THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESENTED BY PROF. CHARLES A. KOFOID AND MRS. PRUDENCE W. KOFOID ENGLISH MEN OF SCIENCE EDITED BY J. REYNOLDS GREEN, Sc.D. SIR WILLIAM FLOWER All Right* Reserved SIR WILLIAM FLOWER BY R. LYDEKKER PUBLISHED IN LONDON BY J. M. DENT & CO., AND IN NEW YORK BY E. P. DUTTON & CO. 1906 kr- Lvb PREFACE ALTHOUGH the complete manuscript of this volume was placed in the hands of the editor before the publication of the late Mr. C. J. Cornish's Life of Sir William Flower (in 1 904), yet the present writer was aware that such a work was in progress, and that it would deal with the social and personal rather than with the scientific side of Sir William's career. Consequently it was decided at an early period of the work to con- centrate attention in the present volume on the latter aspect of the subject ; as indeed is only fitting in the case of a biography belonging to a series specially devoted to men of science. An incidental advantage of this arrangement is that the writer has been able in the main to confine himself to the discussion of topics with which he is more or less familiar, rather than to attempt to chronicle events and episodes to which he must of necessity be a stranger, and to attempt an appreciation of a fine character for which he is in no wise qualified. It will be obvious from the above, that any references in the text to earlier biographies do not relate to Mr. Cornish's volume. In the course of the text, it has been necessary to make certain allusions to the condition and the mode of exhibition of the specimens in the public galleries of the Zoological Department of the Natural History Museum IW35Q267 vi PREFACE previous to the new regime inaugurated by Sir William Flower. The writer may take this opportunity of stating that these are in no wise intended to convey the slightest reflection on those who had charge of the galleries previous to the new era. Technical museum- installation and display is a comparatively new thing ; and the old plan of arrangement had become obsolete, not for want of attention, but because a more advanced scheme had been developed by gradual evolution, and the adoption of this involved a clean sweep. In conclusion, the writer has to express his best thanks to Mr. C. E. Fagan, of the Secretariat of the Natural History Museum, for kindly reading and re- vising the proof sheets. HARPENDEN LODGE, HERTS, July 1906. CONTENTS CHAPTER I PAGE GENERAL SKETCH OF FLOWER.'s LIFE . I CHAPTER II AS CONSERVATOR OF THE MUSEUM OF THE COLLEGE OF SURGEONS, AND HUNTERIAN PROFESSOR . . 3! CHAPTER III AS DIRECTOR OF THE NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM . 57 CHAPTER IV AS PRESIDENT OF THE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY . . 89 CHAPTER V GENERAL ZOOLOGICAL WORK ... . . 95 CHAPTER VI WORK ON THE CETACEA . . . . 1 39 CHAPTER VII ANTHROPOLOGICAL WORK . . ... . 153 CHAPTER VIII MUSEUM AND MISCELLANEOUS WORK .... 169 APPENDIX (LIST OF BOOKS AND MEMOIRS) . . 179 Life of Flower CHAPTER I BORN on 3oth November 1831 at his father's house, " The Hill," Stratford-on-Avon, William Henry Flower was a man who had the rare good fortune not only to make a profession of the pursuit he loved best, but likewise to attain the highest possible success in, and to be appointed to the most important and influential post connected with that profession. As he tells us in that delightful book, Essays on Museums, he was pleased to designate as a " museum " when a boy at home a miscellaneous collection of natural history objects, kept at first in a cardboard box, but subsequently housed in a cupboard. And as a man he became the respected head of the greatest Natural History Museum in the British Empire, if not indeed in the whole world. Very significant of his future attention to details and of the importance he attached to recording the history of every specimen received in a museum, is the fact that he compiled a carefully drawn-up catalogue of his first boyish collection. This early and persistent taste for natural history was not, as we learn from the same collection of essays, in- herited from any member of either his father's 'or his A 2 LIFE OF FLOWER mother's family, but appears to have been an "idio- pathic " development. His isolated position in this respect may, perhaps, have caused Flower in later life to notice more specially than might otherwise have been the case, how comparatively rare is the development of an ingrained taste for natural history among the adult members of the British nation. This idea was exemplified by his remarking on one occasion to the present writer that he often wondered how many persons out of every thousand he passed casually in the street, or met in social intercourse, had the slightest sympathy with, or took any real interest in the subjects which formed his own favourite pursuits and lines of thought. As regards his parentage, his father was the late Edward Fordham Flower, who was a Justice of the Peace for his county, and from whom the son inherited his tall and stately figure and dignified bearing. Edward Flower, who was a partner in the well-known brewery at Stratford-on-Avon, was the eldest son of Richard Flower, of Marden Hill, Hertfordshire, who married Elizabeth, daughter of John Fordham, of Sandon Bury, in the same county. In 1827 Edward married Celina, daughter of John Greaves, of Radford Semele, Warwick- shire, by whom he had, with other issue, Charles Edward, late of Glencassly, Sutherlandshire, and William Henry, the subject of the present memoir. Edward Fordham Flower was noted not only for his philanthropy, but for his efforts to abolish the bearing- rein, which in his time was neither more nor less than an instrument of downright torture to all carriage horses. As the result of his efforts in this direction, LIFE OF FLOWER 3 was founded in 1890, by Mr. C. H. Allen, of Hampstead, a small local society for that district and Highgate, having for its object the abolition, or at all events the mitigated use, of the bearing-rein for draught-horses of all descriptions. That body did good work in this direction for many years in the north of London ; and by its means the Hampstead Vestry was induced to prohibit the use of the bearing-rein on the horses in its employ an example subsequently followed by many large coal-owners and others connected with horses. From this small beginning arose in 1897 the now flourishing society known as the Anti-Bearing Rein Association, of which, as was appropriate, Mr. Archibald Flower, a grandson of Edward Fordham Flower, became Co.-Hon. Secretary with Mr. Allen, while the late Duke of Westminster, and the late Sir W. H. Flower (the subject of this biography) respectively accepted the positions of Patron and President. In all the obituary notices it is stated that William Henry was the second son of Edward Fordham and Celina Flower. This, however, as I am informed by Mr. Arthur S. Flower (the eldest son of Sir William), is not strictly the case. As an actual fact, the eldest son of the aforesaid Edward and Celina was really Richard, who died in infancy, so that Charles, who was born second, grew up as the eldest son, and William Henry as the second, whereas he was really the third. The fair-haired and blue-eyed William not being intended to succeed his father in the business, was permitted from his early years fortunately for zoo- logical science to pursue that innate love of natural history which, as we have seen, developed itself in very 4 LIFE OF FLOWER early years and continued unabated till the close of his career. That career naturally divides into three epochs. Firstly, the period of boyhood and early manhood ; secondly, the long period of official life at the museum of the Royal College of Surgeons ; and thirdly, the time during which the subject of this memoir occupied the post of Director of the Natural History Branch of the British Museum, together with the short interval which elapsed between his resignation of that position and his untimely death. To each of the latter periods a separate chapter is devoted. It has, however, been found convenient, instead of restricting the present chapter to the first epoch, to include within its limits a general sketch of Flower's whole life. A fourth chapter is assigned to the period during which he was President of the Zoological Society of London, although this was synchronous with part of the period covered by the second, and with the whole of that treated of in the third chapter. Finally, the full description of his scientific work is reserved for subsequent chapters. According to information kindly furnished by his widow, Lady Flower, delicate health prevented William Flower from being much at school during his boyhood, and he was thus largely dependent upon his mother a sensible and well-read woman for his early education. He was also in the habit of accompanying his father in his rides, whereby he became much interested in all that concerns horses and their well-being. Best of all, as regards opportunity for developing a love of animal life, he was in the habit of taking long, solitary rambles in the country, thereby acquiring a knowledge of Nature LIFE OF FLOWER 5 which could be obtained in no other manner, and developing his powers of observation. This innate taste for natural history appears to have been further fostered in early life by frequent intercourse with the late Rev. P. B. Brodie, an enthusiastic zoologist and geologist ; but whether this took place during school or college life the writer has no means of knowing. Be this as it may, it appears that after a preliminary education, partly at home and partly at private schools, Flower matriculated at London University in 1849, (the year of his present biographer's birth), attaining honours in Zoology ; and that during the same year having made up his mind to adopt the study and practice of Medicine, or of Surgery as a profession, he entered the Medical Classes at University College and became a pupil at the Middlesex Hospital. It was apparently largely, if not entirely, owing to his fondness for zoology that young Flower selected Medicine as a profession, since at the time, as indeed for many years subsequently, this was practically the only career open to young naturalists devoid of sufficient private means whereby they might hope to be able to devote a certain amount of time and attention to the pursuits and more especially Com- parative Anatomy towards which their inclinations tended. At University College Flower had a distinguished career, gaining the gold medal in Dr. Sharpey's class of Physiology and Anatomy, and the silver medal in Zoology and Comparative Anatomy ; the gold medal in the latter subjects having been carried off the same year by his fellow- student, Joseph Lister, who in after years became the distinguished surgeon, and, as Lord Lister, was for 6 LIFE OF FLOWER some time President of the Royal Society of London. In 1851 the year of the Great Exhibition Flower passed his first M.B. examination at London University, coming out in the first division. In the same year he made a tour in Holland and Germany, while in 1853 ^ e visited France and the north of Spain ; bringing home in both instances numerous sketches in pencil and sepia of the scenery and people of the countries traversed. In all the obituary notices of Flower that have come under the present writer's notice, it is stated that he obtained the post of Curator of the museum of the Middlesex Hospital after his return from the Crimea. This is, however, proved to be incorrect by his first zoological paper, " On the Dissection of a Species of Galago," which was contributed to the Zoological Society of London in 1852, and appeared in the Proceedings of that body for the same year, where the author describes himself as the holder of the post in question. As a matter of fact, he was elected Curator in 1854, anc * resigned the post in I854. 1 Flower never took the degree of M.D., but three years after passing his M.B. he became (on 2yth March 1854) a member of the Royal College of Surgeons of England. A few weeks after this event a call was made for additional surgeons for the army then serving in the Crimea, and young Flower, partly, perhaps, from patriotic motives, and partly with a view of extending his practical experience in surgery, promptly volunteered his services, which were accepted. After spending a few 1 The writer is indebted to the Secretary of the Middlesex Hospital for these particulars. LIFE OF FLOWER 7 idle months with the Depot Battalion then stationed at Templemore, in Ireland, he was gazetted as Assistant- Surgeon to the 63rd (now the First Battalion of the Man- chester) Regiment ; and in July 1854 embarked with his regiment at Cork for Constantinople. On its arrival in the east the regiment was at once hurried up to join the main army at Varna, whence it proceeded to take part in the expedition to the Crimea, where both officers and men suffered severely from exposure to the inclemencies of the climate and an insufficient commissariat during the early months of the campaign. For ten weeks together, it is reported, neither officers or men took off their clothes, either by night or by day, and for the first three weeks all ranks were compelled to get such sleep as they could obtain on the bare ground. Flower, who was present at the battles of the Alma, of Inkerman, and of Balaclava, as well as at the fall of Sebastopol, under- went many and thrilling experiences during the campaign, alike in the field and in the hospital. The hardships and privations which caused the strength of his regiment to be reduced by nearly one-half within the short period of four months, could not but tell severely on the constitution of the young surgeon, which was never very robust ; and from some of the effects of these he suffered throughout his life. Nevertheless, in spite of all this, in the intervals of duty, Flower, with but scant materials at his disposal, managed to find time and energy sufficient to make a considerable number of vivid pen-and-ink, or dashes of ink-and-water, sketches of his surroundings, including one of his own tent overturned by the terrible snow-storm of 1 4th Novem- ber 1854, anc ^ a secon d of the wrecked condition of the 8 LIFE OF FLOWER camp in general at the end of the tempest. A pano- ramic view of Constantinople and a sketch of the military hospital at Scutari were also among his artistic productions at this period. In recognition of his services, Flower, after being invalided home, received from the hands of Her Majesty, Queen Victoria, the Crimean medal, with clasps for the Alma, Inkerman, Balaclava, and Sebastopol ; while he was also permitted to accept from H.M., the Sultan, the Turkish war-medal. Apparently Flower had never entertained the idea of taking up the profession of an army surgeon as a per- manency, and after his return to London he definitely resigned military service, with the intention of settling down to private medical practice in the Metropolis. In the spring of 1857 he passed the examination qualifying for the fellowship of the Royal College of Surgeons ; and about this time, or perhaps immediately on his return to London, he joined the staffof the Middlesex Hospital as Demonstrator in Anatomy. During the next year (1858) he was elected to the post of Assistant-Surgeon to the same Institution, where he resumed the Curator- ship of the museum and was also appointed Lecturer on Comparative Anatomy. Although a large portion of his time while at the hospital was devoted to surgical and other duties connected with the medical profession, his Lectureship and Curatorship required that he should devote a considerable amount of attention to the more congenial study of Comparative Anatomy. It was during his connection with the Middlesex Hospital that his first scientific work was published, this being the well-known and useful little volume entitled Diagrams of the Nerves of the Human Body, which LIFE OF FLOWER 9 appeared in 1861, and has passed through three editions. During this period of his career he also contributed to Holmes' System of Surgery an article on " Injuries to the Upper Extremities," which contained certain original ob- servations- with regard to dislocations of the shoulder- joint ; and he likewise wrote an essay on the same subject to the Pathological Society, as well as several articles on various surgical subjects to the medical journals of the day. But even at this comparatively early period of his career Flower's published scientific work was by no means strictly confined to his ostensible profession, for his two first papers on Comparative Anatomy the one "On the Dissection of a Galago " (Lemur) ; and the other " On the Posterior Lobes of the Cerebrum of the Quadru- mana " appeared during the period in question. During this period, as the writer of his obituary notice in the " Record " of the Royal Society well remarks, there is little doubt that Flower had breathing time, after his Crimean experiences, to collect his energies and gather up a store of valuable information which stood him in good stead in later years, when he had frequently less leisure to devote to pure study. It was, moreover, during his official connection with the Middlesex Hospital that Mr. Flower married Georgina Rosetta, the youngest daughter of the late Admiral W. H. Smyth, C.S.I., etc., a well-known astronomer, who was for some time Hydrographer to the Admiralty and likewise Foreign Secretary to the Royal Society, the wedding taking place in 1858 at the church of Stone, in Buckinghamshire, near the bride's home. This happy union had in many ways an important influence upon the future career of the young surgeon, for, in addition to io LIFE OF FLOWER her father, several of the relatives of Mrs. (now Lady) Flower were more or less intimately connected with scientific work and scientific people ; among them being Sir Warrington Smyth (sometime Inspector-General of Mines), Professor Piazzi Smyth, General Sir Henry Smyth, and Sir George Baden Powell. It was to Lady Flower that Sir William dedicated his last work, the volume entitled Essays on Museums. A tour through Belgium and up the Rhine followed the marriage. Although it scarcely comes within the purview of this biography to allude to the issue of this marriage, it may be mentioned that of the three sons born to Sir William Flower, the second alone, Stanley Smyth, inherited his father's zoological tastes. Captain S. S. Flower (who takes his first name from Dean Stanley, of Westminster, an intimate friend of the family, after serving for some time in the 5th Fusileers, obtained the appointment of Director of the Royal Museum at Bangkok, Siam, after which he was made Director of the Khedival Zoological Gardens at Giza, near Cairo, to which post (which he still holds) was subsequently added that of Superintendent of Game Protection in the Sudan. Cap- tain Flower has not only raised the menagerie at Giza to a high state of perfection, but has contributed several papers to the Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London on the zoology of Siam and the Malay countries. To revert to the proper subject of this memoir, during his tenure of the aforesaid official posts at the Middle- sex Hospital it was apparent to his intimate scientific friends among whom were included the late Professor T. H. Huxley and the late Mr. George Busk that the inclinations of Flower were all on the side of com- LIFE OF FLOWER n parative anatomy rather than towards practical surgery or medicine. Accordingly, when the appointment of Conservator to the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons became vacant in 1 86 1 by the death of Mr. Quekett, Flower was strongly recommended by Huxley (then Hunterian Professor), Busk, and other friends as a suitable successor, and was in due course elected by the Council. When, nine years later (1870), Huxley him- self felt compelled by the pressure of other engagements and work to resign the Hunterian Professorship, the Conservator of the Museum was appointed to the vacant chair, thus once more bringing together two posts which had been sundered since Owen's resignation. On his appointment to the Conservatorship of the Museum of the College of Surgeons, Flower once for all definitely abandoned medicine as a profession, and determined to devote the whole of his energies for the future to the study of his beloved comparative anatomy and zoology. Nevertheless, he always remained in touch with his old profession, as he was always in sympathy with those who were actively practising the same. Indeed, since the collections under his charge included a large pathological series, while during his tenure of office a large display of surgical instruments was added to the exhibits, he could not, even had he so desired, cut himself entirely adrift from old associations and old studies. Since a considerable amount of space in a later chapter is devoted to Flower's work as Museum Curator and as Hunterian Lecturer, it will be unnecessary to allude further to it in this place, although it will be appro- priate to quote the elogium on his efforts in this sphere, 12 LIFE OF FLOWER pronounced by the President of the Royal Society, when bestowing the Royal Gold Medal in recognition of his services to zoology. " It is very largely due," runs the address, " to his incessant and well-directed labour that the museum of the Royal College of Surgeons at present contains the most complete, the best ordered, and the most accessible collection of materials for the study of vertebrate structures extant." As regards his Hunterian lectures, it has been well remarked that few could have any idea of the amount of labour they involved, nor would any one be likely to guess this from the ever-ready and earnest efforts of the lecturer to give to others that knowledge he had so laboriously, and yet so pleasantly, acquired within the walls of the museum. In addition to the official Hunterian lectures, Flower during this portion of his career commenced the delivery, as opportunity occurred, of lectures of a much more popular description, at the Royal Institution and else- where, by means of which he appealed to a wider audience than any that could be attracted to technical discourses, and at the same time was enabled to give a wide circulation to the discussion of subjects connected with his own special studies which had more or less of a general interest. In one of his earlier discourses of this type he discussed at considerable detail the deformi- ties produced in the human foot by badly-designed boots or other covering among both civilised and barbarous nations. Indeed, " fashion in deformity " was at all times a favourite theme with the Hunterian Professor ; and in a lecture on this subject he uttered, for him, a LIFE OF FLOWER 13 strong protest against the evils caused by the corset among European females, illustrating his remarks with a ghastly figure of a female skeleton distorted by the undue pressure of that fashionable article of costume. In 1871, and again in later years, Professor Flower acted as Examiner in Zoology for the Natural Science Tripos at Cambridge, where his suave and dignified manner, and innate courtliness rendered him as great a favourite as in the Metropolis. He was during some portion of his career Examiner in Anatomy at the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons. Flower's official connection with the museum of the Royal College of Surgeons was brought to a close by Owen's resignation of the Post of Superintendent of the Natural History Department of the British Museum, when it was felt by all that the efficient and successful administrator of the smaller museum in Lincoln's Inn Fields, was the one man specially fitted in every way to have supreme charge of the larger establishment in the Cromwell Road. Professor Flower was accordingly selected by the three principal trustees the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Lord Chancellor, and the Speaker of the House of Commons to fill this important post, into the duties of which he entered during the same year. His ad- ministration of the museum which lasted until he was compelled by failing health to send in his resignation a few months before his death is fully discussed in the fourth chapter, and was in every way a complete success. During his long and successful official career Sir William was the recipient of a number of honours (in addition to the medals he received for his Crimean service), and he was likewise on the roll of the more 1 4 LIFE OF FLOWER important societies connected with the branches of biological study in which he was specially interested. Of the Royal Society Sir William was elected a Fellow in 1864 at the relatively early age of thirty- three and he served on the Council of that body for three separate periods, namely from 1868 to 1870, from 1876 to 1878, and again from 1884 to 1886, while in 1884 and 1885 he was one of the Vice-Presidents. In 1882 his conspicuous services to zoological science was recognised by the bestowal upon him of a Royal Gold Medal one of the most honourable distinctions in the gift of the Society ; the other recipient in the same year of a similar honour being Lord Rayleigh. In handing to Professor Flower this medal, the President dwelt upon the value of his contributions to both zoology and an- thropology, referring, in connection with the former science, to his paper on the classification of the Carnivora, and, in respect to the latter, to the then recently pub- lished first part of the "Catalogue of Osteological Specimens in the Museum of the Royal College of Sur- geons," in which descriptions and measurements of between 1 300 and 1400 human skulls are recorded. The present writer has been informed