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RBG Kew, Kew correspondence, Australia, Mueller, 1871-81, ff. 308-9. 81.06.29

Preferred Citation:

Ferdinand von Mueller to Joseph Hooker, 1881-06-29. 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/1880-9/1881/81-06-29-final.odt>, accessed June 13, 2026

29/6/81
So you are back, dear Sir Joseph, from your scientific pilgrimages to the genial clime of Italy, for which delightful travels you may well be enveyed with such a companion as Dr Asa Gray & your Ladies too!
1
J. Hooker and his wife toured Europe with Asa Gray and his wife in the spring of 1881 (J. Gray (1894), vol. 2, pp. 701-25).
You will have escaped one portion of the northern winter at least.
I am glad, that the redflowered var. of Correa Lawrenciana still lives with you. It wants a large tub with the richest forest-soil, to give it a chance to expand into its almost tree-like dimensions. That it is such a large tall species in comparison to all others, must be the cause of its not yet having flowered already. At Arran
2
The island of Arran, in the Firth of Clyde in Scotland, is warmed by the Gulf Stream.
at all events & in the channel Islands it would be hardy. At 5000' here it has to undergo ordeals of severe frosts and gets covered with snow for long periods.
Pilocarpin by its powerful action on the salivary glands & mucous membranes throws of the fungaceous false membrane in even late & severe stages of Diphtheria. A minute fractional quantity is injected hypodermically. Even in Germany, where the discovery was made, it seems too little known, considering how many a valuable life may be saved by the use of this alkaloid, the action of which is so rationally explained by former uses of the leaves in Brazil.
3
See entry for Pilocarpus pinnatifolius in B80.13.07 and subsequent editions of Select extra-tropical plants.
Regardfully your
Ferd von Mueller.
The sons of the Prince of Wales are just arrived.
4
Albert Victor Christian Edward, Duke of Clarence (1864-92), and George Frederick Ernest Albert (1865-1936), Duke of York (later King George V), were sent in 1879 by their father, Edward, Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII) on a 3-year cruise of the Mediterranean and the British colonies in HMS Bacchante. The Princes visited Albany (WA), then Adelaide, Melbourne, Ballarat, Sydney and Brisbane; see DNB and also Dalton (1886). They arrived in Melbourne on 18 June 1881 (Argus, 20 June 1881).
Schomburgk, Moore & the Gardener here
5
William Guilfoyle.
are or will be in attendance on their Royal Highnesses, but with me it is now painfully & undeservedly different to what it was when the Prince Alfred paid his visits to Australia.
6
When Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh, visited Melbourne in 1867, M met him on more than one occasion and showed him around the Botanic Garden (Knight 1868).
In all probability I shall not even have an opportunity to be introduced to the young Princes, though several of the Surgeons of the Escadre
7
squadron? HMS Bacchante was accompanied by HMS Cleopatra.
have kindly called on me on my poor little place where I live forlorn & do such office work as is possible still under the oppression towards me.
8
The sons … towards me is written on a separate sheet and may belong to another letter.