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RBG Kew, Kew Correspondence, Australia, Mueller, 1882-90, ff. 85-88. 84.03.11Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to Joseph Hooker, 1884-03-11. 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/84-03-11>, accessed September 11, 2025
Private
1
A tick in purple pencil has been added to the MS to the left of
Private.
11/3/84.
How sorrowful, dear Sir Joseph, that the great Bentham should not be able to enjoy
the late evening of his life in genuine happiness, watching and directing the progress
of others and living in daily interest and fruits of his labours. His case seems so
much sadder still, as he has no descendents; and he must feel thus inexpressively lonely and forlorn; though it must be a real consolation and comfort for him, to have
you
so near to him. This very absense of family-ties
I
can understand, thus I deeply feel for him; and when in late years I became oft melancholic,
it was largely because through endless persecutions and undeserved adversities I gradually
became too aged and so poor, that I could not build up a domestic home!
When I realized, that his feebleness was not a transient one, I have tried to do a
trifle to cheer him; and he became lately elected on my suggestion a hon. member of
the L.S. of Sydney. - Did I know, what might give him some little pleasure, possible
to be done by me, I would at once carry it out. Your letter is from the middle of
Jan; so the worst part of the winter will then soon have passed there, and perhaps
he will rally in the spring. Kindly express to him my deep sympathy, and assure him,
that I should always treasure my litterary auxiliary connection with him, as among
the greatest of the achievements of my poor life.
And now, while thanking you for your solicitude about my health, let me say, that
it is somewhat improved. To prevent progress of pulmonary disease is already a great
gain. I am fitted up for correspondence, routine-officework &c in a forestral region
of Gippsland
for the sake of the pure air, antiseptic Eucalyptus-vapour and tranquillity, so that
I need not speak almost every day from morn til eve as in my Office, and my lungs
get some rest; still this summer season has been unusually wet and cool; warm days
we had few; I am compelled to work here in a room without fireplace, and am very weak,
and my cough is only to some extent subdued, while the cold season is approaching
again. To go on a lengthened tour to the tropics is impossible since the intrusion
on my Department and its disruption took place; and I could not well trust myself
away, without giving up the rest of my position, [or] finding myself so impaired on my return, that
my difficulties would be still more augmented. If a pension should be perhaps
forced
on me, it would be extremely small, and I should be obliged to give up also the Herbarium
and Library. So I might just as well perish here, as linger on in a miserable existence.
Of course I may have too gloomy anticipations; but in letters from the Government
here I am only "the Gov Botanist", and all seems so cold, not to speak of daily jealousies.
2
Near Drouin, Vic; see M to J. Hooker, 2 March 1884.
You speak of a scientific expedition to New Guinea from Australia! I do not think
it likely that any means were forthcoming for that in these colonies except just for
emissaries of newspapers unless the great Papuan Island in its eastern half was annexed
to Australia. Personally, I could not share any more in rough exploration-work. I
am beyond the age for that, if even my pulmonary sufferings could be subdued; and
half my salary would during any absense of mine be required for my Office-place still
in a small private cottage in Melbourne, where there is so little working space, that
whatever I do is retarded and often beset with the greatest difficulty. If you were
only here for an hour you would realize all this. My position is in such a way taxed,
that I cannot add to the dwelling, unless I throw myself into debt. As however
one
of the most jealous and powerful adversaries of mine lately passed away,
I shall make again an effort, to get back again half the ground and half the Garden
vote; but while the man, who usurpates my place
has an absolute sinecure by nepotism and has any amount of time to misguide people
in reference to me and my wretched position I have no leisure to go out to plead my
cause, polititians and indeed almost no one comes near me, unless a few of my medical
friends in long intervalles, and they have quite enough to do in active practice,
to give me that strenuous and continuous support needed for the resuscitation of my
Department. Such can easily and quickly be destroyed, just like an exploring expedition
may at any moment be disbandend; but it is very difficult and often impossible to
reorganize it again. I trust, that when influential Australians come to Kew, that
you and your Assistants will impress on them, that to be a Gov. Botanist without a
Garden is an impossibility. Bentham[s] case is quite different; he is rich, had never
had any official obligations to the state, and even
he
, what could he have done without Kew, and what would the Kew-herbarium have been
without the Garden? As regards my using the garden, you must kindly remember, that
when I ceded before rude power, I did so under protest; so far as a Gov. Officer can protest that I should break by going to my garden,
though I am there in my thoughts in day-hours and in my dreams at night, - then with
such a person as Curator, as the individual, who with the greatest audacity continues
to style himself Director, is an impossibility; there aught to be also some "point d'honneur" to one's professional brethern abroad. - And if I even live, and go yet through some
years toil, to form a new garden, will it not be all altered into lawns, common flower-plots
&c so soon as I am dead?
