To Alexander Macdonald   November 1891

 

The byefollowing draft, dear Mr Macdonald, I had prepared immediately after the appointment of the subcommittee for the Stanley Adress;1 but as Mr Shillinglaw's mind is so particularly well framed for purposes of this kind, and as such a writing of welcome may be much criticized here and abroad, I hesitated to send it off to you, til he and the other Committee-members had met. That could be simultaneously at your House on Monday, and perhaps you could send a copy on to Mr Shillinglaw2 before, and I will under take to send one on to Dr Bride before. I think, we should pass such an adress in full council; it is a very responsible task.

As the antarctics will have to stay over for 2 years, we must, I think, seek for new fields of action meanwhile, and if we could get Capt Everill away to Dutch New Guinea through an engagement of his by the Java Government, we should perhaps make a good show 1892 & 95 in our branch apart of what the other branches may do.3

 
See B91.14.03 and B92.14.03, address to H. M. Stanley by M and Macdonald, 11 November 1891 (in this edition as 91-11-00c).
See J. Lindt to M, 3 June 1890.
The note is unsigned but is in M's hand.

Please cite as “FVM-91-11-00c,” 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 24 April 2024, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/vonmueller/letters/91-11-00c