532 



INDEX 



282 sq. ; difficulty in Orchids, 283 ; 

 Grasses, and HackePs monograph, 

 285; 286, 287, 288, 289 ter ; 

 Memoir of W. J. Hooker, 381; 

 Indian Balsams, 383, no one 

 classification of, 397 ; India in- 

 completely botanised, 398 bis ; 

 new collections needed, 384 ; diffi- 

 culties, 384, 385 bis, 386 ; excellent 

 new specimens, 387 ; the Gazetteer 

 article, 388, 391 bis; Kashmir 

 specimen, 394 ; Paris specimens 

 overlooked, 401 



Dutkiea, ii. 287 sq. 



Dyer, Sir W. Thiselton-, lectures 

 under Huxley, i. 403 ; aid, ii. 141, 

 153, 154 ; translates Sachs, 153 n. ; 

 from Secretary, 189, becomes 

 Assistant Director, ib. ; marries 

 Harriet Hooker, 204, 206; 215, 

 216 ; Northern and Southern 

 plants, 224 ; administrative work, 

 227, 243, 246-7; physiological 

 work, 230 ; Ed. Bot. Mag., 243 n., 

 255 ; succeeds J. D. H., 267 ; on 

 Pachytheca, 292, 307, 312; first 

 President of Botanical Section at 

 Brit. Assoc., 362 



EAST India Company, treatment 

 of scientific books, i. 340 ; of 

 H. and T.'s Flora Indica, 355, 358 ; 

 botanical collections made over 

 to Kew, 361 



Eastlake, Sir Charles, P.E.A., i. 17, 

 18 



Eastlake, Lady (Elizabeth Rigby), 

 i. 17, 18 ; ii. 349 and note 



Ebony tree, i. 98 



Ecology, instituted by J. D. H., ii. 

 425; cp. s.v. Warming 



Economic Botany, in the Colonies 

 and India, ii. 1-7; Jamaica and 

 W. Indies, 326 ; tropical forestry, 

 402 ; fodder plants, drought- 

 resisting, 402 sq. ; West Indies 

 sugar question, 403, 404, other 

 industries needed, 403, 405, pro- 

 gress made, 405-10, including 

 scientific teaching, 406 ; its origina- 

 tor, Sir W. Hooker, 410 ; Museum 

 of, at Kew, 462 



Edgeworth, M. P., i. 468 and note, 473 



Edinburgh, Botanic Garden, i. 30, 

 ii.445; medical degree at, i. 39, 165; 



lectures for Graham, 191 sq. ; pay*- 

 ment, 192 ; means deserting his 

 book, 196 ; lectures, has to write, 

 196-7, the first, 199 sq., successful, 

 201-2 ; election to chair, defeat in, 

 204-5, taken lightly, 219 



Huxley lectures at, ii. 25 ; re- 

 visited, 344, 445 



Education, of his sons, ii. 182, 193, 

 326 sq., 434; in America, 208; 

 Modern History the curse of, 252, 

 329; popular, need for, 326, 

 should be secular, ib. note, cp. 338 ; 

 limits of, 328, 329 bis; technical, 

 329 ; the classics, 330, 332 sq. ; 

 physics, 330 ; of women, 331 ; 

 religious instruction, 338 ; medical, 

 and botany, 351 ; school work as 

 a foundation, 369 sq. ; how supple- 

 mented, 370 ; the meaning of 

 ' study,' 370, 371 ; examinations 

 and practice, 371 ; modern self- 

 education hampers school curricu- 

 lum, 454 sq. See Schools, Science 



Efficient causes, i. 518 sq. 



Elaeis guineensis, ii. 5 



Edwardes (Milne Edwardes, the 

 French zoologist), i. 58 



Edwardsia, i. 445, 452 ; experiments 

 with salt water, 494 and note 



Ehrenberg, C. G., i. 56 and note, 59, 

 178 



Ellacombe, Canon, letter to, on 

 Fossil Botany, ii. 294 



Ellenborough, Lord, i. 247 and note, 

 262 



Elliott, Mr., i. 233 



EUiott, Sir H. M., i. 253 and note 



Elwes, H. J., F.R.S., follows J. D. H. 

 in the Himalayas, i. 271, ii. 125 ; 

 story of Hooker, Berkeley, and 

 the pickles, i. 403 n. 



Embryonic development as mark of 

 affinity, i. 451 



Emerald Island, i. 83, 111 



Enderby, i. 51 



Endlicher, S. L., i. 100 and note ; 

 on Conifers, 472 ; his ' Genera 

 Plantarum,' ii. 415 



Engler, ii. 22 ; E. and Prantl, 416 



Entomology, H. takes up, i. 25, 26, 

 30 



Ephedra, ii. 214 



Erebus, H.M.S., described, i. 50, 52 ; 

 voyage, compared with the Beagle, 

 48 ; officers of, 45 sq., 67; medical 



