Document information
Physical location:
RBG Kew. Kew Correspondence, Australia, Mueller. 1871-81. ff. 173-174. 76.02.24aPreferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to Joseph Hooker, 1876-02-24 [76.02.24a]. 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//letters/1870-9/1876/76-02-24a-final.odt>, accessed May 15, 2026
1
On black-edged paper.
24/2/76.
This month, dear Dr Hooker, I have been thrown into deep mourning through the death
of poor Dr Wehl, the husband of my only living sister.
He succumbed through the rupture of an Echinococcus-cyst of the larger omentum. It
was too late discovered & too late opened, though tumours in that position are frequently
beyond control. Thus the poor sufferer fell victim to medical practice, having probably
swallowed the ovum of the parasite at some poor country dwelling, where a country
practitioner amidst a sparse population is occasionally compelled far from home to
take his meals.
2
Eduard Wehl, husband of M's sister Clara, died on 11 February 1876.
I was not aware of his illness, til a few days before his death I was telegraphed
for. The large family of young children of my poor sister, who was married out of
the bot. Garden,
is utterly unprovided, while the ruin inflicted
undeservedly
on me by depriving me of my house, my staff, my votes & my plants, has left me unable
to do much for the afflicted family. I have however done what I could. One of the
saddest moments of my life was, when on the day after the burial, I brought back my
poor sister to her very very modest country-place, and the numerous children opened
us the gate without me bringing back their ever affectionate father.
3
27 October 1853, in the Duke of Wellington Hotel, Richmond (Victoria, Register of
marriages, 1853, no. 890).
I have never felt my own financial social and departmental ruin so keenly than on
that occasion. Let Mr Darwin speak on that subject to Mr Edw. Wilson
I thank you for your letter 22/12/75
and for the Museum plants - a rich selection - in prospectu. Too poor since several
years to keep a collector, I can only promise gradual return.
4
Letter not found.
As I think of it, I would mention, that I included the
big
Aloes amongst my supplemental industry-plants,
because surely they will be a richer source of the extract of Aloes than the smaller
species. In
our
climate such plants would moreover be more profitable for horticultural trade, than
many an oil-plant for a mill. Critics in "Nature"
& elsewhere should be more careful in their remarks, particularly so long as I am in distress & cope for the restoration of my departm. position.
5
B75.07.06, p. 46.
6
'Baron Ferdinand von Mueller… has just published a second supplement to his … "Select
Plants Readily Eligible for Victorian Industrial Culture" … Whether any of them are
worth the trouble of cultivation … the botanist will be able to decide upon by a mere
glance at the list. Thus we find included Aloe dichotoma, the Tree Aloe of Damara
and Namaqualand … scarcely an industrial plant, we should say.'
Nature, vol. 12, p. 426 (9 September 1875).
I recognize your disinterestedness concerning the elaboration of Papuan plants. If
we divide our work properly & aid each other, we may live to see the Flora of the
globe mainly completed by the end of the century, so far as systematic diagnosis is
concerned.
7
See also M to J. Hooker, 17 May 1875 (in this edition as 75-05-17c).
What a pity you could not have merged the Monochlamydeae for the genera
in the Calyciflorae.
8
Bentham & Hooker (1862-83); see Maroske (2006).
Always regardfully your
Ferd. von Mueller.
What a glorious work the genera will be for
all
times, as so few will have to be added. I have asked Mr Elder, to send a full set
of the plants of his Expedition to Kew. The rest of the new species will appear in
82 of fragmenta with the n.g. Wehlia
9
B76.03.01, p. 23. The expedition in question was Ernest Giles's expedition from the Overland Telegraph Line to Perth, 1875. Plants collected by a
member of the party, J. Young, at Ularring and other localities traversed by this
expedition, are described in B76.03.01 and subsequent numbers of the
Fragmenta; there are no species described from the other expedition active that year and financed
by Thomas Elder, that of J. W. Lewis (Threadgill (1922), pp. 154-66).
Aloe
Calyciflorae
Monochlamydeae
Wehlia