Hooker, Sir Joseph Dalton
JHC56
Darjeeling, India
JDH/1/10 f.146-147
Hooker, Sir William Jackson
The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
27-3-1849
© Descendants of Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker
Indian Letters 1847-1851
The Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
English
Original MS
6 page letter over 2 folios
 

JDH has collected Rhododendron seeds at 13000 ft & will enclose seeds of a 13th species, the great white macrophyllum, in a letter to be sent by the 8th [April]. Other seeds sent include; acorns looked over by Hodgson, & chestnuts. When boxes arrive JDH will send; seedlings of Rhododendrons, a Primula, Palms drawings, seeds of a Calamus & 2 genera; Caryota & Calami. JDH says Wallichi Chamerops is not found in Darjeeling. JDH procured trunks of a species of tree fern at the foot of the hills, 1 dichotomous & plenty of specimens, also Beaumontia fully in flower, & cones of A. Brunoniana. JDH discusses Wallich, Griffiths & McLelland. JDH mentions he will speak to Falconer about fruit collected in Calcutta [Kolkata] & Palm Stems on his return. JDH & Hodgson have been reading Broomfield's letters in the L[ondon] J[ournal] B[otany] with great pleasure. JDH discusses how Ld. Auckland's death will affect his future prospects as Supernumerary Acting Surgeon in Borneo. JDH mentions: Ab[ies] Brunoniana, the Teta he believes is Bentham's Picrorhiza, & the Jatamansi he believes is Valeriana. JDH complains his servant Hoffman is inferior to Clamanze. Wight has sent JDH books in return for Flora Antarct[ica], & is sending WJH seeds as well as working up 22 species of Utricularia & putting them near Cyrtand[ra].JDH mentions: Jenkins, Balfour, Forbes, Wallich, Bentham, Brown & the coal fossil of E. Grey. JDH has a parcel of 20 species of dried Rhododendrons arriving in Calcutta before the next mail. Jenkins has heard of Lobb's arrival down the river. JDH is sketching the coniferous vegetation of E[ast] Nepal & Sikkim for the As[iatic] Soc[iety] Journal & LJB.JDH understands that Thomson has been offered the Opium Deputy Agency at Patna & discusses Dr Corbett's previous position there. He mentions Sir H Maddock & O'Shaughnessy in relation to the application process.

Transcript

it would be well therefore that you had such an introduction to Sir F Baring as would induce him to say at once whether my situation is likely to be meddled with on the coming reduction of the Navy Estimates; for if so all my present prospects are changed. Please be particular as to my position "acting surgeon, supernum[erary] on Meanders' books, to explore Nat[ural]. Hist[ory] of Borneo" -- My leave from the Admiralty Expires in Nov[embe]r. but my pay from the W[oods].&.F[orests]. was not received till end of January & of course they expect 2 years service from that date, though I have been 18 months on one years salary except for the additional £ 100 you generously added.
Supposing the admiralty do cut me off, either as acting Surgeon or as receiver of £300 at Borneo; what is to be done? -- splendid as the vegetation is, it is a bad climate for a collector & I would have gone further for Lord Auckland than for any one else. Hodgson was on the point of writing to Col. Sykes by this mail begging him to consider the propriety of delaying the distribution of the E[ast]. I[ndia]. C[ompany]. things till my own & Thomsons return & then employing us in that work & in drawing up a Flora of the Himal. This would have been a capital thing but it is too late now. The great white Rhododendron is this this moment brought to me just burst into flower (macrophyllum). I am sorry I could send no better figure, but really the fault was not mine -- it did not flower well last year & is the earliest of all, I got a single flower or small, head, in May last, it was small & all white. The clusters now come in are incomparably larger, & the flowers too -- than I had any idea of -- as large as a small childs head -- far the biggest capitula of any & fl[owers]. as large as Dalhousiae -- colour white 3 lobed with faint yellow or pink tinge -- glo & a deep purple spot at base of corolla -- stamens 14 chestnut brown. Stigma bright flesh colour. Foliage a brilliant green above glossy; below white silvery or very pale pinkish tinge. The Pine I supposed new I have this minute found in the 1d Cyclop[edia]; is Ab[ies]. Brunoniana, Wall. the description is very good, both of tree & uses. The Teta is I doubt not Bentham's Picrorhiza. The Jatamansi undoubtedly the Valeriana when fresh dried it smelt exactly like Patchouli but not so strong -- it is very valuable -- my new Serv[an]t Hoffman is very inferior to Clamanze & is intolerably dull, so that I am constantly blowing him up still he is a good careful man with the plants & I believe honest & civil, but it is a great bore to have so many things utterly ruined in travelling in a day or two, which were uninjured up to his being valet. I have to look after coolies, trunks &c with this man.

