INDEX 



Right living, and Divine Power in 

 the universe, 271, 276 ; asserted 

 by the doctrine of evolution, 277. 



Rigidity of mind in savages and un- 

 educated people, 215. 



River-drift men, 34-36, 46 ; con- 

 temporary with the big-nosed 

 rhinoceros in Britain, 31, 48; 

 disappeared from Europe in later 

 Pleistocene age, 34 ; stone imple- 

 ments of, 35 $ diffusion of, 36 ; 

 antiquity of, 65. 



Rivers, their part in geological denu- 

 dation, 12. 



Rocky Mountains, and geological 

 denudation, 12 ; in the ice age, 



3'- 



Rodents, Eocene, 19. 



Romanic dialects, what they illus- 

 trate, 86. 



Roman Empire, the, change in ideas 

 of social obligation under, 233 ; 

 the recognition of the individual 

 established under, 233 ; decom- 

 position of primitive ideas brought 

 about by, 234. 



Romans, as Aryans, 76 ; their feel- 

 ing of corporate responsibility, 230. 



Roof, Aryan words for, 117. 



Rubinstein, A. G., training of his 

 musical faculties, 282. 



Rudimentary organs, 322. 



Rumansch as a Latin language, 8.5. 



Rupee of Bengal, 121. 



Russia in Tertiary period, 25 ; ec- 

 clesiastical services of, written in 

 Old Bulgarian, 69. 



Russian, modern, a branch of Sla- 

 vonic speech, 87. 



Russians, central, light complexion 

 of, 94. 



Samoyedic race, complexion of, 93 ; 



in northern Asia, 149, 151 ; 



allied to the Eskimos, 151. 

 Sandalwood, Miocene, 22. 

 Sandwich, meaning of the word, 1 16. 

 Sanskrit, studied after the English 



conquest of India, 78, 97 } study 



of, emphasized similarity of Greek 

 and Latin, 78 ; literature of, the 

 oldest in the world, 79 ; a sister, 

 not a parent, language to Greek 

 and Latin, 79 j resemblance be- 

 tween Zend and, 83 ; words, in 

 the Kawi of Java, 124 ; word for 

 six, 135; kinship with the Latin, 

 perfectly evident, 149 ; Vedic, 

 one of the Aryan group, 74. 

 Saporta, Count, on deciduous trees, 



Sapta-Sindha vas of the Vedic hymns, 

 71- 



Sarasvati, one of the " Seven 

 Rivers," 71. 



Savages, their want of forethought, 

 198 ; their rigidity of mind, 199, 

 215; the clan their unit of so- 

 ciety, 2i 7. 



Scandinavia, in Silurian age, 14 ; 

 Eocene, 16 ; Miocene, 21 ; its 

 shores once washed by the waters 

 of the Indian Ocean, 26 ; in glacial 

 epochs, 30. 



Scandinavian language, Teutonic 

 speech as a branch of, 86. 



Scandinavians, complexion of, 94. 



Scherer, Edmond, on contemporary 

 literature, 191. 



Schlegel, Friedrich, conception of In- 

 do-European family of languages 

 first reached by, 79. 



Schleicher, August, his reconstruction 

 of Old Aryan, no 5 his Beitrage 

 Kur vergleichenden Sprachfor- 

 ichung, HI. 



Schurz, Carl, at the farewell dinner 

 to Spencer, 268. 



Science, rudimentary beginnings of, 

 185 ; distinction between meta- 

 physics and, 264. 



Scotch divines, Mr. Buekle on, 197. 



Scot-free, meaning of the term, 1 21. 



Scotland, in Cretaceous period, 1 6 j 

 in Miocene, 21 ; in Pliocene, 

 26 ; Gaelic language still spoken 

 in, 85. 



Sea, Aryan words for, 128, 129. 



