510 



INDEX. 



et seq. ; difficulties of the voyage, 

 334 et seq. ; an indigenous race 

 there, 449. 



Ceranibyx found at Bouru, ii. 132. 



Ceyx Cajeli, ii. 137. 



Chafer, long-armed, i. 473. 



Charniosyna plaeentis, a bird of 

 Djilolo, ii. 17, 42. 



Chinese, in Singapore, i. 32, 33 ; their 

 bazaar, ih. ; trades and occupa- 

 tions of, ib.; Jesuits among, 35, 

 36. 



Christians of Ceram, ii. 77. 



Civets, i. 22 ; civet eats of the 

 Moluccas, ii. 139. 



Cockatoos, i. 21 ; in Lombock, 243 ; 

 of the Aru Islands, ii. 226, 227 ; 

 their habits, 227, 229. 



Cock-figliting at Dobbo, ii. 269. 



Cockroaches, fed on by the Birds of 

 Paradise, ii. 396. 



Cocoa-nut trees and cocoa-nuts of 

 Batchian, ii. 50; of Matabello, 

 100; luxury of, 101; of the Ke 

 Islands, 183. 



Cocytia d'Urvillei, a day -flying 

 moth, ii. 17, 199. 



Ccelogynes in flower, i. 128. 



Comet of 1858, ii. 25, 29. 



Commerce, genius of, at the work 

 of civilization, ii. 215, 216; ethics 

 of, 273. 



Copper, supposed discovery of, in 

 Timor, i. 300. 



Coral rocks surrounding Coram, ii. 

 104, 105 ; dangers of, 343. 



Coraline rock, ii. 28, 30. 



Coti, on the coast of Borneo, ii. 

 385. 



Coupang, arrival at, i. 259 ; a cold 

 reception, ib. ; suspicions of the 

 authorities, 261 ; and conduct of 

 the Pumbuckle, 261-263; inha- 

 bitants of, 290. 



Crania of the race of man in the 

 Malay Archipelago, ii. 467 ; the 

 author's measurements of, 468, 

 469. 



Cranioscopy has produced no cer- 

 tain resnlt.s, ii. 467. 



Crew, author deserted by the, ii. 

 115. 



Cuba and Yucatan, near proximity, 

 yet widely different, natural pro- 

 ductions of, i. 17. 



Cuckoos, in Malacca, i. 44; in Ce- 

 lebes, 429. 



Culture, village of, near Batavia, i. 

 175. 



Curculionidee, ii. 53. 



Current, violence of the, ii. 28. 



Cuscus, prehensile-tailed, i. 22 ; or- 

 natus, ii. 55, 143 ; the genus, 142; 

 maculatus, 244. 



Cvnogale bennetti, the, in Borneo, 

 'i. 61. 



Cynopithecus nigrescens, ii. 54, 

 139. 



D. 



Dammar, a resin, the production 

 of immense forest trees, 60. 



Dampier's Straits, ii. 300. 



Darwin, Mr., theory of the dispersal 

 of natural productions, i. 16, 187, 

 207 ; Ms theory of oceanic islands, 

 329. 



Daud Inchi, an Amboynese Malay, 

 i. 242. 



Davis, Dr. J. B., his collections of 

 human crania, ii. 465, 466. 



Deer, i. 22 ; the only ruminant of 

 the Moluccas, ii. 1 40. 



Deer flies of New Guinea, ii. 313- 

 315. 



Delli, capital of Portuguese Timor, 

 i. 295 ; ii. 124, 125 ; character of, 

 i. 295 ; hill cultivation. 299 ; sup- 

 posed copper mine, disheartening 

 results of an exploration, 302- 

 304; low ebb of morality at, 

 309. 



Divisions, two natural ones, of the 

 Malay Archipelago {see Austro- 

 Malayan). 



Diapauuan, village of, at Java, i. 

 "172. 



Djilolo, village of, ii. 16 ; forests -^ 

 and birds of, 17 ; formerly the S 

 residence of the Sidtaus of Ter- ' 

 nate, ib. 



Dobbo, arrival at, ii. 196 ; difflcul- 



