168 



INDEX 



posed infidelity and persecution 

 of, 21, 22, 25, 69 ; Lyell's mis- 

 taken views on, 54 ; difference 

 of his theory from Lyell's, 53 



HUXLEY, T. H., early views on 

 distinction of Uniformitarian- 

 ism and Evolution, 23 ; later 

 view of identity, 23, 24 ; in- 

 fluence of Darwin on, 24, 127, 

 144 ; on 1st edition of Prin- 

 ciples, 67, 80, 81 ; argues for 

 Lyell's belief in Evolution, 84 ; 

 reviews Origin of Species, 136, 

 137 ; reply to Bishop of Oxford, 

 138 ; defence of Darwinism, 

 140; on Darwin's death, 147, 

 148; on Lyell's death, 80 



Hybridity, Lyell's discussion on, 

 65, 103 



Hypotheses of Creation, twofold 

 character of, 5-8 



Ideas v. Actions, Wallace on, 4 

 Independent discovery of Natural 

 Selection by Wallace, 113 ; 

 Darwin's letter on, 113 

 Italian geologists, their antici- 

 pation of evolutionary ideas, 17 



JACOB, his frauds based on ideas 



of heredity and variation, 9 

 JAMESON, B., founds Wernerian 



Society 1807, 25 ; influence on 



Darwin, 97 

 Journal of Researches, by Darwin, 



106 ; dedicated to Lyell, 72 



King's College, London, Lyell 



professor at, 65, 66 

 Kinnordy, Lyell at, 42, 43, 46 

 KIEWAN, DE Luc, and WILLIAMS, 



opposition to Hutton, 25 



LAMARCK, his Hydrogeologie, 87 ; 

 Philosophic Zoologique, 88 ; 

 Lyell's admiration of, 64, 89 ; 

 criticism of theory, 64, 90 ; 

 views of Darwin on, 90, 91; 

 on geological time, 155 



Lectures by Lyell, 65, 66 



Linnean Society, papers of Dar- 

 win and Wallace at, 112, 129, 

 130 



Literature, Lyell and, 52, 67 ; 

 Darwin and, 116, 117, 120; 

 his loss of interest in, 134, 135 



LOCKHAKT and Quarterly Review, 

 60 



LUCRETIUS, belief in Evolution, 

 3,4 



LYELL, CHARLES, use of term 

 'Creation,' 11 ; on grandeur of 

 idea of Evolution, 12 ; birth 

 and ancestry, 41 ; education, 

 34, 42 ; influence of Buckland 

 on, 34, 42-44 ; on Cuvier, 46 ; 

 change of views not due to 

 Button's works, 45 ; but to 

 travel and observation, 45 ; in 

 East Anglia, 45; in Strath- 

 more, 46, 47 ; abandons career 

 as barrister for geology, 48 ; 

 work with Dr Mantell, 48 ; 

 visits to Continent, 48 ; in- 

 fluence of von Hoff's works, 

 49 ; of Scrope, 50 ; his remarks 

 on Hutton's supposed heresies, 

 51, 54 ; influence of Gibbon on 

 his literary style, 52 ; praise of 

 Hutton and Playfair at later 

 date, 53 ; review of Scrope's 

 book on Auvergne, 56 ; visit to 

 Auvergne with Murchison, 56 ; 

 advocacy of travel for geolo- 

 gists, 56 ; journeys in Italy, 58; 



