INDEX 



252 sq. ; excursions to the Teesta, 

 256, Tonglo, 257 



D'Arley, Mr., i. 33 



Darwin, G., i. 2, 25, 29, 41 note; 

 studies German, 29; cited by 

 Ross against H.'s claims, 41 ; 

 ' Voyage of the Beagle ' read by 

 H., 66 and note, 82, 487 sq.; 

 accuracy of his notes, 136 ; sea 

 discipline, 161 ; sends Galapagos 

 plants, 169, 222 ; and Humboldt, 

 186 ; early appreciation of abroad, 

 188 (cp. ii. 80) ; and Henslow, 219 ; 

 first visit to, 222 ; writes to, from 

 Sikkim, 316; progressive relation 

 to, as shown by the Tasmanian 

 Essay, 353 ; Him. Journ. dedicated 

 to, 364 ; and science organisation, 

 369 ; unselfish love of science, 376 ; 

 finds Braun unintelligible, 426; 

 his Fuegian collections, 437; on 

 S.E. and S.W. Australia as formerly 

 islands, 462 and note ; systematists 

 and generalisation, 465; work 

 and friendship with, 486 sq. ; first 

 meeting with, 487 ; his model as 

 naturalist, 488; recognises his 

 powers, 489 ; sympathy in general 

 ideas, esp. Geog. Dist., 488, 489, 

 500; mutual aid and stimulus, 

 490 sq., 496, 502; appreciates 

 debt to J. D. H., 486, 488 sq., 492-7, 

 499-501 ; fears he may have 

 checked H.'s originality, 500 sq.; 

 systematists acquire a bigoted 

 idea of species, 508 n. ; catastrophe 

 to a MS., 495; aid to Harvey, 

 516 ; his meaning of efficient cause, 

 519 ; observations for in Palestine, 

 markings of asses, 530; x dub 

 guest, 544 



On Hooker's ' barnacles,' ii. 24, 

 and Arctic Essay, 29 ; alone can 

 detect J. D. H.'s mistakes, 29, 105 ; 

 Hooker's estimate of his powers, 

 32 ; controversy, 51 sqq. ; sym- 

 pathy with in illness, 65 ; one of 

 his inner circle, 68 ; photograph, 

 compared to Moses, 72 ; foreign 

 interest in, 89 ; asks for observa- 

 tions in Marocco, 95 ; his ' Varia- 

 tion of Animals and Plants under 

 Domestication,' 109 ; his unique 

 faculty, 116 sq. ; modesty, 119 bis, 

 133 ; aid in Ayrton affair, 171 ; 

 portrait in Hooker's study, 178; 



organises gift to Huxley, 183 ; 

 greatest lawgiver of Geographical 

 Distribution, 222, 426; gift to 

 botany, 237-9 ; death and obitu- 

 ary notice, 259 ; burial, 260 ; R.S. 

 obituary, 304-7 ; Life of, 276, 298- 

 307 ; his work on the Barnacles, 

 299 sq. ; statues to, at Shrewsbury, 

 318-20, 365, and Oxford, 432, dedi- 

 catory speech, ib. ; his originality, 

 433 ; coral reefs, 342 ; ' More Letters 

 of,' 382, 430 sq. ; centenary, 383 ; 

 as geographer, 412 ; his Primula 

 paper, and ' a primrose by the 

 river's brim,' 433 ; early memories 

 of, at Down, 458 sq. ; his ' sand- 

 walk,' 459 and note ; his ' consola- 

 tion of Old Age,' 460 ; ' mutations,' 

 ib. 



Letters from : Fame and affec- 

 tion, i. 486 ; pleasure in the 

 correspondence, 487 ; seeds and sea- 

 water, a laugh over, 494 ; method of 

 working subjects, 496 ; Tasmanian 

 Essays and generalisations, 496 ; 

 effect of Linnean paper, 499 ; 

 aid from H., 499 sq. ; his one 

 source of sympathy, 500 ; feared 

 injury to H.'s originality, 501 sq. ; 

 ' a candid honest fellow,' 503 ; H.'s 

 Darwinian botany book, 535 bis 



Welwitschia like his Barnacles, 

 ii. 24 ; Owen and Oken, 51 ; pro- 

 posed for the Copley Medal, 74 ; 

 J. D. deserves the Copley, 76; 

 Wedgwood ware, 77-8; Notting- 

 ham Address, 104; experiment 

 with bright-coloured seed, 107 ; 

 enjoys long research, 246 n. ; on 

 the Introduction to the Tas- 

 manian Flora, 424 



Letters to : Indian distribution, 

 i. 246 ; health, ib. ; Sir R. Burton 

 and G. Mann, 406 n. ; Galapagos 

 plants : range of Arctic and Ant- 

 arctic plants : distrust of his own 

 generalising power, 436 sq. ; Sand- 

 wich I. flora, and geog. botany, 438 ; 

 ' variation ' : insects on islands : 

 cross fertilisation : effects of climate 

 and currents : Irish Yew : dor- 

 mant seeds : diffusion of water 

 plants, 439 sq. ; validity of species : 

 Gerard as botanist : Irish Yew : 

 labour of establishing a mundane 

 species, 441 sq. ; grouping of 



