480 



LIFE OF PROFESSOR UUXLEY 



Home Rule, letter to A. Grey, ii. 489 ; 



also 456 ; iii. 39 

 Hooker, Sir J. D., his case a pre- 

 cedent, i. 42, 82, 85 ; at Ipswich, 

 131 ; at his inarriago, 186 ; on 

 Snowdon with, 207 ; relations 

 with Darwin, 240 ; on species, 

 245, 25t) ; at Oxford, IStJO, 263, 

 260, 271, 272 ; origin of friend- 

 ship with, 311 ; remonstrates 

 with Huxley on excursions into 

 philosophy, 330 ; x Club, 870, ii. 

 433 ; clubs not for the old, i. 

 377 ; with Huxley in Biittany, 

 414 ; President British Associa- 

 tion, 428 



with Huxley in the Eifel, ii. 12 ; 

 presentation to, at Liverpool, 

 20 ; on Huxley's intellect, 64 ; 

 trouble with official chief, 80 ; 

 85, 90, 99 ; account of trip to 

 the Auvergne, 101 sqq. ; receives 

 Order of the Pole Star, 110 ; on 

 Belfast meeting of British As- 

 sociation, 117, 134 ; unable to 

 write obituary of Darwin, 316 ; 

 P.R.S., 334 



vigour of, iii. 21 ; his treatment 

 by Government, 24 ; friendship 

 with, 90 ; Royal Society's Medal, 

 371 ; Huxley's love of the garden, 

 422, 423 



Letters from — on his work on 

 micro-organisms, ii. 15 



Dana's obituary of Gray, iii. 62 



Letters to — his selection for the 

 Royal Medal, i. 160 ; B. Forbes, 

 169 ; his approaching marriage, 

 185, 186 ; submerged forest, 189 ; 

 British Museum Collections, 

 192 ; science in the Saturday 

 Review, 201 ; glacier paper, 208 ; 

 Swiss trip, 208 ; election to Imp. 

 Acad. Cses. : Fullerian Lectures, 

 215 ; on criticism, 226 ; ap- 

 proaching "Augustan Age" of 

 English science, 229 ; on his 

 Flora of Tasmania, 236, 237 ; on 

 naturalists' fund, 237 ; on Times 

 review of the Origin, 256 ; on the 

 Ape question, 275 ; on Punch 

 squib, 278 ; his absence : Edin- 

 burgh lectures, 282 ; Huxley's 

 address at Geological Society, 

 296 ; working - men's lectures, 

 1862, 300: Natural History Re- 

 view, 302, 803 ; future leaders of 

 science, 321 ; christening, 322 ; 

 on Natural History Review and 

 materialists, 323 ; illness and 



death of Hen slow, 326, 327 ; 

 move to Kew : a poor client, 

 334, 335 ; science examinations, 

 842 ; pressure of work, 358 ; 

 Science and Art Department 

 examinations, 3G6 ; Darwin's 

 Copley Medal, 867 ; on x Club, 

 376, 377 



Medical men and P.R.8., ii. 420; 

 distribution of gentians, 463, 

 464 ; Darwin and the Quarterly 

 reviewers : chance and atheism, 

 466 



death of Symonds : gentians, iii. 

 32 ; the P.R.S. and politics, 36 ; 

 his Copley Medal, 41, 44 ; tech- 

 nical education address at Man- 

 chester, 47; distribution of 

 Coniferee, 48 ; visit from H. 

 Spencer, 54 ; Trustee of the 

 British Museum : story about 

 Lowe: difficulty of the Origin, 

 61 ; on Dana's obituary of Asa 

 Gray : difficulty of the Origin : 

 primer of Darmnismus, 62 ; a' 

 Club breaking up, 68 ; affection 

 of the heart : Moseley's break- 

 down, 69 ; Darwin obituary : 

 possible senility, 70 ; hybridism 

 of gentians, 84 ; visit from, 

 before leaving London, 85 ; a 

 nomadic life or none : deafness : 

 botanist should study distribu- 

 tion in the Bngadine, 86 ; Copley 

 Medal : friendship and salt- 

 water experiences, 90 ; x ar- 

 chives : a "household animal of 

 value," 95 ; Deceased Wife's 

 Sister question, 100 ; raison d'itre 

 of clubs, 119 ; applied science 

 and the Royal Society, 120 ; 

 Academy dinner : portrait of 

 Hooker, 122 ; Monte Generoso : 

 called an old gentleman : 

 anxieties about children when 

 grown up : x Club subscription, 

 127 ; return from Maloja, 133 ; 

 orchids and tlie influence of con- 

 ditions : Balfour and R. C. Uni- 

 versity for Ireland, 134 ; possi- 

 bility of becoming a pamphleteer, 

 139 ; proposed trip to Canaries, 

 147 ; Liunean Medal : trip to the 

 Canaries, 155 ; quietude of mind 

 impossible, theologians keep 

 him occupied, 173 ; abuse over 

 Salvation Army affair, 180 ; Car- 

 penter's First Three Gospels: 

 varieties of pleurisy : Parnell, 

 181 ; Parnell and his followers, 



