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Did you look to this, and can you tell me anything about it? I hope with all my heart that you are getting on pretty well with your experiments. I have been led to think a good deal on the subject, and am convinced of its high importance, though it will take years of hammering before physiologists will admit that the sexual organs only collect the generative elements. The edition will be published in November, and then you will see all that I have collected, but I believe that you gave all the more important cases.
The case of vine in "Gardeners' Chronicle," which I sent you, I think may only be a bud-variation not due to grafting.
I have heard indirectly of your splendid success with nerves of medusae. We have been at Abinger Hall for a month for rest, which I much required, and I saw there the cut-leaved vine which seems splendid for graft hybridism. LETTER 271.
TO FRANCIS GALTON.
Down, November 7th, 1875. I have read your essay with much curiosity and interest, but you probably have no idea how excessively difficult it is to understand. (271/1.
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