that Flower refused to be nominated for the Presidentship of the Royal Society, owing to the fear that the calls made upon his time by that office would interfere with his official duties. Of the Zoological Society Professor Flower became a Fellow so long ago as the year 1851, that is to say, three years previous to the commencement of his Crimean service. After serving for several periods on the Council he was elected to the honourable (and honorary) office of President on the death of the Marquis of Tweeddale LIFE OF FLOWER 15 in 1879, an d ' m this important position he remained till his death. It should be added that Flower never received one of the medals of the Zoological Society, and this for the very good reason that such rewards are bestowed in recognition of gifts to the Society's Mena- gerie, and not for contributions to zoological knowledge. Flower's contributions to both the Transactions and the Proceedings of the Society were numerous, and, needless to say, valuable ; the earliest in the former having been published in 1866, and in the latter in 1852. With very few exceptions, these communications relate to mammals. Fuller details with regard to Sir William's Presidency of the Zoological Society will be found in a later chapter. Of the Linnean Society, Flower was elected a Fellow in 1862, but he does not appear to have ever taken any active part in the administration of that body, or to have contributed to its publications, although for a time he was a Vice-President. To the Geological Society, on the other hand, of which he became a Fellow in the year 1886, Sir William contributed three papers on paleontological subjects, by far the most important of which was one on the affinities and probable habits of the extinct Australian marsupial Thylacoleo. Further allusion to this is made in the sequel. Of the other two, one recorded the occurrence of teeth of the bear-like Hyatnarctus in the Red Crag of Suffolk, and the other that of a skull of the manatee-like Ha/i- therium in the same formation. Of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland Flower was elected a Vice-President in 1879, while in 1883 he succeeded to the Presidential chair, 1 6 LIFE OF FLOWER and occupied that position till 1885. Of his numerous contributions to anthropological science, many appeared in the journal of the Institute. In the annual meetings of the British Association for the advancement of science, Flower, from an early date, took a lively interest. At the Norwich meeting, in 1868, he acted as Vice-President of the section of Biology, white he was President of the same section at the Dublin meeting of 1878. At York he presided over the section of Anthropology in 1 88 1 ; he was a Vice- President at the Aberdeen meeting of 1885, while for the second time he occupied the Presidential chair of the Anthropological section in 1894 at Oxford, when his opening address on Anthropological progress dis- played great breadth of thought and generalisation. Finally, he was President of the Association at the meeting held in Newcastle-on-Tyne in 1889, ^ s address at the latter meeting forming the first article in Essays on Museums. Among other offices of a kindred nature to the above, it may be mentioned that Sir William was President of the section of Anatomy at the International Medical Congress held in London in August 1 88 1. His address on that occasion (reprinted as article 7 of the volume just cited) being on the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons. In July 1893 ^ e acte d as President of the Museum's Association at their London meeting, when, after referring to the general scope of that body, and a brief survey of some of the chief museums of Europe, he sketched out a plan for an ideal building of this nature. This address also appears in Essays on Museums. Sir William, the year before LIFE OF FLOWER 17 his death, had also undertaken to preside over the meeting of the International Zoological Congress held at Cambridge in the summer of 1898, but was pre- vented by failing health ; his place being filled by Lord Avebury (Sir John Lubbock). On 29th November 1895, Sir William Flower delivered an address at the opening of the Perth Museum, in which he pointed out the special function of local museums. Five years earlier (3rd November 1890) he had delivered another address on a very similar occasion, namely, the opening of the Booth Museum, in the Dyke Road, Brighton, famed for its unrivalled collection of British birds, the great majority of which had been shot and subsequently mounted in a most artistic manner by its founder. This splendid collection, it may be mentioned, was bequeathed at Mr. Booth's death to the British Museum, but it was reluctantly declined by the Trustees, who waived their right in favour of the Corporation of Brighton. At the end of October 1896, Sir William, then in fail- ing health, somewhat rashly undertook a journey to Scotland to assist Lord Reay in the inauguration of the Gatty Marine Laboratory at St. Andrews. Another important address delivered by Flower was one read before the Church Congress at their meeting, held in October 1883, at Reading, on ' Recent Advances in Natural Science in Relation to the Christian Faith." It is reprinted in Essays on Museums. In this address Flower, while proclaiming his full adherence to the doctrine of the transmutation of species and the evolution of every organic form from a pre-existing type, urged that this did not in the least shake his confidence in all the essential teaching of the Christian religion. At the B 1 8 LIFE OF FLOWER same time he pointed out that the new doctrine in no wise detracted from the position of the Divine Ruler of the world as the controller, and indeed the originator, of animal development. Shortly after his retirement from the post of Con- servator, Professor Flower was elected a Trustee of the Hunterian Collection of the Royal College of Surgeons. Many years later, in 1 88 1, he became a Trustee of Sir John Soane's Museum, in Lincoln's Inn Fields. Mention has already been made of the fact that in an early stage of his career Sir William became an M.B. of London, and that later on he was elected to the Fellow- ship of the Royal College of Surgeons. In addition to these professional qualifications, he was also the recipient of honorary degrees from the two elder Universities. Thus in 1891 he was made a D.C.L. of Oxford, the public orator of the University, when the degree was conferred, acclaiming him as a living proof of the truth of the old saying, dp^yj avdpa. dei%ti, attributed to one of the seven wise men of Greece, and as a man who had passed with increasing distinction from one important official post to another ; and he was likewise a D.Sc. of Cambridge. But this by no means exhausts the list of his academic honours, Edinburgh, St. Andrews, and Trinity College, Dublin, claiming him on their roll of honorary LL.D.'s, while in 1889 he received from Durham the degree of D.C.L. The Edinburgh degree, it may be mentioned, was conferred on the occasion of the celebration of the tercentenary of the University. Sir William was also a Ph.D. Nor were Flower's conspicuous services to zoological science suffered to remain unrecognised by the Govern- LIFE OF FLOWER 19 ment of his country, for he was created a C.B. in 1887, three years after his first appointment to the British Museum, and five years later (1892) followed the higher distinction of the K.C.B. But this does not exhaust the list of official honours, for in 1887 Sir William received from Her Majesty, the late Queen Victoria, the Jubilee Medal. Had he lived to the date of its foundation, it is possible that Flower might have been admitted by his Sovereign as one of the original members of the Order of Merit. From His Majesty the German Emperor Sir William Flower received the distinction of the Royal Prussian order, "Pour la Merite," an honour of which he was justly very proud. As a distinguished friend pointed out in his letter of congratulation on learning of the new distinction, "it is the one European decoration which an Englishman may be proud to wear, and bestowed, as I believe it to be, with the sanction of the very few who have already got it. It is the one order which real work, apart from rank and wealth and courtiers' trick, alone can win." As another eminent friend described it on the same occasion, it is truly < c the blue riband of literary and scientific decorations." Numerous foreign scientific societies, it is almost unnecessary to observe, were proud to claim the name of Sir William Flower on the list of their honorary members or associates. It is however by no means easy to give a complete list of these honourable distinctions, for Flower was not one who followed the fashion of adding every possible combination of letters to his name in every book or paper he wrote. Perhaps the most important of these distinctions was that of Foreign Correspondent 20 LIFE OF FLOWER of the Institute of France. Among other societies and academies to which he belonged, were those of the Netherlands, Sweden, and Belgium. Although Flower's scientific writings are discussed at length in the later chapters of this memoir, it may be mentioned in this place that during the " eighties " he contributed an important series of articles to the ninth edition of the " Encyclopaedia Britannica." At the commencement of that great undertaking, although the article u Ape " was confided to the competent hands of the late Professor St. George Mivart, some of the other articles, such as the one on" Antelope," were entrusted to writers who, whatever their other merits may have been, had certainly no claim to be regarded as specialists on the subject of mammals. It was not long before this was recognised by the publishers, who forthwith engaged for this section of the work the services of Flower, supplemented by those of the late Dr. Dobson and Mr. O. Thomas. Among the more important articles by Flower were those on the Horse, Kangaroo, Lemur, Lion, Mammalia (in co-operation with Dr. Dobson), Megatherium, Otter, Platypus, Rhinoceros, Seal, Tapir, and "Whale. These and other articles, together with the one on Ape by Professor Mivart and several on the smaller mammals by Mr. Thomas, were subsequently combined and revised to form the basis of the Study of Mammals Living and Extinct, by Sir William Flower and the present writer, and was published by Messrs. A. & C. Black in 1891, which long formed the standard English work on the subject, although now, owing to the rapid progress in zoology and the great change which has taken place in nomenclature, is somewhat out of date. LIFE OF FLOWER 21 The excellent little volume on The Horse in Sir John Lubbock's (Lord Avebury) Modern Science Series, published in 1891, and the Essays on Museums (1898), also appeared during this portion of Flower's career. Although so largely occupied in the study of mammals and other creatures from distant parts of the world, Sir William never travelled much, and never visited little known regions or did any important collecting abroad. In addition to his Crimean ex- periences, and the journeys in Holland, France, and the Rhine country, to which allusion has been already made, his foreign tours appear to have been but few. In the winter of 1873-74 he was, however, enabled to enjoy a trip up the Nile in company with Mrs. Flower, and he visited Biarritz in 1892. During the former excursion he made a number of sketches which bear ample testimony to his powers as an artist. With his great knowledge of anatomy, it may be here mentioned, coupled with his skill with the pencil, he enjoyed a great advantage over many contemporary zoologists in being able to draw accurate and life-like portraits of the animals he loved so well. Nevertheless, if only from lack of time, he never attempted to illustrate with his own hand any of his numerous scientific contributions at all events in later years. Owing to need for com- plete rest, after a short sojourn in the early part of 1897 at Marazion, on the south coast of Cornwall, he spent much of the following winter abroad ; and after his resignation of the Directorship of the Museum in 1898, he spent the following winter at San Remo, from which he returned less than two months before his death. 22 LIFE OF FLOWER As regards the closing scenes of his life, a very few words must suffice. For the last two years of his existence he had evidently been in failing health, largely due to his incessant exertions and from his refusal to spare himself, even when warned of the absolute necessity of so doing by his medical adviser. In August 1898, after a long period during which he had been compelled to devote little or no attention to his official duties, he placed his resignation of the Director- ship of the Museum in the hands of the Trustees. The aforesaid sojourn at San Remo during the following winter effected some slight temporary improvement in his health, but on his return to London, in May 1899, lt was painfully apparent that his constitution never too robust was shattered beyond hope of permanent recovery. And, after a slight temporary rally, from his malady of heart-failure, a sharp relapse occurred on Thursday, 29th June, followed by pneumonia, and on Saturday, 1st July, Sir William Flower passed peacefully away, at the age of sixty-seven years, at his residence, 26 Stanhope Gardens, London. A memorial service was held on the following Wednesday at St. Luke's Church, Sidney Street, Chelsea, which was attended by a large and sympathetic congre- gation of friends and scientific men, including Sir Edward Maunde Thompson, the Chief Librarian and Director of the British Museum, and Professor E. Ray Lankester, Sir William's successor in the Directorship of the Natural History Branch of the same. Sir William was undoubtedly a man of high and noble character, endeared to all with whom he was brought into intimate relations by his unfailing courtesy LIFE OF FLOWER 23 and charm of manner. To the present writer, it may be said perhaps without undue egotism, he was a friend and counsellor such as cannot be expected more than once in a life-time. No better summary of Sir William's general character and high attributes can perhaps be given (certainly the present writer cannot attempt to rival it) than the one drawn up by his biographer in the "Year-book" of the Royal Society for 1901, which may accordingly be quoted in extenso : " In private life no one was more beloved and esteemed. He was in every sense a domestic man, finding the highest joys that life brought him with his family and children. The same courtly bearing and high tone, the same preference for all that was good, was in private circles mingled with the same genial smile, the fascinating account of something interesting or novel, and the respect and deference to others, which was part of his upright, unselfish nature. Many a young natura- list will gratefully remember the kind encouragement and valued advice he was ever ready to offer, and the stimulus which the sympathetic interest of a leader in the department gave him. " In the busy life of Sir William and in the constant calls on brain and nervous system strong though these were there came times when a feeling of lassitude with headache and spinal uneasiness, if not prostration, showed that the indoor life and the strain of many duties had told with severity both on the central nervous system and on the heart. His annual holiday sufficed in many cases to recruit his energies, especially when he visited Scotland and the charming home of his friends, 24 LIFE OF FLOWER Mr. and Mrs. Drummond, of Megginch. There he met other friends, such as Dean and Lady Augusta Stanley [after whom a son and a daughter were respectively named] and Colonel Drummond-Hay, of Seggieden, brother of Mr. Drummond. Moreover, he was always interested in the splendid collection of birds made by Colonel Drummond-Hay during his wanderings with the Black Watch." Another passage from the same memoir of his life runs as follows : " One side of Sir William's life deserves special notice, viz., his social influence, and the endeavour to popularise the great institution with which he was officially con- nected. These influences, developed at the Museum of the College of Surgeons with great success, were brought to bear on a much wider circle in connection with the National Museum and as President of the Zoological Society ; and no one was more fitted than he either for the courtly circle or the large gatherings of working men who flocked on Saturday afternoons to the galleries of the museum. In all his many and varied social functions in his prominent positions he was ably seconded by one who identified herself with his every engagement, and to whom his last volume of collected addresses was dedicated. A man of wide sympathies, he is found at one time addressing a Civil Service dinner, at another a Volunteer gathering, now descanting on evolu- tion to a Church Congress, and again speaking at a Mayoral banquet, a girls' school, or an industrial exhi- bition. The strain on his physique demanded by these efforts would have been great to an ordinary man, but it must have been serious to one whose main energies LIFE OF FLOWER 25 were heavily taxed by exhausting scientific work. His powerful constitution was thus slowly but surely sapped, yet to an eager mind and a generous heart, such as his, little heed was paid to himself. " Taken all in all, we shall not soon see so talented and so accurate a comparative anatomist, so impressive a speaker, so facile an artist, or a public man with a higher type of character." The zoological and anthropological side of Sir William's work (with which the present writer is more competent to deal than he is with his social relations and character) is discussed at length in later chapters of this memoir ; but a few observations may be here introduced on sub- jects which scarcely come within the category of purely scientific work. At intervals during his life-time Flower communicated a considerable number of letters to the Times and other journals on topics more or less intimately connected with animals and animal life. His sympathy with the crusade against the tight bearing-rein, initiated by his father, has already received mention. Equally marked was his sympathy with the movement against the wearing by ladies of the plumage of birds (other than game-birds, etc.), and more especially the so-called " osprey plumes " really the breeding-plumes of the egrets and white herons -in the so-called decoration of their bonnets and hats. The extreme cruelty involved at least in the case of the " osprey s" in this practice, which entails the destruction of the birds during the nesting-season, when these nuptial plumes are alone donned, and con- sequently in many instances the destruction of the help- 26 LIFE OF FLOWER less young by slow starvation, was painted in forcible language by more than one letter from Flower's pen. Happily, as the result of these and other letters from sympathetic naturalists, and the foundation of the Society for the Protection of Birds (whose general aims were likewise strongly advocated by Sir William), this detest- able practice has been much diminished of late years, although very much remains to be done in this way before there can be any pretence of saying that birds, even in this country, are treated by man as they deserve. On another occasion he wrote, deprecating the whole- sale destruction of bottle-nosed whales, which had been advocated on account of the enormous quantities of fishes devoured by these cetaceans. The question of pelagic sealing in Bering Sea, and the best way of preventing unnecessary slaughter, and thus eventual extermination, of the sea-bears and sea-lions which visit the Pribiloff Islands, also occupied his attention. And to him was confided the duty of selecting the naturalists (Professor d'Arcy Thompson and Captain Barrett-Hamilton) who represented British interests in the International Com- mission despatched to those islands in 1896 and 1897, to report on the sealing generally and the habits of the sea- bears, or fur-seals. The best mode of disposing of the bodies of the dead was also a subject to which Sir William devoted a share of his attention, and he was a strong advocate for cremation, or, failing this, for burial in wicker caskets in light sandy soil. The effects of the weather on " Cleopatra's Needle " a comparatively short time after it had been set up on the Thames Embankment $ the best means of utilising and LIFE OF FLOWER 27 beautifying the gardens in Lincoln's Inn Fields ; and the anomaly that while a heavy book could be sent by post for a few pence, the charge on a heavy letter, at the time in question, was considerable, were among many other miscellaneous topics upon which he wrote. In conversation it was Sir "William's great delight, whenever possible, to turn the subject to his own par- ticular studies and pursuits ; but, as mentioned by an exalted personage on an occasion referred to in the sequel, he never wearied his hearers. In a new or rare animal, his delight was almost childish ; and the present writer has often reflected how intense would have been his pleasure had he been spared to see the first speci- men brought to this country of that wonderful animal, the okapi of the Semliki Forest. To his official subordinates Sir William was also readily accessible possibly almost too much so ; and he had always a word of praise for work faithfully carried out under his direction, even if, from a slight misunder- standing of his instructions, it had not been executed precisely on the lines he himself would have desired. He was never above lending a hand himself at manual work ; and the writer well recollects an occasion at the museum where a large animal was, with some difficulty, being moved, and Sir William, although at the time manifestly unfit for severe physical effort, would insist upon aiding in the task. As a host, Sir William Flower, ably seconded by Lady Flower, had few rivals and no superiors ; and although he absolutely detested tobacco, such was his good-nature, that he would not deny his male friends the luxury of an after-dinner cigarette the idea of 28 LIFE OF FLOWER ladies smoking would probably have been too much even for his good-nature and tolerance of other people's little weaknesses. This chapter may be fitly brought to a close by referring to the fact that it was largely owing to the advocacy of Sir William that a statue of his intimate friend Huxley was placed in the Central Hall of the Natural History Museum, in company with those of Darwin and Owen, so that u Huxley and Owen, often divided in their lives, would come together after death in the most appropriate place and amidst the most appropriate surroundings." In this Valhalla of men pre-eminent in British biological science of the nineteenth century, Flower's own bust has found its home ; but of this more anon. In this connection it may be added that Sir William Flower wrote for the Proceedings of the Royal Society the obituary notice of Sir Richard Owen, who had been his predecessor in his own two most important offices. Despite the fact that Flower had been instrumental in overthrowing at least one of Owen's " pet theories," this biographical notice is written in the kindest and most sympathetic spirit, giving full credit to the " immense labours and brilliant talents " of this truly remarkable man. An earlier obituary notice from Flower's pen which appeared in the same journal was devoted to a sketch of the life of George Rolleston, the brilliant Professor of Anatomy and Physiology of Oxford, whose comparatively early death in 1 88 1 was one of the real losses to biological science. Of a more varied and popular nature were Flower's LIFE OF FLOWER 29 reminiscences of his friend Huxley, which appeared in the North American Review for September 1895. A fourth biographical notice was the "eulogium" on Charles Darwin, delivered by Sir William at the centenary meeting of the Linnean Society, held on 24th May 1888, in which the speaker acknowledged the incomparable importance of Darwin's work, and incidentally avowed his own acceptance of the doctrine of evolution. Com- pared to Darwin's achievements, he observed, "most of the work which we others do is but irregular, guerilla warfare, attacks on isolated points, mere outpost skirmishing, while his was the indefatigable, patient, unintermittent toil, conducted in such a manner and on such a scale that it could scarcely fail to secure victory in the end." CHAPTER II AS CONSERVATOR OF THE MUSEUM OF THE COLLEGE OF SURGEONS, AND HUNTERIAN PROFESSOR. [1861-1884.] THE death, in 1 86 1, of the eminent histological anatomist, Professor Quekett, rendered vacant the important post of Conservator of the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons of England in Lincoln's Inn Fields. This museum, it is almost superfluous to mention, was founded by the great anatomist, John Hunter, and is hence often known popularly, although not officially, as the Hunterian Museum. " Originally a private collection," observed Flower in his Presidential address to the Anatomical section of the International Medical Congress, held in London in the summer of 1 88 1, "embracing a large variety of objects, it has been carried out and increased upon much the same plan as that designed by the founder, with modifications only to suit some of the requirements of advancing knowledge. The only portion of Hunter's biological collection which have been actually parted with are the stuffed birds and beasts, which, with the sanction of the Trustees appointed by the Government to see that the college performs its part of the contract as custodians of the collection, were transferred to the British