- A
- Abáca, Manila Hemp, ii. [321]-[324]
- Acacia Catechu (Terra Japonica), ii. [114]
- Adam's Peak, Ceylon, ascent of, i. [406]-[418]
- Adams, William, one of the mutineers of the Bounty, iii. [261]-[263]
- Address of the German Residents in Sydney to the commander of the Expedition, iii. [53] (and Appendix)
- Adiga River near Madras, i. [457]
- Agraharam, Imperial present to the Brahmins, i. [459]
- Agriculture, School of (Quinta Normal), at Santiago de Chile, iii. [300]
- Aichison, Mr., Missionary at Shanghai, ii. [460]
- Alameda, the new, at Lima, iii. [396]
- —— the public promenade at Santiago de Chile, iii. [296]
- Albatross, the, i. [188]
- Alboran, Island of, i. [25]
- Algeziras, i. [40]
- Algoa Bay, i. [258]
- Alpaca, the, successful attempts to introduce into Australia, iii. [64]-[66]; value in Peru and Bolivia, [65]
- Alwis, James de, his proficiency in Cingalese dialects, i. [396]
- Amancaes, Valley of, near Lima, iii. [396]
- Amaral, Dom Joâo Maria Ferreira do, Governor of Macao, assassination of, ii. [403]
- American Missionary Society, its activity in China, ii. [460]-[465]
- Amphitheatre, Roman, at Pola, iii. [454]
- Amsterdam, Island of, in Indian Ocean, i. [323]-[335]
- Ananassa Sativa, ii. [167], [325]
- Aneroid Barometers, their usefulness under certain conditions, iii. [328]
- Angas, Geo. Fred., Esq., secretary of the Australian Museum, Sydney, iii. [33]
- Anthropometry, how practised, ii. [127]; iii. [122]-[126]
- Ant Islands, ii. [588]
- Apothecary's store in Shanghai, ii. [437]-[440]
- Appin, village of, near Sydney, iii. [26]
- Aquasie Boachie, son of an African chief resident in Java, his history, ii. [206]
- Arcot, city of, i. [452]
- Areca palm, ii. [102]
- Arequipa (Peru), iii. [350]
- Arewarewa, a skin disease common in the Society Islands, iii. [247]
- Arica (harbour and village), iii. [345]
- Armegon, first British settlement on the Coromandel coast, i. [428]
- Arréois, the, a secret society formerly existing at Tahiti, iii. [219]
- Arrival in Trieste, iii. [455]
- Artillery barrack at Valparaiso, iii. [285]
- Ash Island (New South Wales), iii. [44]
- Aspinwall (Isthmus of Panama), description of, iii. [438]
- Assacú tree, the (Hura Brasiliensis), i. [135]
- Atmospheric currents, i. [183]
- Atolls, appearance of and how accounted for, ii. [588], [626]
- Auckland, harbour and city, described, iii. [96]-[99]
- Augustinian (or Barefoot) monks, convent at Manila, ii. [304]
- Australia, German emigrants in, iii. [6], [31]-[33]
- Australian club in Sydney, iii. [43]
- —— farm, description of an, iii. [38], [41]
- Australische Zeitung, the German newspaper in Sydney, iii. [6]
- Avatars, the, or descents of Vishnu, i. [436]
- Ave Maria in Manila, the, ii. [347]
- Azores, Island of, iii. [336]
- Azoteas, or terraced roofs of Lima, iii. [366]
- B
- Baines, Admiral, Commander-in-chief of H.M. Pacific squadron, iii. [323], [418]
- Baker, W., Esq., Government interpreter at Auckland, iii. [102]
- Balgonie Farm, near Sydney, iii. [36]
- Ball on board the Novara in honour of the birth of an heir to the throne of Austria, iii. [52]-[54]; ball given by the Austrian Consul at Valparaiso in honour of the Expedition, [321]
- Balsas, or rafts used along the west coast of South America, description of, iii. [419]
- Bamboo paper (China), ii. [516]
- Bampoka, island of (Nicobar Group), ii. [43], [61]
- Bampton reef, ii. [626]
- Bandong, city in Java, ii. [235]
- Banyan tree, i. [357]
- Bargo, forest huts at, near Sydney, iii. [40]; curious library in one of the houses at, [42]
- Barometer, its lowest reading during the Typhoon in the China seas, ii. [545]
- Barrier Island, iii. [91]
- Basle Missionary Association in China, ii. [368]
- Basses or Baxos near Galle, i. [418]
- Batavia, description of, ii. [180]-[190]
- Batte-Malve, Island of, one of the Nicobar Group, ii. [42]
- Bay-Lake (Manila), ii. [288]
- Bell-bird of Australia, the, iii. [38]
- Bennett, Dr. George, Zoologist of Sydney, iii. [14]
- Beri-Beri, a Javanese malady, ii. [188]
- Bernstein, Dr., physician and naturalist, ii. [211]
- Betel-nut and fibre, ii. [73], [102], [144], [238], [260]
- Biche de Mar, or sea slug. See Trepang.
- Big Island. See Sikayana.
- Binondo, suburb of Manila, ii. [290]
- Birloche, the, a two-wheeled vehicle in use in Chile, iii. [294]
- Bleeker, Dr., Ichthyologist in Java, ii. [183]
- Bligh, Capt., commander of the Bounty, iii. [260]; his fate, [261]; becomes Governor of the penal colony of Botany Bay, [75]
- Blodgett, Rev. Mr., Missionary at Shanghai, ii. [460]
- Boehmeria nivea, the Ramé-fibre, ii. [167], [205], [321]-[324]
- Bohea mountains of China, the, ii. [506]
- Bo-tree, the (Ficus religiosa), i. [357]
- Bolts, William, his attempt to colonize the Nicobars for Austria, ii. [6]-[10]
- Book-printing introduced into Tahiti, iii. [202]
- Boomerang, known to the ancient Egyptians, iii. [31]
- Borax, or Tincal, trade in, along the Peruvian coast, iii. [344]
- Botanical garden of Rio, i. [143]; of Cape Town, [205]; of Buitenzorg (Java), ii. [205]; of Sydney, iii. [20]
- Botanical riches of the Nicobars, ii. [101]-[103]; of Java, [204]-[206]; of Sydney, iii. [19]-[21]
- Botany Bay, account of, iii. [18]
- Botany Tower, in Sydney, iii. [18]
- Bounty, abridged account of mutiny of the, and subsequent fate of the mutineers and their descendants, iii. [261]-[276]
- Brahmaism, its tenets, i. [435]-[437]
- Brand Vley, hot-springs of (Cape Colony), i. [225]-[229]
- Brauns, William, Consul-general of Hamburg, at Lima, iii. [364]
- Brazil, importance of, as a field for German emigration, i. [132], [171]
- Bread-fruit tree found in the Nicobars, ii. [101]; in Puynipet, [558], [567]; in Tahiti, iii. [243]
- "Brickfielder," unpleasant sensations in a, [111]. 52
- Bridgman, Dr., Missionary and Sinologue, ii. [460]
- Bromelia ananas. See Ananassa sativa.
