INDEX. 



383 



CARUS. 



Carus, Prof. Victor, impressions of the 

 Oxford discussion, ii. 322. 



, his translations of the * Origin ' 



and other works, iii. 48, 49 ; 

 * Bibliotheca Zoologica,' iii. 66 ; 

 opinion adverse to pangenesis, iii. 

 83 ; letters to : on the German 

 translation of the ' Origin of Species,' 

 iii. 49, 66 ; on pangenesis, iii. 83 ; 

 on the translation of the ' Origin' 

 into German, iii. 109; on earth- 

 worms, iii. 217 ; on ' Cross- and 

 Self-Fertilisation of Plants,' iii. 292 ; 

 on the publication of * Forms of 

 Flowers,' iii. 309. 



Caryophyllia, i. 235. 



Case, Rev. G., schoolmaster at Shrews- 

 bury, i. 27. 



Catasetum, pollinia of, adhering to 

 bees' backs, iii. 264, 284 ; sensitive- 

 ness of flowers of, iii. 268 ; paper on, 

 iii. 275. 



Caterpillars, colouring of, iii. 93, 94 

 note, 95. 



Caton, John D., letter to, on American 

 Deer, iii., 102. 



Cats, mesmerising, i. 374. 



and mice, ii. 312. 



with blue eyes, deafness of, ii. 



348. 



Cattle, falsely described new breed of, 

 i. 105 ; feral, in Australia and else- 

 where, ii. 173, 174. 



Causation, ii. 249. 



Caves, blind insects of, ii,265. 



Celebes, peculiarities of, ii. 162 ; Afri- 

 can character of productions of, ii. 

 285. 



Cells, struggle between the, in the 

 same organism, iii. 244. 



Cephalaspis, ii. 334 note. 



Chaffinch, sexual differences of the, 

 iii. 124. 



Chalk, subsidence in the, ii. 332. 



Chambers, R., acquaintance with, i. 

 355 ; author of the 'Vestiges,' i. 

 356 ; on ancient Sea-margins, i. 

 362 ; remarks on the * Essays and 

 Reviews,' ii. 363. 



' Chance,' supposed influence of, in 

 Evolution, ii. 199. 



Change, slowness of, ii. 124. 



CLIMBING. 



Chatsworth, visit to, i. 344. 



Chemistry, study of, i. 35. 



Children, loss of, iii. 39. 



, mortality of, ii. 264. 



Chili, recent elevation of the coast of, 

 i. 67, 279. 



Chimneys, employment of boys in 

 sweeping, i. 382. 



China and Japan, junction of, ii. 137. 



Christ's College, Cambridge, charac- 

 teristics of, i. 163-165 ; bet as to 

 height of combination-room of, i. 

 279. 



' Christian Examiner,' review of the 

 'Origin' in the, ii. 318, 319. 



Church, destination to the, i. 45, 46, 

 171. 



Cicadas, male, musical, iii. 94 ; rivalry 

 of, iii. 97. 



Circumnutation, iii. 338. 



, tendency to, inherent in the 



growing parts of plants, iii. 329. 



Cirripedia, work on the, i. 80, 81, 

 346-350 ; confusion of nomencla- 

 ture of, i. 366, 370 ; completion of 

 work on the, i. 395 ; fossil pedun- 

 culate, completion of work on the, 

 ii. 37 ; variability of, ii. 37 ; ovigerous 

 frena of, ii. 214 ; Krohn's observations 

 on, ii. 345 ; branchiae of, ii. 350; 

 paper on the so-called auditory sac 

 of, iii. 2 ; orifice at base of first pair 

 of cirrhi of, iii. 38. 

 Cissus, irritability of tendrils of, iii. 



3I3- 



Clairvoyance, i. 374. 

 Clark, Prof., ii. 308. 

 , Sir Andrew, treatment by, iii, 



355, 358. 

 Classics, study of, at Dr. Butler's 



school, i. 31. 

 Classification, ii. 244. 

 Cleistogamic flowers, iii. 307, 308, 309. 

 Climate, comparative unimportance of, 



ii. 212; influence of, on plants, ii. 



92 ; influence^of, on variation, ii. 



96; influence of, ii. 168, 174, 317. 



, pliocene, ii. 135. 



and migration, ii. 135, 136, 



, . I37 \ 



Climbing plants, i. 92; iii., 27, 311- 



317. 