Museum, and a considerable number of dried vascular preparations, which having become useless in consequence of the deterioration in their condition, resulting from age and 32 LIFE OF FLOWER decay, have been replaced by others preserved by better methods." In regard to the special purposes served by this museum, it is mentioned in the same address that it is maintained by the College of Surgeons " for the benefit not only of its own members, but for that of the profession at large, and indeed of all who take any interest in biological science, whether the young student preparing for his examination, or the advanced worker who has here found materials for many an important contribution by which the boundaries of knowledge have been materially enlarged. To all such it is freely open without fee or charge. Even the written or personal introduction of members, still nominally required, is never asked for on the four open days from any intelligent or interested visitor; and on the one day of the week on which it is closed for cleaning, facilities are always given to those who are desirous of making special studies, and to the increasing number of lady students, whether artistic, scholastic, or medical. Artists continually resort to the museum to find opportunities of studying anatomy of man and animals, which no other place in London affords ; and of late years it has been the means of a still wider diffusion of knowledge, by the visits which have been organised on summer Saturday afternoons by various associations of artizans, to whom a popular demonstration of its contents is usually given by the Conservator." Elsewhere in the same address we find the following passage in connection with the teaching functions of this body : "The various professorships and lectureships that LIFE OF FLOWER 33 are attached to the College have grown up chiefly in consequence of one of the conditions under which the Hunterian Collection was entrusted to it by Government that a course of no less than twenty-four lectures shall be delivered annually by some member of the College upon Comparative Anatomy and other subjects, illustrated by the preparations." For some years previously to Professor Quekett's death the offices of Conservator of the Museum of the College and of Hunterian Professor of Anatomy had been disassociated ; the occupant of the professorial chair at the date in question being the late Professor T. H. Huxley, while, as already mentioned, Quekett held the Conservatorship. At an earlier date the two offices had, however, been held conjointly ; Owen having fulfilled the duties of both for a period of no less than twenty-five years. It may be added that, from the varied nature of the collections under his charge, the Conservator is expected to have a knowledge not only of comparative anatomy and zoology, but likewise of palaeontology, physiology, surgery, and pathology. Such a wide range of knowledge is possible to few men at the present day, but it was possessed to a very considerable extent by Mr. Flower, even at this com- paratively early stage of his career ; and as the appoint- ment was congenial to his tastes, he applied for, and in due course was elected to, the Conservatorship. The acceptance of this involved the complete abandonment of practice as a surgeon a course of action which, I believe, was never regretted. For eight years Mr. Flower discharged the duties of the Conservatorship to c 34 LIFE OF FLOWER the satisfaction of the Council of the College ; and when, in 1869, Professor Huxley found himself compelled by the pressure of other duties to relinquish the Hunterian chair, Flower was elected in 1870 to fill the vacancy. He thus, for the first time in his career, became entitled to the designation of u Professor," and he continued to hold the two offices till his transference to the British Museum. Here it may perhaps be well to mention, in order to avoid confusion, that in the early part of Flower's official career at the College of Surgeons the post of Articulator to the museum was held by a name- sake Mr. James Flower. For the first eight years of his connection with the museum in Lincoln's Inn Fields the time and attention of Flower were almost entirely devoted to the improve- ment, augmentation, and rearrangement of the collections under his charge ; and even when his duties as Hunterian Professor claimed a large share of his time, no efforts were spared to maintain the former rate of progress in the museum. To record in detail the improvements and alterations made in the museum under Flower's able administration would obviously not only occupy a large amount of space but would, likewise, be wearisome to the reader. Attention will therefore be concentrated on a few salient features in connection with his work. Although the anatomy of man naturally took a pro- minent place in what used to be called the " physio- logical" series, yet the preparations illustrating this subject were in the main restricted to the viscera ; the details of regional anatomy and of the arrangement and distribution of muscles, vessels, and nerves not finding LIFE OF FLOWER 35 a place in the original scheme of the museum. This appeared to Flower to be a serious omission, and he soon set to work to exhibit human anatomy largely on account of its paramount importance to the members of the medical profession on a much more extensive scale than was previously the case, thereby affording by means of permanent preparations a ready demonstration, accessible at all times, of the structure of every part of the human frame. To those who have already learnt their anatomy, it has been well remarked, and who wish to refresh their memory, or verify a fact about which some passing doubt may be felt, or to those who are precluded by circumstances from visiting the dissecting room, the preparations of this series must prove of great value. In connection with this series may be mentioned the fact that Flower published during the year he took office the work which heads the list of his numerous scientific contributions, namely, Diagrams of the Nerves of the Human Body, exhibiting their Origin, Divisions and Connections, which was favourably received by the medical profession. In the preparation of the anatomical series, Flower's almost unrivalled powers of dissection stood him in good stead, and it was probably during this period of his career that he first acquired the rudiments of that originality and care in museum arrangement and display that led to his being called in after life by a German savant " the Prince of Museum Directors." Perhaps, however, the portion of the museum under his charge in which Flower was most deeply interested was that devoted to the dentition and osteology of 36 LIFE OF FLOWER the different orders of the Mammalia. As regards the osteological series, he expressed himself in the above-mentioned address of 1 88 1 in the following words : " On this head we claim to be somewhat in advance of other museums, on account of the improvements which have been made of late years in preparing and articulating dried skeletons, and in displaying portions of the bony framework in an instructive manner. Formerly all the bones were rigidly fixed together, so that their articular surfaces, if not actually destroyed, were completely concealed, and no bone could possibly be removed and separately examined. The aim of a series of changes in the method of mounting skeletons introduced here, and n9w adopted, more or less com- pletely, in many other museums, has been to obviate all these difficulties, and to make each bone, as far as possible, independent of all the rest, whilst preserving the general aspect and form of the entire skeleton. " Another improvement in the osteological series in- troduced within the last twenty years has been the forma- tion of a special collection designed to show the principal modifications of each individual skeleton throughout the vertebrate classes, by the placing the homologous bones of a number of different animals in juxta-posi- tion. For convenience of comparison, the specimens of this series are all placed in corresponding positions, mounted on separate stands, and to each is attached a label bearing the name of the bone and the animal to which it belongs. This series is especially instructive to the students of elementary osteology, and forms an introduction to the general series." LIFE OF FLOWER 37 It might have been added with perfect truth that this series of the detached homologous bones of different animals is of equal value and importance to both the palaeontologist and the evolutionist ; since with its assist- ance the former has a ready means of ascertaining the nearest relationships of any fossil bone that may be brought under his notice, while the latter is able to observe the modifications that any particular bone has undergone in different groups of animals. He may notice, for instance, the elongation and slenderness distinctive of the humerus, or arm-bone, of the bat, and contrast it with the short and broad contour characterising the same bone in the mole, while he may observe the elongation of some of the bones of the hind-limbs distinctive of jumping mammals, and their almost total disappearance in the whales and dolphins. If the preparation of this series of specimens (which appears to have been closely con- nected with his lectures on the osteology of the Mammalia, and their subsequent incorporation in the well-known volume noticed in the sequel) had been the sole limit of the work accomplished by Flower, it would still have been sufficient to entitle him to the gratitude of posterity. It was while engaged in the development of the collections of this museum that Flower made his im- portant observations on the homologies and mode of succession of the teeth of various groups of mammals, and more especially the marsupials. Here, too, it was that he undertook the investigations which led to his publica- tion of a new scheme of classification for the Carnivora ; and it was likewise during his Conservatorship that he published his valuable series of observations upon the 38 LIFE OF FLOWER comparative anatomy of the mammalian liver. These and other kindred subjects may, however, better be con- sidered at greater length in a later chapter. It must suffice therefore, to add in this connection that during Flower's term of office the unrivalled series of human skeletons and skulls underwent a very marked and im- portant increase. By no means the least important part of Flower's work in connection with the museum of the College of Sur- geons was the compilation and publication of the first two volumes of the Catalogue of Qsteological Sped- mens the first, dealing with man alone, issued in 1879, anc * the second, written with the aid of his assistant, Dr. J. G. Garson, and treating of the other members of the mammalian class, in 1884. The import- ance of these works consists in the fact of their being a very great deal more than mere catalogues of the contents of one particular museum. They are, on the contrary, systematic treatises, embodying the views of their chief author on such important subjects as zoological nomen- clature and classification, and on the best method of arranging museums which include specimens of the den- tition and osteology of both living and extinct animals. They accordingly deserve notice at some considerable length, not only on this account, but as forming a record of the great changes Flower introduced into the museum at this period under his charge. It appears that the first printed list of the contents of the museum was published in the year 1831. In a few years, however, it became evident that a work of a more ambitious nature was required; and in January 1842, the then Conservator, Professor Owen, presented LIFE OF FLOWER 39 a report to the Council, on the supreme advantage to be gained by combining in the proposed new Catalogue both the recent and the fossil osteological Catalogues. Acting on this, the Committee of Council resolved that such a Catalogue should be prepared and published, and the duty of doing this was thereupon confided to Mr. Owen. For some reason or other, this excellent and far-seeing resolution was not acted upon in its entirety ; and al- though catalogues were in due course compiled by Owen and published, the specimens belonging to animals still extant were entered in volumes quite distinct from these devoted to fossil bones and teeth ; while the two series of specimens were likewise kept apart in the museum itself. " Hence," as Flower subsequently ob- served, " each series was incomplete, and required reference to the other for its perfect illustration and comprehension." These defects were remedied during the administration of Flower, who not only arranged the extinct specimens in their proper position among those belonging to recent animals, but likewise followed the same admirable plan in drawing up the Catalogues. Later on, as we shall see in the sequel, he endeavoured to introduce the same scheme into the Natural His- tory Museum, but was prevented by the force of circumstances from carrying his views into full effect, although a small step in the right direction was ac- complished. The first part of the Catalogue of the osteological specimens in the museum of the College which, as already said, is devoted to man alone, is a most laborious, accurate, and valuable work, dealing first with the 40 LIFE OF FLOWER general osteology of man, then with his dentition, and, thirdly, with the special characters of the osteology and dentition of the different races of the human species a line of study which had formed the subject of several of his lectures as Hunterian Professor. Nor is this by any means all, for the introduction to this volume forms a valuable compendium of the principles and rules of the science of craniology ; the remarks on the mode of measuring skulls, and the method of calculating from such measurements " indices," whereby skulls of different types can be compared with one another with exactness, being models of accuracy and clearness, and rendered the more valuable from the tables by which they are accompanied. For measuring the cubic contents of skulls, Flower was convinced that mustard-seed formed the best and most accurate medium. In addition to its value as a summary of the contents of that portion of the museum of which it treats, and as a precis of its chief author's views at that time as to the classification of mammals, the second part of the Cata- logue is of special importance on account of containing an expression of opinion on the subject of zoological nomenclature a subject on which Flower had previously spoken in no uncertain tones in his Presidential Address to the Zoological section of the British Association at the meeting held in Dublin in 1878, which is republished in Essays on Museums. The keynote of Flower's introduction to his Catalogue was the urgent need of uniformity of nomenclature among zoologists ; and on this, and the subject generally, he expressed himself as follows : " As there is no matter of such great importance in a LIFE OF FLOWER 41 catalogue as the correct naming of the objects described in it, this part of the subject has engaged a very large share of attention in preparing the work. I am not sanguine enough to suppose that the names I have adopted always after careful research and considera- tion will in every case be deemed satisfactory by other zoologists, yet I hope that some advance will have been made towards that most desirable end a fixed and generally recognised nomenclature of all the best-known species of mammals. Having selected the generic and specific name which I considered most appropriate, I have given the place and date of their first occurrence, but have only admitted such synonyms as have found their way into standard works, judging it better that the remainder should be buried in oblivion, or at all events only retained in professedly bibliographical treatises. In selecting the name chosen, I have been mainly guided by the views which have been gradually gain- ing general currency among conscientious naturalists of all nations, and which were formulated in what is commonly called the Stricklandian Code, adopted by a Committee of the British Association for the Advance- ment of Science in 1842, and revised and reprinted by the Association in 1 865) anc ^ again in 1878. . . . The regulations laid down in these codes for the formation of new names are unimpeachable; and although some of the rules for the selection of names already in existence have given rise to criticism, and are occasionally difficult of practical application when an endeavour is made to enforce them too rapidly, they do in the main, when interpreted with discretion and common-sense, lead to satisfactory results. As what we are aiming at is simply 42 LIFE OF FLOWER convenience and general accord, and not abstract justice or truth, there are cases in which the rigid law of priority, even if it can be ascertained, requires qualifi- cation, as it is certainly not advisable to revive an obsolete or almost tfnknown name at the expense of one, which if not strictly legitimate, has been universally accepted and become thoroughly incorporated in zoological and anatomical literature ; and it is often better to put up with a small error or inconvenience in an existing name than to incur the much larger confusion caused by the introduction of a new one." These are weighty words of wisdom, and it must be a matter for profound regret to all persons of thoroughly philosophical and well-balanced minds that, by the newer school of naturalists led by an American section they have not only been received without the attention they merit as coming from a man of Flower's wide experience and mature judgment, but have been absolutely ignored and the principle they inculcate treated with disdain and contempt. Obscure names, frequently of the most barbarous construction and sound, have been raked up from all conceivable sources and substituted for the well-known terms adopted by Flower and many of his contemporaries ; while, to make matters worse, the good old rule that no names antedating the twelfth edition of the Sy sterna Nature of Linnaeus should be recognised in zoological literature has, so far as mammals are concerned, been treated absolutely as a dead letter. If it be asked what has been the result of thus ignor- ing the deliberately expressed and matured views of a judicial mind like Flower's, and whether we are per- LIFE OF FLOWER 43 ceptibly nearer the attainment of uniformity in the matter of biological nomenclature, the reply must be that the subject is in a more unsatisfactory state than ever, and the desired end as far off. It is perfectly true, indeed, that a section of the students of the systematic side of zoology have agreed among themselves to employ only such names as they believe to be the earliest, quite irre- spective of the obscurity of their origin or the rule that such names should be compounded according to classic usage. When, however, we take a broader survey of the field of biology, we find that, almost to a man, the anatomists, the palaeontologists, the geologists, the evolutionists, the students of geographical distribution, and other writers who discuss the subject from aspects other than the purely systematic, adhere to the more conservative side in respect of nomenclature. Moreover, even if this were not the case, we should be but little forwarder, seeing that in works like Darwin's Origin of Species and Wallace's Geographical Distribution of Mammals which must remain classical so long as zoology lasts as a science the older style of nomen- clature is used. Consequently, even if the proposed emendations and changes were universally adopted, the names employed by these and other contemporary writers would still have to be learnt and committed to memory by all zoological students ; so that, instead of one series of names, as would have been practically the case had Flower's proposal been loyally adopted by his contemporaries and followers, we are compelled to know and remember a double series. Whether in the end there will not be a reversion to the judicial and temperate conservative compromise 44 LIFE OF FLOWER proposed by Flower and almost everything in this world is based more or less upon compromise from the headstrong and radical mode of procedure fol- lowed by some of the younger zoologists, remains to be seen. Another subject on which Flower insisted very strongly in the work under consideration was the inadvisability of multiplying generic and family divi- sions in zoology. Here again we may quote his own words. " I do not mean," he writes, " that with the advance- ment of knowledge improvements cannot be continually made in the current arrangement of genera. The older groups become so unwieldy by the discovery of new species belonging to them that they must be broken up, if only for the sake of convenience ; newly discovered forms which cannot be placed in any of the established genera must have new genera constituted for them, and fuller knowledge of the structure of an animal may necessitate its removal from one genus into another ; all these are incidents in the legitimate progress of science. Such alterations should, however, never be made lightly and without a full sense of responsibility for the difficulties which may be occasioned by them, and which often can never be removed. Complete agreement upon this subject can never be expected, as the idea of a genus, of an assemblage of animals to which a common generic name may be attached, cannot be defined in words, and only exists in the imagination of the different persons making use of the expression ; but there might be no difficulty in coming to some general agreement, if individual zoologists would look at the LIFE OF FLOWER 45 idea as held by the majority, and would not give way to the impulse to bestow a name wherever there is the slightest opening for doing so." Here, again, we have golden words, which are unfortunately ignored by a large number of the zoologists and palaeontologists of the present day. Most noteworthy, perhaps, in the whole passage, is the emphasis given to the fact that generic groups are but arbitrary creations of the human, and that, far from being natural realities, they are solely and simply formed as matters of convenience, so that their limits are absolutely dependent upon individual or collective opinion. Consequently, when we hear it said as we may that such and such an animal must constitute a genus by itself, we may be assured that in nine cases out of ten the speaker is talking nonsense. It may do so, but this is purely as a matter of convenience for purposes of classification. As examples of Flower's broad and far-seeing way of looking at the limits of generic groups, we may take his inclusion of the foxes in the same group as the wolves, of the polecats and weasels with the martens, of the two-horned with the one-horned rhinoceroses, and of the blackbirds with the thrushes ; and yet in all these instances, as in many others, a large number of his successors many of whom cannot lay claim to anything approaching his intellectual capacity and his power of separating essentials from trivialities cannot be content with the grand simplicity of his scheme of classification. What they gain by their involved systems and minute subdivisions is best known to themselves to the public such complexity 46 LIFE OF FLOWER tends to render zoology, which ought to be one of the most attractive and delightful of all sciences (and it was one of Flower's endeavours to make it as much so as possible), repulsive and distasteful. The present writers opportunities of intercourse with Professor Flower during his tenure of the Conser- vatorship of the Museum of the College of Surgeons were but few and intermittent, and restricted to the latter part of that time, he may therefore be pardoned for quoting from a biographer who appears to have enjoyed more favourable opportunities in this respect. Before doing so, however, the writer cannot refrain from putting it on record that his own appointment to the Geological Survey of India in the early seventies was largely due to the influence of Professor Flower, who had been his examiner in the Natural Science Tripos at Cambridge, in December 1871. To revert to the subject of Flower's personality in connection with his appointment in Lincoln's Inn Fields, his biographer in the " Year-Book " of the Royal Society for 1901 writes as follows : "His tenure of office, viz., twenty-two years, as Conservator of the museum of the Royal College of Surgeons, was a splendid record of original and laborious work, of great administrative capacity, and of unvarying courtesy to visitors. The museum was most popular under his management. There, amidst the almost unrivalled collections, the tall, fair-haired, and earnest worker was daily to be found, minutely studying, comparing and measuring, or giving directions for the extension, arrangement, and classification of the varied and valuable contents. From a scientific point of view LIFE OF FLOWER 47 no post could have been better adapted to the man or the man to the post. With many and varied lines of study lying conveniently around him, in the quietude of an office less conspicuous and exacting than the British Museum, in the full vigour of manhood, and in the midst of sympathetic seniors, friends, and assistants, it can well be imagined that Sir William's powers attained great development, and that perhaps he never felt so full of happiness and satisfaction with his original work. It could not well be otherwise. His conscientious devotion to duty, his remarkable skill in devising methods of mounting, his artistic