[December 1872]1
Allow me, dear Dr Hooker, to express my deep condolence at the sad event, which deprived you of the wordly2 possession of your venerable mother. How proud she must have been for many a year to see you maintain the glorious fame of your father, altho' at the last days of her life that joy must have been mingled with sadness, while she witnessed the unworthy persecution to which you have been subjected.3
I got Darwin's work reviewed in two papers by a friend; as in my still continuing "struggle for existence" I had no leisure to do it myself, much as I wished it.4 Darwin might with a few words to his neighbour Edward Wilson disarm the cruel and ignorant yet crushing persecution which I have to endure from the Australasian & Argus, which blights all my hopes of life destroys all my work, deprives me of my time and piece5 of mind [and is sure]6 to worry me pre-maturely into the grave
I am almost ashamed to deprive you of your Xenia. I never expected such a generosity.7
Letter ends at bottom of sheet without salutation; part of the letter may be missing. However, 'I am … generosity' is a marginal note, which suggests that no more was written.
Hooker had sent M his copy of at least the first volume of Reichenbach (1858-1900); see M to J. Hooker, 12 August 1872 (in this edition as letter 72-08-12a), J. Hooker to M, 20 November 1872, and M to J. Hooker, 25 March 1873.
Please cite as “FVM-72-12-00a,” 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/72-12-00a