1 N 1 



463 



i. 37 ; health, i. 240, 247, 250, j; 

 456,477 ; ii. 157. 326, $38 ; hi 

 decree at I i. 371, 37- '. in- 



timacy with Honker, i. V s . 39;Judd's 

 llections of, i. 376; Lamarck and, 

 i. 125 ; letters to A 

 388, 389 ; ii. 2S, 368 ; marriage, i. 29 ; 

 friendship with F. MUller, i. 3 

 prefatory note to Meldola's transla- 

 tion of Weismann, i. 397: n 

 lections of Cambridge, i. 310; re- 

 lation between J. St. 'I and, i. 217 ; 

 review on Bates, i 232: attends 

 meeting of Royal Society, i. 257 : ii. 

 408; slowness in giving up old be- 

 liefs, i. 234: tendency to restrict 

 interest to Natural History, i. 216; 

 and the l\ '.\ , i. 203 : visits Lon- 

 don, i. 435,437 : ii. 5,219, 232, 408; 

 Wallace and. ii. 40, 61, 8S. 92, 93 : 

 and Weismann, i. 381 ; working 

 hours, i. 158; book on S. American 

 Geology, ii. 118 ; pleasure in angling. 

 ii. 215 ; on making blunders, ii. ioi : 

 slightknowledgeofBotany, ii. 307,308; 

 visits Cambridge, ii. 236 ; love of 

 children, ii. 423 ; on cleavage and 

 foliation, ii. 199-200, 201 ; on origin 

 of coal, ii. 217, 218; hi> theory of Coral 

 reefs supported by Funafuti boring, 

 ii. 199; large correspondence, ii. 312; 

 on danger of trusting in science to 

 principle of exclusion, ii. 173; death 

 of his child from scarlet fever, ii. 

 281 ; on difficulty of writing good 

 English, ii. 110; feels need of stimu- 

 lus in work, ii. 300 ; subscribes to 

 Dr. Ferrier's defence, ii. 437-40 ; 

 on flaws in his reasoning, ii. 20S ; 

 follows golden rule of putting adverse 

 facts in strongest light, ii. 324 ; 

 Geological Inst 'ruction* , ii. 22S ; geo- 

 logical work on Lochaber, ii. 17.:. 

 187, iSS, 192, 193 : visit to Glen R 

 ii. 1S6; bad handwriting, ii. 312: 

 idleness a misery, ii. 433, 443 ; on 

 immortality and death, ii. 44.1. 445 : 

 on lavas, ii. 125 ; letter to 5 

 on Glen Roy, ii. 181 ; indebted) 

 to Lyell, ii. 1 17 ; on 1 yell a 

 geologist, ii. 118; on LyeU's 

 Visit to the U.S.A.. ii. 225 ; worl 

 Man and Sexual Selection, ii. 3 

 on mountain-chains, ii. 12! : offer of 

 help to F. Mllller, ii. 303 ; never 

 afraid of his facts, ii. 333 ; an honorary 

 member of the Physiological Society, 

 ii. 436 ; pleasure in discussing Geo- 

 logy with Lyell. ii. 173: reads paper 

 belore Linn. Society, ii. 193; \ 



ii. 445. 

 of aiding fell 

 ii. 240 ; 1 



• 1 . 442: 

 visit 



an artist, ii. 422 ; on speculation, ii. 

 133; style in writing, ii. \2i: gi 



imonial in 

 candidature for botanical Chair in 

 Edinburgh, ii. 247 : tl 

 in tl L 341 ; \ 



to . ii. 392, 412 ; visil 



Patterdale, ii. 433 ; on vitality 



Is, ii. 243-6 : on volcanic phe- 

 nomena, ii. 113. 114, 121 ; on Welsh 

 glaciers, ii. 190; work on action of 

 carbonate of ammonia on plants, ii. 



434, 438 



in, Mrs. CI 



vn, i. j ! to, i. 29, 30 ; 



passage from Darwin's autobiography 



. i. 30 ; m ntioned, ii. 1 17. 150, 



188 ; illness, ii. 2S5 



Darwin, Emma : see Mrs. Charles 



Darwin. 

 Darwin, Erasmus A., i. 4. 5. 8, 33*. 

 252 ; death of, i. 395 ; letters to, i. 

 247, 24S ; mentioned, ii. 445 ; visit 

 ii. IO 

 Darwin, Dr. Erasmus, Charles Dar. 

 preliminary notice to Krause's me- 

 moir of, ii. 423 ; Charles Darwin and 

 ilutionary views of, i. \2\ 

 Darwin, Francis, i. 302, 365 ; ii. 361, 



395- 397, 417, 421, 425- 4.>o 

 bloom and stomata, i. 369 ; ii. " 

 (.2 5 : on / . i. 369 ; on Hux- 



ley's speech at Cambridge, i. 371. 372 ; 

 on the Knight-Darwin law, i. 51 ; ii. 

 250 ; on lobing of leaves, i 387 ; ex- 

 periments on nutrition, i. 369 : experi- 

 ments on plant-movements, ii. 370 ; 

 lecture at Glasgow (Brit Ass 

 1901) on perceptions of plants, ii. 

 420 j sugg 1 Romai 



riments on intelligence, ii. 49 : 

 vivisection, ii. 

 work, ii. 429; on Wiesnei 

 ii. 432 



313, 315 : ii. ( 

 2 12. z ; 

 i. 287 ; criticism of Wallace, i. 



lected Plumian 1 

 at Cambridge, ii. 447 ; I ex- 



periments with magnetic needles 

 insects, i. ; . 



heredity, ii. 41. icle in C 



tc: on origin of lan- 



guage, ii. 45 



Henrietta (Mrs. Litchfield), 



