My father, who was the wisest man I ever knew, thought it the duty of every man, young & old, to keep an account of his money; & I very unwillingly obeyed him; for I was not always so bothersome an old fellow as I daresay I appear to you. . . .
My dear Father,
I have sent cheque to a repeated bill from Griffin. A thermometer has come from Kew, For which I have also paid.
I go on maundering about the pulvinus, & from what I have seen roughly in the petioles of the Cotyledons of oxalis, I conclude that a pulvinus must be developed from ordinary cells.
I have tried watering Porliera out of doors, I gave four small cans full in the day & next morning it was wide open though for several days before it had been shut. The ***-plant is very unhealthy I am afraid As its leaves are dropping off at the stalk.
I was very glad to find that Sachs is dead against all the people that find the Descendenz theory in Ray, Lamarck, Goethe &c.; Sachs says that he believes some ferns of the family Marratiaceae sleep . . .
Dear F,
I have finished the long chapter on Sleeping Plants & sent it to Mr Norman to copy & diagrams to Mr Cooper.
I am now looking over piles of notes on Heliotropism. I am more perplexed than ever about life of Dr. D: Hen thinks it very dull, & wants it much shortened & otherwise arranged. Erasmus likes it. Your mother wants parts shortened. I shall take it on Aug. 1st to the Lakes & finish it there.