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RBG Kew, Bentham Biographia, f. [16]. M61.05.06Preferred Citation:
George Bentham to William Hooker, 1861-05-06 [M61.05.06]. 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/mentions/selected/M61-05-06-final.odt>, accessed June 13, 2026
(Printed for Private Circulation)
1
Print, one folio, printed on both sides of the paper. No MS version has been found.
Another copy of the printed version is filed with M to J. O'Shanassy, 6 June 1862.
PROPOSED FLORA OF THE AUSTRALIAN COLONIES.
Copy of a Letter from G. Bentham, Esq., F.L.S., to Sir W. J. Hooker,
Director of the Royal Gardens, Kew.
Kew, May 6th, 1861.
My dear Sir William,
It is with feelings of great regret and disappointment that I learn from you that
the Lords Commissioners of the Treasury have declined sanctioning the publication
of a Flora of Australia on the plan of the 'Flora Hongkongensis,'
under the authority of the Colonial Office; for that "adverting to the wealth of
the several Colonies in Australia, and to the sense which they have shown of the interests
of science and commerce, their Lordships have stated that they think that any Works
of the proposed description may be left to the enterprise of the Colonies themselves,
and that there are no sufficient reasons to warrant their being undertaken at the
cost of this country."
2
Bentham (1861a).
3
The quotation is taken from Duke of Newcastle to W. Hooker, 24 Apr 1861 (RBG Kew,
Kew Gardens, Colonial Floras, ff. 46-7).
It is now several years since you did me the favour of communicating to me your ideas
relative to the publication of a series of inexpensive practically useful Floras of
the British Colonies in the English Language, which it was your intention to urge
upon the consideration of Her Majesty’s Secretary of State for the Colonies, as essential
for ascertaining and developing their several productive capabilities. Your efforts
having been successful with regard to the West Indian Flora,
and the Cape Flora
having been also commenced with liberal assistance on the part of the Cape Government,
you proposed to me to undertake that of Australia, which could only be done in this
country, where are deposited all the early published collections of Brown, Cunningham,
Frazer, Drummond
etc.; and I then agreed with you upon the terms upon which the plan could be carried
out. During the three years which have since elapsed, I have not, it is true, commenced
the drawing up of the Work, which I could not do until the necessary outlay should
have been officially sanctioned, but, as the project appeared to meet with the strong
approval both of the Colonial Government at home and of the Governments of the several
Australian Colonies, as well as of Dr. Mueller, the very able Government Botanist
at Melbourne, I have kept it steadily in view in the different botanical investigations
I have been engaged in, and have incidentally worked up several Australian Genera.
I have made many preliminary arrangements, and, in conjunction with yourself and Dr.
Hooker, I have matured the plan in all its details, and exemplified it in the Flora
of the Island of Hongkong, lately published.
4
Grisebach (1864).
5
Harvey & Sonder (1859-65).
6
Robert Brown (1773-1858), Allan Cunningham, Charles Fraser, James Drummond (1784-1863).
7
Bentham (1861a).
I have now passed my sixtieth year, and if the commencement of the Australian Flora
is further delayed, I cannot hope, even should I live, to retain sufficient vigour
of mind and body to complete it in a satisfactory manner. At the same time, I cannot
but be aware that, having devoted nearly forty years of my life to the study of the
Botany of all parts of the world, I have had great practical experience both in the
preparation and use of Local Floras; that I am now established in the only centre
where the vast collections made by travellers and explorers in Australia can be compared
with each other, as well as with the products of other regions; that I am moreover
in friendly communication with those French and German establishments which must be
consulted in the course of the work; and that I have thus acquired peculiar facilities
for the preparation of a general Flora of Australia, so limited as to form and bulk,
that I might hope to bring it to a conclusion. This would also be to me a labour of
love, provided I could be in some measure indemnified for the cost I should incur,
and for the time I should have to take from other pursuits.
I am well aware that several of the richer colonies of Australia would prefer seeing
the vegetable productions of their territories illustrated in such splendid quartos
as Dr. Hooker’s Flora of Tasmania,
or Dr. Mueller’s Flora of Victoria;
but these books, though valuable monuments, testifying at once to the science of
their authors and to the munificence of their promoters, take an enormous time in
their preparation; — a general one for all Australia would be the work of nearly half
a century. They are too bulky and costly for practical use by those who would study
the comparative vegetation of the several colonies with a view to the development
of their productive capabilities, or for those who, either resident or travelling
in the country, may have a few leisure moments to continue the investigation of its
Flora, and who require a portable and readily consultable summary of all that is known
on the subject, as a starting-point for further research. The productions of adjoining
Colonies are moreover so intimately connected with each other, that to answer the
above purposes effectually, a general work is required, that should embrace the whole
Flora of the Australian Continent and adjoining islands, but in which the typographical
arrangements should be such as to show at a glance which species are peculiar to one,
or common to two or more of the separate Colonies.
8
J. Hooker (1860).
9
B62.03.03.
Such a work might be comprised in six or seven octavo volumes, of the size and type
of the ‘Flora Hongkongensis,’ and would probably take as many years to prepare. Were
I therefore to receive, in the course of the present year, the necessary authority
to commence it, I might hope to bring it to a conclusion myself; and if it were thought
necessary that it should be accompanied by illustrations, fifty outline Plates might
be added to each volume, without very materially increasing its bulk or price, or
delaying the issue of the successive volumes.
As the neccessary authority can now only be obtained from the Colonies themselves,
I beg leave to submit, through you, for their consideration the following offer, being
the same terms as were contemplated for a general series of Colonial Floras, as laid
before the Secretary of State for the Colonies.
I am willing to prepare and publish a Flora of Australia on the plan, of the size,
and in the type of my ‘Flora Hongkongensis,’ - distinguishing, however, the species
of each of the several Colonies, - in six or seven volumes of about five hundred pages
each, provided that I am guaranteed a sum of not less than £150 for each volume, to
be paid on its publication, and that 100 copies be taken by the Governments at the
selling price, not to exceed 20s. per volume; and that if 50 Plates be added to each
volume, £50 be added for their preparation, and the selling price not to exceed 25s.
per volume. This would bring the total expense to the Colonies for each volume to
£250 without Plates, or £325 with Plates, and I should hope to publish one such volume
every year.
I remain,
My dear Sir William
Yours very sincerely,
GEORGE BENTHAM.
Sir William J. Hooker,
Director of the Royal Gardens, Kew.
etc. etc.