536 



LIFE OF PROFESSOR HUXLEY 



" Science at Sea," i. 50 sq. 



Science, in public schools, i. 299; in 

 elementary schools, 362, 366, 373; 

 the great tragedy of, 356; defini- 

 tion of, ii. 14; at Oxford, 127, 128. 



Science, Biological, and Medicine, 

 ii. 34. 



Science Primers begun, i. 387. 



Science teachers, need of, i. 299. 



Science teaching: scheme for the In- 

 ternational College, i. 331. 



" Scientific Education," i. 330. 



Scientific missionaries, i. 406. 



Scott, D. H., extends text-book on 

 Biology, i. 409. 



Scott, John Godwin, i. 18. 



Scott, Mrs. J. G. (Eliza Huxley), visit 



to, i. 498. 



Letters to prospects of Rattlesnake 

 voyage, i. 26, 27; first scientific 

 memoir, 35; engagement, 40; last 

 cruise and Kennedy's expedition, 

 47, 48; return and ambitions, 65; 

 character of Forbes, 103; death of 

 his mother, 107; first lecture: 

 irony of his position, 108; Royal 

 Medal, 114; people he can deal 

 with, 115; Science and Mammon, 

 116; rounds the Cape Horn of his 

 life, 127; position in 1858, 168; his 

 home in 1859, 173; his reputation, 

 271 ; slavery, 272. 



Sea serpent, letters on, ii. 367, 368. 



Selborne, Lord, in Metaphysical So- 

 ciety, i. 338. 



Sensation, lecture on, ii. i. 



Seth, Professor, letters to thanks for 

 understanding him: conditions of 

 Romanes Lecture: Faraday on 

 popular audiences, ii. 380; Pro- 

 legomena: Spinoza, 382. 



Sexton, T., and Parnell, ii. 292. 



Shaftesbury, Lord, quotes Huxley's 

 definition of religion and morali- 

 ty, i. 368 n. ; charges him with 

 advocating vivisections before 

 children, 460 sqq. ; letter from, 461. 



Sharpey, Dr. William, help from: 

 Secretary Royal Society till 1871, 

 i. 65, 68; Vivisection Bill, i. 471. 



" Shehretz," ii. 123, 314. 



Sidgwick, Wm. C., rebuke to the 

 Speaker, ii. 289. 



Sin, origin of, ii. 299 (cp. i. 297). 



Sinclair, Sir J. G. T., letter to, on 

 Babbage's calculating machine, 

 ii. 278. 



Sion College, declines to attend open- 

 ing of new buildings at, ii. 157. 



Sion House meeting, i. 325 n., 337. 



Skelton, Sir John, visits, i. 492, 512. 

 Letters to Noctes Ambrosianae, i. 

 492; advantage of quasi-Scotch 

 nationality: the Hermitage too 

 pleasant for work, 513; biography 

 and fiction: conscience and letter 

 writing, ii. 7; dinner and discus- 

 sion, 8; The Crookit Meg, a refer- 

 ence to Huxley, 16; introduction 

 to Tyndall, 38; Mary Stuart and 

 the Casket Letters, 50; Gladstone 

 as controversialist, 130; nature 

 and suffering, 142, 143; historians 

 and practical discipline: an an- 

 tagonist " rouses his corruption," 

 195, 196; retirement from London, 

 303; the Casket Letters, 223; lim- 

 itations of the Romanes Lecture, 

 381 ; mending the irremediable, 

 382. 



Skull, theory of the Vertebrate, i. 152; 

 further investigations, 165, 244. 



Slavery, i. 272. 



Smalley, G. W., Huxley in New York 

 harbour, i. 494; description of 

 him as a lecturer, ii. 440; his 

 friends and talk, 446. 



Smith, Robertson, at x Club, i. 279. 



Smith, Sir William, i. 267; and Inter- 

 national College, 291; effect of the 

 name " vivisection," 459. 



Smith, Right Hon. W. H., Bible-read- 

 ing in schools, i. 367. 



Smyth, Warington W., i. 151; death 

 of, ii. 276. 



Snakes, lecture on, ii. i. 



Socialism, State, and natural selec- 

 tion, ii. 284. 



Societies and ladies, i. 228. 



Society and societies, i. 348. 



Society for the propagation of com- 

 mon honesty, i. 214. 



Society of Arts, speech at, i. 509. 



Speaker, the, insinuations of, rebuked, 

 ii. 289. 



Species and sterility, i. 257. 



