ee 
&T. 65.] TO JOHN #. REDFIELD. 659 
May 21. 
. I have here and there seen references to St. 
Augustine as maintaining views of indirect creation, 
such as now would be termed, or might be termed, 
evolutionary. Can you conveniently put me in the 
way of understanding his ideas? It is matter for 
you to work up in your article on Calvinism and Evo- 
lution. . 
December 20. 
es ou see No. 1 of the new agnostic bina 
“ Evolution,” and its review of ‘ Darwiniana”’ ? 
insists that such a world as ours is too full of imper- 
fections to have had any intellectual originator. . . . 
TO JOHN H. REDFIELD. 
July 1, 1876. 
Dear Reprreip, —I doubt if you know that the 
late John Stuart Mill, the philosopher, was a keen 
botanist. His herbarium, rich in European plants 
and with a good many Indian, ete. (small specimens 
from Royle, ete.), was given by his stepdaughter to 
Kew. But Hooker skeen leave, after taking a certain 
amount, to present the rest to me, with leave to choose 
where all I did not care to have incorporated in the 
herbarium here should go to. I think it should go 
to a public herbarium, and as I think the Academy’s 
is not supplied well with European species of at all 
recent date, or recent collecting, perhaps it should go 
to you... . 
TO MRS. GRAY. 
June 11, 1876. 
. . To get my train yesterday I had to leave the 
house at one. Dom Pedro till sixteen minutes of that, 