3
J. G. Francis. See comment about Francis in M to J. Hooker, 25 December 1875, in this
edition as 75-12-25a.
4
William Guilfoyle.
Field work alone, even if I abandoned my position, does not work up any flora.
Here even this very day I shall do lots of things for the Melbourne-Exhibition soon
to be opened. But where is the laboratory now? Where the apparatus? Where the raw
material, where the manual working power. Last mail brought me letters from two University-Professors,
who after years of efforts and solicitation
did succeed to get a garden
, because even as mere teachers they found, that they could not do without a garden,
Prof Just in Carlsruhe and Prof. Gubler in Rostock.
5
Letters not found.
Had I remained in my garden, and had continued in a fairly roomy and at all events
healthy dwelling, I should not have become so susceptible to colds, as I have been
in later years, when I relapsed to my early phthisic disposition.
I have instructed my assistant in Melbourne, to send you by this post a copy of an
article, I wrote from here, prior to the receipt of your letter, for the Melbourne
Chemist
in reference to priority-claims; these remarks originating through Asa Gray's discussion of Alphonse de Candolle's last publication.
When D.C. sent me his,
I at once stood up for the
right
of the
genera
plantarum,
and wrote an appeal to the Bot. Centralblatt, which must since have appeared.
I have now followed it up; and as I am doubtless regarded in my far and disconnected
position in the field of Botany as a sort of "
free-lance
", I can speak with perfect independence and under no influence whatever.
6
B84.03.01.
7
A.
Gray (1883).
8
A. de
Candolle
(1883).
9
Bentham & Hooker (1862-83).
10
B84.04.05; the date of composition given at the foot of the article is 'November 1883'. See M to J. Hooker, 24 June 1884.
What I said on both occasion may perhaps have some little weight with the Committee,
which will deal with this priority-question in England. For my own part, I adhere to views, emanating from the purest
feeling of justice
, which should overrule all considerations of
form and usage
. No doubt Darwin's endowment for a new bot nomenclator (is that really the best name?
it savoures too much of former works)
is most munificent; but we should count it according to fortune; so I suppose, if
Dr Fr Darwin sent
£3000 to the widow and daughters of poor Hermann Mueller,
it would be proportionately not so much as the poor £3 - - forwarded to day by me.
11
The nomenclator when it appeared as B. Jackson (1895) was titled
Index kewensis.
12
There is a vertical red pencil line in the central margin of the MS to left of
Rev. B. Scortechini . . . Weld is sure,
and to the right of
it savoures too much of former . . . Dr. Fr. Darwin sent.
13
Heinrich Ludwig Hermann Müller (1829–83).
What glorious prospects for new material at Kew! Some years ago I had some correspondence with Sir John Kirk about a journey of mine
contemplated to the alpine mountains west of Zanzibar.
Sir John acted most kindly; the Sultan promised protection; but finally I had not
in or out of the Department the requisite
money
! Then there was Perak; my friend and to some extent disciple (so far as correspondence
is concerned) the Rev. B. Scortechini is gone there. He is still young, and as a Catholic priest without domestic ties;
he has a keen eye for observation, and his coreligionist Governor Weld is sure
to give him every possible aid and protection. Weld however has also shown some friendly
feelings to me formerly.
