To Alexander Magarey1    23 May 1886

23/5/86

Dear Sir,

Our alert Hon Secr.2 here handed to me a letter of yours,3 in which the approval of your new Code for our different geographic branches is sought. Kindly send me also a copy of the proposed rules, and while the other circulates among my Colleagues of the Council, I will carefully make any annotations, which may seem to me desirable.

As regards the proposition of uniting with your branch the historic Society there, I must confess, that I should strongly disadvise such complications, — nor do I think that it would be just to your Royal Society there, who would more properly in its wide scope embrace other branches of science. History of geography is in reality only geography itself, just as history of medicine is only a part of medical Science.

If we encumber our Society with incongruous collateral obligations, we shall make our work still more onerous, get our attention diverted from the legitimate objects before us, and involve ourselves in additional responsibilities, while indeed the great science of geography will claim in a new part of the world, like ours, all the attention which any one of us can possibly bestow on it.4

Regardfully your

Ferd. von Mueller

MS envelope front: 'To the Hon. Secretary of the S.A. branch of the Austral Geograph Society Adelaide'.
Alexander Macdonald.
Letter not found.
See A. Margery to M, 29 May 1886 (in this edition as 86-05-29a), in which Margery responds that M has misunderstood his committee's intentions.

Please cite as “FVM-86-05-23,” 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 25 April 2024, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/vonmueller/letters/86-05-23