524 



INDEX. 



Waidouo, district chief in Java, i. 

 159. 



Waigiou, island of, i. 9 ; voyage from 

 Ceram to, ii. 331 et seq. ; map of, 

 332 ; difficulties of approaching, 

 345 ; lost servants recovered, 

 348; arrival at, 349; birds of Para- 

 dise at, 353; inclement weather 

 at, 354 ; the inhabitants a mixed 

 race, 355; their language entirely 

 Papuan, ib.; collections obtained 

 in, 366, 367 ; voyage fronj to 

 Ternate, 368 ct seq. ; sketch map 

 of the voyage, 369; difficulties 

 of the voyage, 374, 375, 381, 

 et seq. 



Wamma, village of, ii. 198. 



Wangi-wangi, island of, ii. 167. 



Wanumbai, village of, ii. 237; 

 lodgings at, 238, 239; savage in- 

 habitants of, 240; iui[uisitiveness 

 of the natives, 247 et seq. ; legend 

 respecting, 260, 261; the author's 

 mysterious character, 264 ; \var 

 among the natives, 264, 265; de- 

 parture from, 266 ; the people 

 perfect savages, 280. 



Warns-wanis, village of, ii. 115 ; 

 the country around, 122. 



Warzbergen, Capt. Herr, obtains ^ 

 house for the author, ii. 19,7. 



Watelai Channel, ii. 235-237. 



Watelai River, ii. 286. 



Water, scarcity of, ii. 341. 



AVayapo, village of, ii. 129. 



Wayapo vocabulary, ii. 473. 



Waypoti, locality of, ii. 130, 131; 

 the author's house at, 133; igno- 

 rance of the natives, 136. 



Weapons of war, ii. 265. 



Western Islands, resemblance to 

 Asia, i. 20. 



Wokan, island of, ii. 208; map of, 

 219. 



Wonosa,lem, road to, i. 162 ; poisition 

 of, 167 ; noted for its peacocks, 

 ib.; collections in, 172. 



Wood-boring insects, ii. 275, 276. 



Woodpeckers, i. 22, 24, 429. 



Words, nine, selections of in fifty- 

 nine languages, ii. 476, 477. 



Words, one hundred and seventeen, 

 in thirty-three .languages, ii. 478- 

 496. 



;«. 



Ziugiberaceous jilants, i. 51. 

 Zollinger, the Dutch naturalist, his 



account of the island of Bali, i. 



3^7. 



!f^, ^ ^ 





THE END. 



cr 



LONDON : R. CLAY, SONS, AND TAYLOR, PRINTERS. 