- Brooke's deep-sea lead, mode of using and results, i. [112], [263]
- Brotherhood of the Heaven and Earth (secret society of the Chinese of Singapore), ii. [147]
- Broughton's Pass in New South Wales, iii. [27]
- Browne, Col. T. Gore, Governor of New Zealand, iii. [136]
- Buddha, tooth of, i. [405]
- Buddhism, tenets and history of, i. [352]-[358]
- Buitenzorg (Java), excursion to, ii, [203]-[208]
- Bukit Timah, the, or mountain of tin at Singapore, ii. [143]
- "Bullock-bandy," Cingalese native conveyance, i. [417]
- Bungalow, description of one at Vellore, i. [452]
- "Burster," violence of, at New Zealand, iii. [141]
- Bush, the, of Australia, described, iii. [26], [30]
- Bushmen, or Bosjesmen, the, i. [203]
- Bush-rangers, depredations of the, iii. [76]
- C
- Cabo Tormentoso, Storm Cape, now Cape of Good Hope, i. [192]-[195], [257]
- Caffres, i. [203]
- Cajamarquilla, ruins of, visited, iii. [385]-[388]
- Caldera, Chile, its appearance, iii. [340]
- Caledon, village of Cape Colony, visit to, i. [242]
- Callao, port of Lima, iii. [363]
- Caltura, Ceylon, curious rencontre at, i. [369], [397]
- Calzada, the, or public promenade of Manila, ii. [310]
- Camden Park, Sydney, visit to, iii. [20]-[23]
- Camoens, grotto of, at Macao, ii. [394]
- Camote, the, or sweet potato, ii. [102]
- Campamiento (Gibraltar), i. [39]
- Campbell, Mr., of Tacna (Peru), curious statistics furnished by him of the stimulating properties of coca leaves, iii. [404]
- Campbelton, New South Wales, excursion to, iii. [24]
- Campo Santo, or cemetery of Valparaiso, iii. [289]
- Canalization, extent to which carried in China, ii, [479]
- Cannibalism in Australia, iii. [33]; in New Zealand, [108]
- Canoes of the natives of Puynipet described, ii. [552]
- Canton-English, peculiarities of, ii. [351], [364]
- Canton River, ascent of the, ii. [381]
- Canton, visit to, ii. [380]-[386]
- Cape Brett, New Zealand, iii. [91]
- Cape Horn, rounding of, iii. [325]-[328]
- Cape Pigeon, habits of the, i. [157]-[190]
- Cape San Augustin, i. [118]
- Carabus or Calaboose, the prison at Tahiti, iii. [238]
- Caret, Catholic missionary, his pertinacity at Tahiti, and its results, iii. [204]-[206]
- Carlowitz, M. von, Prussian Consul at Macao, ii. [394]
- Carretas, or ox-carriages of Chile, iii. [296]
- Carron, Kennedy's companion in the explorations made by the latter in Northern Australia, iii. [12]
- Carteret Island, ii. [595]
- Carthagena, port of, in New Granada, iii. [440]
- Casa Blanca, one of the oldest settlements in Chile, iii. [294]
- Cash, common copper currency of China, ii. [419]
- Castilla, Don Ramon de, president of Chile, interview with, iii. [303]-[306]
- Cathedral of Tong-Kadu near Shanghai, ii. [445], [478]; of Lima, iii. [369]
- Cavite, the outport of Manila, ii. [280]
- Cayenne, French penal colony in, revelations concerning, iii. [252]
- Center, A. J., Esq., Director of the Isthmus of Panama railroad, his kindness, iii. [438]
- Central Normal School of Lima, iii. [378]
- Cerro Alegre, Valparaiso, iii. [288]
- Cerro de Canetas, near Valparaiso, iii. [284]
- Ceuta, Spanish fort of, i. [27]
- Chagres, fever ravages of, iii. [439]
- Chala (Peru), harbour of, iii. [353]
- Chatham Island, iii. [95]
- Cheyne, Capt. Andrew, his charts of the West Pacific, remarks on Puynipet, ii. [554]; remarks on Simpson Island, [585]-[588], [592]; geographical information respecting Bradley Reef, [594]; remarks on the population of Sikayana, [613]
- Chicha, the, a Chilian drink, iii. [316]
- Chile, state of parties in, iii. [305]
- China Tree, cultivation of, in Java, ii. [227]-[233]; in Bolivia and Peru, iii. [413]-[417]; points requiring to be elucidated, [409]-[412]
- Chincha Islands, deposits of Guano on, iii. [355]-[362]; life upon the, [357]
- Chinese banquet, description of a, ii. [485]-[493]
- —— Council Chamber, ii. [427]
- —— dramatic representations, ii. [486]
- —— eating-houses, ii. [429]
- —— language and mode of writing, ii. [365]
- —— reckoning board, and how it is used, ii. [170]
- —— soothsayers, ii. [362]
- —— tea-garden, ii. [430]
- Cholera at Madeira, i. [85]-[88]; at Rio, [152]; at Singapore, ii. [141], [151]; in China, [453]
- Chorillos, sea-side watering-place of the Limanos, iii. [389]-[391]
- Chronometers, their accuracy fully established, iii. [336]
- Church processions in Manila, ii. [345]-[347]
- Cigar manufactory at Manila, ii. [317]-[320]
- Cinchona, or Peruvian Bark. See Fever-Bark.
- Cingalese canoe, i. [417]
- Cinnamon, cultivation of, in Ceylon, statistics of, i. [373]-[377]
- Clarence River, in Australia, iii. [22]; Stearine Candle Manufactory at, iii. [22]
- Clarke, W. B., geologist, iii. [14]
- ——, Rev. H. F., virtually the first discoverer of Gold in Australia, iii. [66], [67]
- Club, Australian, hospitalities of the, iii. [43]
- "Coachman's Whip," the (a bird peculiar to Australia), iii. [38]
- Cobija, Bolivia, harbour and prospects of, iii. [342]
- Cobra di Capello, found in Ceylon occasionally, i. [363], [401]
- Coca (or Erythroxylon Coca) of Peru, its remarkable properties, iii. [402]-[406];
- chemical analysis of its leaves at Göttingen, [406]-[409]
- Cocain, the organic base of the Coca leaves, discovered at Göttingen, iii. [407]
- Coccus Pela, the tree-wax insect of China, ii. [518]
- Cochineal, i. [82]; plantations of, at Pondok Gedeh (Java), ii. [210]
- Cockatoo Island, Port Jackson, iii. [49]
- Cock-fighting in Manila, prevalence of, ii. [312]
- Cocoa-nut and palm, iii. [243]
- Coffee-culture in Ceylon, i. [377]-[379]; in Java, ii. [242]-[244]
- Coggerah Bay, New South Wales, iii. [58]
- Colic, the dry or vegetal form of (Tahiti), iii. [260]
- Colonization of the Nicobar Archipelago, attempts at, ii. [1]-[15], [128]-[131]
- ——, French principles of, compared with those of England, iii. [250], [251]
- Comet of 1858, ii. [594]
- Comprador, a Chinese, described, ii. [360]-[362]
- Concordia, military association of (Batavia), ii. [268]
- Confucius, temple of, at Shanghai, ii. [433]
- Constantia wine, statistics of manufacture of, i. [255]
- Convict question considered, iii. [72]-[90]; settlement at Singapore, ii. [164]-[168]
- Cook-river Bay, New South Wales, iii. [58]
- Cook's Straits, New Zealand, iii. [95]
- Coolie trade, its dimensions at Macao, ii. [397]-[401]
- Cooper, Sir Daniel, his country-seat, and hospitable reception by, iii. [16]
- Copiapó, Chile, copper and silver mines of, iii. [341], [342]
- Coquimbo, port of, iii. [340]
- Coral reef of Puynipet, ii. [556]
- Corregidor Island, Manila Bay, ii. [279]
- Coróborry, dance of the Australian aborigines, described, iii. [34]
- Cowries, mussel shells, used as currency, i. [394]
- Crocodiles in Madras, i. [449]; in Manila, ii. [337]
- Cruera Patuóni, a New Zealand chief, his address to the members of the Expedition, iii. [103]
- Cuba, statistics of tobacco culture in, ii. [320]
- Culture system adopted in Java, features of the, ii. [244]-[246]
- Curacavi, village in Chile, iii. [295]
- Curaré, the Indian poison, i. [138]
- Curcuma longa, ii. [562]
- Curry, its constituents, i. [368]
- Cuzent, Dr. G., valuable work on Tahiti by, iii. [215], [247]
- Cyclones, or hurricanes, speculations as to origin of, i. [183]-[185], ii. [547]-[549]; description of one, [538]-[547]
- D
- Dagga, Tascha or Takka, used by the Hottentots as a masticatory, i. [241]
- Dahata Wahansa (the Holy Tooth), Ceylon. See Buddha's Tooth.
- Dammara pine. See Kauri pine.