eye, his tact with subordinates, and the esteem in which he was held by zoologists and comparative anatomists at home and abroad, give a clue to his subsequent career, and show the training of one of the most accomplished and courtly comparative anatomists our country has produced." But there was another side to Flower's work during the greater part of his official connection with the Royal College of Surgeons, and one which brought him into wider and closer contact with the public than was the case with his Conservatorship. This was the delivery of the lectures which form the chief, if not the sole, duty of the Hunterian Professor. According to the statutes of the College, the annual course of lectures, which is short, must be on a different subject each year, but must in all cases be illustrated by preparations in the museum. The present writer was privileged to attend only one of these courses on the general structure of the Mammalia and is therefore not competent to speak 4 8 LIFE OF FLOWER from experience of these lectures as a whole. Never- theless the one course was amply sufficient to con- vince him of the lecturer's special qualifications for his task. Flower was indeed an ideal lecturer, endowed with a fine presence, a suave and yet penetrating voice, great power of expression, a slow and impressive delivery, and, above all, an absolute mastery of his subject (whatever it might be) down to the minutest and apparently most insignificant details. For him, every detail of structure, whether functional or rudi- mentary, had a significance and a meaning, and he would never rest satisfied till he had found out what that meaning was, and had laid the whole of the evidence on which he based his conclusions before his audience. That audience, which generally included a considerable number of the elder members of the medical profession, as well as many well-known zoologists and anatomists, invariably listened with rapt attention to the story told so admirably by the accom- plished lecturer. Of these lectures, the first course, delivered in 1870 on the Osteology of the Mammalia, is perhaps the one which has rendered Flower most widely known among zoological students, since, as noticed below, it became the basis of a valuable little volume. His introductory lecture in February 1870 was largely devoted to the subject of plan, or " type," in Nature, and to the evidence in favour of the transmuta- tion of species and evolution of organised beings a doctrine which was at that time by no means so widely accepted, even among scientific men, as it is at the present day. In this address the lecturer prefaced his LIFE OF FLOWER 49 remarks by explaining that since the main part of his anatomical knowledge was derived from the splendid series of specimens and preparations in the museum under his charge, so he intended to act as the mouth- piece of the specimens themselves. After this intro- ductory lecture followed the regular course for the year, which was devoted to the Osteology of the Mammalia, and it is perhaps this series which has rendered the name of Flower most familiar to the ordinary students of scientific zoology and comparative anatomy, since it was published during the same year as a volume in Macmillan's Manuals for Students, under the title of An Introduction to the Osteology of the Mammalia : being the Substance of a Course of Lectures delivered at the Royal College of Surgeons of England. Such was the success of this admirable little volume which has ever since formed the recognised text-book on the subject of which it treats, that a second edition was called for in 1876, and a third in 1885. In expand- ing and revising the latter in which, by the way, the second half of the original title was dropped the author, owing to the pressure of official duties, called in the assistance of Dr. J. G. Garson, of Cambridge, a well-known zoologist and anatomist. This book, to be properly appreciated, should be studied in connection with the series of homologous bones of different species of mammals arranged by Flower himself in the museum of the College of Surgeons, to which reference has been made in an earlier part of this chapter, and from which most of the illustrations were drawn. The figures of the dog's skull have been reproduced in a large number of 50 LIFE OF FLOWER zoological and anatomical works. The plan followed in this volume forms an admirable model for all works of a kindred nature. In the first chapter the author discusses the classification of the mammalia; in the second he describes the skeleton of that group as a whole ; while in the remainder the modifications pre- sented by the various bones in the different groups are described in considerable detail. A special feature is the sparing use of technical terms, and the careful explanation of the meaning of those of which the use was unavoidable. Besides being carefully revised and brought up to date, the third edition differed from its predecessors by including a table of the number of vertebrae found in a large series of species. In the following year (1871) the Hunterian course, which comprised no less than eighteen lectures, was devoted to the functions and modifications of the teeth of mammals, from man to the monotremes, although it was not known at that time that either of the two generic representatives of the latter group really possessed true teeth, the discovery of these organs in the Australian duckbill not having been made till many years later. Among other subjects included in his Hunterian lectures was the anatomy and affinities of the Cetacea, or whales and dolphins, a group of mammals in which Flower almost from the first displayed a marked and special interest, and on which he became one of the first authorities. Since, however, this is a subject to which fuller reference is made in a later chapter, it need not be further discussed in this place. LIFE OF FLOWER 51 In 1872 Flower's Huuterian lectures were devoted to the subject of the digestive organs of mammals ; these lectures being reported, with illustrations, in the Medical Times and Gazette of the same year. Perhaps the most important and certainly the most voluminous of these lectures was the series on the " Comparative Anatomy of Man," which extended over several years, the course for 1880 dealing especially with the skulls of the Fiji, Tongan, and Samoan islanders. The subject of anthropology, or the study of the different races of mankind from a zoological stand- point, shared indeed with that of the Cetacea a large part of the Professor's attention, and the two together formed, perhaps, his favourite lines of investigation. In regard to the problems presented by the human race when viewed from this standpoint, Flower has expressed himself as follows : " Comparative anatomy is specially occupied in study- ing the differences between one man and another, estimating and classifying their differences, and especi- ally discriminating between such differences as are only individual variations (variations which, when extreme, are relegated to the department of the teratologist) and those that are inherited, and so become characters of different groups and races of the human species. Physical anthropology, moreover, extends its range beyond merely comparing and registering these differ- ences of structure. It also occupies itself with endeavouring to trace their cause, and the circumstances which may occasion their modifications. It endeavours also to form a classification of the different groups of 52 LIFE OF FLOWER mankind, and so to throw light upon the history and development of the human species." The races towards which special attention was directed in these lectures were mainly those inhabiting the islands of the Indian Ocean and the Pacific, namely, the diminutive and degraded Andamanese, the Australians, and their near but very distinct neighbours, the Tas- manians, long since extinct, the Melanesians or Oceanic Negroes, and the Polynesians. With the exception of the latter, which the Professor regarded as an aberrant and somewhat mixed modification of the Malay stock, all these different island races were considered to belong to the black or negroid branch of the human species ; and it was suggested that the Andamanese were the purest living representatives of a great "Negrito" stock, which had been formerly widely distributed, and had given rise to the true African negroes on the one hand, and to the Oceanic negroes on the other. As regards his view that the aboriginal Australians are members of the negroid branch, it will be pointed out in a later chapter that an alternative opinion has of late years gained considerable favour among anthro- pologists. The Hunterian lectures of Flower were, however, by no means restricted to the negro-like races of the islands of the southern oceans. On the contrary, the Professor devoted much attention in the course of trje series to the various races to be met with in our Indian dependencies, dwelling especially on the so-called Dravidian (i.e. non- Aryan) tribes of the Nilgiris and other districts of southern India, and likewise on the still more remarkable and primitive Veddas of Ceylon. LIFE OF FLOWER 53 The Mongols, as typified by the Tatars and Chinese, and their relationship on the one hand to the Eskimo, and thus with the " Indians" of America, and on the other with the Malays, were also discussed at consider- able length in these lectures. The origin of the Egyptians was also a subject to which much attention was devoted by the Hunterian Professor. " The much vexed questions," he said, " who were the Egyptians ? and where did they come from ? receive no answer from anatomical investigations, beyond the very simple one that they are one of several races which inhabit all the lands surrounding the Mediter- ranean Sea ; that they there lived in their own land far beyond all periods of time measured by historical events, and that in all probability it was there that they gradu- ally developed that marvellous civilisation which has exercised such a powerful influence over the arts, the sciences, and the religion of the whole western world." The truth of these suggestions has been fully confirmed by the subsequent researches of Professor Flinders Petrie. As a whole, these Hunterian lectures on anthropological subjects were a great success, and won for the Pro- fessor increased respect and admiration from scientific men of all classes. They paved the way for the pre- paration of that invaluable Catalogue of the anthropo- logical specimens in the museum of the College to which allusion has already been made. When in 1884 Professor Flower, on the resignation of Sir Richard Owen, accepted the Directorship of the Natural History Departments of the British Museum, and was thus compelled to sever his official connection 54 LIFE OF FLOWER with the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons, after a service of two-and-twenty years, the following resolution, on the motion of Sir James Paget, seconded by Mr. Erichsen, was unanimously passed by the Council of the College : That the Council hereby desire to express to Mr. William Henry Flower their deep regret at his resigna- tion of the office of Conservator. That they thank him for the admirable care, judgment and zeal, with which for twenty-two years he has fulfilled the various and responsible duties of those offices. That they are glad to acknowledge that the great increase of the museum during those years has been very largely due to his exertions, and to the influence which he has exercised, not only on all who have worked with him, but amongst all who have been desirous to promote the progress of Anatomical Science. That they know that while he has increased the value and utility of the museum by enlarging it, by preserving it in perfect order, and by facilitating the study of its contents, he has also maintained the scientific reputation of the College, by the numerous works which have gained for him a distinguished position amongst the naturalists and biologists of the present time. And that, in their placing on record their high appreciation of Mr. Flower, the Council feel sure that they are expressing the opinion of all the Fellows and Members of the College, and that they all will unite with them in wishing him complete success and happiness in the important office to which he has been elected." This is indeed a splendid, although by no means ex- aggerated, testimonial to the success of Flower's LIFE OF FLOWER 55 administration of the Museum of the College' of Surgeons, and to the good and lasting work he there effected work which paved the way to the improve- ments he was subsequently able to effect in the Natural History Museum. Note. On Owen's retirement the post of Super- intendent of the Natural History Departments of the British Museum, which he had filled, was merged into the new office of Director ; a wider scope being given to the duties of the post. CHAPTER III AS DIRECTOR OF THE NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM [1884-1898] ON the resignation in 1884 by Sir Richard Owen of the post of Superintendent of the Natural History Departments of the British Museum, which four years previously had been transferred to the magnificent new building in the Cromwell Road, officially known as the British Museum (Natural History), but more commonly designated the Natural History Museum, it was felt by all competent to form an adequate opinion on the subject that Professor Flower was the one man specially and peculiarly fitted for the post. And accordingly, in the course of the year in question, he was duly appointed to that most important and influential position, which may be regarded as conferring upon its occupant the status of the leading official zoologist in the British Empire. It was in this position that Flower became most widely known to the general public ; and here that he received the honours, firstly of C.B., and later on K.C.B., conferred upon him by his Sovereign. At the date when Sir William (then Professor) assumed the reins of office, the position of Director of the Natural History Museum was of a somewhat anomalous and peculiar nature. At that time (as now) the administration of the museum was divided into 57 58 LIFE OF FLOWER four sections, or departments, namely Zoology, Geology (or rather Palaeontology), Botany and Mineralogy, each of which was presided over by a " Keeper," who had practically unlimited control, both as regards finance and general arrangement, of his own section. Consequently, as regards these four departments, the Director had very little control over the museum he was nominally sup- posed to govern; and his functions were to a great extent limited to regulating the t( foreign policy " of the institution under his charge, that is to say, its relations to the parent establishment at Bloomsbury, to the Treasury, and to the world at large. In fact, as Sir William once remarked to the present writer, the Director at that time had to find a sphere of work for himself. Fortunately, such a sphere of work lay ready to hand, and Flower immediately entered upon it with character- istic energy and enthusiasm. So long ago as the year 1859, Sir Richard Owen, in one of his reports to the Trustees of the Museum, recommended that the new building, in addition to affording ample space for the general series of natural specimens exhibited to the public, should likewise include a hall, or other suitable apartment, for the display of a series of specimens calculated to convey an elementary idea of the general principles of systematic natural history and biological classification to the large proportion of the ordinary public visitor not conversant with that subject. In other words, the feature of the proposed section would be the exhibition of a series of specimens selected to show the more typical characters of the principal groups of organised (and, it was at the LIFE OF FLOWER 59 time added, crystallised) forms. This, it was urged, would constitute an epitome of natural history, and would convey to the eye, in the easiest and most ready manner, an elementary knowledge of the sciences in question. In every modification which the plans of the new building underwent, a hall for the purpose indicated in the above passages formed, as Sir William has himself remarked, a prominent feature ; being in the later stages of the development of the building called, for want of a better name, the " Index Museum." The increasing infirmities of age, coupled with the short time during which he presided over the Natural History collections in their new home, combined, how- ever, to prevent Owen from making any real progress with the so-called Index Museum; and although he furnished the idea of the scheme and planned the general installation of the hall, the selection and installation of its contents were left to his successor. And, with the vast experience gained by Sir William during his tenure of office in the Royal College of Surgeons, they could not possibly have been left to abler hands. Here it is necessary to explain that, whether by design or by accident, history sayeth not, the Index Museum and the Central Hall generally were not included in any one of the four great administrative departments of the Museum, so that they consequently came under the immediate and exclusive control of the Director himself. Nor was Flower long in setting to work at the task which thus lay awaiting his master-hand ; and the Index Museum, as fast as the exigencies of finance 60 LIFE OF FLOWER and the difficulties of procuring suitable specimens permitted, gradually assumed the shape and character familiar to all visitors of the building, not that in these respects it exactly followed the lines suggested by Owen. In place of being, as was originally proposed, a sort of epitome or index of the main collections in the galleries, it developed rather into something " more like the general introduction preceding the systematic portion of treatises on any branch of natural history." Whether, in view of this departure from the original conception, Sir William, if starting de novo, would have grouped all these separate collections in a single apart- ment, or whether he would have split them up and placed them at the commencement of the various series in the exhibition galleries to which they respectively pertain, may be a moot point. But, at anyrate, no detriment to his work would ensue if such a splitting-up should be thought desirable in the future. And con- siderable advantages would undoubtedly result if the series displaying the general morphology and anatomy of the mammals were placed at the entrance of the mammalian gallery, and so on with the other series at present exhibited in the Index Museum. Be this as it may, the series of specimens and pre- parations arranged in the Index Museum under the immediate superintendence of Flower is probably unrivalled in its way, and displays in a marked manner that attention to detail and that eye to artistic effect which were among his special attributes. In the " bay " devoted to mammals, special attention was given to the display of specimens illustrating the various forms assumed by the teeth in the different orders and LIFE OF FLOWER 61 families, and their mode of succession and replacement ; subjects in which Flower always displayed special interest, and in regard to which he made some important discoveries. Here, too, were exhibited during the latter half of his tenure of office the skeletons and half models of a man and a horse, placed in juxtaposition, in order to display the special adaptations and modifications for, on the one hand, the upright posture and great brain- capacity, and, on the other, for the high degree of speed and endurance essential to an otherwise defenceless quadruped living, in a wild state, on open plains. In this exhibit, which forms the frontispiece to his well- known and deservedly popular little work on The Horse, Sir William always took an especial pride ; and it was one of the first objects to which he directed the attention of the many illustrious and distinguished visitors who sought his guidance in viewing the collec- tions under his charge. Another specimen in the same " bay " of which he was especially proud is the skeleton of a young chimpanzee, dissected by Dr. Tyson, and described by that anatomist in a work published in 1699, under the title of the Anatomie of a Pigmie, being the earliest scientific description of any man- like ape. As regards the vertebrate "bays," Sir William himself (always of course with the aid of trained assistants) took an active part in the selection and arrangement of the specimens. In the case of the invertebrate groups, on the other hand, the task was left more to his subordinates ; while as regards the botanical section such relegation was, of necessity, practically complete. Although it has been previously 62 LIFE OF FLOWER referred to elsewhere, it may be mentioned that it was during the work on the Index Museum the discovery of the absence in certain groups of birds of the fifth cubital quill-feather was made ; a fact now familiar to naturalists under the title of diastaxy, or aquintocubitalism. A special feature of the vertebrate section of the Index Museum was the attention devoted to the mount- ing of the skins of the mammals exhibited. In an address delivered to the British Association in 1889, Flower referred to " the sadly neglected art of taxidermy, which continues to fill the cases of most of our museums with wretched and repulsive caricatures of mammals and birds, out of all natural proportions, shrunken here and bloated there, and in attitudes absolutely impossible for the creature to have assumed while alive." And he was determined that the speci- mens of this nature in the section of the museum under his own immediate superintendence should be the best of their kind, and should serve as models for the renovation of these in the zoological galleries which he had determined to undertake so soon as the opportunity was afforded. Neither was he less particular in regard to labels de- scribing the exhibits. In the address already referred to, he had written that " above all, the purpose for which each specimen is exhibited, and the main lesson to be derived from it, must be distinctly indicated by the labels affixed, both as headings of the various divisions of the series and to the individual specimens. A well- arranged educational museum has been defined as a collection of instructive labels, illustrated by well-selected specimens." Most, if not all, of the descriptive labels in LIFE OF FLOWER 63 the vertebrate series of the Index Museum were written by the hand of the Director himself, while all came under his personal supervision before being placed in the museum. Labels of a descriptive nature had hitherto been mainly, if not entirely, conspicuous by their absence on the zoological side of the museum ; and for some time the Index series alone afforded an example of the nature of the Director's views on this all-important subject. Nor was this all; for in addition to these descriptive labels, other and larger labels were affixed in the cases, bearing the names of the various "classes," "orders," and " families," to which the specimens respectively pertained; the limits of the space occupied by each group being indicated by black laths, varying in width according to the grade of the group they demarcated. By this means systematic divisions were clearly indi- cated ; and on no consideration would Flower permit of any single specimen being placed elsewhere than in its proper systematic position. Another innovation so far at anyrate as the zoological side of the museum was concerned was the placing of small maps alongside each specimen or each group, to illustrate, by means of colour, the geographical distribution of the species or group. As regards the function of the Index Museum, it may be admitted that instead of, as originally intended, serving as an elementary guide in natural history to the uninstructed public, this exhibit is more generally used by serious zoological students, of whom numbers may from time to time be seen, book in hand, and sometimes under the guidance of a teacher, intently poring over the contents of the cases. Such a use although not 64 LIFE OF FLOWER perhaps the prime object of a national museum is, however, at least as important as catering to the require- ments of the ordinary visitor. The display in systematic and serial order of the external characters and internal anatomy of the leading types of living and extinct animals and plants formed, however, only a part of Flower's scheme of exhibits for the central hall of the museum. Such specimens occupied only the ' bays " or alcoves on the west and east sides, and there remained the large central floor space for exhibits of other descriptions. Advantage was taken of this to display examples of the phenomenon of seasonal colour-change in birds, accompanied in some instances, as in the ruff, by the development of special plumes round the neck, or elsewhere ; the two species selected for illustration being the aforesaid ruff and the wild duck or mallard; the latter bird, together with many other members of its tribe, being remarkable on account of the assumption by the males at certain seasons of the year of an "eclipse" plumage, almost indistinguishable from that distinctive at all times of the year of the female. Other cases were devoted to showing some of the more remarkable kinds of variation produced from a single wild stock by domestication and artificial selection ; the species exhibited for this purpose being several types of the common fowl, the various kinds of pigeons, and the more remarkable strains of the canary. The introduction