62 



raontlis of February and March, he is supposed to have contracted 

 that fever which teruiinated his Hfe : he died at his residence in Cam- 

 bridge Street, Hyde Park, on the 6th of April, 1854. I cannot con- 

 clude this notice more appropriately than in the words of Mr. Bell : — 

 *' He loved and followed Science for her own sake ; and if occasion- 

 ally he appeared somewhat tenacious of his opinions and over-anxious 

 for his own Itune, surely this was jiardonable in one who gave up all 

 for the ])ursuit of knowledge, depriving himself without a murmur of 

 even the most common comforts, that he might devote himself the 

 more unreservedly to the one noble object of his life. He worked for 

 knowledge and ])erhaps for fame; but he never prostituted science to 

 gain, nor mingled ignoble motives with his pursuits." 



List of Mr. Newport's Scieyitific Papers. 



On the Nervous 835(0111 of the Sphinx Lij^iistri, and the chan<jes which it undergoes 

 during a part of the Metamorphoses of the Insect. Phil. Trans, cxxii. 383, 

 and cxxiv. 389. 



On the Respiration of Insects. Id. cxxvi. 529. 



On the Temperature of Insects, and its connexion with the Functions of Respiration 

 and Circulation in this Class of Invertebrated Animals. Id. cxxvii. 259. 



On the Organs of Reproduction and the Development of the Myriapoda (1st Series). 

 Id. cxxxi. 99. 



On the Structure, Relations and Development of the Nervous and Circulatory Systems, 

 and on the Existence of a complete Circulation of the Blood in Vessels in Myri- 

 apoda and Macrourous Crustacea. Id.cxxxiii. 243. 



On the Reproduction of Lost Parts in Myriapoda and Insecta. Id. cxxxiv. 283. 



On ihe Impregnation of the Ovnm in Amphibia. Proc. Roy. Soc. v. 971 ; vi. 82, 171. 



On the Respiratory Organs of the Common Leach {Hirudo officinalis) and their con- 

 nexion with the Circulatory System. Id. iii. 206. 



Monograph of the Class JNIyriapoda, Order Chilopoda, with Observations on the 

 General Arrangement of the Articulata. Linn. Trans, xix. 265 and 349. 



On the Aqueous Vaptmr expelled from Bee-hives. Id. xx. 277. 



Note on the Generation of Aphides. Id. xx. 281. 



On the Natural History, Anatomy and Development of the Oil-beetle (Meloc), more 

 especially of Meloe cicatricosus of Leach. — First Memoir: The Natural History 

 of Meloe. Id. xx. 297. — Second Memoir: The History and General Anatomy of 

 Meloe, and its Affinities, compared with those of Strepsiptera and Anoplura, with 

 reference to the connexion which exists between Structure, Function and Instinct. 

 Id. XX. .'^2L — Third Memoir: The External Anatomy of Meloii in its relation to 

 the Laws of Development. Id. xxi. 167. 



On Cryptophagus eellaris of Paykull. Id. xx. 351. 



On the Formation of the Air-sacs and dilated Tracheae in Insects. Id. xx. 419. 



On the Anatomy and Afiinities of Pteronareys regalis of Newman , with a Postscript 

 containing Descriptions of some American Perlida;, together with Notes on their 

 Habits. Id. XX. 425. 



