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Physical location:
Barr Smith Library, University of Adelaide, SA. 83.08.23
Plant names
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Minuria denticulata
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Minuria denticulata
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Minuria integerrima
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Minuria integerrima
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Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to Ralph Tate, 1883-08-23. 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/83-08-23>, accessed September 11, 2025
23/8/83
Let it remain an open question for a while, dear Professor Tate, whether
and M. denticulata are to be combined. Remember that most (if not perhaps all) of
our perennial herbaceous plants are flowering in the first season, thus look as if
they had an annual root. This — often from my notes — is pointed out in the Fl. Austr.
as regards many cases. I feel almost sure, that M. integerrima becomes perennial
also. Nevertheless no one should "in verba magistri jurare".
I am glad you go again to the north, before the spring-flowers pass away. Look to
the minutest plants particularly.
Minuria integerrima
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1
Bentham (1863-78).
2
'swear to the words of any master' (Horace).
About 40 species have been added to the Census in this year already irrespective of
additional notes, much through your cooperation; so a good supplement can be given
at the end of the year.
From Bentham's last remarks in the L.S. journal
I can only regret, that I not left him inexperienced, unguided and unguarded to his
own limited Australian resources for the Flora Australiensis, when he invoked my cooperation
or aid (whatever you like to call it) in 1862. — I could have followed him with a
Flora of my own then. He is fast failing in strength, which to learn I much regret,
3
M is probably referring to the following comments by Bentham, read to the Linnean
Society (London) and published in the Society's journal (Bentham [1883], pp. 304-5):
… the 'Flora Australiensis' is sometimes quoted as the joint work of Bentham and Mueller,
when it is entirely and exclusively mine, with the assistance indeed, but not the
"cooperation," of Baron v. Mueller, this assistance being of precisely the same description
as that which I derived from the herbarium and detailed MS. descriptions of Robert
Brown, from the herbarium and notes of A. Cunningham, from the rich herbaria of Kew,
from the 'Flora Tasmanica' and other published works of the Hookers, as well as from
the numerous instructive notes of the Hookers, of Planchon, and others who had worked
in the herbarium. In the case of Baron v. Mueller, however, the extreme liberality
with which he gave up in my favour his own projects for a general Flora of Australia,
and the great value for my purposes of the very numerous specimens of each species
which he had collected into the Melbourne herbarium, the whole of which he unreservedly
lent to me, seemed to me to demand a special recognition in the titlepage of the 'Flora,'
which has thus been miscontrued into an indication of cooperation. A joint work was
impossible where consultation was prevented by the great distance which separated
us; to procure an answer to the simplest question required four or five months. The
descriptions in the 'Flora' are drawn up from the actual examination of specimens,
generally checked by a comparison with the MS. notes and printed works above referred
to, amongst which Baron v. Mueller's 'Fragmenta.' regularly transmitted to me as printed,
bear a prominent part. Nothing in my work is merely copied, except in a very few cases
where the material at my disposal was insufficient, and where I have specially referred
to my authority. The method and classification are entirely mine, though of course
derived from general and other published botanical works.
Regardfully
your
Ferd. von Mueller.
Your list of the Lake Torrens plants
reminds me of my travelling to near Mt Hopeless
in Sept & October 1851!
4
R. Tate (1883b).
5
Both places in SA.