of domesticated breeds, whose peculiarities are entirely, in the outset at anyrate, the result of man's interference with the ordinary course of Nature, is a notable feature of this portion of the work of Flower, and indicates his sense of LIFE OF FLOWER 65 the important bearing of such artificial variations on the doctrine of the evolution of organic nature. ' ' Mimicry " by animals of one group of those of another also formed an important part of this introductory series of exhibit ; as did likewise the colour-adaptation of animals to their inorganic surroundings. This latter phenomenon is specially illustrated by a series of animals (mammals, birds and reptiles) from the Libyan desert, which are set up amid rocks and sand from the same locality so as to imitate as nearly as possible the natural conditions. And this case, together with one of these to be noticed immediately, affords an excellent example of Sir William's painstaking efforts to make the exhibits in the museum as realistic as possible, and also his influence and per- suasive power in inducing friends or correspondents to aid his endeavours. For in both these instances the animals and their inanimate surroundings were collected on the spot by generous and enthusiastic donors. The second instance of the adaptation of animals to their surroundings is afforded by the two cases display- ing respectively a summer and a winter scene in Norway, with the birds and mammals in the one in their brown dress, and in the other in their snow-white livery. Since Sir William's death an Arctic fox, in the appro- priate dress, had been added to each case, with a decided improvement to the general effect. Another exhibit of the above nature is devoted to the phenomenon of albinism and melanism among animals ; the two cases in which the specimens are shown containing an extraordinary number of species, varying in size from leopards to mice, in which these remarkable colour-phases are respectively displayed. The admission 66 LIFE OF FLOWER of such departures from the ordinary type into the museum justifies, it may be mentioned, the introduction of abnormalities of a more startling nature. Finally, as illustration of a transition from one species towards another, Sir William caused to be set up a series of typical specimens of the common and the hooded crow, together with offspring produced by the union of the two, which are to a great extent intermediate between the parent forms. In the same cases is a series of gold- finches, showing a complete gradation between birds of different coloration, and commonly regarded as belonging to distinct species. All the above instances serve to demonstrate, however inadequately, Flower's broad conception of the field to be covered by a national and educational museum, altogether apart from the exhibition of specimens illustra- tive of systematic natural history. It is no secret that Sir William wished to add a series illustrative of the present geographical distribution of animals on the surface of the globe ; but, for lack of space, all that could be attempted in this direction was the exhibition of the British fauna, together with a map displaying the division of the world into zoological regions, according to the scheme of Messrs. Sclater and Wallace. For several years, apart from administrative duties, Flower devoted practically the whole of his available time to the elaboration of the Index Museum and the other exhibits in the Central Hall, although he found opportunity to draw up a list of the specimens of Cetacea (whales and dolphins^ in the collection of the Museum, which was published by order of the Trustees in 1885. Probably, indeed, this list was compiled LIFE OF FLOWER 67 before active work on the Index Museum had com- menced. It is a very useful work to the student of the group, although limited to species represented in the Museum collection. In the autumn of the year 1895 there occurred, however, an event, which may be said to have revolutionised Flower's position in the Museum, and gave him that immediate personal control over the zoological collections which was essential to the full development and perfection of his scheme of museum reform and expansion. At that date Dr. Albert Giinther retired from the position of Keeper of the Zoological Department ; and it was then resolved by the Trustees of the Museum that this post should be held by Sir William (who, by the way, had been made C.B. in 1887 and K.C.B. in 1892), in conjunction with the office of Director. This arrangement was continued throughout the remainder of Sir "William's term of office, and was like- wise renewed when he was succeeded by Professor E. Ray Lankester, the present holder of the combined posts. This, then, gave Flower, as already stated, the opportunity for which he had so long been waiting; and in January 1 896 he undertook the supervision of the reorganisation and rearrangement of the mammal gallery. Here a digression of some length must be made, in order to make the reader acquainted in a certain degree with the conditions then prevalent in the museum in connection with the galleries open to the public. In the first place, as already indicated, while the skins and bones of recent animals were contained and exhibited in the Zoological Department, the remains 68 LIFE OF FLOWER of their extinct relatives, and even the fossilised bones and teeth of the living species, were relegated to the Geological Department, which occupies the ground- floor of the opposite side of the building. To make matters worse, the skeletons of living mammals were exhibited on the second floor of the zoological side of the building (instead of, as they should have been, on the ground floor), and thus as far away as they could possibly be from those of their extinct predecessors. Such an unnatural and illogical sundering of kindred objects was altogether repugnant to the mind of Flower, who in his address to the British Association in 1889, to which allusion has been already made, expressed himself as follows : " For the perpetuation of the unfortunate separation of palaeontology from biology, which is so clearly a survival of an ancient condition of scientific culture, and for the maintenance in its integrity of the heterogeneous compound of sciences which we now call ' geology,' the faulty organisation of our museums is in a great measure responsible. The more their rearrangement can be made to overstep and break down the abrupt line of demarca- tion which is still almost universally drawn between beings which live now and those which have lived in past times, so deeply rooted in the popular mind, and so hard to eradicate even from that of the scientific student, the better it will be for the progress of sound biological knowledge." The force of circumstances, coupled with the expense which would have been involved, was, however, too much for even a man with Flower's force of character and determination, and the attempt to merge the LIFE OF FLOWER 69 palaeontological withfthe zoological collections was con- sequently perforce abandoned. 1 As a compromise a certain number of fossil specimens, or casts of the same, were to be introduced among the recent mammals ; while, conversely, a few skeletons of the latter were to take their place among the remains of their extinct forerunners. In another mooted change, Sir William (as it lay entirely in the Department under his own special con- trol) was, however, more successful. Previously it had been the practice in the museum to separate the skeletons and skulls and horns of mammals from the mounted skins, placing the former in a gallery by themselves, known as the Osteological Gallery. As a result of this, if a visitor wanted to ascertain the peculiarities of the skeleton of any mammal of which the skin was exhibited, he had to mount to the gallery above, and on his arrival there, very probably forgot the essential features of the skin. One of the first resolves in connection with the rearrangement was to do away with the Osteological Gallery altogether, and to place a certain proportion of the skeletons and skulls in juxtaposition with, or near by, the stuffed skins. Another feature of the old method of exhibition in vogue in the museum was the crowding together of a vast number of specimens, good, bad, and indifferent (mostly either the second or third), many of which were duplicates, in such a manner that the great majority could scarcely be seen at all, while the effect of those that 1 At the cost of a gap in the systematic series, a step has been subse- quently made in this direction by the transference of the elephants and sea-cows to the Geological Department. 70 LIFE OF FLOWER were more or less visible was marred and obscured by the adjacent specimens. To add to this unsatisfactory state of affairs was the bad condition due either to age, to bad taxidermy, or both combined of the bulk of the specimens. Moreover, by some inconceivable Vandalism, dating apparently from a very remote epoch in the museum's history, every specimen was mounted on a stand of polished sycamore, the effect of which was to mar even a first-class specimen of taxidermy. When to the above is added the fact that, beyond the scientific and in most cases also the popular name of the species, nothing in the way of indicating the serial position of the various groups was attempted, while all that was done in the way of descriptive labels was the suspension here and there of frames containing extracts from the " Guide" to the gallery, it may be imagined that the state of the collection was very far indeed behind the Director's idea of what it should be. More- over, although in the case of the smaller animals a systematic arrangement was followed, the cases con- taining the larger species were disposed without any reference to the systematic position of the latter. In regard to such matters the Director had, in the address quoted, already expressed his own views in no uncertain tone, as is evident from the following passage relating to the arrangement of specimens in the public galleries : " In the first place," he writes, " their numbers must be strictly limited, according to the nature of the subject illustrated and the space available. None must be placed too high or too low for ready examination. There must be no crowding of specimens one behind LIFE OF FLOWER 71 another, every one being perfectly and distinctly seen, and with a clear space around it. ... Every specimen exhibited should be good of its kind, and all available skill and care should be spent upon its preservation and rendering it capable of teaching the lesson it is intended to convey. . . . Every specimen exhibited should have its definite purpose, and no absolute duplicate should on any account be permitted." The purport of these golden words, which at the time they were written indicated an entirely new departure in museum arrangement and display, was, so far as possible, followed in the rearrangement of the mammal galleries. In the first place, the upper portions of the cases, which were far too high above the ground to permit of the proper exhibition of small specimens, were, except in those containing large mammals, closed up and employed for displaying the labels relating to the larger groups and the maps illustrating their geographical distribution. Then, again, the shelves, in place of being arranged one above another like those in a wardrobe, were reduced in number, and in most instances in width, so as to be suited to the best possible display of the specimens they were intended to carry. Duplicate specimens of all kinds, as well as representa- tives of species having but little general interest, were relentlessly weeded out and consigned to the store series ; while efforts were made to procure new examples, mounted in the best possible manner, of all species and these were by far the great majority represented by badly - mounted, or old and faded specimens. This part of the business was found, how- ever, to be a matter which must necessarily occupy much 72 LIFE OF FLOWER time, as it is impossible to procure examples of rare or large species, in a condition fit for stuffing, at the precise moment when they are required ; and there is also the question of expense, which becomes very heavy indeed when renovating and replacing a collection of the proportions of that of the National Museum. This portion of the work has therefore been going on uninterruptedly ever since the first start was made, and is indeed being continued at the present time ; for it has been found by experience that a collection of this nature, owing to the terribly bleaching effects of sunlight, requires constant renovation, and that ex- hibited museum specimens have only a definite and limited period, varying to a considerable extent according to the colour and nature of the hair in individual species, during which they are fitted to be publicly shown. Instead of a museum, when once arranged, being " a joy for ever," it requires constant attention and renovation, so that even, to keep them in proper order, the mammal galleries alone in the Natural History Museum demand a large proportion of the time of one of the officials. Not the least important of the changes made in the mammalian galleries under the supervision of Sir William Flower was the alteration of the colour of the stands on which the specimens were mounted. These, as already said, were of polished sycamore, the bright reflection from which was exceedingly unbecoming to the specimens, to say nothing of the obvious lack of aesthetic fitness in mounting stuffed mammals upon a polished surface of this nature. Before anything in the way of a change was attempted, Sir William LIFE OF FLOWER 73 sought the advice of his friend, the late Lord Leighton, after consultation with whom, it was finally decided that in future the stands should be of a good " cigar- colour." This was effected, in the first instance, by scraping and staining the original sycamore stands a work of great labour and expense ; but all new ones were subsequently made of wood more easy to work, walnut being employed in the case of the smaller sizes. Even this improvement, great as it undoubtedly was, did not, however, by any means represent the full extent of the changes in this direction. After a short experience of the aforesaid " cigar-coloured " stands, it was found that the general effect was much improved by gouging out the upper surface of these, with the exception of a narrow rim round the margin, to a depth of a quarter or half an inch, and covering it with a thin layer of sand or earth, upon which leaves, pebbles, etc., might be disposed if required. Instead of "skating on sycamore tables," the animals were by this means shown standing on a very good imitation of a natural land surface. Nor was this all. At an early period during the rearrangement of the mammal galleries, Sir William suggested that many of the larger species might be mounted upon imitation ground-work covering the entire floor of the cases in which they were exhibited. This idea was forthwith put into execution in several cases, notably in these containing the lions, the tigers, and the group of fur-seals from the PribilofF Islands, presented by Sir George Baden-Powell. Supposed difficulties with regard to the cleaning of the glass of the cases prevented this plan from being carried out to 74 LIFE OF FLOWER any greater extent during Sir William's lifetime. But these presumed difficulties were subsequently overcome, and of late years a considerable number of the cases containing the larger species of mammals have been treated in this manner with excellent effect and a vast increase to the general attractiveness of the museum. In some instances a merely conventional ground- work has been introduced, but in others a more realistic effect has been attempted. A notable example of this is the reindeer-case, in which the artificial ground-work is covered with rocks, lichen, moss, and birch-stems obtained from the reindeer pastures of Norway. Similarly, the Arctic musk-oxen have been placed on an imitation snow-slope. Although, as already said, much of this work has been carried out since his death, the idea originated entirely with Flower. A similar grouping of animals on artificial ground-work when possible in imitation of the natural surroundings has been instituted in some of the American museums, but whether following Flower's lead, or as an original inspiration, I am unable to say. At the time when Sir William took over the office of Keeper of the Zoological Department (in addition to the Directorship), the scheme then in vogue at the museum scarcely assigned to man his real zoological position at the head of the order Primates in the mammalian class. It is true that in the osteological gallery the genus Homo was represented by a couple of skeletons and a series of skulls. But in the gallery devoted to stuffed specimens man, as an integral portion of the exhibited series, was conspicuous by his absence. This by no means suited the views of the Director, who in an LIFE OF FLOWER 75 obituary notice of Owen quoted with approval a statement of the great anatomist to the effect that no collection of zoology could in any way be regarded as complete without a large amount of space being devoted to the display of the physical characteristics of the various races of the human species. " The series of zoology would lack its most important feature were the illustrations of the physical characters of the human race omitted." Such a series, thought Owen in 1862, would require a gallery of something like 150 feet in length, by 50 feet in width, for its proper display. Stuffed specimens being, of course, out of the question, the series was to include *' casts of the entire body, coloured after life, of characteristic parts, as the head and face, skeletons of every variety arranged side by side for facility of comparison, the hair preserved in spirit, showing its characteristic sign and distinctive structures, etc." Had photography been in anything like its present advanced position in 1862, no doubt its aid would have been claimed in illustrating the various racial types of the human species. A gallery of anything like the dimensions required by Owen was quite out of the question when Flower planned the addition of an anthropological section to the mammalian series, but one-half of the portion of the upper mammal gallery now open to the public was reserved for this purpose, so that man took his proper place in the zoological series immediately after the gorilla, chimpanzee, and the other man-like apes, which, in their turn, were preceded by the lower types of monkey. In the main, the specimens exhibited in this series follow on the lines suggested by Owen, including 76 LIFE OF FLOWER coloured casts of the upper part of the body, or the head and neck alone, specimens of the hair, skulls, skeletons, etc. In addition to these is a series of photographs of heads enlarged to natural size, and including, whenever possible, a full face and a profile view of each individual represented. Flower took great interest in these photographs (as in the anthropological series generally), and made several experiments before finally deciding as to the scale to which they were to be enlarged. As facilities for photographing in the museum itself were at the time very limited, Flower enlisted the assistance of Dr. H. O. Forbes, Director of the Liverpool Museums, who entered enthusiastically into the project, and under whose superintendence the great majority of the repro- ductions from photographs now exhibited was pro- duced ; the arrangement being that Liverpool should have a copy of every photograph forwarded for reproduction. The races of mankind were arranged in the gallery according to Flower's own scheme, fuller reference to which is made elsewhere in the present volume. Flower himself did not survive long enough to see the arrange- ment he had plotted out fully installed. Of late years, although some progress has been made in this direction, the series of coloured casts of the various human races has not increased so rapidly as Flower had hoped they would ; but, nevertheless, a fairly representative series had been brought together, and there is, at present, ample space for additions when opportunities of acquiring new specimens occur. It should be added that Flower inaugurated the plan of making a collection of photo- LIFE OF FLOWER 77 graphs of the various human races to be kept in the study series. It must not, however, be supposed that Flower, during his too brief tenure of the office of Keeper of the Zoological Department, by any means confined his attention to the mammalian galleries. On the contrary, he had with his own hands rearranged two of the cases in the bird gallery, namely, those con- taining the humming-birds and the woodpeckers ; and shortly before his resignation he was planning the re- arrangement of all the cases in this section ; a work which since his death has been carried out to completion on the same lines. In this connection it is, however, only fair to state that in the obituary notice of Flower, published in the " Year-Book" of the Royal Society for 1901, full justice has not been done to his predecessors. The passage in question runs as follows : " Every effort was made to give the specimens natural postures and natural surroundings. Thus, for example, the tree on which the woodpecker was at work, was cut down, the foliage modelled in wax, and all the surroundings carefully kept. Hovering birds were suspended by fine wire or thread. Birds making nests in holes, such as the Manx shearwater, sand- martin and kingfishers, either had the actual parts or a model of these beside them, just as the nests of the gannets and guillemots on the Bass Rock were shown with their natural environment." The obvious inference from this would be that the cases of birds mounted in imitation of their natural environment, inclusive of the splendid model of a portion of the Bass Rock, with its feathered inhabitants placed 78 LIFE OF FLOWER in the " pavilion " at the end of the bird gallery, are due to the initiation of Flower. This is far from being the case; and he himself would have been the very last man to claim credit which was not his due. As a matter of fact, the idea of mounting birds in this manner originated with Dr. Bowdler Sharpe during the Keeper- ship of Dr. Giinther ; the first case installed on these lines being the one containing the common coot. The series was continued during Dr. Giinther's term of office, and was kept up by Flower after his succession to the Keepership. As regards the Bass Rock model, this was also installed during Dr. Giinther's Keepership, and, I believe, while Owen was Superintendent. "What Flower did initiate in the bird gallery was the rearrangement of the wall-cases on much the same lines as the mammal galleries, including the rejection of duplicates and uninteresting species, and the replacement of worn-out and badly-mounted specimens, by new and artistically set-up examples, and the addition of maps and descrip- tive labels. As a matter of fact, the replacement and remounting of specimens have been carried out to a much greater extent among the birds than has been found possible with the mammals. A large number of the birds have been mounted by Cullingford of Durham, whereas nearly all the mammals have been set up by three London taxidermists, namely Rowland Ward, Ltd., Gerrard, and Pickhardt. This plan of employing several firms of taxidermists, instead of giving all the work to one, was much favoured by Flower, as it gave rise to a healthy competition and rivalry, and thus produced better results ; the different firms being kept up to the mark by having their names affixed LIFE OF FLOWER 79 to the more important examples of their respective work. Before his last illness Flower had in contemplation a plan for treating the reptile and fish galleries (in which the crowded exhibits displayed a monotonous and dismal "khaki" hue) on the above lines, but this work was left for his successor, by whom it is in course of being carried out with characteristic energy and originality. There is, however, another section of the zoological department of the museum which owes its conception entirely to Sir William Flower, and which he was for- tunately spared to complete. This is the whale-room, or whale-annexe, as it might be better called ; for it is a temporary structure of galvanised iron, lined with match- boarding built out from the north-west angle of the building, and entered by a passage leading out of the corridor alongside the bird gallery. At the time that Flower took over the Keepership of the Zoological Department, with the exception of a skeleton of the sperm-whale, placed in the middle of the Central Hall, the specimens of Cetacea were housed in a portion of the basement, never intended for a public gallery and very unsuited to that purpose. The collection consisted mainly of skeletons and skulls, together with samples of whalebone and teeth ; for it had been found by experience that it was a practical impossibility to mount the skins of the larger whales for exhibition purposes. Indeed, there is great difficulty in doing this even in the case of the dolphins, porpoises, and smaller whales, owing to the fact that their skins are saturated with oil, which, even after the most careful preparation, is 8o LIFE OF FLOWER almost sure, sooner or later, to exude through the pores, and render the specimens unsightly, if not absolutely unfit for exhibition. Previously to Flower's attempt to make an adequate and striking exhibition of the bodily form of the larger whales, some of the smaller members of the group, such as the killer-whale, had been modelled in America