474 



LIFE OF PROFESSOR HUXLEY 



trative posts, 329 ; unofficial 

 answer to official inquiries, 366 ; 

 proposed resi,[;n;ition, 367 ; in- 

 dustry ami af,'e, 368 ; health : 

 Gordon, 36',i ; reply to arguments 

 against resignation, ih. ; exten- 

 sion of leave : festa of St. Peter's 

 chair, 390 ; coldness of Rome : re- 

 pression of dynamiters : Roman 

 noses, 393 ; Gordon : public 

 afl'airs : technical education : 

 depression : carnival, 397, 398 ; 

 health, 403 ; retimi from Italy, 

 409 ; Civil List pension, 417 ; 

 return in good health from 

 AroUa : renews work at science 

 instead of theology, 459; Science 

 and Art examinations, 462 ; iii. 

 125 

 age moderates hopes, iii. 1 ; Im- 

 perial Institute, 8; the Irish 

 question, 28 ; Glion : "javelins," 

 32 ; sends proof of Struggle for 

 Existetwe, 55 ; Deceased Wife's 

 Sister Bill : hatred of anonym- 

 ity, 102 ; Stonehenge : use of 

 Radicals : death of Smyth, 159 ; 

 move to Eastbourne, 163 ; 

 London University Commission 

 and refonn, 232 ; the State and 

 intermediate education, 243 ; 

 responsible for the Privy 

 Councillorship, 248 ; humour of 

 public afl'airs, 249 ; the moilern 

 martjTdom, 261 ; faculty of for- 

 getting, 266 ; the scientific 

 docker, 311 ; death of Tyndall, 

 316 ; letter from a lunatic, 320 ; 

 a State evening party, 821 ; 

 procrastination : the scientific 

 docker : Darwin medal, 341 ; 

 women in public life, 342 



Draper, Dr., i. 262 



Dravring, Huxley's faculty for, 1. 6, 

 61 ; li. 137 



Dublin, LL.D., at ii. 250 



Duncan, Dr. Matthews, visit to, ii. 

 60 



Du Thiers, or Duthiers (both forms 

 of the signature occur in his 

 letters), see s.v. Lacaze 



Dyer, Sir W. Thi.selton, helps in tlie 

 new science teaching, ii. 83 n. ; 

 lectures for Huxley, 86 ; to help 

 in Men of Science Series, 257 

 Marine Biological Association, iii. 

 66 ; letter from — Gentian paper, 

 76 



Dyster, Dr., letters to— scientific 

 Calvinism, i. 164 ; introduction 



to Kingsley and Maurice, 177 ; 

 refuses Edinburgh chair : coast 

 survey, 178, 179 ; approaching 

 marriage, 180, 181 ; popular 

 lectures, 199 

 man not a rational animal in his 

 parental capacity, iii. 45 



Ealing, i. 1 



Eastbourne, house at : law of nature 



about : origin of name, iii. 184 

 Echinoderms, on the development 



of, i. 110 ; aim of paper, 134 

 Echo, article in, li. 226 

 Ecker, Dr. A., on his ethnological 



work, i. 394 

 Eckersley, W., letter to— Civil List 



pension, ii. 418 

 Eckersley, W. A., death of, iii. 363 

 Eckhard, Dr., i. 236 

 Ectoderm and Endoderm, discovery 



of, i. 57, 58 

 Edinburgh, lectures at — on the Ape 



question, i. 278 sq. ; on the 



Physical Basis of Life, 431 ; 



Fishery Exhibition, il 303 ; re- 

 fuses an uncertain post at, i. 



165 ; refuses to succeed Forbes 



there, 170, 173, 174, 178-181 

 Natural History courses at, ii. 175 



sq., 194 sq. 

 Edinburgh University, hon. degree, 



i. 397 

 Edison, typical of the century ? iii. 



322 

 Education, the true end of, i. 430 

 secular, ii. 32, and note, 

 intermediate, and the State, iii. 



243 ; scientific, for a boy, 242, 



245 

 Bgerton, Sir Philip, his museum, i. 



192 ; visit to, 257 ; squib on the 



Ape question, 278, 289 

 E!:ryptian exploration, ii. 352 

 Ehrenberg, suspects Bathybius, ii. 



182 

 Eisig, assistant to Dr. Dohrn, ii. 



382 

 Elementary Physiology, i. 354, 409 ; 



ii. 262 

 new edition, ii. 362, 379 

 Eliot, George, proposed burial in 



Westminster Abbey, ii. 286 ; 



Stanley on, 305 

 Ellicott, Bishop of Gloucester, in 



Metaphysical Society, i. 452 

 Ellis, Charles, with Huxley in 



Egj'pt, ii. 73 

 "Emancipation, Black and White," 



i. 37S 



