168

OverviewTranscribeVersionsHelp

Here you can see all page revisions and compare the changes have been made in each revision. Left column shows the page title and transcription in the selected revision, right column shows what have been changed. Unchanged text is highlighted in white, deleted text is highlighted in red, and inserted text is highlighted in green color.

3 revisions
mdierks at Jun 09, 2020 11:40 AM

168

West Chester, Chester Co. Penna., Dec. 20 1881

Dear Professor Bessey; I am just in receipt of [yours?].
I have been thinking for some time that I ought to occasionally
contribute toward the Am. Nat. I was among its earliest contributors. I
continued in full sympathy with it until some of my notes were doctored
by editors in such a way as placed me in a very unpleasant relation to a
valued friend whose book I was supposed to have reissued. Appeal to the
authorities produced hardly any other reply than that they had used their privilege.
Of course I simply withdrew. Under present administration my intention
is all right. But I am now and probably shall be crowded to the
very wall for the next six month for time. After that, I hope to be able to
appear again. My pupils [?] will in another year be able to
write something creditable, and the Naturalist will probably come in
for a full share. I am engaged in a large undertaking which will
probably not be [?] for some time, as it is not yet far enough
along to have taken shape. I use your text book and find it fills the
bill for laboratory work absolutely. We all are inyour debt.

As for [?], our great advantage of being kept busy
is that I had hardly thought of the thing except to send
a short and pleasantly written reply, probably it should have
been more serious and agreeable, but I thought very little
about it save to guess that it was [?] between

168