in papier-mach ; one such model of the species in question being exhibited in the museum. Flower, however, conceived the idea of making models in plaster of even the largest species of whales ; but, in order to save both material and space, resolved that these should be restricted to one-half of the animal, and should be con- structed upon the actual skeleton, thereby ensuring, with the aid, when possible, of measurements taken from carcases, practically absolute accuracy as regards size and proportion. In due course, after great labour and care, such half-models were built up on the skeletons of the sperm-whale, the southern right-whale, and two species of fin-whale, or rorqual, while others were made of some of the smaller kinds, such as the narwhal and the beluga or white whale. Skeletons and skulls of other species, together with complete models or stuffed skins, or models of the head alone, of many of the porpoises and dolphins, and other specimens illustrating the natural history of the Cetacea, were likewise placed in the new annexe, which was opened to the public on Whit Monday 1897. Flower had always been im- pressed with the great structural difference between the toothed whales, as represented by the sperm-whale, grampuses, porpoises, dolphins, etc., on the one hand, and the whalebone whales, such as the right-whales, LIFE OF FLOWER 81 humpbacks, and finners, on the other ; and in order to emphasise this essential distinction, he caused the skele- tons and models of the one group to be mounted with their heads in one direction, while those of the second were turned the opposite way. Although it was found impossible to obtain a skeleton of the Greenland right-whale, Flower was able to persuade Captain Gray, a well-known whaler, to carve a miniature model in wood, which gives an excellent idea of the proportions, especially the huge size of the head and mouth, of this interesting species. Sketches on the walls of the building illustrate the habits and mode of capture of the sperm- whale, while others serve to show the bodily form of species not yet represented by models. At the time it was opened this exhibit was absolutely unique ; and, in the belief of the writer, it remains so to the present day. Unfortunately, the size and design of the building, which has a row of wooden posts down the middle, are such as greatly to interfere with the proper effect of the specimens exhibited ; and it is much to be hoped that means will be found to erect a larger gallery, of a more permanent nature, which will not only allow the contents of the present structure to be adequately seen, but will likewise leave space to permit of models of other species, such as the humpback whale, to be added to the series. Hitherto I have dwelt exclusively upon Sir William's efforts to improve the museum under his charge, from the point of view of the general public, that is to say, as an institution for the exhibition of natural history specimens. It must, however, be always remembered that 82 LIFE OF FLOWER this was but one side of his task, and that he laboured hard during the whole time of his official connection with the museum not only to increase the study, or reserve, collections (which are those on which the real scientific work of the museum is almost exclusively based), but to add to the space available for their storage and for the workers by whom they are studied. Early in his career as Director he recognised the in- sufficiency of the accommodation of this nature, although, as usual, he expressed his opinion in extremely cautious and guarded language. For instance, in his address as President of the Museum Associations in 1893, a ^ ter referring to the deficiencies of all, at that time, modern museums, which were described as having been built during a period when opinion was still divided as to the proper function of institutions of this nature, he continued as follows : " In none, perhaps, is this more strikingly shown than in our own built, unfortunately, before any of the others, and so without the advantages of the experience that might have been gained from their successes or their shortcomings. Though a building of acknowledged architectural beauty, and with some excellent features, it cannot be taken structurally as a model museum when the test of adaptation to the purpose to which it is devoted is rigidly applied." This unsuitableness, it may be added, is apparent not only in the lack of accommodation for the study series, but in the exhibition galleries themselves, where architectural ornament interferes with the proper display of the specimens, if indeed it does not absolutely LIFE OF FLOWER 83 preclude their being placed on the walls, while an excess of light (which has been partially remedied by blocking up the lower portion of the windows in some of the zoological galleries) causes the specimens to become prematurely bleached and faded. As regards the deficiency of accommodation for the study series in the museum, Sir William endeavoured to remedy this, so far as possible, by closing some portions of the galleries previously open to the public a step, which, however necessary, tended to mar the building, so far as exhibition purposes are concerned. " While thus maintaining," writes his biographer in the Year-book " of the Royal Society for 1901, the high scientific reputation of the great National Museum, he continued to popularise the institution and science by taking parties of working men round the museum on Sundays, and occasionally a distinguished visitor, like Dr. Nansen, would also join the group. Nor was he less attentive to members of the Royal Family, or to distinguished statesmen, like Mr. Gladstone, who honoured the museum with their presence. Foreign rulers, like the Queen of Holland, the Prince of Naples, the Empress Frederick of Germany, and the King of Siam, were also interested in the collection, so that the popularity and welfare of the museum were greatly extended by the Director's tact and urbanity. Formerly, he had taken a leading part in interesting the Prince of Wales (his present Majesty), who was present at Sir James Paget's Hunterian Oration in 1877, * n the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons, and in arranging for an exhibition of the Prince's hunting trophies at the Zoological Society shortly afterwards, 84 LIFE OF FLOWER so in his new sphere royal and other powerful influences were utilised for the improvement and popularising of the collection." King Edward, as Prince of Wales, it may be added, was a constant attendant at the meetings of the Board of Trustees at the Museum during Sir William Flower's administration ; and would occasionally, at the close of the meeting, accompanied by the Director, make an inspection of some of the galleries. As indicative of the interest he took in the details of the arrangement of the museum, it may be mentioned that on one of these tours of inspection His Majesty took exception to the position assigned to the head of a reindeer, and desired that it might be placed elsewhere. One other point in connection with Sir William's administration may be noticed. Ever since its establish- ment the hall and public exhibition galleries of the Natural History Museum had been guarded during exhibition hours by members of the Metropolitan Police an arrangement which involved a very large expense to the country. Flower suggested that, provided two or three police sergeants and constables were detailed for special duty, the general work of guarding the collec- tions could be equally well done by members of the Corps of Commissionaires, thereby not only effecting a considerable financial saving, but likewise a fresh area of employment for a very deserving class of the community. This arrangement, which was found to work smoothly and satisfactorily, has remained in force ever since. It may be added that the opening of the museum for a limited number of hours on Sunday afternoons commenced during Flower's tenure of office j LIFE OF FLOWER 85 this arrangement being common to other institutions of a like nature. At the special recommendation of the Trustees, the Treasury, when Sir William reached the age for retirement, according to Civil Service rules, extended his term of office for three years. A lengthened period of physical weakness and prostration rendered it, however, impossible for Flower to avail himself of the whole of this extension, and in July 1898 the state of his health was such that he felt himself compelled to send in his resignation. When this resignation was accepted by the Standing Committee of the Trustees of the Museum, a special Minute, signed by Lord Dillon, gave expression to the regret felt by that body and the Trustees generally at the retirement of Sir William, to whom every compliment was paid as a worthy successor of Sir Richard Owen, and as one who had done so much towards the re-organisation of a museum pre-eminent amongst institutions of its kind. To enter upon the relations of Flower to his subordinates in the Museum is treading upon somewhat delicate ground ; it may be safely affirmed, however, that to those who were in full sympathy and accord with his way of looking at things and his schemes for the general advancement and improvement of the institution under his charge, no truer friend or kinder master could possibly have been found. Owing to the fact that the time of the permanent officials of the museum is for the most part fully occupied in working out the store collections, and registering and, when necessary, describing new acquisitions, Sir William soon found 86 LIFE OF FLOWER that he had not sufficient skilled labour at his disposal wherewith to carry out the installation of the Index Museum and his meditated improvements in the exhibition series. Accordingly he obtained the assent of the Treasury to employ the services of a few scientific men not on the staff of the museum for these purposes ; an arrangement which has been continued under his successor. Sir William's services to the museum, as well as to science in general, are commemorated by a bust, executed by Mr. T. Brock, and placed on the south side of the entrance to the first " bay " of the Index Museum. The funds necessary for this were raised by the " Flower Memorial Committee," to which Mr. F. E. Beddard, Prosector of the Zoological Society, acted as Secretary. The bust, which in a profile view, is an excellent likeness of the late Director, was unveiled on 26th July 1903, by the Archbishop of Canterbury, in the presence of a representative assemblage of men of science and personal friends, as well as of statesmen. The proceedings were opened by Professor E. Ray Lankester, the Director of the Museum, who moved that Lord Avebury (better known in scientific circles as Sir John Lubbock), the Chairman of the Memorial Committee, should take the chair. The Chairman, having taken his seat, expressed his pleasure in being called upon to preside at the ceremony, on account of his admiration and respect for the late Sir William Flower, and for the services he had rendered to zoological science. Dr. Philip Lutley Sclater, the Secretary of the Zoological Society, also spoke as an old and intimate LIFE OF FLOWER 87 friend of the late Director, with whom he had been brought into specially close contact during the long period the latter presided over the Zoological Society. The Archbishop of Canterbury, in a brief speech previous to unveiling the bust, referred to two traits in Flower's character which had specially struck his Grace, and which were seldom found associated in the same individual, one of these being his great love of talking on his own special subjects of study, and the other that, in spite of this, he never bored even the least interested of his hearers. During his Directorship Flower had done more to popularise the museum, and museums generally, than had any other man of science. The proceedings closed with the usual vote of thanks to the Chairman. In addition to writing numerous scientific memoirs, Flower found time during his tenure of the Directorship of the museum to prepare for publication two volumes of considerable interest. The first was the one on The Horse, issued in 1891, to which fuller reference is made in a later chapter; and the second, the well-known Essays on Museums, which appeared in 1 898, and consists of a collected series of essays, articles, addresses, etc., on natural history and kindred subjects. A melancholy interest attached to this volume (which is dedicated to Lady Flower), since, as we are told in the preface, it was compiled during a period of enforced restraint from active occupation, which was evidently only the prelude to the final breakdown. It was also during his Directorship of the Museum that The Study of Mammals saw the light. CHAPTER IV AS PRESIDENT OF THE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY [1879-1899] DURING a portion of his tenure of office as Conservator of the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons, and throughout the whole of his Directorship of the Natural History Museum, Sir William Flower occupied the Presidential Chair of the Zoological Society of London the oldest body of its kind in existence. The events narrated in the present chapter occurred therefore during the period covered by its two immediate pre- decessors; nevertheless, this method of treatment, although breaking the chronological order, has been found, on the whole, the most convenient. The Zoological Society, it may be observed, has been in the habit of selecting its presidents from three distinct classes. As in the case of the late Prince Consort, the president may be a personage of exalted rank without any claim to a special knowledge of zoology. . On the other hand, as exemplified by the Earl of Derby, who filled the office in the "fifties," the Marquis of Tweeddale in the " seventies," and the Duke of Bedford at the present time, he may combine high rank with a more or less pronounced taste for and knowledge of natural history, or, finally, as in the case of the founder, Sir Stamford Raffles, he may be selected 89 90 LIFE OF FLOWER solely for his eminence as a zoologist or as a lover of animals. On the death of the Marquis of Tweeddale, 2pth December 1878, Professor Flower was selected by the Council to fill the presidential chair ; the appointment being duly ratified at the Annual Meeting of the Society held the following spring. From that date till the year of his death, Flower was annually re-elected president by the unanimous vote of the meeting. He made an admirable president, his deliberate mode of speaking being specially well adapted to the comments expected from a scientific man occupying the presidential chair at the scientific meetings. From his wide know- ledge of zoology, anatomy, and palaeontology, he was able to speak to the point on almost all the papers read at the Society's meetings ; and those privileged to listen to his remarks on any specimen in which he was speci- ally interested will not readily forget the impressive manner in which he brought its more salient and char- acteristic features to the notice of his hearers. Many of his more important scientific memoirs communicated to the Society had been published in its Proceedings or Transactions, before he accepted the presidential chair, in days when the calls on his time were not so pressing or so numerous as they afterwards became ; but even after his elevation to the presidency several valuable memoirs were received from him, the most important being, perhaps, one on the classification and affinities of the dolphins, to which fuller reference is made in another chapter. During Flower's presidency several important events and changes occurred in the affairs of the Zoological LIFE OF FLOWER 91 Society ; and although the management was to a very great extent in the hands of the Secretary, Dr. P. L. Sclater, yet in matters of extreme importance the influence and opinions of the president always made themselves felt the more so, perhaps, that they were not in special evidence in the case of trivial matters. In the early eighties the Society suffered severely from financial depression, its income in the years 1883 and 1884 falling far below its expenditure. Thanks, however, to the patient sagacity and great administrative powers of the president and secretary, the affairs of the Society were soon put on a much more satisfactory basis, and long before the death of the former, a state of prosperity was reached which had seldom, if ever, been equalled, and certainly never excelled. In the first year of his presidency, Flower delivered one of the Davis lectures in the Society's Gardens, the subject being birds that do not fly, and he also lectured in the two following years, selecting as his subjects in 1 88 1 firstly whales, and secondly dolphins. The following year was notable on account of the sale to the great American showman, Barnum, of the African elephant " Jumbo." The reason for thus parting with a valuable and interesting animal was that it was unsafe to keep it in the gardens any longer. The sale, as stated in the " Record" of the Society, caused a good deal of public excitement, but the Council would not have parted with the animal unless satisfactory reasons for so doing had been laid before it by the responsible Executive of the Gardens. A still more important event occurred in 1883, namely the transference of the Society's Offices and Library from 92 LIFE OF FLOWER No 1 1 to No 3 Hanover Square ; the freehold of the latter house having been secured by the Council at a cost of 16,250. Such an important transaction would not, we may be assured, have been allowed to take place without the most careful deliberation and consideration on the part* of the President. On the first meeting of the Society, held on 1st April 1884, in its new premises, the President took the opportunity of congratulating the Fellows present on the very great improvement in the Meeting-room, the Library, and the Offices, resulting from the change. The Society had occupied the old house, No II Hanover Square, for forty-one years, and had long since quite outgrown the accommodation it afforded in all the three departments mentioned above. The income of the Society had increased from 9 1 37 in 1843 to 28,966 in 1883, with a corresponding increase of clerical work. The Library had been almost entirely formed since the earlier of these dates, and was rapidly increasing, and the attendance of the Fellows at the evening meetings for scientific business had been such that the old rooms were quite inadequate for their accommodation. The President trusted that the increased facilities afforded by the move would be taken advantage of by the Fellows in promoting, with even greater zeal than previously, the work for which the Society was founded, and in maintaining and extend- ing the high reputation it had acquired in the scientific world. Few presidents or chairmen, whether of scientific societies or of commercial companies, could have had a more satisfactory record of progress to lay before their LIFE OF FLOWER 93 supporters. The following account of certain events in the Society's history which took place in 1887 is extracted from the " Record " of its work : " In ordertomark the Jubilee of her late Majesty Queen Victoria which took place this year, in some special way, it was decided to hold the General Meeting in June in the Gardens. After the usual formal business had been transacted, the Silver Medal awarded to the Maharaja of Kuch-Behar was presented to His Highness in person, and suitably acknowledged. Professor Flower, C.B., President of the Society, then delivered an address, which was printed as an Appendix to the Council's Report. It dealt in general terms with the principal points in the history of the Society, from its foundation in 1826, tracing its progress throughout. The con- nection of the Royal Family with the Society as Patrons and Donors, the scientific meetings, the publications, the Davis Lectures, the menagerie, and the recent improve- ments in the Gardens were passed in review. The President concluded by appealing for the continued support of the public, either by becoming Fellows or by visiting the Gardens, and expressed the hope that the ' brief record of the Society's history would show that such support was not undeserved by those who have had the management of its affairs.' A reception held after the meeting was numerously attended by the Fellows and their friends, and by many specially invited guests, among whom were the Queen of Hawaii and Princess Liliokalani, the Thakor Sahib of Limdli, H.H. the Prince Devawongse, and the Maharaja of Bhurtpore." The reception, which was held on 1 5th June in brilliant weather, was a marked success ; the number of 94 LIFE OF FLOWER foreign visitors in their native dresses lending additional patches of colour to the scene. The President's address on the occasion is reprinted in his Essays on Museums. Referring to Sir William's death, the " Record" of the Society has the following paragraph : " On 1st July [1899] the Presidentship of the Society became vacant by the death of Sir William Flower who had filled the office for more than twenty years. During this period Sir William Flower had regularly occupied the Presidential chair, and had been constantly engaged on committees and on other matters connected with the Society's affairs. In Sir William Flower the Society lost a zoologist of the highest ability and a most able and energetic President. To succeed him the Council selected His Grace the Duke of Bedford as President, and their choice was confirmed at the Anniversary Meeting in 1900." CHAPTER V GENERAL ZOOLOGICAL WORK IN the course of the preceding chapters numerous more or less incidental references have been made to the contributions of Sir William Flower to biological literature, as well as to his many improvements in museum organisation and arrangement. The more detailed discussion of these has, however, been reserved for the present and succeeding chapters, of which the first two are devoted to the zoological and the third to the anthropological side of his work, while in the fourth his views in regard to museums and certain other subjects are taken into consideration. Regarding the general scientific work of Flower, it must be confessed at the outset that this is characterised in the main by its conscientious carefulness and exactness, rather than by brilliancy of thought, conception, or style. Great attention to detail, both as regards the work itself and in reference to authorities (which were always most carefully verified), is indeed one of the leading features of his labours ; but there is no epoch- making discovery or comprehensive generalisation which can be associated with his name. In connection with his careful attention to small and apparently trivial points of detail, the following passage from Professor Ray 95 96 LIFE OF FLOWER Lankester's obituary notice in Nature may be appro- priately quoted : " He did his own work with his own hands, and I have the best reason to know that he was so deeply shocked and distressed by the inaccuracy which unfor- tunately crept into some of the work of his distinguished predecessor, Owen, through the employment of dissectors and draughtsmen, whose work he did not sufficiently supervise, that he himself determined to be exceptionally careful and accurate in his own records and notes." In another passage of his notice the same writer observes that : " Caution and reticence in generalisation certainly distinguish all Flower's scientific writings. Whilst he was on this account necessarily not known as the author of stirring hypotheses, his statements of fact gained in weight by his reputation for judgment and accuracy." Flower's zoological studies related entirely to the vertebrates and almost exclusively to mammals, although he devoted a few papers, such as the one on the gular pouch of the great bustard, and that on the skull of a cassowary, to birds. Other groups, I believe, he never touched. In the earlier years of his scientific career, at anyrate, his labours were in the main devoted to the anatomical aspect of zoology, such subjects as the dentition, osteology, and the structure and characters of the brain and viscera claiming a much larger share of his attention than was bestowed on the myology. In latter years the classification of the major groups of the mammalia received much attention from Flower. Not that he was in any way what is nowadays called a systematist in zoology, that is to say, he took no LIFE OF FLOWER 97 active part in describing new species (not to mention sub-species, which had scarcely begun to be recognised by naturalists in his day), or the redefining of generic groups, and other work of this nature. Indeed, as mentioned in the chapter devoted to his career at the College of Surgeons, he was extremely conservative in this respect, and strongly opposed to the modern fondness for small generic groups, and also for changing generic names which, from long association, have come almost to be regarded as household words and integral parts of the English language. The substitution of the name Procavia, for Hyrax, the familiar title of the Klip-dass, was, for instance, very repugnant to him, although loyally accepted when found to be coming into general use. As a matter of fact, so far as my information goes, with the exception of certain whales and dolphins, and one extinct sea-cow (Halitherium)^ Flower never named a new species of animal, nor, I think, did he ever pro- pose a new generic term. Indeed, so opposed was he to any interference with names of the latter description in general use, that when several such were replaced by alternative ones in the Study of Mamma/s, it was expressly stipulated by him that the responsibility for such substitution should rest solely with the present writer. 