414 



EVOLUTION, OLD AND NEW. 



Darwin, how h and Lamarck treat 

 the winglessness of Madeira 

 beetles respectively, 373-380 



an example of his " manner," 

 378 



the way in which he met 



" Evolution, Old and New," 

 393 



Darwin, Erasmus, never quite 

 recognized design, 39 



ignorance concerning, 61 



on reason and instinct, 115,&c. 



life of, 173, &c. 



in Nottingham market-place, 



182, 184, 197 



and Dr. Johnson, 184, 185 



and Tutbury bull running, 187 



his poetry about the pump, 



and illustration, 84, 193 



should have given his evolu- 

 tion theory a book to itself, 

 197 



had no wish to see far beyond 



the obvious, 197 



. . must be admitted to have 

 missed detecting Buffon's 

 humour, 83, 84, 197 



did not attribute instincts and 



structures to memory pure 

 and simple, 198 



on the reasoning powers of 



animals, and on instinct, 

 201, 205 



his failure to connect memory 



and instinct, as with birds' 

 nests, 201-203 



failed to see the four main 



propositions which I con- 

 tended for in "Life and 

 Habit," 37, 203, 204 



on the analogies between 



animal and vegetable life, 

 206, &c. 



on sensitive plants, 206, 210 



on the individuality of buds, 



and his theory of bark, 207, 

 208 



on the movements of climbing 



plants, 209 



on the oneness of personality 



between parents and off- 

 spring, 214 ; the embryo not 

 a new animal, 215 



Darwin on animals under domes- 

 tication, 223 



on the effects of accidents 



transmitted to offspring, 

 224 



sees struggle, and hence modi- 

 fication, turn mainly round 

 three great wants, 226, 229, 

 257, 279 



on desire as a means of modi- 

 fication, 226, 228, 259 



by a slip approaches the error 



of his grandson, 227, 228 



on embryonic metamorphoses, 



230, 231 



believed animals and plants 



to be descended from a com- 

 mon stock, 233 



and Lamarck compared, 257 



on the struggle of existence, 



and the survival of the 

 fittest, 227, 232, 259 



Darwin, Mrs. Erasmus, death-bed 

 of, 178 



Darwin, Francis, mentioned, 109 



his interesting lecture, 206 



does not use the expression 



"natural selection," 368 



Darwinising, Coleridge on, 21 



Darwinism, the old Darwinism in- 

 volves desire, invention, and 

 design, 58 



modern, falling into disfavour, 



60 



and evolution not to be con- 

 founded, 360, 361 



Day, the portrait of, by Wright of 

 Derby, 180 



Death, violent, Buffon on, 126 



of Dr. Erasmus Darwin, 193, 



194 



Death-bed of Mrs. Erasmus Darwin, 

 178 



Deed, illustration drawn from a 

 very intricate, 28 



Definite, with Lamarck the varia- 

 tions are, 341, 344 



Dtgtnlrations, 87 



Demand and supply, like power 

 and desire, 222, 300 



Demonstrative case, "this demon- 

 strative case of neuter insects, 

 &c.," 249, 298, 314 