- Damper, unleavened bread used in the Australian Bush, iii. [38]
- Dana, his researches in New Zealand, iii. [181]
- Dances of savage races—Caffres, i. [209]; Javanese, ii. [260]-[264]; inhabitants of Puynipet Island, [583]; Australians, iii. [34]; New Zealanders, [101]; Tahitians, [219]; natives of New Caledonia, [221]
- Davis, John, an English sailor, abandoned on the island of Sikayana, his account of the natives, ii. [608]-[610]
- Denison, Sir William, his reception, iii. [5], [14]; his work on convict discipline, [51]; hospitable reception by, [55]; opens Parliament of New South Wales, [56]
- Diadem, the, a mountain peak of Tahiti, iii. [225]
- Dictionary, Maori, iii. [127]
- Dieffenbach, his geological researches in New Zealand, iii. [109], [127]
- Divers (pearl-) of Ceylon, i. [382]-[384]
- Dkinawasima, island of, ii. [547]
- Domeyko, Professor Ignacio, of Santiago, iii. [303]
- Dominican Monks of Manila, ii. [302]
- Dragon tree of Madeira, i. [59]-[64]
- Drury, district of in New Zealand, visit to, iii. [155]; its coal-fields, [169]-[172]
- Dubash (an Indian factotum), his functions, i. [425]
- Duck-hunting in Manila, ii. [329]-[339]
- Du Petit-Thouars, captain of French frigate Venus, his oppression in Tahiti, iii. [208]
- E
- Earthquakes in Peru, iii. [362]
- Edible swallows' nests, ii. [235]-[237]
- Eimeo, one of the Society Islands, iii. [196], [241]
- Elephantiasis græcorum, its ravages in Brazil, i. [135]; singular mode of treatment for, [136]
- Elephants in Ceylon, i. [410], [411]
- Emigration of Chinese, ii. [397]-[400]
- Emu, the, description of, iii. [31], [34]
- Encouragement of learning in China, ii. [419]
- English colonies, their influence on the mother country, iii. [1]-[3]
- Evans, Lieut., U.S.A., director of the Chilean railway, iii. [308]
- ——, F., his chart of magnetic declinations, iii. [257]
- Expedition, Kennedy's, for traversing the continent of Australia, tragical fate of, iii. [13]
- ——, table of, throughout the voyage, i. Appendix
- F
- Faáa, village of Tahiti, iii. [223]; fête there, [230]-[235]
- Falkland Islands, passed on voyage home, iii. [329]-[330]
- Falmouth Harbour, arrival of author at, iii. [446]
- Faóle, one of the groups of Stuart's Islands, ii. [604], [607]-[609]
- Fare-rupe (Pteris esculentum) of Tahiti, iii. [245]
- Fata Morgana, appearance of, i. [49]
- Fauna of Island of St. Paul, i. [297]
- Fautáua, a hill-fort in Tahiti, iii. [227]; waterfall of, iii. [226]
- Feejee Islands, iii. [89]
- Feet, artificial compression of women's, in China, ii. [372]
- Féi, or wild plantain, Tahiti, iii, [243]
- Fenton, F. D., his work on the origin of the Maori population of New Zealand, iii. [138]-[140]
- Ferdinand Maximilian, Archduke, visits the Novara, iii. [452]-[455]
- Ferguson, Sir James, Governor of Gibraltar, i. [28], iii. [450]
- Fernando de Noronha, island of, i. [117]
- Fever-Bark, or Cinchona. See China tree.
- "Fiestas Reales," Manila, ii. [314]
- Fire, alarm of, on board, i. [420]-[422]
- Fire companies in Valparaiso, iii. [288]
- "Fire of the Gods," name of a New Zealand weapon, iii. [101]
- Fire on Island of Amsterdam, accidental, i. [332]
- Ficus Indica. See Banyan tree.
- —— Religiosa. See Bo-tree.
- Fish, species of, at St. Paul Island, i. [316]
- Fitzroy Dry Dock, Cockatoo Island, Sydney, iii. [49]
- Flata limbata, or wax insect of China. See Coccus pelah.
- Flemmich, J. F., Austrian Cons.-Gen. for Chile, iii. [279], [293], [321]
- Flora of Island of St. Paul, i. [312]-[315]
- Flying Fish, i. [110]
- —— Fox (Pteropus), or Kalong Bat, ii. [234], [337]
- Fonseca, Friar Joachim, Manila, ii. [302]
- Foot-print of Buddha, Ceylon, i. [413]-[415]
- Fort St. George, Madras, i. [428], [474]
- Fortune, Rob., naturalist, ii. [508]
- Foundling and orphan children in China, statistics of, ii. [421]-[423]
- Foveau Straits, New Zealand, iii. [95]
- Franciscan monks, monastery of, at Manila, ii. [303]
- Frangerola, harbour of, in Spain, i. [47]
- French language compulsorily introduced into Tahiti, iii. [239], [240]
- —— naval stations in Oceania, remarks on, iii. [248]-[253]
- —— protection of Tahiti, its influence on commerce, iii. [248]
- Friedrich, Dr., philologist (Batavia), ii. [185]
- Friedrich's Islands (the Nicobars, which see)
- Fukien, or Fo-Kien, province of China, ii. [371]
- Funchal, description of, i. [91]-[97]
- Funeral customs of Australian aborigines, iii. [32], [33]; of Nicobar Islands, ii. [31], [32]
- Fung-yun-san, one of the founders of the Tai-ping sect, ii. [530]; his marriage with "the Heavenly Sister," 530
- G
- Gadok, sanitary hill-station in Java, ii. [211]
- Galatea, Danish corvette, visit of, to the Nicobars, ii. [13].
- Galatea River on the island of Great Nicobar, ii. [76]
- Gallinazos, or Turkey buzzards, at Lima, iii. [368]
- Gamelong, or alarm-drum of Java, ii. [260]
- Gamhi plantations, ii. [144], [239]
- Ganeza, Temple of, at Madras, i. [461]
- Ganges, H.M.S., courtesy shown by officers of, iii, [323]
- Garden Island, ii. [627]
- Garua, the, substitute for rain in Peru, iii. [351]-[366]
- Gaspar Straits, ii. [175], [177], [178]
- Gay, Claude, his work on Chile, iii. [297]
- Gecko, the (Ceylon), i. [360]
- Gedeh, volcano of, in Java, ii. [208], [218], [221]
- Genaadendal, Moravian colony of, i. [229]-[240]
- German Emigrants in Rio, i. [164]-[173]; in Shanghai, ii. [494]-[496]; in Valparaiso, iii. [291], [316]-[318]
- Gibraltar, description of, i. [29]-[46]; return to, iii. [448]-[450]
- Gilli-Mali, village of Ceylon, i. [407]
- Ginseng root, China, ii. [439]
- Glossina morsitans. See Tsetse.
- Goddess of the Sea (or Queen of Heaven), Temple to the, at Shanghai, ii. [428]
- Gold-fields of Australia, statistics of, iii. [66]-[70]
- Gower Island, ii. [595]
- Graculus Indicus, or Maina, at the Nicobars, ii. [75]
- Grass-cloth, manufacture of, ii. [325]
- Gravosa, arrival at, on return voyage, iii. [452]
- Great Nicobar, description of, ii. [72], [76]-[79]
- Green Indigo (Chinese green), ii. [370]-[378]
- Green stone, Nephrite, or Jade, weapons made from, iii. [118]; history of a large block of, [119]
- Gregory, his expedition in search of Dr. Leichhardt, iii. [11]
- Grey, Sir George, his works on the ancient Maories and their dialects, iii. [126]
- Gros, Baron de, French Plenipotentiary in China, ii. [468]-[471]; ludicrous malady of, [471]
- Guadalcanar, one of the Solomon Group, ii. [624]
- Guam, or Guaham, Island, ii. [550]
- Guamul, the Chilean deer, iii. [299]
- Guano. See Chincha Islands.
- Guava, the (Psidium Guava), of Tahiti, iii. [223], [224]
- Guindy Park, Madras, children's fête in, i. [453]-[457]
- Gunpowder trade with New Zealand rebels, iii. [135]
- Gunyahs (Sandstone cavities), New South Wales, iii. [58]
- Gutzlaff Island, ii. [409]
- H
- Haast, J., naturalist, accompanies the geologist of the Expedition into the interior of New Zealand, iii. [155]
- Hakka dialect, in use in China, ii. [368]
- Hall of United Benevolence at Shanghai, ii. [426]; of Council, Shanghai, [427]
- Hance, Dr., Botanist at Hong-kong, ii. [379]
- Hand-book in Chinese of Physiology and practical Surgery, ii. [454]
- Hangi-Maori, New Zealander's cooking oven, iii. [162]
- Hargraves, the practical discoverer of the Australian gold-fields, iii. [67]
- Harland, Dr., Hong-kong, ii. [379], [454]
- Hartmann, Madame, Buitenzorg, ii. [266]
- Haszkarl, Dr., Botanist, ii. [228], iii. [410]
- Hawaiki, Island of, supposed cradle of the New Zealand race, iii. [107]
- Hay, Capt. Drummond, in New Zealand, iii. [154], [167], [181]
- Heaphy, Charles, Chief Engineer, New Zealand, iii. [154]
- Hemeralopia, prevalence of, on board, i. [419]
- Herredia, Dr. Cajetano, of Lima, iii. [374]
- Herzl, Dr., of Santiago di Chile, iii. [308]
- Hill, Edward, Esq., of Sydney, his thorough acquaintance with native language and customs, iii. [29]; excursion with, to Wulongong, iii. [30]
- Hindoo Temple at Madras, visit to, i. [430]
- Hippomane Mancinella (Poison tree), Central America, iii. [438]
- Hobson, Dr. B., of Shanghai, ii. [451]-[453]
- Hochstetter, Dr. Ferdinand, Geologist to the Expedition, abridged narrative of his scientific tours in New Zealand, iii. [155]-[169], [177]-[194]; addresses to. See Appendix.
