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APPENDIX I.

THE FUNERAL IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY.

ON the Friday succeeding my father's death, the following letter, signed by twenty Members of Parliament, was addressed to Dr. Bradley, Dean of Westminster :

HOUSE OF COMMONS, April 21, 1882. VERY REV. SIR,--We hope you will not think we are taking a liberty if we venture to suggest that it would be acceptable to a very large number of our fellow-countrymen of all classes and opinions that our illustrious countryman, Mr. Darwin, should be buried in Westminster Abbey.

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The Dean was abroad at the time, and telegraphed his cordial acquiescence.

The family had desired that my father should be buried at Down: with regard to their wishes, Sir John Lubbock wrote:

HOUSE OF COMMONS, April 25, 1882.

MY DEAR DARWIN,-I quite sympathise with your feeling, and personally I should greatly have preferred that your father should have rested in Down amongst us all. It is, I am sure, quite understood that the initiative was not taken by you. Still, from a national point of view, it is clearly right that he should be buried in the Abbey. I esteem it a great privilege to be allowed to accompany my dear master to the grave.

W. E. DARWIN, ESQ.

Believe me, yours most sincerely,
JOHN LUBBOCK.

The family gave up their first-formed plans, and the funeral took place in Westminster Abbey on April 26th. The pall-bearers were :—

SIR JOHN LUBBOCK,

MR. HUXLEY,

MR. JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL

(American Minister),

MR. A. R. Wallace,

The DUKE OF DEVONSHIRE,

CANON FARRAR,

SIR JOSEPH HOOKER,

Mr. WILLIAM SPOTTISWOODE (President of the Royal Society),

The Earl of DERBY,

The DUKE OF ARGYLL.

The funeral was attended by the representatives of France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Russia, and by those of the Universities and learned Societies, as well as by large numbers of personal friends and distinguished men.

The grave is in the north aisle of the Nave, close to the angle of the choir-screen, and a few feet from the grave of Sir Isaac Newton. The stone bears the inscription

CHARLES ROBERT DARWIN.

Born 12 February, 1809.

Died 19 April, 1882.

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Statue§.
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CHIEF PORTRAITS AND MEMORIALS NOT TAKEN FROM LIFE.

Joseph Boehm, | Museum, South

R.A.

Kensington.

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Christ's College, in

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Charles Darwin's

Room.

Sons.

Deep Medallion.

J. Boehm, R.A.

In

Westminster

Abbey.

* Probably a sketch made at one of the sittings for the last-mentioned. ↑ A replica by the artist is in the possession of Christ's College, Cambridge.

A replica by the artist is in the possession of W. E. Darwin, Esq., Southampton.

§ A cast from this work is now placed in the New Museums at Cambridge.

332

CHIEF ENGRAVINGS FROM PHOTOGRAPHS.

*1854? By Messrs. Maull and Fox, engraved on wood for Harper's Magazine (Oct. 1884). Frontispiece, Life and Letters, vol. i. 1868 By the late Mrs. Cameron, reproduced in heliogravure by the Cambridge Engraving Company for the present work. *1870? By O. J. Rejlander, engraved on Steel by C. H. Jeens for Nature (June 4, 1874).

*1874? By Major Darwin, engraved on wood for the Century Magazine (Jan. 1883). Frontispiece, Life and Letters, vol. ii.

1881 By Messrs. Elliot and Fry, engraved on wood by G. Kruells, for vol. iii. of the Life and Letters.

The dates of these photographs must, from various causes, remain uncertain. Owing to a loss of books by fire, Messrs. Maull and Fox can give only an approximate date. Mr. Rejlander died some years ago, and his business was broken up. My brother, Major Darwin, has no record of the date at which his photograph was taken.

INDEX.

ABBOTT.

ABBOTT, F. E., letters to, on religi-
ous opinions, 55.

Aberdeen,

British Association
Meeting at, 1859..202.
Abstract (Origin of Species '), 192,
193, 195, 196.

Agassiz, Louis, Professor, letter to,
sending him the 'Origin of Spe-
cies,' 208; note on, and extract
from letter to, 208; opinion of the
book, 225; opposition to Darwin's
views, 235; Asa Gray on the
opinions of, 243.

Agassiz, Alexander, Professor, letter
to:-on coral reefs, 282.
Agnosticism, 55.

Ainsworth, William, 12.
Albums of photographs received
from Germany and Holland, 293.
Algebra, distaste for the study of, 17.
Allfrey, Dr., treatment by, 327.
American edition of the Origin,'
226.

·

Civil War, the, 249.
Ammonia, salts of, behaviour of the
leaves of Drosera, towards, 320.
Andes, excursion across the, 136;
Lyell on the slow rise of the, 153.
Animals, crossing of, 148.
'Annals and Magazine of Natural

History,' review of the 'Origin'
in the, 227.

Anti-Jacobin, 242, note, 243.
Ants, slave-making, 191.
Apocynes, twisting of shoots of,

313.

Apparatus, 92-94; purchase of, for
the Zoological Station at Naples,
293.

Appletons' American reprints of the
'Origin,' 235.

Ascension, 30.

'BEAGLE.'

'Athenæum,' letter to the, 258;
article in the, 257; reply to the
article, 258.

review of the 'Origin' in
the, 211, 212; reviews in the, of
Lyell's Antiquity of Man,' and
Huxley's 'Man's place in Nature,'
253, 257; review of the 'Varia-
tion of Animals and Plants,' in
the, 268; review of the Fertilisa-
tion of Orchids,' in the, 308.
Athenæum Club, 147.
"Atlantic Monthly,' Asa Gray's
articles in the, 248.
Atolls, formation of, 282.
Audubon, 14.

Autobiography, 5–54.
'Automata,' 327.

Aveling, Dr., on C. Darwin's reli-
gious views, 65, note.

BABBAGE and Carlyle, 36.
Bachelor of Arts, degree taken, 18.
Bär, Karl Ernest von, 213.
Bahia, forest scenery at, 131; letter
to R. W. Darwin from, 128.
Barmouth, visit to, 106.
Bates, H. W., paper on mimetic
butterflies, 251; Darwin's opinion
of, 251 note; Naturalist on the
Amazons,' opinion of, 251; letter
to: on his Insect-Fauna of the
Amazons Valley,' 251.
Beagle, correspondence relating to
the appointment to the, 115-123.
—, equipment of the, 125;
accommodation on board the,
125; officers and crew of the,
126, 127, 130; manner of life on
board the, 125.

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