INDEX 



287 



38 n. 1, 122, 127 ».2; Romanes, 

 G. J., 38, 258; Scott, J.,18-19, 

 53».1,70, 74; Thiseltoa-Dyer, 

 Sir W., 100 ; Wallace, A. E., 

 104-5, 112, 129 n. 3, 133-4, 

 134 n. 1, 140, 255; Weir, 

 J. Jenner, 112 ; Weismann, A,, 

 127. 



Twenty-two of Darwin's let- 

 ters first published in these 

 addresses were written to the 

 following correspondents : — 

 Hope, F. W., 202-3 ; Trimen, 

 Roland, 63, 213-46; Weir, 

 J. Jenner, 32 ; Wilson, E. B., 

 107 ; Wallace, A, R., 106 (see 

 also vii). 



Autobiography of: — 51, 58 

 n. 2, 59, 60, 63-4, 66, 74-6, 

 75 n. 2, 85 n. 1, 99 n. 1, 100, 

 103, 123 n. 2, 140. 

 Darwin, Mrs. Charles, 58, 58 

 n. 2 ; letter from Darwin to 

 on 1844 essay, 6, 87 ; letters 

 signed by Charles Darwin writ- 

 ten by, 227-9, 234; letter 

 written on behalf of Charles 

 Darwinby,216,231,245. 

 Darwin, Dr. Erasmus (grand- 

 father of Charles Darwin), 

 Lamarck and, 8, 4 ; A. R. 

 Wallace on, 15 ; on protective 

 and aggressive resemblances, 

 101-2. 

 Darwin, Erasmus Alvey (brother 

 of Charles Darwin), letter to, 

 58 n. 2, 

 Darwin, Francis, permission to 

 publish Darwin's letters 

 granted by, vii, 31, 106, 201, 

 213; to reprint Section IV, 

 ix ; assistance in editing let- 

 ters, &e., rendered by, 215, 

 224 n. 2, 245 n. 1, 273 ; pre- 

 sent at Oxford centenary, 78; 

 speech at, 79; the debtto, 90-1; 

 on the conditions of Darwin's 

 health and work, 58, 61-3, 61 

 n. 1 ; Darwin's attitude to- 

 wards his readers, 69; Dar- 

 win's control, 75 n. 1 ; tele- 



ology and natural selection, 

 100-1 ; transmission of ac- 

 quired characters, 38-42 ; an 

 orange-piercingmoth,224M. 1. 

 Darwin, Sir George, permission 

 to reprint Section IV granted 

 by, ix ; on discontinuity in 

 rate of evolution, 50-1 ; pre- 

 sent at Oxford centenary, 78 ; 

 speech at, 79 ; writer of 

 letter signed by Charles Dar- 

 win, 244-5. 

 Darwin, Major Leonard, present 



at Oxford centenary, 78. 

 Darwin, William E, present at 

 Oxford centenary, 78 ; speech 

 at Cambridge centenary, 79. 

 Darwin and modem science, Se- 

 ward, Ed., viii, ix, 92, 260. 

 Darwin celebration of the 

 American Assoc, for Adv. Sci,, 

 viii, 1, 57. 

 Darwin centenary at Cambridge, 



84.. 

 Darwin centenary at Oxford, 78. 

 DarmnrWoMaee celebration of 

 the Linnean Society, 12-15, ?6, 

 52, 71. 

 Darwin- Wallace essay, publica- 

 tion of, (July 1, 1858), 12-15, 

 23, 144; effect of, 52; pro- 

 tective resemblance described 

 in Wallace's section, 103 ; 

 sexual selection in Darwin's, 

 103, 139-40. 

 Darwin - Wallace hypothesis, 

 xiv, XV, 8, 9 ; see also 'natural 

 selection'. 

 ' Darwinism versus Wallaceism', 



Hubrecht, 269. 

 Davenport, C. B., 185; on de 

 Vries's ' fluctuations', 269-70. 

 Dawson, Sir William, on the 



Origin, 15-16. 

 de Vries, on the variations in- 

 cluded in 'fluctuations', 49, 

 49 n. 1, 263; Bateson's, Ptin- 

 nett's, and Shipley's ' fluctua- 

 tions ' differ from those of, xi, 

 xii, 49 n. 1, 258-80; the mu- 

 tation hypothesis of, xi-xiv. 



