INDEX. 



393 



GRAY. 



tions, i. 314; articles in the 'At- 

 lantic Monthly,' ii. 338, 359, 370, 

 371 ; ' Darwiniana,'ii. 370; his sup- 

 port of Darwin's views, ii. 185, 

 314; letter from, to J. D. Hooker, 

 on the 'Origin of Species,' ii. 268; 

 letter from, on the American reprint 

 of the * Origin,' ii. 270 ; " Note 

 on the coiling of the Tendrils of 

 Plants," iii. 311 ; notice in the Na- 

 tion, of the ' Variation of Animals and 

 Plants,' iii. 84 ; on the aphorism : 

 "Nature abhors close-fertilisation," 

 iii. 259 ; on variations being speci- 

 ally ordered or guided, iii. 62 ; 

 review of the ' Fertilisation of 

 Orchids ' by, in ' Silliman's Journal,' 

 iii. 272. 



Gray, Dr. Asa, letters to : on Design in 

 Nature, i. 315; on variation and on the 

 American flora, ii. 60, 61 ; on Natural 

 Selection and on geographical distri- 

 bution, ii. 78 ; on Trees and Shrubs, 

 ii. 89 ; on the recording of varieties of 

 plants, ii. 106 ; with abstract of the 

 theory of the ' Origin of Species,' ii. 

 1 20 ; on climate and migration, ii. 

 135 ; on the difficulties of the work, 

 ii. 155; sending him the 'Origin 

 of Species,' ii. 217'; suggesting an 

 American edition, ii. 244, 269 ; on 

 his review of the 'Origin,' ii. 286; 

 on Sedgwick's and Pictet's reviews, 

 ii. 296 ; on American reviews, ii. 

 305 ; on notices in the ' North British' 

 and ' Edinburgh ' Reviews, and on the 

 theological view, ii. 310; on the dis- 

 cussion before the American Aca- 

 demy, ii. 326 ; on Lyell's change of 

 position, ii. 326 ; on the position of 

 Profs. Agassiz and Parsons, ii. 332 ; 

 on his article in the ' Atlantic Month- 

 ly,' ii. 338 ; on degrees of acceptance, 

 ii. 344 ; on his essay and on change 

 of species by descent, ii. 371 ; on 

 design, ii. 353, 373, 377, 381 ; on 

 the American war, ii. 376, 381 ; 

 on his sending postage-stamps, ii. 

 383 ; on the spread of the doc- 

 trine of Evolution and on the 

 French translation of the 'Origin,' 

 ii. 386 ; on language and on Colenso's 



GURNEY. 



1 Pentateuch,' ii. 390 ; on Lyell's 

 ' Antiquity of Man,' and on the Civil 

 War in the United States, iii. 10 ; 

 on Phyllotaxy, iii. 52 ; on the ' Varia- 

 tion of Animals, &c.,' iii. 73; on 

 the American edition, iii. 84; on 

 the ' Descent of Man,' iii. 131 ; on 

 the biographical notice in 'Nature,' 

 iii. 189; on their election to the 

 French Institute, iii. 223 ; on the 

 'Expression of the Emotions,' iii. 

 134; on fertilisation of Papilionaceous 

 flowers and Lobelia by insects, iii. 

 259, 260 ; on the structure of ir- 

 regular flowers, iii. 262 ; on Orchids, 

 iii. 263, 264, 271, 273, 284; on his 

 article in ' Nature, 'iii. 283 ; oncross- 

 and self-fertilisation, iii. 290, 292, 

 293 ; on different forms of flowers in 

 species of Primula^ iii. 298, 300 ; on 

 Lythrum, iii. 301 ; an. Linum grandi- 

 floruni) iii. 302 note; on " dicecio- 

 dimorphism," iii. 303 ; on dimorphic 

 plants, iii. 306, 308 ; on the Oxlip, 

 iii. 306 ; on the fertilisation of Linum 

 grandiflorum, iii. 302, note; on 

 movement of tendrils, iii. 313 ; on 

 the climbing of Bignonia, capreolata, 

 iii. 314 ; on climbing plants, iii. 316 ; 

 on Drosera, iii. 318, 322, 325 ; on 

 the " bloom " of leaves and fruit, iii. 

 340. 



Gray, John Edward, his opinion of the 

 'Origin,' ii. 243. 



Gray's ' Statistics of the Flora of the 

 Northern United States,' ii. 88. 



Great Marlborough Street, residence 

 in, i. 67-99, 279. 



Greeks, ancient, high intellectual 

 development of the, ii. 295. 



Greenland, connexion of American and 

 European Alpine plants through, ii. 

 89. 



Grote, A., meeting with, i. 76. 



Gully, Dr., his belief in mesmerism and 

 clairvoyance, i. 373. 



Gtinther, Dr. A., letters to : on Ford's 

 woodcuts, iii. 122; on sexual differ- 

 ences, iii. 123. 



Gurney, Edmund, letter to, on music, 

 iii. 186; contribution to the vivi- 

 section discussion, iii. 210. 