14
Letters not found.
15
See note 12 above.
16
M had corresponded with Weld when he was Governor of Tasmania (24 July 1878) and claimed
(M to M. Fraser, 7 August 1876) that Weld, when Governor of Western Australia, had suggested that M might take up
some land in that Colony, and had written to tell him of appointments made there (M
to J. Haast, 30 April 1870).
The region here is the most unproductive for plants; I am too early for fungs and
mosses; and as regards the general vegetation, I explored it at the risk of my life
31 years ago, being on the occasion once 5 days without food, had just about here
a ride from 5 a.m. til 11 p.m without a settlement, and was nearly drowned in crossing
one of the swollen water courses,
and subsequently narrowly escaped falling into the hands of cannibal-natives!
Now
there are railroads, vast wealth is accumulating from the territory, and - of course
- the early explorers are forgotten, and men come to the front now, then either unborn,
or in their boyhood or in obscurity!
17
See Darragh (2003), p. 6 for an account of the incident by Bishop Goold, who was with
M for this part of his 1853 journey; see also M to L. Haynald, 22 November 1882.
One of the Senecios here puzzles me; but I can deal with it only after my return to
Melbourne. I will then also reexamine
Wittsteinia
, as I have some idea, that it belongs to
Gesneriaceae
, though anomalous in that order also.
I hardly ever get now a new plant to work out; Australia unless some of the forest-mountains
of the far N.E. is almost exhausted as regards actual novelties of decided characteristics.
Pray, thank Mr Dyer for sending me the print on Sand-binding plants of India.
I will use the information for the "select plants", so far as that is possible, as only some of the plants would be hardy
beyond the tropics. I am sure, to pick up some notes from the new Kew-Report
and Mr Dyers Guide
also.
18
See
Gardeners
'
chronicle, vol. 21 (24 May 1884), p. 685.
19
Presumably
Report on the progress and condition of the Royal Gardens at Kew during the year
1883
(London, 1884).
20
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (1883); this work appears not to have been issued until
early 1884, and is favourably discussed as 'recently issued' in the
Gardeners
'
c
hronicle, 29 March 1884, pp. 407-8. Publication in late January or February is consistent with M's receiving a copy in time to comment upon it in M to J. Hooker, 23 March 1884.
Very regardfully your
Ferd. von Mueller
I have written a few notes for the Sydney Medical Gazette, reviewing Zopfs new work on Bacterian organisms (Spalt-Pilze);
the connection of them with numerous diseases, into which we now get more and more
insight, is marvellous!
21
See B84.03.04, reviewing Zopf (1883).
How grateful you must be to providence, to grant you unimpaired health and strength,
without which you could not carry on your glorious labors! I suppose you see Sir Henry
Barkly sometimes; give him my kind regards
A new Civil service bill comes here in force now. Our Chief Rulers are now three permanent
Commissioners; still much will yet depend on the individual Minister of the Department
also henceforth.
- What not happens perhaps to many mortals occurred to me lately; I
declined three Presidencies
within a few weeks, just before my illness; that of the new-formed Geographic Society
of Sydney, that of the large Melbourne Turn-Verein and that of the Melbourne or rather
Victorian Field Naturalists Club. The latter was offered me for several years in succession.
You see, that most of my fellow-colonists wish me well! I shall also relinquish the
Vice-Presidency of the Liedertafel; as I work under so much official disadvantage,
and have therefore so little leisure now, besides all these positions involve extra
expenses.
22
Victoria's Public Service Board of three persons was created by the Public Service
Act 1883.
You speak, my dear Sir Joseph, of your florishing family;
investments
in bringing them up are the
best in life
, and you will live through them into futurity.
Gesneriaceae
Senecio
Wittsteinia