476 



LIFE OF PROFESSOR HUXLEY 



Fjlhal, M. , work on Natural Selection, 

 ii. 279 



Pish, immature, iii. 124 



Fisheries, appointed Inspector of, 

 ii. 289 ; duties, 292 sq. ; deep 

 sea, require no protection, 295, 

 301 ; salmon, protection, 295 ; 

 experiments, ib. 



Fisheries, Report on, i. 213 ; old 

 fallacies in reports, ii. 274 ; ex- 

 perimental station at Lamlash 

 Bay, 1. 223 



Fishery business, ii. 331, 359 



Fishery Exhibition, lesson of, ii. 

 294 n. ; at Norwich, 300 sq. ; at 

 Edinburgh, 303 ; in London, 332 



Pishes, development of the skeleton 

 in, i. 220 sq. 



Fishmongers' Company and educa- 

 tion, ii. 333 



Fiske, John, visit to, ii. 206 



FitzRoy, Admiral, Darwinism and 

 the Bible, i. 270 



Flood myth, iii. 161, 186 



Flourens reviewed, i. 360 



Flower, Sir W. H., on the simian 

 brain at Cambridge, 1862, i. 

 274, 275, 28S, 291 ; on Huxley's 

 work for Hunterian Lectures, 

 338 ; curator of Natural History 

 Collections, 357 ; character of, 

 360 ; Kingsley should get to 

 know him^ 399 

 evolution and tlie Church, ii. 



343 n. 

 Letters to — examinership at 

 College of Surgeons : DiJon 

 museum, i. 338 ; Hunterian 

 Lectures, 450 

 anatomy of the fox, ii. 276 ; Lin- 

 acre professorship, 304 ; ac- 

 ceptance of P.R.S., 337, 338; 

 " Ville qui parle," etc., 357 ; re- 

 tirement, 412 

 refuges for the incompetent : Civil 

 Service Commissioners : treat- 

 ment by the Royal Society, iii. 

 91 ; promotion by seniority, 

 308 ; university reform, 234 ; the 

 P.C. : Salisbury P.C.'s received 

 by Gladstonians(cp. 250) : kinds 

 of pleurisy : official patronage : 

 illness of Owen, 253 ; Owen's 

 work, 274 



Foote case, iii. 309 



Forbes, Professor Edward, introduc- 

 tion to, i. 36, 39 ; seemingly for- 

 gotten by, 57 ; visits, 85 : support 

 from, 87, 91, 117, 130 ; helps to 

 F.R.S., 97, 98 ; his pay, 99 ; goes 



to Edinburgh, 124 ; life of 

 the Red Lion Club, 126 ; writes 

 notice of Huxley, 131 ; on 

 Huxley's views, 134 ; character 

 of, 136, 137, 138, 156, 167, 172 ; 

 is succeeded by Huxley, 157, 172 ; 

 death of, 168 sq. ; also 144 

 Letters ftom — Huxley's Rattle- 

 snake work, i. 86 ; on Royal 

 Medal, 161 

 Letters to— Royal Medal, i. 150, 

 160 (cp. iii. 371) ; also 165, 166 



Forbes, Principal James, structure 

 of glaciers, i. 211, 216 

 and TyndaU, ii. 128 



Forel, Professor, at Arolla, iii. 30 



Forster, Right Hon. W. E., on Bible 

 teaching, ii. 34 ; vivisection at 

 South Kensington, 157 sq.; letter 

 to, 162 



Foster, Sir M., on the spirit of 

 Huxley's early inquiries, i. 149 ; 

 on his "Review of the Cell 

 Theorv," 203; and "Theory of 

 the Vertebrate Skull," 204, 205 ; 

 on the Oxford meeting of the 

 British Association, 274 ; on 

 Huxley as examiner, 343 ; on 

 his ethnological work, 379 ; 

 takes over FuUerian Lectures, 

 422 ; on Huxley's work on birds 

 and reptiles, 424 

 on Huxley as Secretary of the 

 Royal Society, ii. 51 ; takes over 

 his lectures, 68 ; helps in the 

 new science teaching, 83 ; a 

 New Year's guest, 98 ; on 

 Huxley's work after 1870, 112 

 sq. ; with him at Belfast, 133-136 ; 

 to help in Men of Science Series, 

 257 ; assists in preparing new 

 edition of Elementary Physiology, 

 362 

 and London University Commis- 

 sion, iii. 232; "discovery "of, 355 

 Letters from — retirement at sixty, 



ii. 418, 433 

 society at Maloja, iii. 80 

 Letters to — Edinburgh lectures : 

 vivisection : Bathybius sus- 

 pected, ii. 181 ; official functions 

 not his business in life, 333 ; 

 successor to Spottiswoode, 335 ; 

 reluctance to divide the Royal 

 Society over his election as 

 President, 340; elected, 342; 

 .support of debateable opinions 

 while P.R.S., 343 ; handwriting 

 and anxiety, 346 ; holiday de- 

 fined, 347 ; Science and Art 



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