3i6 



A Century of Family Letters 



Colenso, Bishop, ii. 218 



Coleridge, S. T.: Sarah Wedgwood's 

 criticism of, i. 109, 110; on Mackin- 

 tosh, i. 249; Fanny Allen on his 

 letters to T. Wedgwood, ii. 109; 

 Emma Darwin on, ii. 284, 293 



Coleridge, Sara, ii. 114 



Collos, Louis, i. 114; " bothers Emma 

 Wedgwood very much," i. 117 



Collos, Madame, i. 113, 114, 118, 119; 

 a " duty " visit to, i. 166 



Collos, Monsieur, i. 113 



Confirmation, Mrs Josiah Wedgwood 

 on, i. 160, 161 



Constant, Henri Benjamin, i. 87 n., 

 115; an invaluable adviser, i. 91, 93 



Conway, Moncure, ii. 211, 235 



Copleston, Bishop, i. 235 n. 



Coup d'tat, the, ii. 144 n. 



Coutts's Bank, amalgamation with 

 John Wedgwood's, i. 101, 102 



Cresselly, i. 1; life at, i. 2, 10, 17, 18 



Crewe Hall, fete at, i. 28 



Crimean War, the, ii. 156; History of, 

 by Lord G. Paget, ii. 249 



Cudham, ii. 278, 279, 311 



Cunningham, Mr, "a beauty," i. 95, 

 96 



Darwin, Anne Elizabeth: birth of, ii. 

 57; illness and death of, ii. 132, 136; 

 the course of her illness, ii. 132-136; 

 her character described by her 

 father, ii. 137-139; inscription on 

 tombstone, ii. 139 



Darwin, Bernard: birth of, ii. 225; 

 childhood of, ii. 227, 232, 234, 237; 

 Emma Darwin's affection for, ii. 

 245, 246 



Darwin, Caroline. See Wedgwood, 

 Mrs Josiah, of Leith Hill Place 



Darwin, Catherine. See Langton, 

 Mrs Charles 



Darwin Centenary at Cambridge in 

 1909, ii. 167, 171 



Darwin, Charles: account of life at 

 Maer by, i. 52 ; his interest in Hum- 

 boldt's travels, i. 116 n. ; taught by 

 his sister, i. 139; his respect for his 

 father, i. 140 ;ii. 169; wanting letters 

 from home, i. 193, 194; sole visit to 

 the Continent, i. 200, 201; his recol- 

 lections of Fanny Owen, i. 226, 227; 

 sails in the Beagle, i. 242; returns 

 from voyage in the Beagle, i. 271, 

 272; visits Maer, i. 273; his Journal 

 thought not worth publishing by 

 Dr Holland, i. 274; on marriage, i. 

 277; publication of his Journal, i. 

 282; ii. 42; engagement to Emma 



Wedgwood, ii. 1 ; love of quietude, 

 ii. 23; his marriage, ii. 23, 26; 

 ill-health, ii. 51, 56; his deceptive 

 look of health, ii. 60; meets Hum- 

 boldt, ii. 67; finishing the Coral 

 Islands, ii. 70; finishes his Journal, 

 ii. 96; money affairs, ii. 97; attends 

 his father's funeral, ii. 120; tries the 

 water cure at Great Malvern, ii. 122, 

 123; improved health, ii. 131; sum- 

 moned to Annie at Malvern, ii. 132; 

 his great grief at death of Annie, ii. 

 136-139; on pigeons and pigeon 

 fanciers, ii. 157, 158; the charm of 

 his character, ii. 159; at Moor Park 

 Hydropathic Establishment, ii. 165; 

 description of, by W. E. Darwin, 

 ii. 167-171; ill-health after publica- 

 tion of Origin of Species, ii. 172; 

 illness, ii. 180, 181 ; given the Copley 

 Medal by the Royal Society, ii. 181 ; 

 tries Dr Chapman's ice cure, ii. 

 182; better in health, ii. 184; at a 

 soiree of the Royal Society, ii, 

 184, 185; presented to the Prince 

 of Wales, ii. 185; riding acci- 

 dent, ii. 195; publishes Descent of 

 Man, ii. 196, 202, 203; recollections 

 of "cribbing" at Dr Butler's, ii. 

 208; at Abinger Hall, ii. 213, 214; 

 serious illness in 1873, ii. 214, 215; 

 his taste for scenery not lost, ii. 

 218; at the Vivisection Commission, 

 ii. 221; finishes Autobiography, ii. 

 223; takes honorary degree of 

 LL.D. at Cambridge, ii. 230, 23\ ; 

 signing petitions too readily, ii. 234, 

 235; attends lecture at Royal Insti- 

 tution, ii. 244, 245; portrait by Sir 

 W. B. Richmond, ii. 248 n. ; serious 

 state of health, ii. 250, 251; his 

 death, ii. 251; his devotion to his 

 wife, ii. 252-254; Life and Letters of, 

 ii. 260, 261, 279, 280; statue in 

 Natural History Museum, ii. 270 



Letter to his children, ii. 239; 

 letter to his son Francis, ii. 221; 

 letters to his son George, ii. 187, 224, 

 233, 237, 244, 248; letters to his son 

 Horace, ii. 190, 207; letter to Susan 

 Darwin, ii. 96; letters to his son 

 William, ii. 145, 157, 158, 161, 162 

 165, 166, 167, 176, 234; letter to 

 Rev. J. S. Henslow, ii. 123; letters 

 to Mrs Litchfield, ii. 196, 202, 204, 

 206, 208, 227; letter to Sir Charles 

 Lyell, ii. 1; letter to Mrs Thorley, 

 ii. 139; letter to Elizabeth Wedg- 

 wood, ii. 281; letters to Emma 

 Wedgwood, ii. 3, 13, 15, 18, 19, 20, 



