To W. E. Darwin 6 [June 1861]
Down.
6th.
My dear William.—
I enclose the £20.1 No news about your affair.2 I wish to God there was.— We clearly cannot go to Torquay on 10th.— I had long talk with J. Lubbock, who urged Mr. ——3 to prompt action. I see, if affair progresses, there will be much negotiation & very great difficulties of all kinds. But we have a true friend & good adviser in J. Lubbock.— It seems that the great Houses of Robarts & Lubbock joined on mere verbal agreement!4 It seems that much must be left to honour & mutual good feeling; & there is this protection that partners are like man & wife & it hurts both their reputations to part.— I shall be so sorry if you lose your Welch tour:5 but all is utterly dark.—
Good Bye my dear old sensible fellow, who will be the guardian of the Family. | C. D. Second note
Since writing, I have received enclosed. Lubbock urges us to meet him at their Bank on Saturday.6 Therefore I shall go up tomorrow (Friday) to 6 Queen Anne St.—7 You come there either Friday night or in good time on Saturday morning; for I shall start at eleven oclock to go to City.
I cannot understand as —— is now negotiating with another party, why he wants to see us: but I suppose he has got some loophole to escape. Anyhow it is worth the trouble.— I was glad to hear that Mr —— is a University man—8
When we meet I will tell name & place; but I had better not break my word yet.—
I wonder whether it will come to anything!
Yours | C. D
[Enclosure]
My dear L.
Many thanks for yr note. The gentn I mentioned in my last letter has asked for a few days to think the matter over which I have of course conceded. Therefore perhaps Mr D. wd let the proposition as regards his son remain in abeyance for a few days I am not in such great haste as Mr D. in his note supposes, but if it proceeds I shd like to have it settled by or as soon as possible after the 1st July.
As regards the years trial it wd hardly do. as it wd not obviate my reasons for taking a partner at once, the motive for which I think you are aware of. As time however is every thing what say you to the plan (under any circumstances) of Mr D. & his son meeting me on Sat in London to talk matters over, & we cd then mutually judge of each other. & he wd have more time for consideration in the event of the affair progressing.
Footnotes
Bibliography
Banking almanac: The banking almanac, directory, yearbook and diary. London: Richard Groombridge; Waterlow & Sons. 1845–1919.
Summary
Writes regarding the possibility of banking partnership for WED; second note arranges a meeting between the involved parties in London.
Letter details
- Letter no.
- DCP-LETT-3178
- From
- Charles Robert Darwin
- To
- William Erasmus Darwin
- Sent from
- Down
- Postmark
- JU 6 61
- Source of text
- DAR 210.6: 69–70
- Physical description
- ALS 4pp, encl 3pp
Please cite as
Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 3178,” accessed on 24 November 2024, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-3178.xml
Also published in The Correspondence of Charles Darwin, vol. 9