RECORD: Darwin, Emma. [1860.07]. Letter to William Erasmus Darwin. CUL-DAR210.6.57. Edited by John van Wyhe (Darwin Online, http://darwin-online.org.uk/)

REVISION HISTORY: Transcribed by Christine Chua and edited by John van Wyhe 8.2023. RN1

NOTE: See record in the Darwin Online manuscript catalogue, enter its Identifier here. Reproduced with permission of the Syndics of Cambridge University Library and William Huxley Darwin. The volume CUL-DAR210.6 contains correspondence of William Erasmus Darwin and family correspondence (1851-1896).

See Darwin's letter to William on 30 July 1860. Emma Darwin's diary recorded "stomach disordered much of day" on Monday 30 July, probably refers to Henrietta (Etty). Mr Williams is identified by the editors of the Darwin Correspondence as "Probably William Wallis, the surgeon and parish registrar in Hartfield, Sussex".
"Holland, Sir Henry, Bart, 1788-1873. Physician and travel writer. Physician to Queen Victoria. CD's second cousin." (Paul van Helvert & John van Wyhe, Darwin: A Companion, 2021.) Hensleigh Wedgwood, Emma's brother.


[1]

[July 1860]

My dear William

Thank you for your pleasant account of your gaieties. There are none of them that wd have quite suited me, more especially the necessity of being so very swell.

It is very disheartening, but I don't think poor Etty makes

[1v]

a bit of progress. She had a very bad day on Monday & that has pulled her back & she is only now up to her usual mark. Mr Williams says we cannot give her too much wine & brandy & all the food we can get her to take

[2]

Her has always said that it would be most lingering & that the only thing was to keep up her strength. He thinks her going on quite favorably & that we must have patience. Poor soul she has a great deal of patience

I think & is got in a manner used to it. She is as thin as possible. Aunt Eliz. is

[2v]

come to stay with us & help us & she will cheer us up. She brought such a pleasant letter from Amy giving an account of their voyage, when near Cronstadt a flock of little birds flew on deck, one of them a butcher bird which made the sailors very indignant by striking several of the others & killing them. They tried in vain to kill it

[3]

George came on Monday but had a dull visit with yr father & I so much up with Etty. He consoled himself tolerably with Parslow at billiards & the boys went several times with him to the big woods where he got a clear wing &c

[3v]

I think you had much better write to H.H. I was thinking of sending him a book by Smiles "Self Help" because I am sure it wd interest him, but he wd be much more pleased at your sending it him. If you do you might tell a Camb.

[4]

bookseller to send it to him by post. It cost 6/. It is a short account of almost all the great men who have raised themselves. We shall be very glad to see you on the 14 or 15

I am sorry to think we are sure to be here still. Hope says

[4v]

No. 17 is sold to a Turk or other Heathen from Bombay & they have to move out on the 21st or so & they can't get in to the other till Mich. [Michaelmas] so they are on the wide world. The Turk jumped at Uncle Hensleighs offer so he was very sorry he did not ask more.

[from page 1:] Goodbye my dear old man.

yours E.D


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Citation: John van Wyhe, ed. 2002-. The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online. (http://darwin-online.org.uk/)

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