INDEX 



547 



7 ; statue at Exeter, 8 n. ; ii. 

 472 and note ; visited, ib. 



Hooker, Richard Symonds, his name 

 and skull, ii. 266 ; a budding doctor, 

 357, 457 and note ; reading with, 434 



Hooker, Robert H., presents statue 

 of Richard Hooker to Exeter, 

 i. 8 n. ; ii. 472 



Hooker, Thomas, Rev., founds the 

 American branch of the family, 

 i. 8 ; and American democracy, 

 ii. 323 



Hooker, William Dawson, i. 18, 20 ; 

 delicacy, 20 ; boyish quickness, 

 21-23; tastes, 23, 25, 27; at 

 College, 22, 24, 25 ; his first book, 

 22 ; death, 154 aq. 



Hooker, William Henslow, ii. 192, 196, 

 268 ; illness of, 430 ; sends an ivory 

 walking-stick, 462 



Hooker, Sir W. J., position, sciertific, 

 i. 3, and official, 37; birth, 8; 

 career and discoveries, 9 sq. ; 

 travel, 10 ; the Hooker-Turner- 

 Paget alliance, 10, 16, and with 

 D. Turner, 16 ; the brewery and 

 financial loss, 10 ; at Glasgow, 11 ; 

 his teaching and influence, 11-14, 

 136 ; botanical excursions, 13 ; 

 works, 14 sq., a parallel with his 

 son's, 15 ; personality and home 

 life, 20, cp. 67; K. H., 27; aid 

 to his son, 37, 38-40, 67, 68, 166, 

 176, 215, appreciated by J. D. H., 

 220 ; criticises Erebus officers, 45, 

 67 ; botany and ' dissipation,' 

 zoological and other, 63 sq., 161, 

 262; collections, advice on, 64, 

 101, delight in good, 65, would like 

 to join in, 101 n. ; preliminary 

 account of Antarctic botany, 146 ; 

 advises shortening of Continental 

 trip, 178; friends in Paris, 180; 

 Herbarium and Library, more 

 useful than Brit. Mus., 192, as 

 gift to his son, 192, first offered to 

 Kew, 215; estimate of J. D. H., 

 206 ; small aid from Govt., 210 ; 

 official residence offered, at a 

 price, 346, then freely, with a lien 

 on the Herbarium and Library, 

 346-7 ; modesty, though in need 

 of an Assistant, 349; unselfish 

 love of science, 376 ; opposed to 

 Sunday opening, 377 ; trustee of 

 Fielding Herbarium, 382 ; science 



at Oxford, 383 ; grows careless as 

 editor, 411 ; claims overlooked, 

 418-20 ; identity of several species 

 of Juniper, 472 



ii. 3, 10 sqq. ; his strenuous age, 

 45, character, 64; death, 47, 64, 

 67, account of, 68; his Library 

 and Herbarium, 47-8; portrait, 

 178; the Bot. Mag., 242 n. ; 

 natural inheritance from, 307 sq. ; 

 connexion with Jorgensen, 346- 

 7-8, 483, 484, 485, 486; visit 

 to Iceland, 347 and note ; quotes 

 ' Loves of the Plants ' in his 

 lectures, 354 ; Memoir of, 379-82 ; 

 originator of economic botany, 

 410; a maker of Kew, 417; 

 J. D. H.'s devotion to his memory, 

 148, 382, 410, 430, 444, 473, 474 ; 

 his systematic work, 421, and 

 its aim, ib. ; and the Linnean 

 Society, 430 ; works to the last, 

 444 



Letters from : Botanical excur- 

 sion, i. 23 ; Latin : the Boy's Own 

 Book, 24 ; useful knowledge of 

 botany, 25; unprofitable travel, 

 25 ; College work, 27, 31 ; visit 

 to D. Turner, ib. ; Joseph's botani- 

 cal progress, 32 ; Antarctic, pre- 

 parations for, 38, 39, 40 ; officers 

 of the Erebus, 45 ; Fuegian collec- 

 tions, 139 ; prospect of succession, 

 166; J. D. H. strengthened by 

 the voyage, 168; (to D. T.) on 

 Joseph's engagement, 220 



Letters to : Interview with 

 Ross, i. 41^4, with R. G. Com- 

 mission, 44 ; Govt. and Science, 

 45 ; medical duties, ib. ; work at 

 sea, 57, 60, 60-1 ; as naturalist de 

 facto, 68, 70 ; aid from Ross, 68 

 sq., 70; botany at sea, 71, 72; 

 no tedium, 73 ; St. Helena 

 plants, 71, unsatisfactory, 72 ; 

 uprooted seaweeds, 73 and note ; 

 Kerguelen's Land, its plants, 77, 

 78; affection for, 79; described, 

 100-4 ; the Falklands and Crypto- 

 gams, 79, and Geog. Distribution, 

 81 ; an Antarctic Flora, 82, and 

 local floras, ib. ; Antarctic mosses 

 and their grouping, 83 sq. ; Tas- 

 mania, 106, 107, 107 sq. ; first 

 Polar voyage, 109 sqq. and 110 n. ; 

 only marine zoology possible so 



