INDEX. 



521 



4.'il; general view as to their 

 origin and affinities, 452 et seq. ; 

 the black Polynesian races, 454 

 et seq. ; general reflections on, 

 459 et seq. ; on the crania and the 

 languages of the, 465 et seq. 



Raffles, Sir Stamford, his account of 

 the ruins of Java, i. 163. 



Ratahan vocabulary, ii. 473. 



Regent Bird of Australia, ii. 419. 



Rhinoceros, in Malacca, i. 52. 



Rifle birds of Australia, ii. 416, 417. 



Robberies at Batchiau, ii. 45. 



Rosenberg, Herr, ii. 123; a German 

 naturalist, 319. 



Ross, Mr., an Englishman resident 

 at Lombock, i. 253. 



Botti vocabulary, ii. 475. 



Rowan mountains, i. 114. 



Ruatan, a river of Ceram, ii. 82 ; 

 difficulty of crossing, ib. 



Rurukan, village of, the highest in 

 Minahasa, i. 385 ; coffee planta- 

 tions, 387 ; hill vegetation, 388- 

 390 (see Tondano) ; missionaries 

 in, 396. 



Rusa hippelaphus of Java, ii. 140. 



Sago district of East Ceram, ii. 

 116. 



Sago bread, mode of preparing the, 

 ii. 118 ; oven for baking, 120. 



Sago palm of Ceram, ii. 116, 117; 

 washing of, 119; conversion into 

 food with little labour, 121. 



Sago trees, ii. 89; of the Ke Islands, 

 183. 



Sahoe, village of, ii. 17, 18; the in- 

 habitants distinct from the Malay 

 races, 19. 



Sahoe vocabulary, ii. 474. 



Salayer Straits, ii. 166. 



Salayer vocabulary, ii. 473. 



Salibabo Islands, vocabulary of the, 

 ii. 473. 



Salwatty, map of, ii. 332; island of, 

 414. 



Samabang, a trip to, i. 81 ; descrip- 

 tion of, 83 ; a Dyak house, ib. 

 VOL. II. 



Sandal wood, in Timor, i. 12, 311. 



Sanguir Island, i. 6. 



Sanguii- Islands vocabulary, ii. 473. 



Saparua vocabulary, ii. 474. 



Sapi-utan, the, i. 412, 413; descrip- 

 tion of, 433. 



Sarawak, i. 54; the autlior enter- 

 tained at, by Sir James Brooke, 

 ib. ; gold-fields and coal-works, 

 54, 55 ; the Sadong river and its 

 tributaries, 55 ; head of the river 

 of, 113; arrival at, from the in- 

 terior, 116; government of, by 

 Sir James Brooke, 144-146. 



Sardinia and Corsica, natural jiro- 

 ductions peculiar to, i. 15. 



Sassak vocabulary, ii. 472. 



Sassaks, the, aborigines of Lom- 

 bock, i. 270. 



Savu vocabulary, ii. 475. 



Scoriiions, ii. 258. 



Screw pines on the Batchian coast, 

 ii. 60. 



Sea, contrasts in depths of, i. 13, 

 23. 



Sea Gipsies, vocabulary of the, ii. 

 475. 



Seboran mountain, lower slopes of 

 the, i. 112. 



Semioptera of the Moluccas, ii. 146. 



Seuankan, Malay village, i. 111. 



Senna, Malay village, character of 

 the people, &c., i. 115, 116. 



Serpents, of immense size, ii. 132, 

 133. 



Servants, the author deserted by his, 

 ii. 115. 



Serwatty Islands, i. 6. 



Sharks caught and cooked, ii. 167. 



Shells and fish, an unrivalled col- 

 lection of, i. 472, 473. 



Siau vocabulary, ii. 473. 



Sickness of the author and his men, 

 ii. 317, 322, 323. 



Silinta, in Mysol, ii. 332, 333. 



Simia satyrus, i. 62. 



Simunjon river, i. 55 ; coal-works, 

 57 ; advantages of, good locality 

 for insect collecting, ib. ; a trip 

 up the river, 81 ; narrowness of 

 the stream, 82 ; monkeys on the 

 lianks.rt. ; arriv;d at Samabang. ('6. 

 M M 



