D
"Darwin and After Darwin," Romanes', ii. [50]
"—— and his Teachings," i. 170
"—— and 'The Origin,'" Poulton's, ii. [88] (note)
——, Charles, i. 1, 2;
birth of, 5;
autobiography, 5, 23 (note);
ancestors, 6;
at Shrewsbury Grammar School, 12;
natural history tastes, 12;
as angler, 12;
egg-collecting, 12;
humanity of, 13;
leaves Shrewsbury Grammar School, 15;
fondness for shooting, 16;
at Cambridge, 16;
medical studies, 16;
theological studies, 17, ii. [184];
tours in North Wales, i. 18;
beetle-hunting, 18, 114;
voyage in the Beagle, 18;
theory of Natural Selection, 102, 107;
reading, 103;
visits Maer and Shrewsbury, 103;
experiments, 103;
Huxley and, 104;
at work on Species and Varieties, 107;
at Down, 109;
receives presentation copy of Spencer's Essays, 124;
appreciation of Wallace's magnanimity, 134, 137, 139, 141, 153, 164, 242, 252, 287, 304;
falls from his horse, 243;
on Wallace's review of "Descent of Man," 260-2;
criticism of Wallace's "Geographical Distribution," 286, 289;
at Dorking, 288;
promotes memorial to City Corporation in favour of Wallace, 303;
acknowledgment of "Island Life," 307-8;
on migration of plants, 307 (note), 312;
memorial to Gladstone on behalf of Wallace, 313;
death of, 318
Darwin, Charles, letters to Wallace:
On "Law regulating Introduction of New Species," etc., i. 106, ii. [129];
on distribution of animals, i. 133;
on his "Origin of Species," etc., 134, 136;
on Wallace's "Zoological Geography of the Malay Archipelago," 137;
inviting Wallace's opinion of the "Origin," 139;
on protective adaptation of butterflies, 140;
on Press reviews of "Origin," 141, 144;
on theory of flight, 146;
on Wallace as reviewer, 148;
on Wallace's "Variation" and his paper on Man, 153;
on sexual selection, 159;
on Wallace's papers on pigeons and parrots, 160;
on the Aru pig, 162;
on the crested blackbird, etc., 163;
on Wallace's "Pigeons of Malay Archipelago" and dimorphism, 166;
on the non-blending of varieties, 169;
on the term "survival of the fittest," 174;
on sexual differences in fishes, 177;
on colour of caterpillars, 178;
on coloration and expression in man, 179;
on sexual selection and expression, 182;
on scheme for his work on Man, 183;
on laws of inheritance, etc., 185;
on Wallace's "Mimicry," 187;
on Wallace's reply to Duke of Argyll, 189;
on sexual selection and collateral points, 194;
on pangenesis and sterility of hybrids, 197;
on production of natural hybrids, etc., 201;
on sexual selection, 204, 206, 207;
on northern alpine flora, 211;
on Wallace's article on "Birds' Nests," and on mimetic butterflies, 212;
on Sir Clifford Allbutt's sperm-cell theory, and on female protected butterflies, 214;
[pg 273] on Wallace's "Protective Resemblance," 216;
on dimorphic plants and colour protection, 220;
on the colour problem of birds, 225, 229, 231;
on fifth edition of "Origin of Species," 233;
on single variations, 234;
on Wallace's "Malay Archipelago," 235, 237, 240;
on Wallace's review of Lyell's "Principles," 242;
on baffling sexual characters, 245;
on Wallace's paper, "Geological Time," 250;
on Wallace's views on Man, 250>, 251;
on Wallace's "Natural Selection," 252;
on Wallace's criticism of Bennett's paper, 253;
on his "Descent of Man" and St. G. Mivart, 257;
on Wallace's review of "Descent of Man," 260;
on Chauncey Wright's criticism of Mivart, 264;
on a Quarterly review, 269, 291;
on Fritz Müller's letter on mimicry, 270;
on Dr. Bree, 271, 272;
on Bastian's "Beginnings of Life," 274, 278;
on ants, 279;
criticising Wallace's review of "Expression of the Emotions," 280;
on Spencer and politics, 283;
on Utricularia, 284;
on Wallace's "Geographical Distribution of Animals," 286, 289, 292;
on Wallace's article on Colours of Animals, etc., 299;
on Wallace's "Origin of Species and Genera," 304;
on Wallace's "Island Life," 307;
on land migration of plants, 312;
on memorial for Wallace pension, 314, 315;
on mimicry, 316;
on political economy and "Creed of Science," 318;
on land question, 319;
——, Erasmus, i. 6;
on the Wallace-Darwin episode, 127
—— Sir Francis, and "Life and Letters of Charles Darwin," i. 118, 119, 120, 122
—— Sir G., Expulsion theory of, ii. [180]
——, Mr. Horace, letter from his father, on discoverers, ii. [242] (note)