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M 539, Royal Australian Historical Society, Sydney. 86.01.08Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to Edward Strickland, 1886-01-08. 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/1880-9/1886/86-01-08-final.odt>, accessed June 10, 2026
1
For a summary of this letter see ML MSS.853/2 letter register, no. 983, Royal Geographical
Society of Australasia (NSW Branch) papers, Mitchell Library, State Library of New
South Wales, Sydney.
This evening, dear Sir Edward, I received your kind letter of yesterday, together
with the copy of the last one from Mr Forbes.
2
Letters not found.
Let me in first instance offer to you also my best felicitation to you; may the new
annual space of time be one of happiness to you and those dear to you. Accept also
my best thanks for your own gratulation; my health is fluctuating, so I may not live
to celebrate an other anniversary of the worlds history; but among what little I can
yet do in life, that for the geographic Society will be the most pleasurable, especially
as you always meet me with so much geniality. Your not coming to our annual meeting
will be a great loss to us; indeed we reckoned on it.
Still as it was with me, so it may be with you, that you cannot take a week or two
out of your time, as such a visit would involve.
3
See M to E. Strickland, 9 December 1885.
I learn with much sadness of Mr Maidens relapses to illness; as mentioned before,
he ought to have a whole year of furlong, and make a sea-voyage through tropical latitudes, or go to some quiet country-retreat
in a mild hilly region away out of all excitement.
The dried plants from the Expedition,
I have only been quite recently able to unpack. They could only be cleared at the
customs just before new year. They are in an excellent state of conservation, and
so soon as the extra engagements for the annual meeting are over, I will set methodically
to work on the elucidation of these plants. — I will also from time to time send back
specimens for Sydney and Brisbane; in many instances there are only solitary specimens
of a sort, but even of these I shall retain few. The difficulty of all collectors
was experienced also in this instance, to get the plants as well in flower as in fruit;
hence the elaboration is not in all instances easy; indeed from the necessarily incomplete
material it will involve much devotion of time.
4
The Royal Geographical Society of Australasia's expedition to the Fly river, led by
Henry Everill, had arrived at Thursday Island with collections (H. Everill to M, 24 November 1885
(in this edition as 85-11-24a)) and returned to Sydney on 3 December 1885 (Sydney morning herald, 4 December 1885, p. 7).
As regards Mr Forbes,
we must endeavour to grant this splendid and enthusiastic naturalist an other subsidy,
but on conditions, which will secure to Australia simultaneous sendings, so that we
are not in disadvantage to Europe. I shall express myself to this effect in the annual adress.
Mr Ramsay on behalf of the Australian Museum of your city might place himself in communication
with the London Zoologist at the British Museum, so that a clear understanding may
be arrived at, which particular orders or genera are to be elaborated at home and
which in Australia. This would be fair to both sides, provided we can make our subsidy
equal to that of the British Institutions, and that could only be, by the Governments
of these colonies continuing the votes at least to some extent. I feel sure, your
meeting will be a brilliant one. With regardful remembrance, dear Sir Edward, I continue
yours
5
Henry Forbes, in the field in New Guinea.
6
B87.05.03, p. 22.
Ferd. von Mueller