INDEX 



a gift to Huxley, 184 bis ; travel 

 with Huxley, 185; Lady Lyell, 

 188 ; aid from W. T. Dyer, 189 ; 

 death of Mrs. Hooker, 191 ; Royal 

 Society, 198; public duty, 198; 

 Lyell's death, 199, and epitaph, 

 200, Life and Letters, 201 sq. ; 

 Glenroy, 203 ; American trip and 

 flora, 216; N. American flora, 

 220 bis, 221 ; Geographical Distri- 

 bution Address, 223, 225, 226; 

 Kew Herbarium, 228; botanical 

 physiology, research, 230 ; Brit. 

 Assoc. Addresses, 232 ; Marocco 

 botany : Paris : future retire- 

 ment, 232 ; St. Helena flora, 233 ; 

 seeds and cold, 234 ; private and 

 public benefactions to science, 

 235; Index Kewensis, 239 ; Move- 

 ments of Plants : Wallace and 

 Australian Flora : Paget and plant 

 diseases, 245; pressure of work, 

 245 ; ' all play,' 245 ; ' Earth- 

 worms' : Sunningdale, 255 ; death 

 of old friends, 258, of Erasmus 

 Darwin, 258 ; heredity, disregarded 

 in Mrs. Gaskell's novel, 366 



Darwin, Mrs. 0., memories of, 

 prompted by ' The Letters of 

 Emma Darwin,' ii. 458 



Letter to : Banks' Journal, ii. 314 



Darwin, Dr. Erasmus, the ' Loves 

 of the Plants,' ii. 353-4; the 

 Nelumbium Wedgwood eet made 

 for him, 353 



Darwin, Erasmus, ii. 258 



Darwin, Sir F., author's thanks to, 

 i. viii, 521 n. ; cited, 486 



Carnivorous plants, ii. 141 and 

 note ; visit to, 365 ; consults as to 

 telling his share in the Darwin - 

 Wallace episode, 465; at Cam- 

 bridge, 468 



Letters to : Practical botany, 

 ii. 280 ; Life of 0. Darwin, 298 bis, 

 300, 302, 303 ; e"loge on R. Brown, 

 310 ; public dinners, 310 ; ' More 

 Letters of C.D.,' ii. 430 ; contrasts 

 with his own, 431 ; contributes 

 letters, ib. ; delight in them, ib. ; 

 dedication, 432 (cp. 448);? the 

 Oxford statue, ib. ; Pour le Me"rite, 

 448 



Darwin, Sir George, i. 465, 468 



Darwin, Horace, visits at Cambridge, 

 ii. 468 



Darwin, Mrs. Horace, ii. 353 



Darwin, Leonard, ii. 183 and note 



Darwin, Ursula, ii. 469 



Darwin, W. E., sends books to, 

 ii. 319, 328, 337; consulted as 

 to Darwin-Wallace jubilee, 465; 

 speech at the Darwin centenary, 



Letters to : ' The Camp,' origin 

 of its name, ii. 256 ; Copley Medal 

 speech, 309; the Public Depart- 

 ments, 324 ; America as universal 

 peacemaker, 325 ; the German 

 Emperor and war with England, 

 325 sq. ; Edinburgh revisited, 344 ; 

 the Nelumbium Wedgwood set, 

 353-5 ; Galton's tables of heredity, 

 366 ; W. Indian sugar question, 

 404 ; Wedgwoods as wedding 

 presents, 436, a show of, ib., for 

 the Linnaeus jubilee, 437 ; C. 

 Norton and the poet Gray, 456 ; 

 contin. Antarctic drawings, 457 ; 

 ' Letters of Emma Darwin,' 458 



Darwin Islet, i. 139 



Darwin Medal, awarded to Huxley, 

 ii. 311 sq. ; flowers represented on, 

 458 



Darwin-Wallace paper at the Lin- 

 nean, i. 354, 499 ; disclaimers of 

 priority, ib. n. ; ii. 300 sq., 424 ; 

 jubilee of, 383 ; 465 sq. 



Daubeny, Dr., i. 521 and note 



Davis, J. E., his drawings, i. 62 and 

 note ; illust. Ross' ' Voyage,' 86 n., 

 144 ; appreciates Darwin's ' Beagle,'' 

 66 n. ; name commemorated, 189 

 sq. ; portrait of, ii. 477 



Davy, Sir Humphry, i. 397 n. ; 

 relation with Faraday, 542 



Dawson, Col. Douglas, ii. 464 



Dawson, Sir J. W., ii. 30 and note ; 

 criticises J. D. H.'s geology, 31 ; 

 Packytheca, 292 

 Letter to : ii. 31 



Dawsonia, i. 221 



Dayman, J., i. 62 and note, 106, 120 

 Letter from : i. 63 



Decaisne, on Fuci, i. 182 ; remark- 

 able botanist, 183, 184 sq., 186, 

 188 bis ; his Asdepiadeae, 340 ; 

 validity of species, 441 ; first 

 opposes, then adopts, H.'s drastic 

 reduction of species, 453 



Dead Sea, i. 533 



De Candolle, A. P., i. 100 and note; 



