Document information
Physical location:
ML MSS 2117/1, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales, Sydney. 96.07.14Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to Georgina King, 1896-07-14. 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/1890-6/1896/96-07-14-final.odt>, accessed June 13, 2026
14/7/96
Your kind letter has reached me, dear Miss King, also the additional note on the hatched
by the Rev Dr Gill,
to whom — please — convey my best thanks. I certainly will dedicate to him a new
plant, but before the middle of August I shall have no time for phytographic labours,
rural work absorbing all my attention til then and perhaps later. Here the season
has been one of fogs and nebules almost continually and thus the danger of
rust
is greater in Wheat than in any with much clear sunlight, as I pointed out in 1865,
when I was President of the Rust-Committee (in a very bad year) of the Gov Board
of Agriculture as constituted at that time.
1
Letter and note not found.
2
B65.09.01.
Will Mr Moore return?
I fear not, as he not likely will live any longer in Sydney. Altho' we held very
opposite views on the objects of
botanic
gardens, he always acted
honorably
towards me. English Gardening in an egyptian clime can only be carried on at fabulous
expense, which sums in young colonies, so I always held, go largely for promoting
rural interests for the benefit of the producing classes and thus for the breadwinning
people and to
augment the
revenue. Now my counsels, for which I made so strenuous I might say heroic efforts
here with slender means, seem to prevail also in your colony, and a reaction under
the deep financial distress of these colonies, seems to have set in with you. Moreover
I had never any water for extensive lawns and mosaic or carpet flower-beds, but I
had the Victoria regia, the Geyser fountain, the aviary, the pine sloaps,
the first large glasshouse in Australia and a marvellously rich collection of varied
plants, the industrial kinds largely represented, and I supplied on an immense scale
for 15 years as Director here in the then only commencing Victorian colonisation;
the grounds of Churches, manses, Cemeteries, public reserves, railway enclosures with
plants, so that when I ceded from my Directorship I was presented with an adress of
thanks by the Clergy of the Church of England
If the 1/4 million sterling, which has been spent on the bot Garden here since I
left had been under my administration, what vast utilitarian work would have been
accomplished!
3
Charles Moore visited Europe after his retirement as director of the Sydney botanic
garden in May 1896; he later returned to Sydney.
4
slopes?
5
Address not found.
I see Sir Frederick
very rarely; we live so far from each other, our researches are in different directions,
I never give up time for attending to mere formal festivals at the University, and
have — for which I am thankful late in life, when my time becomes so precious, [no]
further duties as an hon. University-Examiner which I was for therapeutics and materia
medica for many years. Are the "Select Plants" often mentioned in your colony? I know
they are in almost daily use there on
many public institutions, journals and by private colonists. I have worked on that
book fully 30 years, and an occasional kindly word in an official Document would be
cheering to me and aid in the support of my Department But I find so often in Australia
that those who use my original works give themselves the air, as if they had known
all already themselves. Let me hope, that you and those near and dear to you are all
happy and well.
6
Frederick McCoy.
7
editorial addition — M has evidently lost the thread of his sentence.
8
in?
Ferd von Mueller