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RBG Kew. Kew Correspondence, Australia, Mueller. 1882-1890. f. 119. 84.10.07Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to Joseph Hooker, 1884-10-07. 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/1880-9/1884/84-10-07-final.odt>, accessed June 13, 2026
7/10/84
It was the saddest of tidings, dear Sir Joseph, that of the demise of the great Bentham!
The telegraphic news reached me at the borders of South Australia, from whence I
have just returned.
It was with some misgivings, when I learnt from your letter of the 22 July,
that Mr Bentham had gone to his brother’s in law country-seat;
though this would break his loneliness, it would also entail greater exertions, than
he could readily bear in his frail bodily state, and it would take him from the special
comforts, to which in his uniform quiet life he had so long been accustomed, though
the cheerfulness of relatives and the pureness of rural air may have held out hopes
of invigorating our venerable friend. However he must have been grateful to providence,
to have allowed him to retain his mental faculties unimpaired and to spare him the
suffering of bodily pain, which as a rule accompanies the causes of death. With the
glorious help of Kew he stands in reality foremost among plain phytographers of this
age, a grand position which he could not have attained without your establishment,
and by which he has impressed his name for all times on all countries of the globe!
1
Bentham died in London on 10 September 1884.
2
See M to J. Hooker, 18 September 1884.
3
Letter not found.
4
Sir Harford Brydges; Boultibrooke, near Presteigne, Wales. See B. Jackson (1906),
pp. 256–60.
Ever with regardful remembrance your
Ferd. von Mueller