514 



LIFE OF PROFESSOR HUXLEY 



knowledge of popular audiences, 

 380. 



Farrar, Dean, on science in public 

 schools, i. 298, 331; at Sion 

 House meeting, 325. 



Farrar, Rev. Professor, account of the 

 Oxford British Association, 1860, 

 i. 196, 203. 



Farrer, Lord, letters to official folly: 

 fallacies tenacious of life, ii. 10; 

 Fishery appointment, 22; Glad- 

 stone controversy: ignorance of 

 the so-called educated classes, 124; 

 effect of controversy on health, 

 124; the Cassowary rhyme, 356; 

 his elevation to the peerage: criti- 

 cism of Romanes Lecture, 379, 

 380; the Devil Prince of this 

 Cosmos: a priori reasoning: the 

 Established Church and our 

 simian origin: attack on the 

 School Board compromise, 406; 

 the a priori method an anachro- 

 nism: method of the Political 

 Economists and Eubiotics: grow- 

 ing hopefulness in age, 407; aim 

 of the chapter in Owen's Life: 

 hint for an essay on Government: 

 London University reform, 416. 



Fawcett, Professor, stays with, i. 213. 



Fayrer, Sir Joseph, settles his career 

 for him, i. 25, 271 ; great anthropo- 

 logical scheme, 294; invites Hux- 

 ley to Calcutta, ib. ; ethnological 

 photographs, 330. 



Letters to unable to go to Calcutta, 

 i. 273; Indian Canidae, ii. 12; the 

 P.C.: career due to his sugges- 

 tion, 346. 



Felixstowe, visits, i. 96; Mrs. Huxley 

 at, 213. 



Fichte, i. 235. 



Filhal, M., work on Natural Selection, 



ii. 13- 



Fish, immature, ii. 249. 



Fisheries, appointed Inspector of, ii. 

 21 ; duties, 23 sq. ; deep sea, re- 

 quire no protection, 24, 28; sal- 

 mon, protection, 24; experiments, 



25- 



Fisheries, Report on, i. 159; old falla- 

 cies in reports, ii. 10 ; experimental 

 station at Lamlash Bay, i. 166. 



Fishery business, ii. 52, 73. 



Fishery Exhibition, lesson of, ii. 25 n. ; 

 at Norwich, 29 sq. ; at Edinburgh, 

 31; in London, 53. 



Fishes, development of the skeleton 

 in, i. 164 sq. 



Fishmongers' Company and educa- 

 tion, ii. 54. 



Fiske, John, visit to, i. 497. 



FitzRoy, Admiral, Darwinism and the 

 Bible, i. 201. 



Flood myth, ii. 276, 296. 



Flourens reviewed, i. 269. 



Flower, Sir W. H., on the simian 

 brain at Cambridge, 1862, i. 204, 

 205, 213, 216; on Huxley's work 

 for Hunterian Lectures, 254; 

 curator of Natural History Col- 

 lections, 268; character of, 269; 

 Kingsley should get to know 

 him, 298; evolution and the 

 Church, ii. 60 n. 



Letters to examinership at College 

 of Surgeons: Dijon museum, i. 

 253; Hunterian Lectures, 335; 

 anatomy of the fox, ii. n; Lina- 

 cre professorship, 32; acceptance 

 of P.R.S., 56, 57; "Ville qui 

 parle," etc., 71; retirement, 113; 

 refuges for the incompetent: Civil 

 Service Commissioners: treat- 

 ment by the Royal Society, 225; 

 promotion by seniority, 312; uni- 

 versity reform, 33; the P.C. : 

 Salisbury P.C.'s received by 

 Gladstonians (cp. 350) : kinds of 

 pleurisy: official patronage: ill- 

 ness of Owen, 347; Owen's work, 

 362. 



Foote case, ii. 429. 



Forbes, Professor Edward, introduc- 

 tion to, i. 27, 29; seemingly forgot- 

 ten by, 42; visits, 64; support from 

 64, 65, 68, 87, 98; helps to F.R.S., 

 72, 73; his pay, 68; goes to Edin- 

 burgh, 93; life of the Red Lion 

 Club, 94; writes notice of Huxley, 

 98; on Huxley's views, 100; char- 

 acter of, 102, 103, 104, 116, 125, 

 128; is succeeded by Huxley, 117, 

 128; death of, 125 sq.; also 108. 

 Letters from Huxley's Rattlesnake 

 work, i. 59; on Royal Medal, 109. 



