472 



LIFE OF PROFESSOR HUXLEY 



of writing the prologue, 213 ; 



elimination of the supernatural, 



ih. 

 Cook (editor of Saturday Review), i. 



257, 356 

 Cooke, Dr., his brother-in-law, i. ; 



his first instruction in medicine, 



21, 47 

 Copley Medal, awarded to Huxley, 



iii. 70 

 CorDeld, R., on Clifford's illness, ii. 



259 

 Cork, rejected for chair at, i. 115 

 Comay, Professor, acknowledgment 



from, i. 412 

 Comu, Professor, at x Club, i. 372 

 Cornu, the posterior, i. 275, 291 

 Courtney, Right Hon. L., at Royal 



Society dinner, li. 349 

 Coventry, the home of Thomas 



Huxley, i. 2 ; George Huxley 



returns to, 8 

 Craniology, i. 343 

 Cranks, letters from, ii. 322 sq. 

 Crayfish, on the, i. 190 ; li. 112, 243, 



202 

 Creation, controversy on Genesis i. 



with Mr. Gladstone, ii. 425 sqq., 



435 ; also iii. 218 

 Criticism, a compliment, i. 226 

 Croonian Lecture, i. 231, 232, 235 

 Cross, Lord, letter to — Vivisection 



Commission, ii. 170 

 Crowder, Mrs., visit to, iii. 298 

 Crum Brown, Professor, induces 



Huxley to play golf, ii. 61 

 Crustacea, paleozoic, i. 213 

 Culture, basis of, ii. 280 sq. 

 Cunningham, on South American 



fossil, i. 449 

 Cuno, language and race, iii. 175 

 Cuvier, his views controverted, i. 



215, 222 

 and his title, ii. 55 ; appreciation 



of, 317 

 Cuvier, the British, i. 281 



Dalgaims, Father, in Metaphysical 

 Society, i. 453 



Dalhousie, Lord, President Royal 

 Commission on Trawling, ii. 297 



Dana, and coral reef theories, iii. 15 ; 

 misunderstanding of Darwin in 

 his obituary of Asa Gray, 62, 63 



Daplmia, i. 213 



Darwin, Charles, likewise begins his 

 career at .sea, i. 42 ; as man of 

 science, 137, 138 ; saying about 

 happiness and work, 187, 220 ; 

 starts on the Origin, 230 ; effect 



of the Origin, 240-240; the species 

 question before 1859, 244 ; the 

 most serious omission in the 

 Ori^w, 247; Huxleyhis "general 

 agent," 247, 398 ; his " bulldog," 

 ii. 62 ; and his predecessors, 1. 

 290, 322 ; and poetry, 325 ; com- 

 pared with Lamarck, 328; and 

 spontaneous generation, 352 ; at 

 X Club, 372 



his opinion of Dohrn, ii. 8 ; his 

 generosity, 141; "the cheeriest 

 letter-WTiter I know," 279 ; letter 

 to, obtaining a Civil List pension 

 for Wallace, 282 ; death of, 314 ; 

 notice of, in \ature, 316 ; love 

 for, ib. ; intellect of, 317 ; obi- 

 tuary, 348 ; compared to Gordon, 

 397 ; unveiling of statue, 422 ; 

 character and friends, 423 



influence in science, iii. 19 ; ex- 

 position not his forte, 00 ; dumb 

 sagacity of, ib. ; legacy from A. 

 Rich, 196 ; his theory needs 

 experimental proof, 203 ; and 

 iiatura non facit solium, 320 ; 

 typical of the century ? 323 ; 

 nature of his work, 328 ; example 

 of, 345 ; defence of, 400 



Letters from — the decisive critics 

 of the Origin, i. 240 ; Huxley's 

 reservations in accepting the 

 doctrine of the Origin, 299 



on Huxley's treatment of Suarez' 

 metaphysics: intellect of Hux- 

 ley, ii. 04 ; conveys him a gift 

 from his friends, 67 ; on new 

 biological teaching, 87 ; on report 

 of stance, 149 ; automatism, 315 



Letters to — on the Origin, i. 258 ; 

 Edinburgh lectures, 281, 282 ; 

 the Cambridge British Asso- 

 ciation, 287 ; on Man's Place : 

 Atavism, 295 ; that his theory ac- 

 counts for retrogression as well 

 as progression, 297, 298 ; pressure 

 of work, 348 ; 360 ; absorption 

 in one kind of work, due to one's 

 reputation and one's children, 

 361 ; " Criticisms of the Ongriii," 

 365; Copley Medal, 366; diffi- 

 culty of writing a book, 382 ; 

 birth of a son : work in the 

 Reader, 383 ; sends booklet, 384 ; 

 Darwinism in Germany, 385; 

 Pangenesis, 387; laziness: Hooker 

 ill, 888 ; memorialabout Gallegos 

 fossils, 398 ; new edition of 

 OrifjiJi .-'Jamaica afnir, 402; on 

 Positivist critics, 432, 433 ; visit 



