INDEX 



535 



208 bis; rival claims for R.S. 



Medal, 416 ; Atlantis theory, 444 



and note 



On Continental Extension, ii. 98, 



99 bis ; on the British Flora, 222, 



224 ; and future generations, 289 ; 



reformer of Geographical Distribu- 

 tion, 222, 426 

 Ford, Mr., ii. 251 

 Forestry, ii. 7; Indian, 17, 387; 



tropical, 402 

 Forster, E., i. 42 and note 

 Fortune, R., i. 47 n. 

 Foster, Henry, i. 133 and note 

 Foster, Sir M., i. 402 n. ; lectures 



under Huxley, 402 ; ii. 156 ; on 



Irises, 283 

 Frankland, Edward, in the x Club, 



* Sketches from the Life of,' quoted, 



i. 538, 541, 542 ; the Atom, 543 ; 



x Club conversation, 544; Copley 



Medal, ii. 312 



Letter to, from Huxley, the x 



Club, i. 545 

 Franklin, Benjamin, ii. 301 

 Franklin, Sir John, i. 32 n., 105 n. ; 



welcome from, in Tasmania, 105 sq., 



medallion of, ii. 178, 477 ; 347 n.; 



456 ; Jorgensen's letter to, 346, 



347 n., 348 

 Franklin, Lady, welcomes him in 



Tasmania, i. 105 ; 106 ; founds 



scientific society in Tasmania, i. 



106, ii. 455 sq. 

 Frazer (probably Fraser, Louis), i. 83 

 Freshfield, Douglas, ii. 382 n. 



Letters to : On the Caucasus, 363; 



receives ' Round Kanchenjanga ' : 



reminiscences of hisfown journeys, 



452 ; his own geological work, 



scenery, 452 sq. 

 Fries, Elias, i. 84 and note, 132; 



reception from, ii. 89 

 Fry, Sir E., uses Sir W. Hooker's 



drawings, ii. 382 



Letters to : Sir W. J. Hooker's 



plates for his book, 473 ; his book 



on the Liverworts, W. J. H.'s 



drawings, ib. 

 Fry, Elizabeth, ii. 346 

 Fuci, D. Turner on, illustrated by 



W. J. Hooker, i. 9 ; Decaisne on, 



182, 184 ; Harvey on, 451 

 Fuegia, vegetation, and the Falk- 



lands, i. 81, 138; Fagi, 133; 



visited, 134-9; natives, 137 



Gage, Capt., ii. 398 n. 



Letters to : European eyes wanted 

 to improve Indian Botany, 399 bis 



Gaillardot, i. 530 



Galapagos, flora, i. 169, 214, 222; 

 488 sq. ; material in a Darwinian 

 botany book, 535 ; flora, ii. 232 



Galileo, ii. 301 



Galton, Sir Douglas, ii. 161 



Galton, Sir F., x Club guest, i. 544; 

 ii. 308 ; tables of heredity, 366 



Galton, S. T., ii. 188 



Gamble, J. S., ii. 290 and note; 

 Peninsular and Forest Botany, 

 389 ; aid from, 393, 395 bis 



Letters to : Herbarium at 

 Saharunpur and Sikkim balsams, 

 387 s^.; forestry data, 389; Indian 

 types, 390 bis ; ought to deal with 

 forest botany fully, 391 ; India as 

 parent of old-world vegetation, 

 392; the Fl. B. I. out of date, 

 392 sq. ; the Gazetteer article, 

 over-estimated, 393 ; makes clearer, 

 Indian botany being backward, 

 394; perplexing synonymy, 395, 

 396; 'deceitful' plants, ib. ; 

 botany seems dead in India, 400 

 bis ; discoveries at end of J. D. H.'s 

 botanical career, ib. ; tropical 

 forestry, 402 ; his Malayan Botany 

 a solace during coronation festivi- 

 ties, 449 



Garden, Frank, i. 22 and note 



Gardeners' Chronicle, contributor to, 

 i. 412 ; enquirers should read, 430 ; 

 supports Darwin in, 515, 517, 535 ; 

 ii. 105 



Gardner, G., i. 114 and note 



Garsten, Major, i. 233 



Gartner (Gertner), i. 423 



Garwood, Mr., ii. 453 



Gaskell, Mrs., disregards heredity 

 in novel ii. 366 



Gauss, J. K. F., i. 48 sq. 



Gay, visit to, i. 185; Herbarium 

 bought by J. D. H. for Kew, ii. 48 



Geikie, Sir A., ii. 439 



Genera, large, vary greatly, i. 453 sq., 

 458, 497 ; tabulation of local floras, 

 455, 459, and general monographs, 

 456 



General knowledge, J. D. H.'s sources 

 of, i. 24, 36 



* Genera Plantarum,' planned, i. 362 ; 

 work on, 535 bis 



