Index 
Darwin, C., no writer done so 
much good as, 239 
his persistency, 240, &c. 
like Pope Julius II., 240 
did not show early promise, 
241 
had hand of iron under 
velvet glove, 241 
——on earthquakes, 241 
——action of worms, 242 
not especially great as 
observer, 242 
strongestin savoir faire, 242, 
243 
cannot be denied rare great- 
ness, 243 
gave his esoteric doctrine to 
the world, 243 
must be allowed great, 243 
organised a literary backing, 
243 
——-strong social position, 244 
‘would have been too wide 
a cross if as good as G. Allen 
says, 244 
——the right man in the right 
place, 244 
knew our little ways, 245 
‘watching his worms, 245 
and ‘‘sag,’’ 245 
——effect of work, instantane- 
ous, 246 
his style bad, 247 
-when badly hit said nothing, 
247, 248 
and emperors of Austria, 
7 
should have noticed Hering, 
2 
ahs best justification, 248 
and Professor Mivart, 248 
——did not care whether uni- 
verse instinct with mind or 
no, 250 
his Gladstonian nature, 250 
great populariser of evolu- 
tion, 250 
Darwin, Erasmus, and Buffon 
better men than Lamarck, 22 
Ss 
273 
Darwin, Erasmus, new genera- 
tion, elongation, 61 
——and thrift, 71, 72 
and moral uniformity, 78 
admits chance, 101, 103 
Darwin, Francis, ve Professor 
Hering’s lecture, 44 
Death and life, 73 
in the liquidation and re- 
construction of, 73 
and decay an untuning, 74 
complex, 74 
swallowed up in life, 75 
fear of, necessary, 150 
residue of life in, 150 
only a new departure, 150 
if we let life without the 
body, &c., 151 
not so complete, 264 
a facon de parler only, 264 
Decimals, true for seven places, 
32 
Deception, there is no, 209 
Democracies, animals and plants, 
265 
Departmental, reflex action, 265 — 
Descent, treated as identical 
with natural selection, 180, 
&c., 185, &c., 196, 197, 199 
triumphed as rapidly as 
other theories, 231 
no more C. Darwin’s theory 
than mine, 234 
Design, aggregation of small 
designs, truest design, 21, 22 
——C. Darwin, ve Hermann 
Miller’s book, 63, 64 
——of telescope, and chance, 80, 
81 
a rope of many strands, 97 
mixed with chance, 154 
Detail, none escaped if small, 159 
Details of two principles em- 
bodied in species of animals 
and plants, 107 
Diapason, the, closing full, &c., 
74 
Diderot, on life of corpse, 150 
Digests us, our food, 128 
