436 LIFE OF PROFESSOR HUXLEY 



subscription of no less than £10,666, raised almost 

 entirely amongst the Fellows themselves for the purpose. 

 In 1876 a responsibility, that fell heavily on the 

 Secretaries, was the allotment annually of a grant by the 

 Treasury of £4000, to be expended, under the direction 

 of the Eoyal ^ and other learned societies, on the advance- 

 ment of science. Every detail of the business of this 

 grant is undertaken by a large committee of the Eoyal 

 and other scientific societies, which meets in the Society's 

 rooms, and where all the business connected with the 

 grant is conducted and the records kept. 



APPENDIX III 



LIST OF ESSAYS, BOOKS, AND SCIENTIFIC 

 MEMOIRS, BY T. H. HUXLEY 



ESSAYS 



" The Darwinian Hypothesis." {Times, December 26, 



1859.) Collected Essays, ii. 

 " On the Educational Value of the Natural History 



Sciences." (An Address delivered at St. Martin's 



Hall, on July 22, 1854, and published as a pamphlet 



in that year.) Lay Sermons ; Collected Essays, iii. 

 " Time and Life." (Macmillan's Magazine, December 



1859.) 

 " The Origin of Species." (The Westminster Review, April 



1860.) Lay Sermons; Collected Essays, ii. 

 " A Lobster : or the Study of Zoology." (A Lecture 



delivered at the South Kensington Museum in 1861, 



^ It is often called a grant to the Royal Society. This is au 

 error. The Eoyal Society, as such, in no way jiarticipates in this 

 grant. The Society makes grants from funds in its own possession 

 only. 



