every good wish, believe me, my dear Sir, Yours sincerely, Ch. Darwin. It is curious that in this correspondence Darwin makes no reference to the fact that he had already had in his possession a copy of Butler's dialogue and had endeavoured to induce the editor of an English periodical to reprint it. It is possible that we have not here the whole of the correspondence which passed between Darwin and Butler at this period, and this theory is supported by the fact that Butler seems to take for granted that Darwin knew all about the appearance of the original dialogue on the ORIGIN OF SPECIES in the PRESS. |
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