- Hoei, or Tuité-Huy, Fraternity of Heaven and Earth (secret society of Chinese), tenets of, ii. [195]-[199]
- Hogg, James, Hanseatic Consul, Shanghai, ii. [477], [494]
- Holothuria. See Trepang.
- Hong-kong, description of, ii. [355]-[364]
- Horse, first introduction of, into Tahiti, iii. [201]
- Hot-springs, Island of St. Paul, i. [280]; of Brand Vley, i. [227]
- Hottentots, habits of, i. [209]
- "House of Big Words" (Fare Aporáa), the Parliament House at Papeete, Tahiti, iii. [210]-[212]
- Howe, W., associate of the London Missionary Society in Papeete, iii. [214]-[216]
- Huanchaco harbour, Peru, iii. [418]
- Hui Haupapa, a New Zealand chief, oration of, iii. [104]
- Humboldt, Alex. von, his physical and geognostic memoranda, i. (Introduction);
- intelligence of his death, how received in South America, iii. [423], [424]
- Humboldt's Current, iii. [278]
- Hung-Tsin-Tsuen, chief of the Tai-pings, ii. [523]-[526]
- Huraka Gulf, New Zealand, iii. [91]
- Hursthouse, his latest work on New Zealand, iii. [127]
- Hwa-táh, nine-storied Pagoda, near Canton, ii. [396]
- Hyrax Capensis, i. [242]
- I
- Ice, statistics of trade at Ceylon, i. [373]; at Valparaiso, iii. [302]; at Panama, [427], [428]
- Ichthyosis, prevalence of, among the natives of the island of Puynipet, ii. [573]
- Illawara District, New South Wales, iii. [25]-[39]
- Infanticide in China, ii. [369]-[372]
- Iquique Harbour, Peru, iii. [342], [352]
- Isthmus of Panama, trade over, iii. [428]-[431]; geographical and physical features of, [434], [437]
- Iting, village in Peru, iii. [419]
- Itoe, village on Nangkauri (Nicobar), ii. [49]-[51]
- Iwi, demon of the Nicobars, ii. [70]; an exorciser of, [69]-[71]
- J
- Jacatra, ancient name of Batavia, ii. [181]
- Jade-stone, its value in China, ii. [363]
- Jansen, Florentin Tepano, Bishop of Axieri in Papeete, iii. [217]
- Java, excursions in, ii. [181]-[280]
- Jesuit mission of Sikkawéi, Shanghai, ii. [477]-[483]
- Joseph and Theresa, first Austrian ship to visit the Nicobars, ii. [10]
- Joss-paper, used in Chinese temples, ii. [432]
- Joss-sticks, ii. [341]
- Junghuhn, Dr. Franz, his career, ii. [230], [240], [252]; desiderata of China bark cultivation, iii. [409]-[412]
- Jungle-men of the Nicobar Islands, ii. [40]
- Junks, Chinese, ii. [352], [392], [413], [478]
- Jurujuba Cove, Bay of Rio de Janeiro, i. [158]
- K
- Kalamander-wood, i. [395]
- Kalong Bat. See Flying Fox.
- Kamorta, Island of, Nicobar Group, ii. [55], [84], [86]
- Kampong, Chinese colonies in Java, ii. [195]-[197]
- Kane, Dr., of Macao, ii. [396]
- Kangaroo Hunting, in New South Wales, iii. [36], [37]
- Kar-Nicobar, Island of, i. [481], ii. [12], [14], [16]-[37]
- Karroo, the (Cape Colony), i. [231]
- Katschal, Island of, Nicobar Group, ii. [86]
- Kauri forest, a, in New Zealand, iii. [150]
- Kauri pine, iii. [151]
- Kawa beverage, its intoxicating properties, and how prepared in Tahiti, iii. [245]-[247]
- Kawa plant (Piper methysticum), its properties, ii. [568], iii. [147], [245]
- Kawaïn, extract of Kawa, iii. [246]-[248]
- Keasberry, B. P., Missionary at Singapore, ii. [162]
- Keira Hills, New South Wales, iii. [37]; coal-fields in, [39]
- Kennedy, E. B., his fatal exploring expedition to Cape York, Northern Australia, iii. [12], [13]
- Kentsch, singular malady in Puynipet, ii. [574]
- Klings, natives of Coromandel coast, ii. [145], [149]
- Knight, Dr., Botanist, Auckland, iii. [141]
- Koek, M. de, Batavia, ii. [203]
- Koeping, one of the earliest visitors to the Nicobars, ii. [2]
- Kolowrat, mountain on the Island of Malaýta, ii. [596]
- Komios, village in Kar-Nicobar, ii. [38]-[41]
- Kondúl, Island of the Nicobars, ii. [69], [87]
- Krammat, mausoleum of a Malay prophet at the Cape, i. [244]-[248]
- Kratochwil, Joseph, physician in Panama, iii. [428]
- Krishna, the Hindoo Divinity, i. [436]-[460]
- Kulczycki, Adam, Director of native department at Papeete, iii. [214]
- Kumara (Convolvulus Batata), New Zealand, iii. [121]
- Kus-kus grass (Andropogon muricatum), i. [465]
- L
- Labour, European and Chinese compared, ii. [148]
- Laguna de Bay, Manila, excursion to, ii. [325]-[341]
- Laguna Encantada, the enchanted Lake near Manila, ii. [335]-[338]
- Lalang grass (Saccharum Koenigii), ii. [51]
- Lambajeque, harbourage on coast of Peru, iii. [419]
- Lammat mountains, Solomon Islands, ii. [624]
- Lang, J. D., Sydney, his historical and political works and address to Frankfort Congress, iii. [15]
- Lao-tse, Chinese sage, ii. [435]
- La Pérouse, monument to, at Botany Bay, iii. [17], [18]
- Las Esmeraldas, Hacienda in Chile, iii. [311]-[313]
- Lascars, Indian porters, i. [426]
- Laval, Catholic Missionary to Tahiti, iii. [204]
- Layard, C. P., Government agent in Ceylon, i. [396]
- Lazar village. See Leper village.
- Le Breton, Physician in Panama, iii. [428]
- Lee Harbour. See Roankiddi Harbour.
- Leeches, land-, of Ceylon, i. [407]
- Legabalu, Island of, ii. [1]
- Legaspi, conqueror of the Philippines, ii. [286], [287]
- Leichhardt, his tragical fate in Australia, iii. [12]
- Lemmas Canal, Hong-kong, ii. [353]
- Leonitis Leonurus, masticatory used by the Hottentots, i. [241]
- Leper village near Canton, ii. [457]
- Leprosy in China, ii. [455]-[459]
- Lima, account of, iii. [364]-[383]
- "Line," ceremony in "crossing the," i. [115]-[117]
- Little Hong-kong, small fishing village of, ii. [379]
- Little Nicobar, Island of, ii. [63], [81]
- Liu-tschiu (or Loo-choo) Islands, ii. [538], [543], [547]
- Llama, introduction of, into Australia, iii. [64]-[66]
- Lobschied, Dr. W., school inspector, Hong-kong, ii. [369], [379]
- Logan, Dr. Abraham, editor of "Singapore Free Press," ii. [161]
- —— J. H., publisher of "Journal of Indian Archipelago," ii. [161]
- Lombok, embassy from the king of, ii. [199]-[202]
- London Missionary Society, ii. [451], iii. [200], [214]-[216]
- Long-Fah, Pagoda of, near Shanghai, ii. [484]
- Loo-Rock, lofty rock near Funchal, i. [57]
- Los Baños, village near Manila, ii. [332]-[335]
- Lossen, W., his experiments on the cocoa leaf, iii. [407]
- Lu Kao. See Green Indigo.
