Darwin, C. R. to Innes, J. B.
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Etty [Henrietta Darwin] much improved.
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Reference to his "hobby of striped asses".
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Sceptical of JBI's "curious stories" on spirit-tapping: "believe nothing one hears & only half of what one sees".
Summary Add
Transcription
Down Bromley Kent
Sept. 6
Dear Innes
Many thanks for your kind enquiries about Etty. I am glad to be able to give a
decidedly better account, though her progress is excessively slow. She now sits up
several hours every day & has taken two or three very short drives. What is best
of all is that the Doctors are now convinced there is no organic mischief.— We
have had an unhappy Summer; but I hope the worst is over.— I am glad to have a
pretty good account of your son; & I hope M
I hope you have not given up thinking about Down; though what house you could get, I
cannot tell. I hear dreadful reports on the state of M
What stories one hears about the spirit-rapping now-a-days— the old saying to believe nothing one hears & only half of what one sees is a golden rule.
Farewell | with every good wish. | < >
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- f1 2907.f1
John William Brodie Innes and Eliza Mary Innes. - +
- f2 2907.f2
Innes, perpetual curate of Down, had been unable to secure a house for his family in Down. Robert Ainslie, the owner of Tromer Lodge, had left the village late in 1858 (see Correspondence vol. 7, letter to W. E. Darwin, 14 [May 1858] and n. 5). - +
- f3 2907.f3
William Walker Phillips lived at Down Hall farm (Post Office directory for the six home counties 1859). CD discussed the stripes of asses in Variation 1: 62--4, but Phillips is not cited. - +
- f4 2907.f4
CD's signature has been excised.