1 The modern system of forming trinomials to indicate the local races, or sub-species, of mammals (as exempli- fied by Giraffa camelopardalis rothschildi and Giraffa camelopardalis capensis for two of the local phases of 1 An American writer has recently attributed, quite unjustifiably, the names in question to Flower. G 98 LIFE OF FLOWER the species of giraffe typified by G. camelopardalis of the Egyptian Sudan and Abyssinia), was practically in its infancy during the active life-time of Flower, and it is doubtful how he would have approved of the extent to which it has been subsequently carried. Nevertheless, that he appreciated the practice of recognising minute local differences of colour, size, etc., in the same species of mammals is evident from an incident within the writer's own knowledge, which occurred at the Natural History Museum, when a tray containing the local phases of one of the species of the small squirrel-like rodents known as chipmunks was submitted to his notice; his remark being that such variations from a common type ought in nowise to be ignored, if we wished to make our knowledge of animals anything like complete, and that the simplest way of indicating such differences was to assign them distinct names. In a general way, however, it may be said that Sir William's sympathies were with the wider and more philosophical aspects of zoology rather than with the details of specific and sub-specific distinction (which, by the way, have scarcely any more right to be regarded as real philosophical science than has stamp-collecting) r j and that, from a systematic standpoint, his interest was very largely concentrated on the relationships existing between the mammals of to-day and their extinct pre- decessors. Several of his lectures and papers, and one especially of his separate works (that on The Horse) were indeed devoted to this aspect of the subject ; and 1 The present writer has the less compunction in making this assertion, seeing that he himself is responsible for naming no inconsiderable number of these so-called sub-species of mammals. LIFE OF FLOWER 99 on every possible occasion he emphasised his conviction of the necessity of studying (and arranging in museums) living and extinct mammals together, if we wish to make our science really practical. As a matter of fact he had the strongest possible objection to the recognition of " palaeontology " as a science apart from zoology, and he even went so far as to mildly rebuke (in his own inimitably courteous and gentle manner) the present writer, for venturing to offer to the public a volume on that subject. To a great ex- tent, no doubt, he was perfectly right in this contention, although there are points of view from which " palae- ontological" works are decidedly convenient, even if their existence and production cannot be logically justified. As regards the particular groups of mammals (other than man) in which Flower was more especially in- terested, there can be no doubt that the Cetacea (whales and dolphins) occupied the first position. And on this subject he was undoubtedly one of the first authorities, his only possible rivals in this country, at anyrate, being Sir William Turner and Professor Struthers. Next to this group came, perhaps, the marsupials, in which a most important discovery was made by Flower in regard to the succession and replacement of the teeth. Not even the most sympathetic of biographers would attempt for one instant to assume that his hero if a zoologist could by any possibility be infallible ; and it has to be recorded that many changes and amendments have had to be made in Flower's conclusions. Perhaps, indeed, Sir William has been to some extent especially unfortunate in this respect, owing to the extreme im- ioo LIFE OF FLOWER perfection of the state of our palaeontological (I must use the objectionable word) knowledge at the date when much of his best work was accomplished. At that time, in spite of the enormous and valuable results achieved by Cuvier, Owen, and others, mammalian palaeontology may be said to have been in its infancy compared to its present state ; the wonderful discoveries in North and South America being then either unknown or only partially revealed, and the same being the case with regard to those made known by the working of the phosphorite beds in Central France. These and other discoveries have, for instance, totally revolutionised our ideas with regard to the affinities of the different families of the modern Carnivora, and have thus led to considerable modifications of the views entertained by Flower as to the relationships of the members of this group. Moreover, there is another important factor which has to be taken into consideration. At the time when Sir William wrote his celebrated memoir on the Carnivora, the effects of what is now universally known among zoologists as " parallelism in development " were quite unrecognised. By " parallelism " (to abbreviate the expression) is meant, it may be explained, a remarkable tendency which undoubtedly exists among animals of markedly diverse origin to become more or less like one another in at least one important structural feature, when living under similar physical conditions, or specially adapted for similar modes of existence. Not unfre- quently this structural resemblance, when closely ex- amined, is found to be less close than might at first sight have seemed to be the case ; the adaptation having been LIFE OF FLOWER 101 brought about by the modification of structures origin- ally more or less dissimilar towards a common type. In other words, the same goal has been reached by two different routes. An excellent example of this is offered by the de- velopment of " cannon-bones " in the lower portion of the limbs of the members of the horse tribe on the one hand and those of the deer and antelopes on the other ; the object of this lengthening and strengthening of this part of the limb being in both instances the attainment of increased speed. Whereas, however in the one instance the cannon-bone is formed from one original element, in the other it is the result of the fusion of two such elements. In this case, indeed, the difference in the structure of this part of the skeleton in the two groups is so apparent as to leave no reasonable doubt as to the remoteness of the affinity between their respective ancestors. There is, however, a certain group of ex- tinct South American hoofed mammals in which the cannon-bone corresponds exactly in origin and structure with that of the horse, from which it might be assumed that the two animals were closely related, whereas, from other evidence, we know that they are widely sundered. Approximately similar structures are therefore in many instances far from being indications of genetic affinity between the animals in which they respectively occur. Before the occurrence of this parallelism was recognised by naturalists as an important factor in their develop- ment, such resemblances were, however, frequently regarded as indications of a common parentage, so that animals which had comparatively little to do with one another were brigaded as members of the same assemblage. 102 LIFE OF FLOWER With these preliminary remarks, we may proceed to a general survey of Sir William's zoological work. It has, however, been found convenient to relegate the consideration of his numerous memoirs on the Cetacea to the next chapter, by which means their connection will be made more apparent than if they were discussed among those on other sections of zoology. The first zoological paper (and indeed the first scientific work of any description) published by Flower seems to have been that on the dissection of one of the African lemurs belonging to the genus Ga/ago, which appeared in the Zoological Society's Proceedings for 1852, and serves to prove, as mentioned in the first chapter, that the author was at that time holding the post of Curator of the Museum of the Middlesex Hospital. The paper itself is of little importance, dealing only with the structure of the muscles and viscera of the species in question. The next paper on the list, which appeared in the same journal for 1 860, was also written during this part of Flower's career ; it is one of the few devoted to the anatomy of birds, and describes the gizzard of the Nicobar pigeon and other graminivorous species. About this time Flower began to devote his attention to the mammalian brain ; his first contribution on this subject being " Observations on the Posterior Lobes of the Cerebrum of the Quadrumana, with the Description of the Brain of a Galago? of which an abstract appeared in the Proceedings of the Royal Society of London for 1860, although the complete memoir was not published till 1862, in the Philosophical Transactions. The date of LIFE OF FLOWER 103 publication of the abstract proves that these studies were commenced, and the memoir in question completed, be- fore (and not, as stated by Professor M'Intosh, 1 after) the author's appointment to the Conservatorship of the Museum of the College of Surgeons, which did not take place till the year 1 86 1 . The brain of another monkey was also described in a paper on the anatomy of a South American species then known as Pithed a monachus, which appeared in the Zoological Society's Proceedings for 1862. In the following year (1863) he published, in the Natural History Review, a still more important com- munication, dealing with the brain of the Malay siamang (Hylobates syndactylus), one of the man-like apes, in which it was shown that in this species (and probably therefore in gibbons generally) the posterior part of the cerebrum, or main division of the brain, overlapped the cerebellum, or hind brain, to an even less degree than in the American howling-monkeys, which had hitherto been regarded as the lowest members of the group, so far as the feature in question was concerned. That such a feature should occur in one of the highest groups of apes was certainly a remarkable and unexpected dis- covery. Yet another contribution to the same subject was made in 1864, when a paper appeared in the Zoological Society's Proceedings on the brain of the red howling-monkey, then known as Mycetes seniculus, but of which the generic title is changed by many modern naturalists to Alouata. The earlier memoirs of this series published (in the Philosophical Transactions), writes Professor M'Intosh in the Scottish Review for 1900, "formed important evidence 1 Scottish Review, April, 1900, p. 5. io 4 LIFE OF FLOWER in the discussions which took place between Owen and Huxley in regard to the posterior lobe of the brain, the posterior cornu, and the hippocampus minor. Professor Owen, at the Cambridge Meeting of the British Association in 1862, maintained, from specimens of the human brain in spirit, and from a cast of the interior of the gorilla's skull, that in man the posterior lobes of the brain overlapped the cerebellum, whereas in the gorilla they did not ; that these characters are constant, and therefore he had decided to place man, with his overlapping posterior lobes, the existence of a posterior horn in the lateral ventricle, and the presence of a hippocampus minor in the posterior horn, under the special division Archencephala. Moreover, he grouped with these features the distinctive characters of the foot of man, and showed how it differed from that of all monkeys. Flower's accurate investigations enabled Huxley to substantiate his antagonistic position to Owen's doctrines, viz., that these structures, instead of being the attributes of man, are precisely the most marked cerebral characters common to man with the apes. Huxley also asserted that the differences be- tween the foot of man and that of the higher apes were of the same order, and but slightly different in degree from those which separated one ape from another. The result of this controversy was the overthrow (except in the mind and works of its author) of Owen's separation of man on the one hand as the representa- tive of a primary group the Archencephala; and of apes, monkeys, Carnivora, Ungulates, Sirenians, and Cetaceans on the other hand, as forming a second LIFE OF FLOWER 105 group the Gyrencephaia. 1 As will be seen from the above quotation, this result was very largely due to the work of Flower, although it was brought into prominent notice by the superior fighting powers of Huxley, who was also an older, and at the time at anyrate, a better- known man. It may be added that Flower himself subsequently abandoned the use of the term " Quadru- mana," as distinguishing apes and monkeys on the one hand from man, as " Bimana," on the other, and brigaded all altogether under their Linnaean title " Pri- mates." The contributions of Flower to our knowledge of (and, it may be added, to the clearing up of miscon- ceptions in regard to) the mammalian brain, was, how- ever, by no means confined to the Primates (man, apes, monkeys, and lemurs). On the contrary, his researches were of equal if not indeed of more importance with regard to the structure of that organ in the lower groups of the class, namely the marsupials and the monotremes (duckbill platypus and spiny ant-eater). In the well-known Reade Lecture of 1859, Professor Owen expressed himself as follows with regard to the brain of the two groups last mentioned : "Prior to the year 1836, it was held by comparative anatomists that the brain in mammalia differed from that in all other vertebrate animals by the presence of the 1 From the extract from Professor M*Intosh's notice of Flower's work above cited, it might be inferred that Owen first proposed the terms Archencephala, Gyrencephaia, etc., at the Cambridge Meeting of the British Association in 1862. This is not so, as these terms were used by him in a paper read before the Linnaean Society in 1857, and also in his Reade Lecture " On the Classification and Geographical Distribution of the Mammalia," delivered at Cambridge on loth May, 1859, and pub- lished in London (by J. W. Parker) as a separate volume the same year. io6 LIFE OF FLOWER large mass of transverse white fibres called 'corpus callosum' by the anthropotomist ; which fibres, over- arching the ventricles and diverging as they penetrate the substance of either hemisphere of the cerebrum, bring every convolution of the one into communication with those of the other hemisphere, whence the other name of this part the ' great commissure.' In that year I discovered that the brain of the kangaroo, the wombat, and some other marsupial quadrupeds, wanted the ' great commissure ' ; and that the cerebral hemi- spheres were connected together, as in birds, only by the { fornix ' and ' anterior commissure.' Soon afterward I had the opportunity of determining that the same deficiency of structure prevailed in the Ornithorhynchus (duckbill) and Echidna (spiny ant-eater)." Owen's conclusions with regard to the absence of the great connecting band of fibres between the hemispheres of the marsupial brain were first published in the Philo- sophical Transactions for 1837 ; those, with regard to the same lack in the monotremes, being added in Todd's Cyclopedia of Anatomy and Physiology, Article " Mono- tremata." In the latter article it was also stated that the brain of the echidna was further distinguished from that of other mammals by the circumstance that whereas in the latter the portion of the brain known as the optic lobes consists of four lobes (corpora quadrigemina), in the echidna and duckbill there are only a pair of such lobes (corpora bigemina.) In consequence of this supposed lack of the corpus callosum in their brains, Owen separated the marsupials and monotremes from other mammals in a primary group by themselves, under the title of Lyencephala. LIFE OF FLOWER 107 Flower's attack on these conclusions was commenced by a paper which appeared in the Zoological Society's Proceedings for 26th January 1864, entitled "On the Optic Lobes of the Brain of the Echidna," in which it was conclusively demonstrated that these structures resembled those of the higher mammals in being four- lobed. More important still was his memoir " On the Com- missures of the Cerebral Hemispheres of the Marsupialia and Monotremata, as compared with those of the Placental Mammals," which was published in the Philo- sophical Transactions of the Royal Society for 1865. In this was shown, it was thought, the existence in both monotremes and marsupials of a distinct, although very small, corpus callosum connecting the two hemispheres of the brain ; the anterior commissure, which in the higher mammals is the smaller connecting band, being in this instance much the larger. Recent researches have, however, tended to show that Owen was after all right in denying the existence of a corpus callosum in the latter groups. Even allow- ing for this correction, the result of this important paper was to discredit among all zoologists capable of forming an adequate opinion on the subject Owen's proposed fourfold division of the Mammalia into Lyen- cephala, Lissencephala, Gyrencephala, and Archen- cephala. And these terms have now completely disappeared from zoological literature. In those days it required no considerable amount of courage to attack a man of Owen's established social and scientific position on an important subject like this ; and Flower's triumph was therefore the more con- io8 LIFE OF FLOWER spicuous. Of course such of these discoveries as are valid, if they had not been made by him, would have been made later on by somebody else, as they merely required accurate dissection and observation. But this may be said of every discovery of a like nature ; and Flower is entitled to all credit for having worked out the subject in the way he did. It may be added, that, with our present knowledge of mammalian morphology, a classification based on the characters of the brain is manifestly based on a misconception from first to last ; the degree of development and specialisation of that organ being purely adaptive features, and therefore not dependent upon structural relationships. Had Owen's classification been maintained, it would have been necessary to assign the primitive Carnivora and Ungulata to a group quite apart from the one containing their existing representatives. In the light of modern research, it cannot now be held that the result of Flower's investigations in this direction was to demonstrate the existence of a corpus callosum to the brain in all the members of the mammalian class. In another paper, dealing with the brain of the Javan loris, published in the Transactions of the Zoological Society, Flower made a further contribution to the study of this part of the organism. Previous to the appearance of the memoir on the marsupial and mono- treme brain, Flower had published, in the Natural History Review for 1864, one on the number of cer- vical vertebrae in the Sirenia (manati and dugong). Apart from several papers on whales and dolphins, which, as already mentioned, are reserved for considera- LIFE OF FLOWER 109 tion in a later chapter, the next noteworthy zoological contribution from Flower's pen appears to be one on the gular pouch of the great bustard, published in the Zoological Society's Proceedings for 1865. This pouch, which, it may be observed is confined to the cock-bird, and inflated during the breeding season, is a very re- markable structure, which has recently been described in greater detail by Mr. W. P. Pycraft. Two years later (1867), Flower contributed to the same journal a .paper on the anatomy of the West African chevrotain, Hyomoschus aquaticus, or, as it is now called, Dorcatherium aquatlcum. The specimen on which the paper was based was the first of its kind which had ever been dissected at least in this country ; and the result of its examination was to confirm the view that the mouse-deer, or chevrotains, cannot be included among the true ruminants, or Pecora, but rather that they form a group (Tragulina), in many respects inter- mediate between the latter and the pigs and hippopota- muses, or Suina. To the essential difference between the chevrotains and the musk-deer, which have often been confounded, Flower was very fond of recurring in his later writings. About the year 1 866 Sir William began to turn his attention to the teeth of mammals, more especially as re- gards the mode in which the milk or baby series is suc- ceeded by the permanent teeth, and the general homology of the milk with the permanent, and of the individual teeth of both series with one another. As the result of these investigations he published during the next few years the following papers on this subject. First and most important, one on the development and succession no LIFE OF FLOWER of the teeth of marsupials, which appeared in the Philosophical Transactions for 1 867 . In the following year he delivered before the British Association at Norwich a paper entitled " Remarks on the Homologies and Rela- tion of the Teeth of the Mammalia," which was published in the Journal of Anatomy and Physiology for the same year. In that year he also published, in the Proceedings of the Zoological Society, an account of the homology and succession of the teeth in the armadillos. A general sketch from his pen of the dentition of mammals was published in the British Medical Journal for 1871, while in the Transactions of the Odontological Society for the same year, appeared a paper on the first, or milk, dentition of the Mammalia. By far the most important of this series of papers is undoubtedly the one on the succession and homologies of the teeth in the marsupials or pouched mammals ; and it is the one which contains, perhaps, the most note- worthy discovery made by Flower. Owen had previously pointed out that marsupials differ from ordinary placental mammals in having four (in place of three) pairs of cheek-teeth at the hinder part of the series which have no milk, or deciduous, predecessors, and are therefore, according to the usual rule, to be regarded as true molars, in contradiction to premolars, in which such deciduous predecessors are generally developed. He considered, however, that all the premolars in the kangaroo (and therefore presumably in other marsupials) as well as the incisors or cutting teeth, and the canines or tusks, were preceded by milk- teeth. Flower, on the other hand (who it is only just to add had a much fuller series of specimens of young LIFE OF FLOWER in marsupials on which to work than was available to Owen), was enabled to show that in the Marsupialia only one pair of teeth in each jaw, at most, is preceded by a milk-tooth. The tooth, in question, is the fifth from the posterior end of the series, and whereas in the adult animal it differs in character from those behind it, its deciduous predecessor resembles the latter. The replacing tooth was further considered to correspond with the fourth or last premolar of placental mammals, while the replaced tooth was regarded as the only one in the entire series corresponding to the milk-teeth of placental mammals. This view rendered it necessary, of course, to regard all the four pairs of cheek-teeth behind this abnormal one as corresponding to the true molars of placentals, as had been done by Owen, thus making, as already mentioned, marsupials to differ from ordinary placentals by possessing four instead of three pairs of these teeth. Before proceeding to notice an amendment which has been proposed in regard to the homology of the one successional tooth of the marsupials, certain other features connected with it and its predecessor discussed by Flower may be briefly mentioned. He noticed, to quote from an admirable epitome of his observations on this point, drawn up by Professor M'Intosh in the Scottish Review for 1900, " that there were considerable differ- ences in the various genera as to the relative period of the animal's life at which the fall of the temporary molar and the evolution of its successor takes place. In some, as in the rat-kangaroos, it is one of the latest, the temporary tooth retaining its place and its functions until the animal has nearly, if not quite, reached its full ii2 LIFE OF FLOWER growth, and is not shed until all the other teeth are in position and use. On the other hand, in the Tasmanian wolf the temporary tooth is very rudimentary in size and form, and is shed or absorbed before any other teeth enter the gum. Anterior to the period of Sir William Flower's communication, mammals had been, in regard to the succession of their teeth, divided into two groups the Monophyodonts, or those that generate a single series of teeth, and the Diphyodonts, or those that develop two sets of teeth, but, as he pointed out, even in the most typical Diphyodonts the successional process does not extend to the whole of the teeth, always stopping short of those situated most posteriorly in each series. The pouched animals (marsupials), he stated, occupied an intermediate position, presenting, as it were, a rudimentary diphyodont condition, the suc- cessional process being confined to a single tooth on each side of each jaw." All this is unexceptionable. Flower, however, went further than this, and claimed that the true molar teeth of mammals correspond serially with the permanent premolars, canines, and incisors, and not with their deciduous predecessors. And he therefore urged (as indeed must be the case on these premisses) that the whole dentition of adult marsupials corresponds with the permanent dentition of placentals. A further infer- ence from this is that the milk-teeth, instead of being an original development, may rather be a set superadded to meet the temporary needs of mammals whose permanent