- Lunatic Asylum, Rio, i. [142]; Manila, ii. [348]; Lima, iii. [378]
- Lütke, Russian Admiral, ii. [552]
- Luzon, ii. [281]-[284]
- M
- Macarthur, Sir William, New South Wales, iii. [20]-[25]
- Macartney, Lord, his embassy to China, [179]2, i. [299]
- Macleay, botanist, New South Wales, his residence at Elizabeth Bay, iii. [16]
- Madras, i. [424]-[447]
- Mafoûmo river, on East coast of Africa, ii. [9]
- Magdalena, steamer, voyage home in, iii. [443]-[447]
- Magelhaen, discovers Manila, ii. [285]; his fate, [310]; Straits of, settlement in, iii. [317]; projected steam-tug line through, [317]-[320]
- Magnetic declination, zero point of, iii. [257]-[260], [279]
- —— needle, variation of, iii. [257]
- Mahabharata, Indian poem of, i. [472]-[474]
- Mahamalaipur, City of the Holy Hill, monolith temples at, i. [464]-[474]
- Mahawanso, Cingalese epic poem, i. [395], [396]
- Mahishasura, the Indian giant, memorial of, i. [467]
- Maigrat, Catholic missionary to Tahiti, iii. [106]
- Maipú bridge, Chile, iii. [308]
- Makok, pagoda near Macao, ii. [395]
- Makun, St. Sebastian de, Catholic mission of, near Caltura, Ceylon, i. [369], [401]
- Malacca Straits, navigation in, ii. [132]-[135]
- Malaýta, Island of, Solomon group, ii. [596]
- Mamaku (Cyathea Medullaris), the tree-fern, specimens in New Zealand, iii. [122]
- Mandioca flour (Brazil), i. [175]
- Mangatawhiri, river in New Zealand, iii. [164], [165]
- Mangrove forest at Puynipet, ii. [563]
- Mangrove swamps in the Nicobars, ii. [72]
- Manila hemp. See Abáca.
- Manila, stay at and description of, ii. [290]-[310], [342]-[349]
- Manluéna, or exerciser of evil spirits among the Nicobarians, quackery of the, ii. [70]
- Manukau hills (New Zealand), excursion to the, iii. [150]
- Maoris, or Mauris, aboriginal inhabitants of New Zealand, speculations on their past and future, iii. [97]-[110]
- Maori chiefs, reception of by the governor, iii. [136]-[138]
- —— king, iii. [135]
- —— meeting in Drury, iii. [136]
- —— poetry, specimens of, iii. [129]-[132]; proverbs, [127]-[129]
- Marine currents, i. [55]-[57]
- Mass meeting of natives of New Zealand, iii. [99]-[106]
- Matavai, native village in Tahiti, iii. [222]
- Maury, Commander, U.S.N., his sea-charts, i. [54], [107], [114]
- Meadows, J.A.T., government interpreter at Shanghai, ii. [473]
- Meal, imports into Brazil from Austria, i. [175]
- Medanos, wandering sand-hills in Peru, iii. [350]
- Medical school in Lima, iii. [374], [375]
- Meester Cornelis Bazaar, near Batavia, ii. [274]
- Megabalu, Island of, Nicobar group, ii. [1]
- Megamendoeng, pass of, in Java, ii. [211]
- Melepilla, town in Chile, iii. [311]
- Melori (Pandanus), bread of the Nicobarians, ii. [65]
- Menu, the Hindoo lawgiver, i. [435]
- Meridian of 180°, crossing the, iii. [194]
- Meri-Meri, New Zealand war-club, iii. [104]
- Meroe, island of, Nicobar group, ii. [82]
- Merrimac, U.S.N., iii, [417]
- Messina, return to, iii. [451]
- Metelenian, harbour of, in Puynipet island, ii. [553]; aboriginal race on Puynipet, [575]
- Miáu-Tze, a wild race in China, ii. [461]
- Miliani, Father, Catholic missionary in Ceylon, i. [370], [402]
- Military library in Manila, ii. [342]; hospital in Batavia, [187]
- Milk, human, sold in China for vaccine, ii. [438] (note)
- Missionaries, Protestant, in Puynipet Island, ii. [563];
- Catholic and Protestant, disputes of, in the Society group, iii. [200]-[205]; Catholic, their first appearance in Oceania, [204]-[209]
- Mitchell's Pass, New South Wales. See Broughton's Pass.
- Moa (Palapteryx ingens), gigantic extinct bird of New Zealand, iii. [191], [192]
- Moehrenhout, American consul at Papeete, religious partisanship of, iii. [205]-[207], [219]
- Moesta, Dr., astronomer of Santiago de Chile, iii. [300]
- Moko, or face-tattooing among the Maories, iii. [110]-[114]
- Monasteries in Lima, iii. [370]-[372]
- Monghata, hill of, in the Nicobar group, ii. [51]
- Montial, island of, one of the Nicobar group, ii. [68]
- Montigny, M. de, French consul at Shanghai, ii. [467], [512]
- Montt, Manuel, President of Chile, iii. [303]-[305]; interview with, [304]; his position with respect to the ultramontane party, [305]
- Monuments of Chinese female philanthropists, ii. [446]
- Moore, Charles, Director of the Botanical Garden in Sydney, iii. [19]
- Mooyart, Government assistant in Colombo, i. [407]
- Moravian settlements (see also Genaadendal) on Nicobars, ii. [94]-[96]
- Morea, Island of. See Eimeo.
- Moreton Bay, its capabilities for wool growing, iii. [47]-[49]
- Morok (Casuarius Bennetti), iii. [14] (note)
- Morrok, bay of, Nicobar group, ii. [44]
- Mosse, village on Kar-Nicobar, i. [481]
- Motu-Uta, island in Papeete harbour (Tahiti), iii. [198]
- Mouat, Dr., of Calcutta, ii. [458]
- Mould, Col., chief of engineer corps, New Zealand, iii. [186]
- Mount Egmont, or Taranaki Mountain (New Zealand), iii. [189]
- Mozambique negroes in Brazil, i. [140], [235]
- Muirhead, W., English missionary in China, ii. [418], [452]
- Mulberry trees in China, ii. [499]
- Musa textilis (wild banana), ii. [167], [324]
- Museum of natural history in Sydney, iii. [9]; at Santiago de Chile, [301]
- Musical instruments of the Nicobarians, ii. [122]
- N
- Nadaud, Dr., physician at Papeete (Tahiti), iii. [214]
- Nahlap Islands, near Puynipet Island, ii. [558]-[560]
- Nannekin, chief of Puynipet Island, visit to, ii. [570]-[573]
- National Library, Lima, iii. [375]-[377]; Museum, Lima, [377], [378]
- Negro population of Brazil, i. [166]
- Negroes, the emancipation of, at St. Thomas successfully carried out, iii. [442], [443]
- Negrillos or Negritos del Monte, Manila, ii. [293]-[295]
- Negro-head tobacco of America, ii. [575]
- Nelson, province of, in New Zealand, and geological researches therein, iii. [188]-[192]
- Nephrite. See Jade.
- New Caledonia, proposition of Dr. J. D. Lang to found there a German settlement, iii. [15]; attempts of the French to annex same, [89], [250]
- New Plymouth, province of New Zealand, iii. [188]
- New year's eve at the Antipodes, iii. [166]-[168]
- New Zealanders. See Maories.
- Ngara, Lament for, specimen of New Zealand poetry, iii. [131]
- Nicobar archipelago, ii. [1]-[137]
- Niemann, Dr. Albert, his discovery of cocain, iii. [406]
- Nopal plantations. See Cochineal.
- Norfolk Island. See Bounty, mutiny of.
- North Cape, Australia, ii. [627]
- North China Herald, ii. [386], [496]
- "Norther," description of a, at Valparaiso, iii. [285], [286]
- Norzagaray, Don Fernando, Governor-General of the Philippines, ii. [307]
- Nót, an aboriginal race on Puynipet Island, ii. [575]
- Novara, her equipment, i. [4]-[9]; at the dry-dock, Sydney, iii. [49]; festivities on board in honour of the birth of a crown prince, [51]-[54]; return to Trieste, [455]; retrospect of her career, [456]-[460]
- Nukahiwa, island of, Marquesas group, iii. [250]
- Nunneries in Shanghai for Chinese ladies, ii. [435], [436]
- O
- Observatory at Santiago de Chile, iii. [299]
- Odd Fourth, game at cards, introduced by sailors among the natives of Sikayana, ii. [602]
- Oïdium Tuckeri, Madeira, i. [78]
- Onehunga, village in Auckland province, iii. [97]
- Opium, how prepared, ii. [154]-[160]; annual imports of, into China, [518]-[523]; its cost in China, [523]
- —— boats on the Wusung, ii. [411]
- —— smokers, ii. [157]-[159], [274]; number of, in China, [523]
- Opposition line between New York and California, iii. [426]
- Oraki, a Maori village, iii. [147]-[149]
- Oranges, exportations of, from Tahiti into California, iii. [240]
- Otahuha, village near Auckland, iii. [155]
- Overbeck, M. Gustav, Prussian Consul at Hong-kong, ii. [378]
- Owen, Captain, his visit to the Nicobars, ii. [3]
- P
- Paarl, village of, Cape Colony, i. [219]
- Pachacamác, ruins of, iii. [390]-[395]
- Páh, a New Zealand native entrenchment, iii. [117], [155]
- Pakin Island, ii. [589]
- Pampero (storm from the pampas), i. [119]
- Panama, description of, iii. [424]-[429]; "Star and Herald," 428; Railroad, description of, [429]-[438]
- Panax Ginseng. See Ginseng.
