ISDEX. 



787 



■WTialc?, measurements of, i. 



■140. 

 Wheat, ii. 96. 

 AVhfi'l iuiimalcules, i. 23. 

 Wliimbrel, i. .')S).'). 

 Whistling teal, i. 399. 

 AV'hite aut^i, their remarkal)Ie 



nrc'hitectural capabilities, i. 



46. 

 White-bellied rnt, Masnu's 



remarks on tlie i. 417. 

 Whito-browial gibbon, i. 474. 

 White cockseonib, ii. 292. 

 White, Br., qnoteil, ii. 241. 

 White-eared paradoxure, i. 



469. 

 White-eyed duck, i. 400. 

 AVhite-handed gibbon, i. 474. 

 White gourd, a present for 



new-married couples ii. 449. 

 White pepper, ii. 231. 

 White pomfret, i. 220. 

 White-rumped munia, i. 381. 

 White ' Shah,' ii. 236, 700. 

 Wliite teak, ii. 302. 

 Whiting, tish, i. 214. 223. 

 Whiting as a head-covering 



for elephants, i. 4.51. 

 Whortleberries, ii. 372. 

 Wight, Dr., ' Icone-s,' quoted 



or mentioned, 110 ct srq. 

 Wild bees, method 4if taking 



their honey, i. 120. 

 Wild buffalo, its pedigree, i. 



129; 401. 

 Wild eats, i. 472, 473. 

 Wild dog, i. 4C.') ; Hodgson's 



remarks on wild dogs kept 



in conlinement, ihid. 

 AVild elephant, i. 447. 

 AVild "oats, i. 459. 

 Wild nogs, killing a python, 



i. 4.54. 

 Wild mangosteen, ii. .583. 

 Wild nutnieg, seeds of the, 



used for plauting after pass- 



ing through a pigeon, i. 

 388. 



Wild yam, ii. 145. 



Will of tbeWisp phenomenon, 

 i. 488; description of, 489. 



Willow, C'liristian legends 

 relating to, ii. 256. 



Wilmer, Capt., quoted, i. 124. 



Wilson, I'rof., II. II., on the 

 native names for RottUra, 

 ii. 211. 



Wind-ball, ii. 111. 



Window oyster, i. 125. 



Winter green, ii. 373. 



Witches ill Kurope, i. 488. 



Wizards in I3unua, i. 488. 



Woad, ii. 619. 



Wolt's-bane, ii. 340. 



Women, a weakness in, ii. 

 399. 



Woodcock of the sea, i. 204. 



Woodford, Dr., slain by a 

 tiger, i. 471. 



Wood ibises, i. 398. 



Wood- JIasou, G. J., his list of 

 Burmese Crustacea, ((noted 

 or referred to, i. 25 ct scq. 



Wood lou.se, i. 24. 



Wood oil, ii. 625, 627. 



Wood oil tree, ii. 628. 



Woodpecker, regarded as a 

 binl of ill omen, i. 501. 



Woodpi'ckers, i. 346 ; differ- 

 ent species going about in 

 troops, i. 347 ; a species of, 

 breeding in ants' uests, i. 

 348. 



Wood pigeons, i. 388. 



Wood, various specimens of, 

 noted, with their weight per 

 enl)ie foot, together witli 

 Kur7.,Brandis,and (Jamble's 

 remarks, ii. 217 tt seq\ 693- 

 701. 



Woodward's ' JIamial of the 

 JloUusca,' mentioned, i. 123. 



Woolly blights, i. 38. 

 Wormwood, curiousetymology 



of, ii. 382. 

 Worms in the Kuman body, 



horrible effects of, i. 21. 

 Worsley's Homer, i. 120. 

 Wrens, i. 362. 



X. 



Syrideoe, ii. 123. 



Y. 



Tarns, ii. 145. 



Yankee notion of a smart boat, 



i. 239. 

 Yeast plant, ii. 90. 

 Yellow dyes, ii. 351, 357. 

 Yellow oleander, ii. 344. 

 Yengyaing, the plain of, the 



home of the Thamen, i. 457. 

 Yucca, ii. 129. 

 Yule, Col., adventure with a 



Hamadryad, i. 310. 

 Yuuzaleeu, discovery of a wild 



Amhtrsdu in the valley of 



the, ii. 537. 



Zebra wood, ii. 517. 

 Zinzibeiaci;e, 205 ; economic 



products of, ii. 208. 

 Zollinger, H., a genus of 



plants named in honour of, 



ii. 501. 

 Zoology and Botany, their 



twin relationship, ii. I. 

 Zuleika's tomb, ii. 214. 

 Zwiigaheii, wild goat shot at, 



measurements of, i. 459. 

 Zygophyllea;, ii. 600. 



i:xD OF vol.. II. 



