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Updated: June 18, 2025


Hoping you are quite well and are getting on with your Man book, believe me, dear Darwin, yours very faithfully, P.S. When you have read the proof and done with it, may I beg you to return it to me? Down, Beckenham, Kent, S.E. January 26, .

We must be thankful for small mercies. James Braid and I were once playing down at Beckenham. At one of the putting greens we were both a long way from the hole. My ball was a trifle the more distant of the two, and so I played the odd, and managed to get down a wonderfully fine putt. Then Braid played the like and holed out also. These were two rather creditable achievements with our putters.

Believe me, dear Darwin, yours very faithfully, Down, Beckenham, Kent. July 9. My dear Wallace, Dr. G. Krefft has sent me the enclosed from Sydney. I hope that the world goes well with you. Do not trouble yourself by acknowledging this. Ever yours,

Again thanking you for your kindness, believe me yours very faithfully, Down, Beckenham, Kent. January 10, 1881. My dear Wallace, I am heartily glad that you are pleased about the memorial. I do not feel that my opinion is worth much on the point which you mention.

While the troops were advancing, Captain Beckenham in the "Association," of ninety guns, laid his broadside against a battery of seventeen guns on the left side of the harbour, and Captain Wyvill in the "Barfleur" was sent to batter the fort on the other side, while there was a considerable firing from great guns and small-arms on both sides.

I believe the Beckenham authorities are doing all they can to impart a little more comfort to the ladies' changing and resting-room, and they have greatly improved their accommodation. It is time other meetings followed their example. At the seaside meetings it does not so much matter.

Down, Beckenham, Kent. June 5, 1876. My dear Wallace, I must have the pleasure of expressing to you my unbounded admiration of your book, though I have read only to page 184 my object having been to do as little as possible while resting. I feel sure that you have laid a broad and safe foundation for all future work on Distribution.

Many thanks for your kind invitation. I will try and call some day, but I am now very busy trying to make my house habitable by Lady Day, when I must be in it. Believe me yours very faithfully, Down, Beckenham, Kent. July 27, 1872. My dear Wallace, I have just read with infinite satisfaction your crushing article in Nature.

Craik having been so kind as to offer any service she could render, I wrote to her on the subject, and she answered: "BECKENHAM. July 19, 1868. "My dear Mrs. Hamerton, I can quite understand how you care about the book perhaps more than your husband even, and I wish I could send you news of it. But there have been no reviews as yet, and this being the dull time of year, the sale is slow.

It is very clever, but the writer seems a little like those critics who know an author's or an artist's meaning better than they do themselves. My house is now in the hands of a contractor, but I am wall-building, etc., and very busy. With best wishes, believe me, dear Darwin, yours very faithfully, Down, Beckenham, Kent. July 12, 1871. My dear Wallace, Very many thanks.

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