- Pandanus tree, its exuberance on the Nicobar Islands, ii. [64], [101]
- Paomotu Islands, iii. [260]
- Paora Tahuera, New Zealand chief, address of, to the Expedition, iii. [102]
- Papakura, plains of, New Zealand, iii. [170]
- Papaoa, village in Tahiti, iii. [237]
- Papeete, capital of Tahiti, its position, iii. [197], [210]; origin of name and mode of spelling, [210]-[212]; Tahitian orators at, [212]-[214]; its religious and social condition under the French Protectorate, [213]-[220]; Governor's ball, [235]-[240]
- Paréu, a Tahitian native garment, iii. [221]-[231]
- Parkes, Harry, English Commissioner at Canton, ii. [385]
- Parliament at Tahiti, speeches in, iii. [212]
- Patterson, Mr. M., Principal of St. John's College, Auckland, iii. [152]
- Patuóni, New Zealand chief, iii. [102]
- Paul, St., Island of, described, i. [267]-[319]
- Payta, harbour of, Peru, iii. [420]-[422]
- Pearls, artificial, how made, i. [387], [388]
- Pearl-fishery of Ceylon, i. [379]-[388]; of Panama, iii. [429]
- Pearl, mother-o', procured at Paomotu and Gambier Islands, iii. [240] (note)
- Pedro-talla-galla, highest mountain in Ceylon, i. [412]
- Peh-lah, vegetable wax of China, ii. [518]
- Pekin, Treaty of Peace concluded at, ii. [388]
- Peluqueros, political party in Chile, iii. [306]
- Penguins, in St. Paul Island, ludicrous movements of, i. [281]-[284]
- Pettah, the, or Black quarter, Colombo, i. [372]
- Pfitzmaier, Dr., an eminent Sinologue, ii. [367], [418], [461]; his explanation of Chinese written character, [526]
- Philippi, Dr., Professor in College of Santiago, iii. [297]
- Phormium tenax, New Zealand flax, iii. [145]
- Phosphorescent glow in the sea, i. [26]
- Physical and geognostic memoranda. See Humboldt.
- Pia, the (Tacca Pinnatifida), Tahiti, iii. [244]
- Piaco, river, New Zealand, iii. [96]
- Pico Ruivo, Madeira, i. [102], [105]
- Pih-kwei, Tartar general, ii. [385]
- Piper methysticum. See Kawa.
- Pisco, town in Peru, iii. [354]-[357]
- Pissis, Aimé, geologist of Santiago, iii. [297]
- Pitcairn Island, History of. See Bounty.
- Pizarro, conqueror of Peru, his corpse exposed to view in the catacombs of Lima, iii. [369];
- his portrait in the National Museum, [378]
- Point de Galle, Ceylon, i. [359]-[361]
- Point Venus, Tahiti, iii. [222]; revolving lighthouse on, [223]
- Pola, chief naval arsenal of Austria, iii. [454]
- Polyandria, prevalence of, in Ceylon, and cause, i. [365]
- Polygamy in China, ii. [371]
- Pomáre II., King of Tahiti, iii. [198]; origin of name, [201]; his remark on first beholding a horse, [202]
- Pomáre, Queen, her letter to Louis Philippe, iii. [208]; her civil list, [209]; her residence, [210]; rudeness of French authorities to, [236]-[238]
- Pomperos. See Fire Companies.
- Poncho, the native Chilean garb, iii. [294]
- Porcelaine-craquelée, ii. [440]
- Porta Aurea at Pola, ruins of, iii. [454]
- Port Curtis, North Australia, gold-fields of, iii. [48]; fate of the gold-seekers there, [49]
- Port d'Islay, Peru, iii. [349], [350]
- Port Jackson (Sydney Harbour), ii. [627]; first settlement there of convicts, iii. [75]
- Potatáu, chief of the Waikato race, first king of the Maories, iii. [135]
- Praya Grande, promenade at Macao, ii. [405]
- Pré Catalan, pleasure gardens at Papeete, iii. [219]-[222], [235]
- Public Schools at Shanghai, ii. [443]
- Puka-puka, the New Zealand papyrus, iii. [147], [148]
- Pulicat-Lake, near Madras, i. [475]
- Punkah, its uses in India, i. [360]
- Purchas, A. G., pastor of Onehunga, iii. [155]; first discoverer of the Drury coal-beds, New Zealand, [169], [181]
- Puynipet, Island of, visit to, ii. [551]-[588]
- Q
- Quebradas, caves near Valparaiso, iii. [282], [288]
- Quillota, Chile, favourite summer resort for the residents of Valparaiso, iii. [314], [315]
- Quilpué, village in Chile, iii. [291]; fête champêtre there to the Expedition, iii, [292]
- R
- Radhen Adipati Aria Kusuma Ningrat, a Javanese "Regent," ii. [264]
- Radhen Adipati Wira Natu Kusuma, a Javanese "Regent," ii. [238], [252]
- Radhen Rangga Padma Negara, a Javanese Chief, ii. [214]
- Radhen Saleh, a Javanese Artist, ii. [269]
- Raffles, Sir T. Stamford, his services to Singapore, ii. [138]-[140]
- Ragusa, iii. [452]
- Railroads—Rio, i. [161]; Madras, [447]-[453]; Batavia, ii. [204]; New South Wales, iii. [20]-[43]; Chile, [308]-[310]; Isthmus of Panama, [429]-[438]
- Raimondi, Professor, at Lima, iii. [374]
- Rain-fall, annual amount of, in Gibraltar, i. [36]; in Buitenzorg (Java), ii. [208]; at the Solomon group, [624]
- Rama, the Hindoo Divinity, i. [436]
- Rama-Rama, a settlement in the heart of the New Zealand forests, iii. [159]
- Ramé-fibre. See Boehmeria nivea.
- Rancho, description of a, iii. [287], [389]
- Rangitakí. See Wiremu Kingi.
- Raorao (Pteris Esculenta), the New Zealand fern, iii. [121]
- Rasamala forest of Java (Liquid Ambar Altingiana), ii. [216]
- Ratnapoora, Ceylon, i. [406]
- Reed, Mr., Minister, plenipotentiary of United States to China, ii. [466]
- Réi, settlement on Puynipet Island, ii. [561]
- Rerehau-Hemara, of Ngatiapakura, in New Zealand, enters as a seaman on board the Novara, iii. [175]
- Retrospect of the results of the voyage, iii. [456]-[460]
- Rewarewa, head-dress of Maori woman, iii. [220]
- Rhanganatha Swami, Rock Temple, near Madras, i. [466]
- Rice-paper in China, ii. [363], [364]
- "Rickety Dick," last survivor of the Port Jackson aborigines, iii. [17]
- Ried, Dr. Aquinas, Valparaiso, iii. [293]
- Rüse, A., Pharmaceutist and Zoologist at St. Thomas, iii. [442]
- Roankiddi Harbour, in Puynipet Island, ii. [561]
- —— race, manners and customs of, ii. [570]-[575]
- —— river on Puynipet Island, ii. [563]
- Roberts, J. C., Protestant missionary, and present (late) foreign minister of the Tai-Ping rebels, ii. [528]-[532]
- Robertson, Mr. Brook, English Consul, Shanghai, ii. [472]
- Robinson, J. P., Superintendent of Nelson Province, New Zealand, iii. [189]
- Roccella tinctoria, i. [75]
- Rochleder, Prof., of Prague, his instructions with reference to investigating the geographical distribution of plants, iii. [20]
- Rochouse, Etienne, priest of the Society of Picpus, iii. [203]
- Rosen, Pastor, missionary at the Nicobars, his residence at, ii. [12], [51], [74]
- S
- Saddle Islands, Chinese Sea, ii. [409]
- Sago palm, the, ii. [153]
- Saisset, M., Governor of Tahiti, iii. [211], [216], [219], [230], [232]-[238], [250], [253]
- Salak Gunung, volcano in Java, ii. [207]
- Salangan, swallow on the Nicobars, ii. [58]; at Java, [235]-[237]
- Saltpetre, obtained at Iquique, iii. [343]
- Sambelong. See Great Nicobar.
