Document information
Physical location:
RB MSS M4,Library, Royal Botanic GardensMelbourne. 65.09.21Preferred Citation:
George Bentham to Ferdinand von Mueller, 1865-09-21. R.W. Home, Thomas A. Darragh, A.M. Lucas, Sara Maroske, D.M. Sinkora, J.H. Voigt and Monika Wells (eds), Correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller, <https://vmcp.rbg.vic.gov.au/id/65-09-21>, accessed April 19, 2025
25 Wilton Place
London S.W.
Sept. 21 1865
My dear Sir
You will probably have heard by last mail of the great loss we have sustained in the
death of Sir William Hooker on the 12th of last month after an illness of three days.
He was in the full enjoyment of all his faculties both of body and mind on the Tuesday
preceeding and having passed his eightieth year and come to his end without suffering
one cannot but feel that there is much to be thankful for. Dr Hooker having gone to
sleep in a draught whilst watching his father was laid prostrate by a violent attack of acute rheumatism with fever, he could not leave his bed for above a fortnight and untill last week we were very
uneasy about him. He is now much better and is gone today to Buxton where the waters
are celebrated for rheumatic complaints and we trust that in a few weeks more he will
be able to return to Kew and take up his father's duties. In the mean time he has
as yet very little use of his hands and has I believe scarcely yet been able to hold
a pen. I have been out of town for the last two months and only came up for Sir William's
funeral, and now again to see Dr Hooker before he left — by the end of next week I
hope to be fairly at work again.
I have received I believe two of your letters since I last wrote —those of 25 May
and 11 June — the box per Sussex, with supplementary Myrtaceae, has safely arrived.
1
I am sorry that you have paid the freight. As I wrote once before
there are great difficulties here in prepaying the boxes sent
from
the Establishment at Kew but none in paying the freight on boxes
received
there. It would be a great deal better for you only to pay for the boxes
returned
to you and leave us to pay the freight on the boxes you send. As it is, for what is
past, if you will let me know what you have paid I will myself send you the amount.
2
See G. Bentham to M, 24 November 1864.
I have examined the two Rubiaceae you send and ask about.
The one (Dichostachys) is certainly a congener of
Antirrhea
.
Whether that genus ought or ought not to be united with Guettarda remains to be ascertained
and it will also require further examination to ascertain whether your species is
really a new one which I believe it to be. — The other (Woollsia) is a Lasianthus (Mephitidia Blume) very near L. obscura
Miq. (M. obscura Bl.) if not a variety of that species which is abundant in the Archipelago
and somewhat variable.
3
See M to G. Bentham, 11 June 1865.
4
Antirhea
?
5
L. obscurus
?
I have not heard anything of the draft for £100 you mention, but it is of no consequence
as it will not be strictly due to me untill next year when the 3d vol. will I hope
be out.
It would be a great convenience if you were to give a systematic index to the plants
described or commented on in your fragmenta and other papers, for it takes a great
deal of time to hunt up the scattered notices
and after all there is great risk of missing some as is unavoidable with regard to
the notices of Australian plants occasionally scattered in more or less obscure periodicals
both here and on the Continent
6
M did not publish a complete index to his own species, although B59.13.03 gave plants
he had published in Victoria up to that date, and B66.13.01, pp. 217-24 contains an
'Index ordinum et generum' of the first five volumes of his
Fragmenta. His complete censuses of all Australian genera and species were not published until
the 1880s (B82.07.05 and supplements, B83.03.04 and supplements, B89.12.03).
We are going to close our 2d part of the Genera
with what is now printed that is to the end of Myrtaceae — Dr Hooker had Melastomaceae
and all the remaining orders before Umbelliferae ready except the last revision which
was not quite finished and which he will not be able to complete for many months yet
and we are unwilling that what is in print should remain so long unpublished. This
part will therefore be one of 300 pages only and the 3d part (to include all before
Compositae) will conclude the 1st vol.
7
Bentham & Hooker (1862-83); part 2 of vol.1 was publlshed on 19 October 1865 (TL2).
Ever yours sincerely
George Bentham
Dr F. Mueller FRS
&c
Antirrhea
Dichostachys
Guettarda
Lasianthus obscura
Melastomataceae
Mephitidia obscurus
Myrtaceae
Rubiaceae
Umbelliferae
Woollsia