set is of a highly complex type. To review the objections which have been raised against these views would be entering on a very difficult LIFE OF FLOWER 113 question, and one in regard to which uniformity of opinion by no means exists among naturalists even at the present day. It may be mentioned, however, that from the circumstance of the later milk-premolars resembling (as was noticed by Flower in the case of the one tooth replaced in marsupials) the true molars rather than the permanent premolars, it has been suggested that the milk-dentition is serially homologous with the true molars. And on this view, the entire dentition of marsupials (with the exception of the one replacing tooth) corresponds to the milk-dentition of placentals. Possibly, however, the larger number of incisors which distinguish many of the carnivorous marsupials from the placentals may be due to the development of teeth belonging to the permanent series with those of the milk-set, and both persisting together throughout life. Be this as it may, it is evident, on the above view of the serial homology of their dentition, that marsupials, instead of as Flower supposed, showing the commence- ment of a milk-dentition, really exhibit the decadence of the permanent series. In this respect they display a precise similarity to the modern elephants, as indeed was pointed out by Flower in his original paper, although on a false premiss, for he at that time regarded the anterior cheek-teeth of the elephant as the representatives of the permanent pre- molars, whereas they really correspond with the milk- premolars. One objection has indeed been raised with regard to the identification of the adult marsupial dentition with the milk-set of placentals, namely, the existence in certain marsupialia of rudimentary teeth belonging to an earlier H n 4 LIFE OF FLOWER set than the one functionally developed. This has been got over by regarding these rudimentary germs as the representatives of a prelacteal series. Passing on to another point, it has to be noticed that exception has also been taken to Flower's view that the replacing tooth of marsupials and its deciduous prede- cessor correspond to the fourth, or last premolar of placentals. The question has been discussed in con- siderable detail in the Zoological Society's Proceedings for 1899 by the present writer, who had for material the dentition of certain extinct South American mammals quite unknown to science at the time Flower's paper was written. The result of these comparisons was to render it evident, in the present writer's opinion, that the replacing tooth of the marsupials corresponds to the third, instead of to the fourth, premolar of placentals. From this it follows that marsupials agree with placentals in possessing only three pairs of true molars ; the first of the four teeth in the former behind the replacing tooth being the last milk-premolar (which is never replaced) instead of, as supposed by Flower, the first true molar. This conclusion, as pointed out by the present writer in the paper referred to above, had really been arrived at years previously by Owen, who also believed the replacing tooth to correspond to the third premolar of placentals. In thus bringing marsupials into line with placentals as regards their dentition, this later interpretation accords well with recent discoveries in regard to other parts of the organisation of the former animals. It should, however, be mentioned that the newer view is by no means accepted by all zoologists, although it has LIFE OF FLOWER 115 received the support of the well-known American paleontologist, Dr. J. L. Wortman, 1 who is specially qualified to form a trustworthy opinion on a point of this nature. Finally, whatever be the eventual verdict as to the serial homology of the marsupial dentition as a whole, and also as to that of the replacing premolar, Flower must always be credited with the discovery that marsupials replace only a single pair of teeth in each jaw by vertical successors. The other papers on dentition referred to above as having been "written by Flower about the same time are, although interesting in their way, of far less im- portance than the one published in the Philosophical Transactions. Indeed the one read before the British Association in 1 868 and published in the Journal of Anatomy and Physiology for the same year, is little more than a recapitulation of the results arrived at in the former. The paper on the development and succession of the teeth in the armadillos, published in the Zoological Society's Proceedings in 1 868, is, on the other hand, of considerable interest on account of its confirming the fact first mentioned by the French zoologist, Professor Paul Gervais, but generally overlooked by subsequent writers up to that time, that the common nine-banded armadillo (^Tatusia peba) differs from its relatives in replacing some of its teeth by vertical successors. This at the time was an unexpected feature in any member of the so-called Edentate mammals ; and tended further to break down the supposed hard and fast distinction between monophyodonts and diphyodonts. 1 American Journal of Science , vol. xi. p, 336 (1901). n 6 LIFE OF FLOWER Closely connected with the subject of dentition is a paper on " The Affinities and Probable Habits of the Ex- tinct Marsupial, Thylacoleo carnifex (Owen)," communi- cated by Flower to the Geological Society of London in 1868, and published in the Quarterly Journal of that body for the same year. After alluding to the paper on marsupial dentition, Professor Ray Lankester, in his obituary notice of Sir William in Nature^ of 1 3th July 1899, observes of the communication under considera- tion that " The next most striking discovery which we owe to Flower seems to me to be the complete and convincing demonstration that the extinct marsupial, called Thylacoleo carnifex by Owen, was not a carnivore, but a gnawing herbivorous creature like the marsupial rats and the wombat a demonstration which has been brought home to the eye even of the unlearned by the complete restoration of the skull of Thylacoleo in the Natural History Museum by Dr. Henry Woodward." If we are to believe later authorities, Flower's demonstration of the herbivorous nature of the creature in question was by no means so " complete and con- vincing " as the learned Professor would have us believe ; but of this anon. The first important paper on Thylacoleo, which was a creature of the approximate size of a jaguar, whose remains are met with in the superficial formations of Australia, was one by Owen, published in the Philo- sophical Transactions for 1859. From the general characters of the skull (which was at that time only known by fragments), and especially from the rudi- mentary condition of the hinder cheek-teeth and the enormous size of the secant replacing premolar, which LIFE OF FLOWER 117 bears a certain superficial resemblance to the carnassial tooth of the cats, its describer was led to the conclusion that Thylacoleo was a marsupial carnivore, and " one of the fellest and most destructive of predatory beasts." Probably Owen's views at this time were, that the creature had its nearest living relatives in the members of the Australian family Dasyurida, such as the Tasmanian devil (Sarcophllus ursinus), and that it bore a relationship to the existing carnivorous marsupials some- what similar to that presented by a lion to a dog. At this time there was no evidence to show whether the large teeth near the front of the jaw, the existence of which was indicated in the original specimen merely by its empty socket, was a canine or an incisor ; and though Owen was inclined to regard it as the former, he ad- mitted that it might be an incisor, in which event he recognised that the affinities of the animal would be more with the herbivorous, or diprotodont section of the marsupials, and more especially the phalangers, or so- called opossums of the colonists. This is clearly in- dicated by the following sentence appended by Sir Richard to his discription : " If, however, this be really the foremost tooth of the jaw, it would be one of a pair of terminal incisors according to the marsupial type exhibited by the Macropodidez (kangaroos) and Phalangistida (phalangers)." In 1866, after receiving additional specimens from Australia, Owen was enabled to describe the greater part of the skull and the entire dentition of Thylacoleo. The large anterior teeth were clearly recognised to be incisors, which, in Owen's opinion, "proved the Thylacoleo to be the carnivorous modification of the n8 LIFE OF FLOWER more common and characteristic type of Australian marsupials, having the incisors of the lower jaw re- duced to a pair of large, more or less procumbent and approximately conical teeth, or * tusks.' " Not only did the additional evidence serve to confirm Sir Richard in his view of the carnivorous propensities of Thylacoleo, but he considered that in this extinct form we have "the simplest and most effectual dental machinery for pre- datory life and carnivorous diet known in the mammalian class. It is the extreme modification, to this end, of the diprotodont type of marsupialia." Beyond, however, admitting its affinities with the diprotodonts, Sir Richard Owen does not appear in this later paper to have regarded Thylacoleo as a near relative of any of the existing forms ; but in the article on '* Paleontology " in the eighth edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, published in 1859? ^ e seems to have con- sidered it allied to Plagiaulax of the Purbeck strata of Dorsetshire, which had been shown by Dr. Hugh Falconer to be probably of herbivorous habits. Sir William Flower, in the aforesaid paper in the Geological Society's Quarterly Journal for 1 868, while agreeing with Owen that Thy/acoleo was related to the diprotodont rather than to the polyprotodont carni- vorous marsupials, differed from the conclusion that it was a carnivore. While the large cutting premolar teeth were considered by Owen to resemble the carnassial teeth of a lion, Flower was struck by their similarity to the corresponding teeth of the rat-kangaroos and the phalangers. After discussing the other teeth, he concluded that "in the number and arrangement of these teeth . . . Thylacoleo corresponds exactly with LIFE OF FLOWER 119 the modern families Macropodid* and Phalangistidx, and differs completely from the carnivorous marsupials." After alluding to the small size of the brain-cavity and the large space for the attachment of the powerful muscles which worked the lower jaw, and suggesting that these features may be only to be expected in a large form as compared with the smaller members of the same group, Flower concluded that the habits of all species with the same general type of dentition must necessarily be similar. And, on these premisses, it was urged that Thylacoleo must in all probability have been a vegetable-feeder. The large premolar may seemingly have been " as well adapted for chopping up succulent roots and vegetables, as for dividing the nutritive fibres of animal prey." It is further suggested that the nutriment of Thylacoleo "may have been some kind of root or bulb ; it may have been fruit ; it may have been flesh." While in conclusion it is argued that the organisation of the animal did not countenance the idea of its preying on the large contemporary marsupials. Omitting reference to Owen's reply to this reversal of his conclusions, and also to certain comments and addi- tions to the arguments by other writers, we may pass on to a paper by Dr. R. Broom, published in the Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales for April 1898, and entitled "On the Affinities and Habits of Tt>ylacoleo." In this the author admits that the animal in question, as suggested by Owen in his second paper, and more fully determined by Flower, was undoubtedly a dipro- todont, and that it was nearly allied to the modern phalangers. With the 'latter it is indeed closely con- 120 LIFE OF FLOWER nected by the recently discovered extinct Burramys, which differs from the existing members of that group by the large size of the secant premolar. After discussing numerous points in connection with the problem, Dr. Broom states that those who believe Thylacoleo to have been carnivorous, " evidently consider that the molars have been reduced through their functions being taken up by the large premolars. But could the large premolars take up the molar function could they grind ? Even those who favour the idea of Thylacoleo being a vegetable-feeder, admit that the premolars were cutting teeth, and the difficulty of imagining a herbi- vorous animal without grinders is got over by supposing that its food was of a soft or succulent nature." But for the creature to have lived on succulent roots and bulbs, the vegetation of that part of Australia where it lived must, urges Dr. Broom, have been quite different from what it is at the present day ; and we have no justification for assuming any such change to have taken place. Moreover, an animal that could only slice, and not grind up, vegetable food, could apparently subsist only on ripe fruit, and such is to be met with in Australia only at one season of the year, when, owing to the abundance of frugivorous mammals, little, i any, is allowed to fall to the ground. "It is probably however," adds Dr. Broom, "un- necessary to discuss further what food Thylacoleo could possibly have obtained, when we have, as I hold with Owen, the most satisfactory proof from its anatomical structure as to what food it did obtain. It must be admitted that Thylacoleo had enormous temporal muscles, and it is perfectly certain that such muscles would not LIFE OF FLOWER 121 have been developed unless the animal required them. For what could such powerful muscles be required ? Most certainly not for slicing fruits or succulent roots and bulbs, nor would they be required even for the slicing of fleshy fibres. Temporal muscles are chiefly used apparently for closing the jaws more or less forcibly from the open position, while for the more complicated movements of mastication it is the masseter and pterygoid muscles that are chiefly used. Hence in all carnivorous animals the temporals are largely developed and the n:asseters more feebly, because the killing process requires a very forcible closing of the jaws, and the work to be done by the premolars and molars is com- paratively little. In herbivorous animals the conditions are reversed. The jaws are here rarely required to be opened widely or to be closed with any great force, while a very large amount of grinding work has to be done ; hence the temporals are rarely much larger than the masseters, and often very much smaller. When we look at Thylacoleo, ^we find not only the enormous temporals and only moderate masseters, but everything else about the skull seems to be built on carnivorous lines. Owen has shown the wonderful similarity which exists between the molar machinery in Thylacoleo and the lion, and it is hard to conceive as possible any other cause giving rise to such a specialisation in Thylacoleo than that which led to a similar specialisation in the cat tribe. Another most striking feature is to be seen in the condition of the incisors. Leaving out of considera- tion the mode of implantation and structure of the teeth both confirmatory of the carnivorous hypothesis there is one point which appears to me absolutely con- 122 LIFE OF FLOWER elusive on the subject. Unless Owen's figures are altogether unreliable, the lower incisors are quite unlike those of the herbivorous diprotodonts. In such typical forms as the wombat, the koala, the kangaroo, and the phalanger, though there are different modifications of the arrangement, we have the lower incisors meeting the upper, and forming with them an instrument for biting through a moderately tough, fibrous tissue, and even in the very small diprotodonts, so far as I am aware, the lower incisors always meet and work against the upper. But in Thylacoleo we have powerful pointed incisors which do not meet, but overlap. Though technically incisors, they are not intended to incise, but to pierce and tear. Such powerful pointed and over- lapping teeth, though easily explained on the theory that they were intended to kill and tear animal prey, were never surely provided merely to pierce succulent vegetables or ripe fruit. It might of course be argued that the incisors were used as weapons of defence, as apparently are the canines in the baboon ; but against this idea is the objection that the incisors were put to some use which wore them down and blunted them more rapidly than would be the case if they were chiefly used on the rare occasions when the animal had to defend itself; and furthermore, were such the case, the temporals would not require to be greatly developed. " There is thus, in my opinion, no other conclusion tenable than that Thylacoleo was a purely carnivorous animal, and one which would be quite able to, and pro- bably did, kill animals as large as or larger than itself." This opinion as to the carnivorous habits of Thylacoleo is approved by Mr. B. A. Bensley, who has specially LIFE OF FLOWER 123 studied the Australian marsupials in a memoir recently published in the Transactions of the Linnean Society of London. If it be correct, it reduces the net result of Flower's investigations on this subject to a fuller realisation of the diprotodont affinities of the animal under considera- tion. In the latter part of 1 868, Mr. Flower, as he was then styled, communicated to the Zoological Society a most important paper entitled, " On the Value of the Characters of the Base of the Cranium in the Classification of the Order Carnivora," which was published in the first part of the Society's Proceedings for the following year. Working on the lines suggested twenty years previously by Mr. H. N. Turner, who had pointed out the importance of certain peculiarities of the base of the skull in the Mammalia, and especially demonstrated their constancy in the different groups of the Carnivora, Flower felt himself justified in dividing, on these char- acters, the existing terrestrial representatives of that order into three groups. These were 1st, the ^Eluroidea, comprising the cats (Felidts), the fossa (Cryptoproctidts), civets and mongooses (Viverrid PP. 330 and 331. 45. " On the Anatomy of JElurus fulgens, Fr. Cuv.," 1870, pp. 752-769. 46. "On the Skeleton of the Australian Cassowary," 1871, pp. 32-35. 47. "On the Occurrence of the Ringed or Marbled Seal (Phoca hispida) on the Coast of Norfolk, with Remarks on the Synonymy of the Species," 1861, pp. 506-512. 48. " Remarks on a Rare Australian Whale of the Genus Ziphius" 1871, p. 631. 49. " Note on the Anatomy of the Two-Spotted Para- doxure (Nandinia blnotata)" 1872, pp. 683 and 684. 50. " On the Structure and Affinities of the Musk-deer, (Moschus moschiferus, Linn.)/' 1875, pp. 159-190. 51. "Description of the Skull of a Species of Xiphodon, Cuvier," 1876, pp. 3-7. 52. "On some Cranial and Dental Characters of the Existing Species of Rhinoceros," 1876, pp. 443-457. 53. ** Remarks upon Ziphius novce-zealandta and Mesopl- odon floweri" 1876, pp. 477 and 478. 54. " On the Skull of a Rhinoceros (R. lasiotis, Scl.) from India," 1878, pp. 634-636. 55. " On the Common Dolphin (Delphinus delphis, Linn.) " 1879, pp. 382-384. 56. " Remarks upon a Drawing of Delphinus tursio" 1879, p. 386. i8 4 APPENDIX 57. " Remarks upon the Skull of a Female Otaria (Otaria gillespii)," 1879, p. 551. 58. " Remarks upon the Skull of a Beluga, or White Whale (Delphinapterus leucas)" 1879, pp. 667-669. 59. " On the Cascum of the Red Wolf (Cants jubatus, Desm.)," 1879, PP' 766 and 767. 60. "On the Bush-Dog (Icticyon venaticus, Lund)," 1880, pp. 70-76. 61. '< On the Elephant-Seal (Macrorhinus /eoninus, Linn.)," 1881, pp. 145-162. 62. "Notes on the Habits of the Manatee," 1881, PP- 45S-45 6 - 63. "On the Mutual Affinities of the Animals composing the Order Edentata," 1882, pp. 358-367. 64. " On the Cranium of a New Species of Hyperoodon, from the Australian Seas," 1882, pp. 392-396. 65. "On the Skull of a Young Chimpanzee," 1882, PP- 634-636. 66. "On the Whales of the Genus Hyperoodon* 1882, pp. 722-734. 67. " On the Arrangement of the Orders and Families ot existing Mammalia," 1883, pp. 178-186. 68. "On the Characters and Divisions of the Family Dflpbinida" 1883, pp. 466-513. 69. " On a Specimen of Rudolphi's Rorqual (BaUnoptera borealis, Lesson) lately taken on the Essex Coast," 1883, PP- S^-S 1 ?- 70. " Remarks on the Burmese Elephant lately deposited in the Society's Gardens," 1884, P- 44- 71. "Remarks upon Four Skulls of the Common Bottle- nose Whale (Hyperoodon restrains), showing the Develop- ment, with Age, of the Maxillary Crests," 1884, p. 206. 72. "Exhibition of a Mass of pure Spermaceti, obtained from the 'head-matter' of Hyperoodon" 1884, p. 206. 73. " Note on theiDentition of a young Capybara (Hydro- chorus capybara)" 1884, pp. 252 and 253. 74. " Note on the Names of Two Genera of Delphimdce" 1884, p. 417. 75. " Remarks upon a Specimen of Rudolphi's Rorqual APPENDIX 185 (Balanoptera borealis) taken in the Thames, 1887," p. 5 6 4- 76. "On the Pygmy Hippopotamus of Liberia (Hippo- potamus liberiensis, Morton), and its Claims to Distinct Generic Rank," 1887, pp. 612-614. 77. " Remarks upon a Specimen of a Japanese Cock, with Elongated Upper Tail-coverts," 1888, p. 248. 78. " Remarks upon the Skin of the Face of a Male African Rhinoceros with a Third Horn," 1889, p. 448. 79. " Remarks upon a Photograph of the Nest of a Horn- bill (Tocus melanoleucus), in which the Female was shown * walled in,' " 1890, p. 401. 80. " Remarks on the Rules of Zoological Nomenclature," 1896, pp. 319-320. e. In the "Natural History Review" 8 1. " On the Brain of the Siamang (Hylobates syndactylus, Raffles)," 1863, pp. 279-287. 82. "Note on the Number of Cervical Vertebrae in the Sirenia," 1864, pp. 259-264. f. In the " Journal of Anatomy and Physiology." 83. "On the Homologies and Notation of the Teeth of the Mammalia," vol. iii. pp. 262-278 (1869) ; Abstract in Rep. Brit. Assoc., vol. xxxviii. (Trans, of Sections), pp. 262- 288 (1868). 84. " On the Composition of the Carpus of the Dog," series 2, vol. vi. pp. 62-64 ( I ^ > 7 Q )- 85. "On the Correspondence between the Parts Compos- ing the Shoulder and the Pelvic Girdle of the Mammalia," vol. vi. pp. 239-249 (1870). 86. " Note on the Carpus of the Sloths," vol. vii. pp. 255 and 256 (1873). g. In the " Quarterly Journal" of the Geological Society oj London. 87. "On the Affinities and Probable Habits of the Extinct Australian Marsupial, Thylacoleo carnifex, Owen," vol. xxiv. pp. 307-319 (1868). 1 86 APPENDIX 88. " Description of the Skull of a Species of Halitherium (H. canhami) from the Red Crag of Suffolk," vol. xxx. pp. 1-7 (1874). 89. " Note on the Occurrence of Remains of Hycenarctos in the Red Crag of Suffolk," vol. xxxiii. pp. 534-536 (1877). h. In the " Proceedings " of the Royal Institution. 90. " On Palseontological Evidence of Gradual Modifica- tion of Animal Forms," vol. vii. pp. 94-104 (1873). 91. "The Extinct Animals of North America," vol. viii. pp. 103-105 (1876), and Popular Science Review, vol. xv. pp. 267-298 (1876). 92. " On Whales, Past and Present, and their Probable Origin," vol. x. pp. 360-376 (1883). i. In the "Report" of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. 93. " On the Connexion of the Hyoid Arch with the Cranium," vol. xl. (Trans, of Sections), pp. 136 and 137 (1870). 94. "A Century's Progress in Zoological Knowledge," vol. xlviii., pp. 549-558 (1878), and Nature, vol. xviii. pp. 419-423 (1878). j. In the Annals and Magazine of Natural History. 95. "On a Sub- Fossil Whale (Eschrichtius robustus) Dis- covered in Cornwall," ser. 4, vol. ix. pp. 440-442 (1872). 96. "Extinct Lemurina," ser. 4, vol. xvii. pp. 323-328 (1876). k. In the "Journal" of the Royal Colonial Institute. 97. "Whales and Whale Fisheries " : a Lecture delivered at the Royal Colonial Institute on 8th January 1885 (1885). /. In Nature. 98. " On the Arrangement and Nomenclature of the Lobes of the Liver in Mammalia," vol. vi. pp. 346-365 APPENDIX 187 (1872) ; and also Rep. Brit. Assoc., vol. xlii. (Trans, of Sections), pp. 150 and 151 (1872). 99. "On the Ziphioid Whales," vol. v. pp. 103-106 (1872). 100. "Museum Specimens for Teaching Purposes," vol. xv. pp. 144-146, 184-186, and 204-206 (1876). m. In the " Transactions " of the Geological Society of Cornwall. 10 1. "On the Bones of a Whale found at Petuan," 1872,8 pp. n. In the " Bulletin " of the Brussels Academy. 102. <{ Sur le basin et le fe'mur d'une Balenoptere," vol. xxi. pp. 131 and 132 (1866). o. In the " Medical Times " and " Gazette" 103. " Comparative Anatomy," a Lecture, 1870. 104. " Lectures on the Comparative Anatomy of the Organs of Digestion of the Mammalia," delivered at the Royal College of Surgeons of England, in February and March 1872. p. In the " Transactions " of the Odontological Society of London. 105. " On the First or Milk Dentition of the Mammalia," vol. iii. pp. 211-232 (1871). 1 06. "Note on the Specimens of Abnormal Dentition in the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons," vol. xii. pp. 32-47 (1880). q. In the " British Medical Journal:' 107. " Dentition of the Mammalia," 1871. 1 08. " History of Extinct Mammals, and their Relation to Existing Forms," 1874. 1 88 APPENDIX 109. "The Anatomy of the Cetacea and Edentata," 1881 and 1882. r. In the " Encyclopedia Britannic a" qth Ed. no. "The Horse," vol. xii. pp. 172-181 (1881). in. "Mammalia" (Insect'ivora, Chiroptera and Rodentia, by G. E. Dobson), vol. xv. pp. 347-446 (1883). 112. "Whale," vol. xxiv. pp. 523-529 (1888). And other articles. s. 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