532 



LIFE OF PROFESSOR HUXLEY 



Archetype," 270; his books to be 

 asked for by Dohrn, 405; attack 

 on Hooker, 419; Mrs. Carlyle's 

 saying about, ii. 178; death of, 

 361; statue to, 361, 362; review of 

 his work: a piece of antiquity, 

 395; review of, in Nature, 396. 



Owens College, governor of, i. 420; 

 opening of, 433. 



Oxford, compared with London, i. 165, 

 166; Huxley refuses Linacre Pro- 

 fessorship, 169; invited to accept 

 Linacre Professorship a second 

 time, ii. 32; invited to be master 

 of University College, 33, 34; re- 

 ceives D.C.L., 113, 118; science 

 at, 127, 128, 300; letter on chair 

 of English Literature, 301 ; ad- 

 dresses at, a contrast, 377, 378. 



Oysters, on, ii. 52. 



Paget, Sir James, address from, at 

 Medical Congress, ii. 35; sup- 

 ports London University Reform, 



334- 



Paleontology,, work at, i. 142; " The 

 Method of Paleontology," 143; 

 rise and progress of, ii. 36; would 

 have led to invention of evolu- 

 tionary hypothesis, ib. 



Paley, Evidences, and argument from 

 design, ii. 62. 



Pangenesis, i. 289. 



Pantheon, admiration of, ii. 134. 



Parker, T. Jeffery, on Huxley and the 

 practical teaching of biology, i. 

 406 sq.; teaching by types, 408; 

 persuades him to change course 

 of teaching, 409, and to alter 

 biological course, ii. 435; Encyclo- 

 paedia work between H and L, i. 

 488; impression of Huxley, ii. 447; 

 as administrator, 434; as lecturer, 

 436; with his children, 459. 

 Letter to book dedicated to him: 

 renewed vigour: "cultivons notre 

 jardin " the whole duty of man, 

 ii. 307. 



Parker, W. K., and the F.R.S., i. 



291, 292. 



Letters to i. 264; bids him remodel 

 his work on the Struthious skull, 

 292; bird classification, 307; the 



style of his Frog paper, 447; 

 work on the Amphibia, 447, 448 

 sq. ; interest in the Invertebrata, 

 526. 



Parnell, C. S., his great qualities, ii. 

 134; retirement, 292. 



Parslow, Darwin's old butler, ii. 305. 



Pasteur, L., Huxley repeats his ex- 

 periments on micro-organisms, i. 

 356; Pasteur and pebrine, ii. 284; 

 typical of the century? 396. 



Pasteur Institute, letter to the Lord 

 Mayor on, ii. 254. 



Paton, Miss, of St. Andrews, i. 390. 



Pattison, Mark, in Metaphysical So- 

 ciety, i. 338. 



Payne, J., on science in public schools, 

 i. 299. 



Payne, Dr., i. 537. 



Pearson, Professor K., on Huxley's 

 work in London University Re- 

 form, ii. 333. 



Peile, Dr., at Arolla, ii. 180. 



Pelseneer, Professor, letters to inten- 

 tion to revise work on Mollusca, 

 ii. 129; Molluscan morphology, 

 275; completion of Spirilla mem- 

 oir, 383; early morphological 

 ideas confirmed : publication, 384. 



Pelvis in Mammalia, ii. i. 



Penmaenmawr, writes Hume at, i. 531. 



Percy, Dr. John, at School of Mines, 

 i. 124. 



Pfliiger, a physiological experiment, 

 i. 470. 



" Physical Basis of Life, On the," i. 

 321 ; " the boldest act of his 

 life," ib. 



Physiography, lectures, inception of, 

 i. 299; lessons in, 331 sqq. 



Physiography, published,!. 510; adapted 

 in Germany, 511; a boy's appre- 

 ciation of, ib. 



Physiology, study of, compared to the 

 Atlantic, i. 438; " Elementary In- 

 struction in," 507. 



Plants, sexes of, and Shakespeare, ii. 

 232. 



Plato, opinion of his philosophy, ii. 451. 



Playfair, Lyon (Lord Playfair), at 

 School of Mines, i. 124; on Fish- 

 ery Commission, 252; Vivisection 

 Bill, i. 469, 471. 



