Index 



" Variation, Heredity, and Evolution," 



Lock's, ii. 84 



of birds, i. 162-3 



" Variations of Animals and Plants 



under Domestication," Darwin's, 



i. 112, 189, 195, 197, 199, ii. 2 

 Variety, Wallace's differentiation of, 



from species, i. 91-2, 96, 97, 101, 



115, 167 (note), 169, 173, 205, 210, 



234, ii. 21, 62, 63, 70 

 Varley, C. F., i. 244 

 Vegetarianism, Wallace on, ii. 158 

 " Vestiges of the Natural History of 



Creation," i. 91, 92 (note) 

 Victoria, Queen, approves of pension 



to Wallace, i. 315 

 " Vignettes from Nature," Grant 



Allen's, ii. 46 

 Vogt, Prof., i. 221 

 Volcanic eruptions and migration, 



Lyell's theory of, ii. 19 

 " Voyage of the Beagle," Darwin's, i. 



31, 32, 34, ii. 2 

 " up the Amazon," Edwards's, 



i. 25 



W 



Waddell's " Lhasa," ii. 82 



Waddington, Mr. Samuel, ii. 77 



Wages, question of, ii. 156 



Waimate (N.Z.), missionary settle- 

 ment at, i. 37 



Wallace, Alfred Russel: co-discoverer 

 of Natural Selection, i. 1, 2, 105, 

 106, 107, 111, 112, 113, 136, 139, 

 153, 158, ii. 39-40 ; early years, 

 i. 5-44 ; nervousness, 7, 14, 35, 

 ii. 134 ; his father, i. 8 ; his 

 mother, 8, 9, 30 ; first experi- 

 ments, 9, 19-20 ; schooldays, 11 ; 

 geographical studies, 11 ; love of 

 reading, 13 ; pupil teacher at 

 Hertford Grammar School, 14 ; 

 interest in Socialism, 15, 27, ii. 

 151 et scq., 181 ; land-surveying, 

 i. 15, 17, 19, ii. 139, 182 ; astrono- 

 mical studies and writings, i. 20, ii. 

 167 el seq. ; early interest In zoo- 



286 



logy and geology, i. 20 ; first 

 telescope, 20, ii. 168 ; love of 

 botany, i. 20, 21, ii. 106 ; his her- 

 barium, i. 22 ; as watchmaker, 23 ; 

 interest in phrenology and mes- 

 merism, 24, ii. 181, 182 ; studies 

 beetles and butterflies, i. 24, 114 ; 

 school teacher at Leicester, 24 ; 

 voyage to Amazon, 26 et seq. ; 

 explores Uaup6s River, 29 ; fire 

 at sea and loss of collections, 29, 

 30 ; first meeting with Darwin, 

 35, 105, ii. 62 ; meets Huxley, i. 

 35 ; visits Switzerland, 35, ii. 

 204 ; visits Singapore, i. 36 ; on 

 missionaries, 37-8, 47, 48, 50, 

 62-3 ; in Sarawak, 38-40 ; beetle 

 and butterfly collecting, i. 38, 41-2, 

 114, 237, ii. 4-5 ; ill-health of, i. 

 40, 79 ; enthusiasm as naturalist 

 and collector, 40-2, 115 ; journey 

 in a " prau," 42 ; early letters, 

 etc., 45-88 ; Darwin- Wallace joint 

 paper read before Linnean Society, 

 71, 89, 109, 118, 122 ; Darwin's 

 appreciation of his magnanimity, 

 71, 106, 118, 134, 137, 139, 141, 



153, 164, 242, 252, 287, 304 ; 

 attack of intermittent fever, 107, 

 108 ; jubilee of Darwin-Wallace 

 essay and his speech, 110 et seq. ; 

 relations with Spencer, 125 ; Presi- 

 dential Address to Entomological 

 Society, 126 ; reads proofs of 

 Spencer's " Principles of Socio- 

 logy," 126 ; correspondence with 

 Darwin, 127-320 ; inscription on 

 envelope containing Darwin's first 

 eight letters, 128 ; sends Darwin a 

 honeycomb, 143 ; reads Spencer's 

 ■works, 147, 150; " expos6 " of 

 Rev. S. Haughton's " Bee's Cell," 

 148 ; his opinion of Agassiz, 149 ; 

 and the origin of man, 152, 153, 



154, 155 et seq., 240 ; and Dar- 

 win's paper on climbing plants, 

 162 ; on a crested blackbird, 163 ; 

 on the Reader, 165 ; on mimicry, 

 167 (note), 168, 176, 179 ; ap- 