Page 1


Darjeeling
March 27. 1849 *1
My dear Father
Yours of Feb[ruar]y 7th has just arrived it having followed me up & down the hills many thanks for it. You are very anxious about seeds, & I think I have done my best to give satisfaction -- I staid[sic] at 13000ft very much on purpose to collect there of the Rhododendrons & with cold fingers it is not very easy at the ripening season Dec[embe]r[?] to collect them from the scattered twigs, generally out of reach. I did not shell them & perhaps am wrong in not so doing but I thought they took care of themselves throughout winter in the pods & hence rather took care to keep them in the latter. Next season I will leave word to have the accessable[sic] species collected again, but those are the 3 or 4 occurring below 5000 ft., you will not get the Lepchas to go alone to 12000, at winter time, where alone the majority grow, & on mts far from habitation. Comparatively few individuals fruit. In the other letter by this mail I enclose the seeds of a 13th species (the great white macrophyllum) & send a larger packet overland. -- Macrae has this moment informed me that the seeds arrived only 1 day too late for the last mail, they will go by the 8th & by the following

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a small collection of all the species. It is easy collecting acorns -- I had many bushels which Hodgson looked over during my absence & though within a week he has to throw away all but a peck -- those I further reduced & selected & have sent seeds of nearly all the kinds as also of the chestnuts. I have live seedlings of some Rhododendrons & a lovely winter flowering stemless Primula, but am out of tin boxes; as soon as these arrive I will send them straight to Kew. as also a collection of drawings of the Palms I sent you seeds of a Calamus -- & 2 other genera, the Caryota is not known to flower, & the other 3 Calami rarely, the seeds of one are now ripening, Wallichi Chamaerops is not found here & Hodgson never saw it but in gardens in Nepal -- you ask W[allich]. about this. I have found another sp. of Tree fern at the foot of the hills & procured 3 trunks for you, one dichotomous & plenty of specimens also Beaumontia fully in flower, for the seed of which I will look out, but it only grows in very malarious places.
Of Pines I only got cones of A. Brunoniana (not of webbiana & the Larch, Juniper & Taxus & have sent all I could get of the above. It is much easier to get Pines in the N[orth]. W[est]. where these grow near to European & other habitations -- here you must go far to see the trees at all. *2

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Tell Wallich that Griffiths certainly never was at Darjeeling, though a Dr Griffiths was. McLelland was busy copying the list of Griffith's plants for distribution, with the specimens, as you have printed in my letter. I am tolerably acquainted with As[iatic]. Soc[iety]. Journal & it took no small labor to be so & it is impossible I should think that any paper by G[riffith]. on Darj[eeling].should have escaped me. I collected some fruit for you at Calcutta *3 gardens when there, I will speak to Falconer about these & Palm stems on my his return. I have only now got cross cut saws for timber cutting, of Mr Muller's, & will get you fine diameter slabs of oaks, chestnut, magnolia, cherry & walnut &c.
I have been reading Broomfields letters in the L[ondon]. J[ournal]. B[otany]. with great interest & pleasure & profit, & so is Hodgson -- I do hope the L[ondon]. J[ournal]. B[otany]. will go on & wish that my bad spirit Reeves was content to keep my "Journal" in its proper place. The Calcutta press will take no notice of it, on account of the Athenaeum review, which is widely circulated, & the said press have always spoken most flatteringly of me. For my part I am too great a coxcomb to care a rush for the Athenaeum review but after all you pains I was sorry for it.

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I wonder how the 1/ numbers will look, this is nicely got up & very correctly printed a wonderful improvement on Baillieu.
You ask how Ld. Aucklands death will affect my future prospects, I cannot form the smallest sure idea. The Borneo app[ointment]t was made for me, & at a time when the Labuan colony promised splendidly, & the Navy Estimates were not called in question. Now Labuan is at a discount, if the Indian press speaks true, & Lord John has promised extensive reductions in the Navy Estimates. My position was to be that of Supernumerary Acting Surgeon to do duty as Naturalist in Borneo. -- the pay of acting surgeon & £300 a year for expenses. -- In the measures for reduction this I must come prominently before the Commissioners 1st as Supreme Surgeon where my servings are not wanted as Surgeon future receiver of £300 a year here 'dies':-- Under all these circumstances I may be swept off or at only have the 300 docked: & the my services as Naturalist dispensed with: in the latter case I still stand as "acting Surgeon on the Meanders books" & shall be drafted by the Admiral into some ship for duty -- which would not suit my [views] at all.

