26/6/86.
Since writing to you, dear Mr Dyer, I received the tropical seeds, which you so kindly
despatched to me,
and for which I express my thankfulness, as all such sendings help to keep up my
horticultural intercourse. If I have not on all occasions acknowledged your successive
generous sendings of seeds, you must not feel discouraged; but the correspondence
grows always over my head, and as I read 30 professional journals in various branches
of science, (five medical) and that (if even only skimmingly) at late night-hours,
my eyes often get sadly dim from overwork; remember my eyes are not young like yours,
and were so much exposed to the glares of sunlight in the desert, bivouak-fires, not
to speak of using lenses and microscopes daily since 1840! Yes - I am now the Senior
of naturalists and professional scientists (except a few medical Colleagues) in Australia;
all others having come only with the flood of the
gold-tide
and they never knew, what colonizing and exploring ment
before
that time, when the Australian monetary resources were so narrow, roads and bridges
and towns hardly anywhere existed, except in a small portion of N. S. W and a few
other places.
I cannot express to you, how glad I felt, when you told me, how opportune the
-stem came in for the Exhibition there now! I still like to exercise some influence
on the cultures of the world; and to maintain cultural relations have made enormous
private sacrifices, since I left the garden,
beyond
what little I could do still with official means for Horticultural purposes. Thus
you can understand, why I feel always so joyful, if still occasionally a plant of
mine appears in the Bot Magazine, the magazine of
centuries
for Horticulture. I feel, that at best I shall only have yet a short time to live;
hence it is gratifying to me, when my cultural efforts bear any new fruit while I
am by Gods grace still among the living!
Yesterday I had to wait on the Governor
on behalf of our geograph. Society, to invite his Exc. and Lady Loch to honor us
with their presense
at a meeting on Tuesday next, when I shall have to preside. Sir Henry asked very
kindly about the welfare of your brother in law,
and expressed himself glad about his having fairly got on.
In reading your last letter once more over,
I feel, I ought to say, that it was not on account of any
national
feelings, that the Papuan ferns (nearly all well known species)
went to Germany, but simply to redeem a heavy obligation.
I have
spent double the time
of my life in the Austral colonies compared to that I spent in Europe, and was previously
sometime a Scandinavian.
Having cast my lot with
British
colonists, my sentiments are absorbed in
their
interests.
If you and your Colleagues do not get much for the Kew-Herbarium
just now
, you must all be consoled meanwhile, as lots of things, sent by me to the Exhibition,
are sure to come into the possession of Kew, even if a Colonial Museum will be established,
as lots of duplicates occur.
I am particularly anxious to learn something about the colossal
.
Next
year, unless the Adelaide Exhibition gives
much
to do, there will be more time for making up duplicates of really
new
or rare plants for Kew, or to arrange about the loan of some from here. If the day
would only have 48 hours, I should not get so much behind.
Regardfully
your
Ferd. von Mueller.
Did you read my last geographic adress?
I hope that a bound copy of the Myoporinae
can be sent off by next mail to
Kew.