25, WILTON PLACE, S.W.
London
May 14 1868
My dear Sir
The day after last mail I received your box per Superb and immediately went through the Stylidium Goodenovieae Epacrideae etc named them and packed up the whole of these supplementory parcels with the other Epacrideae (all but five parcels which would not go in to the boxes) in two boxes which were despatched from Kew about ten days ago and of which the bill of lading will I have no doubt have been sent to you from Kew by this mail[.]1 I found no new KGS2 species — but that was not to be expected that neighbourhood having been so thoroughly explored by Menzies Brown Labillardière Cunningham Fraser Collie Preiss Drummond Maxwell Oldfield Harvey Gilbert and others
The True Briton is now arrived and I shall have the box by it in a day or two3
I have to thank your for your letters of the 10th & 29th Feby — you ask about Mr Oldfield4 — I have heard nothing of him for the last twelvemonth. The year before last his death was in the papers5 but six months afterwards he reappeared at Kew — I gave him a copy of my Flora but have not seen him since the last vol. was out and know not now where to find him.
I have finished Gentianeae and nearly gone through Boragineae (both to be reviewed when your specimens come) — I have next Convolvulaceae Solaneae and then the Personate orders — Bignoniaceae Gesneraceae (Cyrtandraceae) Orobancheae Scrophularineae etc — then Verbenaceae (including Myoporineae) and Labiatae if I have room for them but these Orders multiply so much more than I expected that I see I shall not get all the Monopetalae into this vol. and the Labiatae at least will have to stand over for the next
I began printing as soon as I had gone through your KGS supplementory plants Three sheets are now gone to press but I fear I shall not have the clean proofs time enough for this mail, but shall have a good lot for the next. I hope to go on steadily two sheets a week till I leave town in July. I am afraid you will find much fault with the Stylidium but the extreme delicacy of the corolla prevents in most cases the ascertaining its precise shape from dried specimens. In the Epacrideae there was no such difficulty — only the great tedium of having to examine the minute ovaries of almost every specimen.
Ever yours sincerely
George Bentham
Dr Ferd Mueller
Bignoniaceae
Boragineae
Convolvulaceae
Cyrtandraceae
Epacrideae
Epacrideae
Gentianeae
Gesneraceae
Goodenovieae
Labiatae
Monopetalae
Myoporineae
Orobancheae
Scrophularineae
Solaneae
Stylidium
Verbenaceae
Please cite as “FVM-68-05-14,” 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 29 April 2024, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/vonmueller/letters/68-05-14