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it would be well therefore that you had such an introduction to Sir F Baring as would induce him to say at once whether my situation is likely to be meddled with on the coming reduction of the Navy Estimates; for if so all my present prospects are changed. Please be particular as to my position "acting surgeon, supernum[erary] on Meanders' books, to explore Nat[ural]. Hist[ory] of Borneo" -- My leave from the Admiralty Expires in Nov[embe]r. but my pay from the W[oods].&.F[orests]. was not received till end of January & of course they expect 2 years service from that date, though I have been 18 months on one years salary except for the additional £ 100 you generously added.
Supposing the admiralty do cut me off, either as acting Surgeon or as receiver of £300 at Borneo; what is to be done? -- splendid as the vegetation is, it is a bad climate for a collector & I would have gone further for Lord Auckland than for any one else. Hodgson was on the point of writing to Col. Sykes by this mail begging him to consider the propriety of delaying the distribution of the E[ast]. I[ndia]. C[ompany]. things till my own & Thomsons return & then employing us in that work & in drawing up a Flora of the Himal. This would have been a capital thing but it is too late now. The great white Rhododendron is this this moment brought to me just burst into flower (macrophyllum). I am sorry I could send no better figure, but really the fault was not mine -- it did not flower well last year & is the earliest of all, I got a single flower or small, head, in May last, it was small & all white. The clusters now come in are incomparably larger, & the flowers too -- than I had any idea of -- as large as a small childs head -- far the biggest capitula of any & fl[owers]. as large as Dalhousiae -- colour white 3 lobed with faint yellow or pink tinge -- glo & a deep purple spot at base of corolla -- stamens 14 chestnut brown. Stigma bright flesh colour. Foliage a brilliant green above glossy; below white silvery or very pale pinkish tinge. The Pine I supposed new I have this minute found in the 1d Cyclop[edia]; is Ab[ies]. Brunoniana, Wall. the description is very good, both of tree & uses. The Teta is I doubt not Bentham's Picrorhiza. The Jatamansi undoubtedly the Valeriana when fresh dried it smelt exactly like Patchouli but not so strong -- it is very valuable -- my new Serv[an]t Hoffman is very inferior to Clamanze & is intolerably dull, so that I am constantly blowing him up still he is a good careful man with the plants & I believe honest & civil, but it is a great bore to have so many things utterly ruined in travelling in a day or two, which were uninjured up to his being valet. I have to look after coolies, trunks &c with this man.

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Wight has just written me a long a very kind & improved style of letter, sending me his other books & begging me not to think of any further return than the Flora Antarct[ica]., which I hope Reeves has sent -- he is sending you seeds -- is working up Utricularia, 22 species & intends putting them near Cyrtand[ra]. Gardner I heard from yesterday. I wish you would write to Jenkins no man in India could render your museum greater service. I have done so & begged him to lay £10 or £20 for me in getting things, but he is sore I think at his last collections not having been acknowledged. *4 So Balfour has published a Flora of the Bass rock -- Mons parturiens? I have also written by this mail to Forbes Wallich Bentham & Brown, has the latter said any thing about the coal fossil Egrey? I have just made up a parcel of dried Rhododendrons, for you to go overland they will be in Calcutta before next mail leaves -- there are I take it 20 good species. I see Reeves advertises the book for 1 Feb[ruar]y what is he in such an e xtravagant hurry about? Jenkins has just heard of Lobbs arrival & asked who he is. I will write & explain. I almost wish Lobb were here & yet along the river is the best place for him who wants to be sending things constantly down to Calcutta. I am drawing up a sketch of the coniferous vegetation of E[ast] Nepal & Sikkim partly for the As[iatic]. Soc[iety]. Journal & for your L[ondon]. J[ournal]. B[otany]. or whatever it is now called. Thomson is I understand offered the Opium Deputy Agency at Patna the place which Dr Corbett held when I was there it is worth 1, 200 rupees which is upwards of £1200 a year O'Shaughnessy had the giving away [of] the app[ointmen]t for which purpose Sir H. Maddock sent him the list of fitting candidates with Tommy's name at the bottom. O S[haughnessy]. immediately put it to the top & returned it to Gov[ernmen]t. I have not heard from Tom a long while. Ever your affect[ionate] son Jos D Hooker [signature]

ENDNOTES


1. Annotations written in another hand record that the letter was received on 29 May and then correct this to 31 May.
2. This paragraph is written in the margin of page 2 which has some damage, making the text hard to decipher.
3. The city formerly known as Calcutta is now called Kolkata.
4. The address of the recipient appears here as the letter would originally have been folded in such a way that it formed its own 'envelope'. The address reads: "via Southampton | Sir W.J. Hooker | R[oya]l Gardens | Kew | London"

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