To Ronald Gunn   6 January 1865

Melbourne bot. Garden

6/1/65

 

I was, my dear friend, aware of the sad bereavement, which caused you to proceed home without seeing us here in Melbourne. Poor Dr Grant, when here, informed me of the sudden death of your beloved daughter, and now you tell me of the almost hopeless case of your deer1 friend, whom during the brief acquaintance here I learnt to estimate. So none of us knows how soon the hour of our departure from this world may arrive.

I am glad to think that my poor books pleased you. If about March you were writing to the Chief Secretary you would be doubtless supplied with the following volumes

fragmenta phyt. Austr vols 2, 3, 4, the 4th vol. being in the binders hand, vol 1 is no longer obtainable

plants of Victoria

1 vol. text & plates2

1 vol plates only (about 60) the latter also nearly ready for binding and to appear next month3

I am not at all surprised, that you share not my views on the circumscription of species, as more particularly enunciated in the little book on the Chathamian vegetation.4 I feel that my ideas on this subject are in disharmony with those of the vast majority of living nature's philosophers; and yet I feel a calm consciousness of their truth. I contemplate as type of the meaning species man himself. A species to me is a organism, requiring special creation, never to be confounded with anything else, though often misunderstood by not due allowances being made for its power of variation, a power different in different species and often largely greater than in man or even domestic animals. To characterize a species we have to look for such distinctive marks, resting on absolute difference of internal structure as never can be over turned. On every other diagnosis, based on [moving]characters I look at once with suspicion. We see nowhere transits between real generic forms, and if we have the specific forms in each genus not rightly circumscribed and understood, it arises out of the circumstance of our not having our observations sufficiently extended over the globe. Genera nevertheless are to me nothing but an artificial complex of species of certain resemblance. Man stands by himself; he is not connected by any middleform whatsoever with other beings; and so indeed it is with every true species. Circumstances may give races may give varieties a local permanence, but this will not be a lasting one elsewhere and will entitle never such a variety or race to specific distinction. I exhibited to you a series of Epilobia, pointing out that in N.Z. the only Epilobium of the Southern hemisphere assumes a form, not yet met with elsewhere; but this race is even there not upheld by permanent tangible characters and hence every attempt, as Dr Hookers new handbook5 shows, to limit its supposed specific boundary proves vain. Contrasting this Epilobium with any other onagreous6 plant of the whole southern hemisphere what do we observe? not the remotest transit to any other plant of the order much less to any other. If, as Darwin assumes, no specific limitations exist, how is it, that we should not find a single aberrant type of this Epilobium in either Africa, S. Asia, Australia or S. America, evincing its transit to other plants. This is not a single instance, but so it is throughout nature. In the northern hemisphere we have certain Epilobia, the specific dominion of which remains obscure, and which are probably races aberrant in an other direction, than that of one of those New Zealand But the yellow-flowered N. American Epilobium is probably as distinct from it, as any Gaura, Oenothera, Circaea, Jussiaea or any other coordinal plant.

The obscure and enigmatic laws, which rule the distribution of the plants over the globe, we shall probably never be able to reveal. Why is it, that in all Australia, after having travelled through it in lines of about 25,000 miles extent, I never but once found Lysimachia vulgaris and this in a swamp close to a habitation in the remote East of Gipps Land, where scarcely any traffic exists? Might not by a sheer accident this plant have sprung from an [embollage] thrown away? Or must it be considered indigenous, simply because it [is] consociated with Lythrum and other cosmopolitan swamp plants? This is a question, which I will not venture to solve, nor that of the occurrence of Potentilla in Australia, though I can readily imagine how that plant and many others can have been easily introduced & equally easy through the agency of birds have been carried into the interior. R Brown was too long after the discovery of Australia (and New Zealand) on our shores to be placed in the position of giving an unequivocal opinion of what at the time of his stay was indigenous or not of otherwise widely dispersed plants. Let me adduce still an other example. When I first travelled in the colony of Victoria I never saw a single plant of Portulaca oleracea any where, a plant that is not readily overlooked; during the latter years, probably from the accidental dispersion of some seeds it has spread so extensively as to have become a plague in much garden land and to be quite frequent in the streets of Melbourne. Had this spreading taken place at the early time of the settlement of Victoria, I should have entertained as little doubt about the Portulaca being indigenous here, as I felt when seeing it on every street gutter and around every house in Rio de Janeiro.

You will ask what is to be done in arranging and naming plants, about the specific value of which from imperfect evidence we remain doubtful. I answer that we should, like in the instance of the Epilobium admit the species, which shows unalterable structural differences, unalterable because they arise from distinct internal organisation. Under such a species, which we can all recognize, we should arrange as doubtful what so far approaches to it as to render its transit (even according to circumstantial evidence) possible, leaving it to a future time to confirm or alter the view adopted; but in no instance should we without positive marks of the utmost importance raise them to specific rank. Were this rule obeyed, we would free the descriptive history of plants & animals of an oppressive incubus. I have acted on this principle in the second vol. of my plants of Victoria, when dealing with certain real & supposed species of Cassia and Acacia.7 But it will be impossible to argue this question, if we hold different views on the origin of species; we might just as well expect an allopathic and homaeopathic physician to agree on the treatment of diseases. In the event of you possessing a spare copy of the philosophical journal of Tasmania, edited by you many years since, I should be grateful for it, as it is one of the very few works bearing on the vegetation of Australia, of which my library is devoid.8

Trusting, dear Mr Gunn, that you will enjoy health & consolation I remain your regardful

Ferd. Mueller

 
 

Acacia

Cassia

Circaea

Epilobium

Gaura

Jussiaea

Lysimachia vulgaris

Lythrum

Oenothera

Portulaca oleracea

Potentilla

 
dear?
B62.03.03.
B65.13.04.
B64.13.02.
J. Hooker (1864-7).
onagraceous?
M apparently distributed page proofs of the planned second volume of his Plants indigenous to the colony of Victoria, but the work was never published.
There is no set of the Tasmanian journal of natural science at MEL.

Please cite as “FVM-65-01-06,” 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 March 2024, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/vonmueller/letters/65-01-06