Document information
Physical location:
Box 241/3 Shillinglaw papers, La Trobe Australian manuscripts collection, State Library of Victoria, Melbourne. 79.03.31aPreferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to John Shillinglaw, 1879-03-31 [79.03.31a]. 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/1870-9/1879/79-03-31a-final.odt>, accessed June 13, 2026
1
MS annotation: 'Recd. 3.IV.79.'
Herewith, dear Mr Shillinglaw, I return the letter of Sir Joseph.
Why is it necessary to dwell so much on
Jorgenson?
after his degraded life? He can add neither lustre nor information concerning Flinders's discoveries.
— Whatever you do,
quote not Sir Joseph's unhappy
comparison to that of Humboldts visage without
special
permission. It would sully your book! and was not intended for publication, while
Baron Humboldts memory should be dear to all of us.
2
Joseph Hooker. Letter not found.
3
Jorgenson was a crew member of Lady Nelson, which accompanied Flinders' Investigator from Port Jackson, NSW, northwards to map the east coast of Australia from May until
October 1802, when it was sent back from the Cumberland Islands, Qld, to Port Jackson,
after damage to its keels.
In reference to information of R Brown
I could
help
you. 1, with a good likeness and secondly with
autographic
words of his, though I have not his signature.
I could also furnish a note on his writings, & have only just referred to him in
my preface to the new School-book on Victorian plants.
If you would call some day, say Saturday afternoon early, we could consult about
your requirements, but my mind is so much taxed, that I do not wish to write more
than I can help and must talk it over with you first.
4
Robert Brown (1773-1858).
5
In M to A. de Candolle, 4 August 1880, M said he had received 'specimens of R. Brown' from Joseph Hooker; he may here be
referring to labels on some of these. (Most of Brown's specimens now held at MEL did
not arrive until 1882; see M to J. Hooker, 22 May 1882.)
6
B79.06.04, pp. xiii-xiv: 'But for an advanced learning in the Australian vegetation
the "Prodromus" of R. Brown will always remain the firm though unfinished basis; indeed
no subsequent individual researches can compare in importance to those carried on
by that great man already in the beginning of this century, when it fell to his enviable
share under the most favorable circumstances to examine personally the vegetation
of our island-continent along much of its litoral tracts, and thereby to continue
what was begun by Sir Joseph Banks; thus R. Brown's illustrious name has become impressed
on every square-mile of this great portion of Her Majesty's possessions for all ages,
through the thousands of plants, which he as the first in the field discovered, many
of which carrying his name from the oceanic shores also to Central Australian regions.'
Can you not spare me a
single
letter from Flinders for a friend in Italy,
who has a large collection of autograms of celebrated men. I shall be glad to pursue
your "records".
7
Possibly Maria Negri. Shillinglaw did supply a specimen of Flinders' signature; see
M to J. Shillinglaw, 3 July 1879.
8
peruse?
9
Shillinglaw (1879).
With best regards
Ferd. von Mueller.
I hardly ever am in town, so could not well call at your office