Document information
Physical location:
Grey Papers, GL M50(13), Auckland Public Library, Auckland. 77.07.12Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to George Grey, 1877-07-12. 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/77-07-12>, accessed September 11, 2025
1
A copy of M’s visiting card is attached (GL M50(13) att.).
I was pleasingly surprised, dear Sir George, to receive so kind and encouraging a
letter from you,
with such glorious words on my poor “select plants”.
To see so much praise bestowed on this little book by so learned and enlightened
a man as yourself, is a great triumph to me indeed. Had the Department, from which
this work emanated, not been broke up, the pages of this unpretensive book might have
advanced much farther during the last four years. As it is, it embraces researches
of mine during my 17 years of Directorship, and these researches will with fair means
perhaps be resumed, as my Department is under the process of reconstruction.
2
Letter not found.
3
B76.12.04.
4
A Parliamentary Board of Inquiry had just reported on ways to improve the facilities
available to M; see L. Smith to G. Berry, 11 July 1877 (in this edition as M77-07-11).
Perhaps it may be fairly claimed, that no work similar in brevity and completeness
(up to recent time exists in the literature of any country or any nation; and if providence
spares me strength and health, I intend to write a collateral volume for intra-tropic
countries,
which would bring in the two volumes all utilitarian plants of importance from any
part of the globe together.
5
No such work was published.
I have had some correspondence with the Chief Secretarys Office at Wellington concerning
the reissue of the work in New Zealand, and was willing to concede the rights of doing
so without remuneration. The offer was accepted, but it seems, that as yet no action
in this matter has been taken, on account of the pressure of work on the Gov. Printers
Department in Wellington
6
See also M to G. Grey, 31 December 1879; M to J. Hector, 10 August 1874; G. Cooper to M, 6 October 1874 (in this edition as 74-10-06b); M to G. Cooper, 3 November 1874.
The best plan would be, to provide on the estimates there £200 or £300
specially
, for the reprint of 2000 copies, and it would be a wise act, to distribute the copies
gratuitously throughout your colony. For a a
comparatively small sum, thus an immensity of good might be done permanently.
7
a repeated at beginning of line.
Since the publication here, I have added about 75 species of plants of more or less
importance, besides notes to those in the volume. I have prepared also a systematic
index, which in a very instructive way classes the plants scientifically, and also
an index of latin synonymes (such as occur in the work) is ready. This would enlarge
the volume from to 300 to about 350 pages.
If your Government still likes to reproduce the work I would send
at once
an interpaged copy, in which all the additions at the proper place are legibly written,
and Dr Hector might put his name on the title page as editor of the New Zealand edition,
and I would like to dedicate the edition to the Marquis of Normanby
and yourself.
8
Governor of NZ at the time.
The title might be changed from Victorian to “extra tropical” culture and the edition be called the “enlarged New Zealand edition”
When enjoying the hospitality of Count de Zaba
here, I met your friends, Mrs Keesing and her charming young daughters.
Regardfully, dear Sir George, yours
9
Count and Miss de Zaba arrived in Sydney from San Francisco on Zeelandia on 19 June 1876. He gave a lecture on his mnemonics system at the Melbourne Atheneum
on 14 October 1876 (Argus, 16 October 1876, p. 7), and one on 'the history and literature of Poland' on 2 November
1876 (Argus, 2 November 1876, p. 7. De Zaba gave similar lectures in New Zealand (e.g.,
Evening post (Wellington), 9 March 1878, p. 2).
10
Probably part of the family of the NZ businessman Henry Keesing (1791-1879).
Ferd von Mueller