I868.J AND SELF-FERTILISA1I0N.' 467 



necessary repetition. I shall be anxious to hear what you 



decide 



I most sincerely hope that your health has been fairly 

 good this summer. 



My dear Sir, yours very truly, 



Ch. Darwin. 



C. Darwin to Asa Gray. 



Down, October 28, 1876. 



My dear Gray, — I send by this post all the clean sheets 

 as yet printed, and I hope to send the remainder within a 

 fortnight. Please observe that the first six chapters are not 

 readable, and the six last very dull. Still I believe that the 

 results are valuable. If you review the book, I shall be very 

 curious to see what you think of it, for I care more for your 

 judgment than for that of almost any one else. I know also 

 that you will speak the truth, whether you approve or dis- 

 approve. Very few will take the trouble to read the book, 

 and I do not expect you to read the whole, but I hope you 

 will read the latter chapters. 



... I am so sick of correcting the press and licking my 

 horrid bad style into intelligible English. 



[The ' Effects of Cross and Self- fertilisation ' was published 

 on November 10, 1876, and 1500 copies were sold before the 

 end of the year. The following letter refers to a review in 

 1 Nature : ' *] 



C. Darwin to W. Thistelton Dyer. 



Down, February 16, 1877. 



Dear Dyer, — I must tell you how greatly I am pleased 



and honoured by your article in ' Nature,' which I have just 



read. You are an adept in saying what will please an author, 



not that I suppose you wrote with this express intention. 



* February 15, 1877. 