- Sampan, or Chinese boat, ii. [413]
- Samschoo, a Chinese beverage obtained from rice, ii. [474]
- San Cristoval, island of, Solomon group, ii. [596], [624]
- San Luis de Apra, harbour in Marianne Archipelago, ii. [549]
- San Miguel, village near Manila, ii. [348]
- Sandal-wood cutters, ii. [609]; atrocities perpetrated by, [610]
- Sandy Cape, Australia, ii. [626]
- Santiago de Chile, visit to, iii. [295]-[303]
- Sargasso, Mar de, iii. [334].
- Sàui, village of the Nicobar Islands, i. [481], ii. [24], [83]
- Saya y Manto, the native dress of the Lima ladies, decline in the use of, iii. [399]
- Scherzer, Dr. von, overland journey from Valparaiso, iii. [337]-[447]
- Schierbrand, Col. von, Batavia, ii. [277]
- Schroff, or Chinese factotum. See Comprador.
- Schu-king (old Chinese Book), ii. [498]
- Sculptures of aboriginal Australians, iii. [34]
- Sea-birds, habits of. See Cape Pigeon, Albatross, &c.
- Serpent-breeding in Ceylon, i. [362]
- Sesarga, Island of, ii. [624]
- Sheep, statistics of, in New South Wales, iii. [62]-[64]; in Australia at large, [64]; estimated value of, [64]
- Ship's complement, crew, officers, and scientific staff, i. Appendix
- Shrove Tuesday on shipboard, ii. [256]
- Sicard, Dr. Adrian, monograph on Chinese sugar-cane, ii. [513]
- Sikayana, visit to, ii. [601]-[622]
- Sikkawéi, Jesuit mission at, ii. [480]-[483]
- Silk, Chinese, statistics of, ii. [498]-[450]
- Simon's Bay, Cape of Good Hope, anchorage of, i. [195]-[197]
- —— Town, description of, i. [197]-[199]
- Simpson's Island, inaccurately assigned position of, ii. [591]
- Sinamay (or Sinamarre), Manila cloth, ii. [325] (note)
- "Singing Stones," the, Macao, ii. [406]
- Siva, the Indian divinity, i. [435]
- Skulls, human, used as drinking cups in Australia, iii. [34]; Indian, found near Lima, [393]
- Slave population of Brazil, condition of, i. [166]-[168]
- Slavery among the Maories, iii. [116], [117]
- Smith, his block-house at Titarango, iii. [150]
- Snook-fish (Thyrsites Atun), i. [199]
- Snow-fall on board the Novara, off the Horn, iii. [325]
- Sokol, or Enchanted Lake, Manila. See Laguna encantada.
- Solomon Islands, ii. [595]-[597]
- Sorghum Saccharatum (Chinese sugar-cane), ii. [467], [512]-[515], iii. [302]
- Southampton, arrival of Dr. v. Scherzer at, iii. [447]
- Southern Cross, the, iii. [167]
- Southern railroad, Chile, excursion on, iii. [308]-[310]
- Sri-Pada, or Buddha's footstep, Ceylon, i. [413]
- St. George's Canal, Nicobar group, ii. [68]
- St. John College, Auckland, iii. [152]
- St. Thomas, Island of, iii. [441]-[444]
- Stafford, C. W., Under Secretary of State in New Zealand, iii. [97]
- Stearine, candle-factory of, at Clarence river, iii. [22]
- Stellenbosch, town of Cape Colony, i. [215]-[219]
- Stewart, Capt., of schooner Louisa, his narrative of the recent history of the Pitcairn Islanders, iii. [269]-[276], [338]
- Stewart's Islands, ii. [598]
- Stores for voyage, list of, i. Appendix
- Straubenzee, Lieut.-General, Commander-in-chief of allied forces in China, ii. [382], [384]
- Strzelecki, Count, his ethnographic work on Australia, iii. [32]
- Sugar-growing in Tahiti, iii. [224], [225]
- Sweet potato, ii. [102]; of Tahiti, iii. [245]
- Sycee (or sacrificial) paper, China, ii. [433] (note)
- Sydney, arrival at, ii. [627]; description of, iii. [7]-[10]
- Syle, Rev. Mr., missionary in China, ii. [460]
- T
- Taboga, Island of, in Bay of Panama, iii. [422]
- Taboo, customs of, in New Zealand, iii. [114]
- Tacna, city of Peru, iii. [345]
- Tael, Chinese currency, ii. [422] (note)
- Tagales, or Tagalogs, aborigines of the Philippines, ii. [292]-[296]
- Tahiti, Island of, iii. [196]-[251]; first efforts of Protestant missionaries in the Society Islands, [200]-[202]; placed under French protectorate, [208]; present political condition, [239], [240], [248]-[251]; physical configuration of the island, [241]; climate, [241]; statistics of value of commerce, [248]
- Tahitian women, their appearance and morals, iii. [219]-[221]
- Taiarapu, peninsula of Tahiti, iii. [227]
- Tai-ping rebels, their history, ii. [523]-[537]; assume a political organization, [527]; their doctrines, [529]-[533]; latest intelligence respecting, [534]-[537]
- Takapuna district, New Zealand, iii. [100]
- Taki, Chinese merchant, Shanghai, banquet given by, ii. [485]-[494]
- Tallow-tree (Stillingia Sebifera) of China, ii. [517]
- Tangkuban Prahu, Javanese volcano, ii. [248]-[252]
- Tanka-boat, Macao, ii. [393], [394], [406]
- Taouist sect, China, ii. [435]; their convents, [436]
- Taranaki (Mount Egmont), New Zealand, iii. [189]; province and tribe, [189]-[191]
- Taro (Caladium esculentum), Puynipet Island, ii. [568]
- Tattooing, how performed among the Maories, iii. [110]-[114]; on Puynipet, ii. [572]-[574]
- Taú-Tái, or Governor of Shanghai, ii. [472]; interview with him, [472]-[476]
- Tawa, the (Laurus Tawa), its berries used by the Maories for the preparation of a beverage, iii. [122]
- Te-Huhu, death-song of, specimen of New Zealand dirges, iii. [130]
- Te Teira, New Zealand native, the purchase of whose land led to the late wars, iii. [132]
- Tea, statistics of, ii. [504]-[511]
- Teijsman, J. E., Director of Botanical Garden of Buitenzorg, ii. [205]
- Telegraph, electric, its progress in Madras, i. [450]; in Batavia, ii. [204]; in Australia, iii. [43]
- Temple of the Goddess of the Sea, Shanghai. See Goddess of the Sea.
- Tenákoe, the New Zealand mode of salutation, iii. [149]
- Teressa, one of the Nicobar group, ii. [61]
- Terra Japonica. See Acacia Catechu.
- Tetakaka valley, gold-fields of, New Zealand, iii. [190]
- Tetraodon Honkenyi (sea-devil), fatal effects of eating, i. [199], [200]
- Theatrical representations in China, ii. [486]-[489]
- Thomson, Dr. A., anthropometrical and dynamical experiments with New Zealand natives, and their results, iii. [123]-[125]
- Ti-plant (Cordyline Australis) of Tahiti, an intoxicant beverage prepared from, iii. [245]
- Tien-tsin, treaty of, considered, ii. [386]
- Tiffin, the Indian lunch, i. [368]
- Tigers, prevalence of, at Singapore, ii. [143]
- Til-tree (Oreodaphne fœtens), i. [65]
- Tiles (Chinese weights), ii. [156]
- Tillangschong, one of the Nicobar group, ii. [43], [45], [84]
- Tinkal. See Borax.
- Tjiangoer, town in Java, ii. [235]
- Tjiburum, river in Java, ii. [216]
- Tjipodas, cinchona plantation at, in Java, ii. [227]-[232]
- Tjisokan, village in Java, ii. [237]
- Tjitarum, river in Java, ii. [238]
- Toe-toe, species of New Zealand grass, iii. [147]
- Tombs, Island of Puynipet, supposed, ii. [584]
- Tom Weiry, a Sydney chief, iii. [59]
- Tong-Kadu, Catholic cathedral near Shanghai, ii. [445], [478]
- Tow-boats, expense of, at Hong-kong, ii. [408]; at Shanghai, [537]
- Track, one of the Nicobar group, ii. [62]
- Trepang (or Biche de Mar), different species of, ii. [619]-[622]; preparation for Chinese market, [621]
- Treis, Island of, Nicobar group, ii. [62]
- Trieste, departure from, i. [12]; return to, iii. [455]
- Tschandú. See Opium.
