INDEX. 



385 



CORYANTHES. 



Coryantkcs, water-reservoir in labellum 

 of, iii. 284. 



Corydalis, Hildebrand on cross-fertili- 

 sation in, iii. 2S0. 



Cosmogony, Pentateuchal, ii. 187. 



' Cosmos,' English translation of the, 



i- 344 ; "• 3°- 

 Cottage Gardens, i. 343 note. 



Cotyledons, movements of, iii. 330. 



Cousins, inter-marriage of, iii. 129, 130. 



Cowslip, supposed male and female 



plants of the, iii. 297, 298 ; differ- 

 ences of the pollen in the two forms 



of the, iii. 297, 298. 

 Crawford, John, review of the 'Origin,' 



ii. 237. 

 Created form, primordial, ii. 251. 

 Creation, continued, of Monads, ii. 210. 



, conceivable, ii. 187. 



, objections to use of the term, 



iii. 18. 

 Creative action, ii. 210. 

 power, continued intervention 



of, ii. 174. 

 Cresy, E., letters to, detailing experi- 

 ments on Drosera with ammoniacal 



salts, iii. 318, 319. 

 Cretaceous beds of the United States, 



Angiospermous plants ir, iii. 248 ; 



toothed birds in the, iii. 242 note. 

 Crick, W. D., on a mode of dispersal 



of Bivalve Mullusca, iii. 252. 

 Crossbill, variability of the bill of the, 



ii. 97. 

 Cross- and self-fertilisation in plants, i. 



96, 97. 

 Cross-fertilisation of hermaphrodite 



flowers, first ideas of the, iii. 257, 258. 

 Crossing, effects of, iii. 156. 



of animals, i. 299, 301. 



Cruder, Dr., observation on Catasttum 



and Coryanthes, iii. 264, 284. 

 Crustacea, unequal numbers of sexes 



in, iii. 97 ; lower, clasping pincers 



in males of, iii. III. 

 Crustaceans and fishes, ii. 334. 

 Cryptogamia, dispersal of, i. 328 note. 

 Cucurbitaceae, irritability of tendrils of, 



iii. m> 

 Cycas, seedling, movements of, iii. 330. 



Cychnoches, iii. 268. 



Cypripediuni., pollen of, iii. 265. 



VOL. III. 



DARWIN. 



Daily Life at Down, i. 108. 



' Daily Review,' review of the c Varia- 

 tions of Animals and Plants ' in the, 

 iii. 85. 



Dallas, W. S., index to the 'Variation 

 of Animals and Plants,' iii. 74 note ; 

 translation of Fritz Midler's ' Fur 

 Darwin,' iii. 86, 87 ; glossary to sixth 

 edition of the 'Origin,' iii. 154; 

 translation of E. Krause's ' Life of 

 Erasmus Darwin,' iii. 364. 



Dana, Professor J. D., Geology of the 

 United States Expedition, i. 374 ; 

 on the permanence of continents and 

 oceans, iii. 247. 



Dareste, Camille, letter to, iii. 7. 



Darwin, Charles, i. 7. 



, Charles R., pedigree of, i. 5 J 



Autobiography of, i. 26-107 5 birth, 

 i. 27 ; loss of mother, i. 27 ; day- 

 school at Shrewsbury, i. 27 ; natural 

 history tastes, i. 28 ; hoaxing, i. 

 28 ; humanity, i. 29 ; egg-collect- 

 ing, i. 30 ; angling, i. 30 ; dragoon's 

 funeral, i. 30 ; boarding school 

 at Shrewsbury, i. 30 ; fondness 

 for dogs, i. 30 ; classics, i. 32 ; 

 liking for geometry, i. 33 ; read- 

 ing, i. 33 ; fondness for shooting, i. 

 34 ; science, i. 34 ; at Edinburgh, 

 i. 36-42 ; early medical practice at 

 Shrewsbury, i. 37 ; tours in North 

 Wales, i. 42 ; shooting at Wood- 

 house and Maer, i. 42-44 ; at Cam- 

 bridge, i. 46-55 ; visit to North 

 Wales, with Sedgwick, i., 56-58 ; 

 on the voyage of the ' Beagle,' i. 58- 

 6y ; second residence at Cambridge, 

 i. 67 ; residence in London, i. 67- 

 78 ; marriage, i. 69 ; residence at 

 Down, i. 78-79 ; publications, i. 79- 

 98 ; manner of writing, i. 99-100 ; 

 mental qualities, i. 100-107. 



, Reminiscences of, j. 108-160 ; 



personal appearance, i. 109, 11 1; 

 mode of walking, i. 109, 1 1 1 ; walks, i. 

 109, 114-116; dissecting, i. no; 

 ill-health, iii. ' 159 ; laughing, i. 

 in ; gestures, i. 112 ; dress, i. 112; 

 early rising, i. 112; work, i. 112, 

 122 ; fondness. for dogs, i. 113 ; love 

 of flowers, i. 116; riding, i. 117; 



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