To William Hooker   27 July 1864

27/7/64

My dear Sir William

The last mail brought the concluding part of your noble work on the ferns of the world & hence it was only then that I could take cognizance of the very kind passage under Gymnogramme, which your generosity dictated. To have my name by you, whom all adore, conjoined to that of Wallich, whom as representing in part science as upheld by Danish writers I can but imperfectly replace, must be always a proud thought.1

I wished I could have done more; but I have honestly sacrificed all I ever had for the promotion of knowledge, and if my results have not been as bright, it will be remembered that I was placed 50 years too late in to Australia to win the Laurels, which crowned the labours of my great countryman in his rich field of research.2 Had I been located in an unexplored jungle-country anywhere under a tropical sky, my own investigations would have had a more powerful influence on the advancement of descriptive Botany. Indeed one day's in Central Africa would be worth as much as one year's labour now in Australia.

The language of your work is throughout elegant, logical & full of meaning & contrasts most favorably with much that is written in these days. May you live many many years in health to prosecute your work, to guide & encourage us & to reap the rewards of your renown.

The collector employed by this establishment on N.E. Australia3 is likely to add a few species to the, after all, scanty fern flora of this continent.

Through the Colonial Office I have forwarded to you by this mail as large a collection of Austr. seeds, as the harvest of this year yielded & I trust that they may contribute many a desirable plant to the collection of your winter garden.

Ever with grateful

& cordial regard

your

Ferd Mueller

 

Gymnogramme

In vol. 5 of W. Hooker (1846-64), under the entry for Gymnogramme Muelleri, p. 144,Hooker wrote:'It would be idle to speak of the great acquirements and the unbounded liberality of the prince of Australian botanists, Dr Mueller, F.R.S. of London, and Government Botanist at Melbourne, who must ever rank with the noble-hearted Dr Wallich amongst botanists'.
Wallich was superintendent of the Calcutta Botanic Garden, 1815-41.
John Dallachy.

Please cite as “FVM-64-07-27,” in Correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller, edited by R.W. Home, Thomas A. Darragh, A.M. Lucas, Sara Maroske, D.M. Sinkora, J.H. Voigt and Monika Wells accessed on 28 April 2024, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/vonmueller/letters/64-07-27