- Tscharul Mugra (one of the Flacourtiaceæ), an antidote to leprosy, used in China, ii. [458]
- Tschaura, or Chowra, Island of, Nicobar group, ii. [61], [84]
- Tschinapatnam, Indian village of, i. [429]
- Tschokóits, aboriginal race of Puynipet, ii. [575]
- Tsetse-fly, ravages of, in Cape Colony, i. [252]-[254]
- Tuakan, Maori village, iii. [166]; New Year's night at, [167]
- Tubuai, Island of, in Rorutu Archipelago, iii. [196]
- Tupa-kihi (Coriaria sarmentosa) berries used for brewing purposes in New Zealand, iii. [111]
- Turnour, George, translations from Cingalese, i. [395]
- Typhoon, description of a, ii. [539]-[549]
- U
- Ulála Bay, Nicobar Islands, ii. [60], [94]
- Unger, Professor F., his theory as to the probable age of Australia, iii. [70], [71]
- University of Sydney, iii. [8]
- —— Santiago de Chile, iii. [298], [299]
- Upa-Upa, licentious dance of Tahitian women, iii. [219]
- Urdaneta, Friar A., Prior of the Augustines of Manila, ii. [306]
- Urmeneta, Don Jerónimo, foreign minister of Chile, iii. [304]
- V
- Vahara Swami, Temple of, Madras, i. [470]
- Valdivia, German colony at, iii. [316]
- Valparaiso, iii. [280]-[291]
- Vanilla plantations in Java, ii. [205]
- Vapour-baths, Shanghai, ii. [419]
- Vegetable wax. See Peh-lah.
- Vellore, visit to, and fort, i. [447]-[453]
- Venus, French frigate, visits Tahiti, iii. [208]
- Vert chinois. See Green Indigo.
- Victoria, Hong-kong, ii. [355]-[375]
- Vigil, Francisco de Paula, director of National Library, Lima, iii. [375]; his views respecting the Papacy, [376]
- Vine disease in Madeira, particulars of the, i. [75]-[81]
- Vishnu, Indian Divinity, i. [429]
- Visscher van Gaasbeek, assistant resident, Java, ii. [239], [252]
- Vinhatico (Persea indica), at Madeira, i. [65]
- Visanili Katail (poison oil), Ceylon, i. [401]
- Vriese, de, director of Botanical Garden, Leyden, his travels in Java, ii. [242]
- Vrij, chemist, resident in Java, ii. [246]-[248]
- W
- War in Chile, iii. [305], [306]
- Wax-berry, shrub, Cape Colony, i. [205]
- Wagner, Dr. Moritz, his contour map of Isthmus of Panama, iii. [434]
- Waiiria, Lake of, Tahiti, iii. [228]
- Waikato River, New Zealand, iii. [158], [174], [182]-[184]
- Wakka, New Zealand canoe, iii. [157]
- Walloby (Kangaroo rat), Australia, iii. [36]
- Wall reefs, ii. [556]-[558]
- Wandering sand-hills. See Medanos.
- Wangs, or Kings of the Tai-pings, ii. [535]-[537]
- Waves, mode of measuring their height, i. [191]; height in Chinese sea, ii. [544]
- Weapons of the Nicobar aborigines, ii. [121]
- Weddahs, wild native race of Ceylon, i. [358]
- Wellington Province, New Zealand, iii. [188]
- Whale fishery off St. Paul Island, i. [288]-[291], [319]-[321]; off Puynipet, ii. [554], [579]; off Tahiti, iii. [248]
- Whampoa, ship purveyor, ii. [168]-[173]
- Whari, or New Zealand hut, iii. [161]-[163]
- White colonists, Island of Puynipet, ii. [561]
- Whittle's Rock, Simon's Bay, Cape Colony, i. [259]
- Wiener, G., Austrian Consul at Hong-kong, ii. [378]
- Wild Banana. See Musa Textilis.
- Will's Harbour. See Papeete.
- Williamson, J., Superintendent of Auckland Province, iii. [177]
- Wine cultivation of Madeira, i. [76]-[79]; of Cape Colony, [255], [256]; of Australia, iii. [21]-[24]
- Winnes, Dr. Ph., Missionary at Hong-kong, ii. [368]
- Wiremu Kingi, chief of New Zealand insurgents, iii. [132]
- Wong-Fun, Physician in Macao, ii. [406]
- Worcester, Cape Colony, its charming site, i. [223]-[225]
- Wuang-po, canal of, ii. [479]
- Wulongong, harbour of, New South Wales, iii. [29]; rencontre with natives, [30]; Walloby hunt, [36]; nocturnal adventures among the hills of, [40]-[42]
- Wusung River, at Shanghai, ii. [410]-[414], [479]
- Y
- Yak-tien, Chinese drug stone, ii. [437]
- Yam, ii. [102]; at Tahiti, iii. [245]
- Yang-tse-Kiang, arrival off, ii. [410]; navigation of, [410]-[412]
- Yaws (Frambœsia), prevalence of, in Puynipet Island, ii. [574]
- Yeh, late Governor of Canton, ii. [383]; his cruelty to the Tai-pings, [526]
- Yellow fever, i. [158], iii. [372]
- Yo-stone. See Nephrite.
- Z
- Zodiacal light, i. [480]
ERRATA.
VOL. I.
| PAGE | LINE |
| vii. | 1 from bottom, for Hardinger read Haidinger |
| viii. | 3 from bottom, for minerals read mammalia |
| xxvi. | 6 from bottom, for Saugar read Sangar |
| xxvii. | 10 from bottom, for Tama read Jama |
| —— | 9 from bottom, for Saka read Saku |
| xxix. | 12 from top, for sheet of water read pool of lava |
| xxx. | 10 from bottom, for isolated Vaihu of the read isolated Vaihu or Easter Island |
| xxxi. | 10 from bottom, for schists of lava read sheets or flows of lava |
| xxxv. | 17 from top, for internally of a matted texture read within the holes of a melted glassy surface |
| —— | 2 from bottom, for Gacal read Jakal |
| xxxvi. | last line, for Rosotlan read Bosotlan |
| xxxvii. | 6 from bottom, for Posto de Quindici read Passo de Quindiu |
| xxxviii. | 9 from bottom, for Ausango read Ansango |
| xxxviii. | 5 from bottom, for unlike read like |
| —— | last line, for Pullo read Puela |
| xxxix. | 8 from bottom, for veins read grains |
| —— | 8 from bottom, for Weise read Wisse |
| —— | 6 from bottom, for trachytes of Hungary read trachytes out of Hungary |
| xlii. | 5 from top, for 18° 15′ read 18° 25′ |
| xliii. | 12 from top, for Exogira contoni read Exogyra Couloni |
| xliv. | 1 from top, or Yntales has to be omitted entirely |
| —— | 5 from top, for La Cruz read La Cruz Olmedella |
| 1. | 2 from top, for crooked read oblique |
| 115 | 6 from bottom, for 30° 50′ read 33° 50′ |
| 474 | for prediluvian period read period (before the flood extended so far) |
VOL. II.
| PAGE | |
| 42 | for mania read maina bird (Graculus) |
| 102 | for Jakopha read Jatropha |
| 135 | for lovely read lonely |
| 143 | for Turiah read Bukit Timah |
| 156 | for Tschni-tschni read Tschin-tschin |
| 163 | for Carl read Windsor Earl |
| 219 | for usnioides read usneoïdes |
| 242 | for Phlippan read Phlippau |
| 262 | for room read court yard |
| 296 | for Tbanac read Ybanac |
| 319 | for Bisayx read Bisaya |
| 343 | for aficimado read aficiado |
| 350 | for Girandier read Giraudier |
| 355 | for Praya Granite read Praya Grande |
| 355 | for To-stone read Yo-stone |
| 364 | for Funan read Yunan |
| 366 | read preparing Indian-ink from |
| 394 | for Russian read Prussian |
| 401 | for "lines" read "lions" |
| 411 | for become involved read escaped being involved |
| 416 | for Main-tze read Mian-tze |
| 416 | for Long-Sah read Long-Fah |
| 471 | for been read had brought him |
| 482 | for medical read philosophical |
| 498 | for Shoo-kiu read Shoo-kin |
| 508 | for invisible read illimitable |
| 516 | for China read India |
| 518 | for limitata read limbata |
| 547 | for Dkinawasmia read Dkinawasima |
| 553 | for Metetenai read Metelenian |
| 575 | for Metelemia read Metelenian |
| 575 | for Awnaks read Awuaks |
| 585 | for Nálan read Ualán |
| 596 | for Senville read Surville |