488 



LIFE OF PROFESSOR HUXLEY 



controversy : named as a temper- 

 ate blasphemer : demouoloccy : 

 development, 110, 111 ; reviling 

 morally superior to not reviling, 

 112; explanation with Bishop 

 Magee ends controversy, 113 ; 

 the last word : miracle of Cana : 

 Newman, it. ; supposed payment 

 for Nineteenth Century articles, 

 313 ; suggestion of article on 

 Foundations of Belief : difference 

 from Spencer's views, 357 ; the 

 first instalment of the article, 

 ib. ; the "art d'etre grandpfere," 

 358 ; divides the article, ib. ; 

 work against time on proofs, 

 359 ; rest of article postponed 

 through influenza, 360 ; on 

 friendship, 371 



Kolliker, Professor R. A., corre- 

 sponds with, i. 216 ; translation 

 of his Histology, 229 ; 23S, 353 ; 

 reviewed, 359 ; criticism of, 439 



Kowalesky, his discoveries depend- 

 ent on those of Huxley, i. 58 

 on Ascidians, ii. 17 



Krohn, anticipates his work on 

 Salpa, i. 133 



Lacaze Duthiers, Dr., corresponds 

 with, i. 216 ; on his handwriting, 

 331 



Ladder, from the gutter to the Uni- 

 versity, iii. 7 



Laing, S., on Agnosticism, iii. 105 sg. 



Laishly, R., cites Huxley on secular 

 teaching, ii. 33 n. 



Lake District Defence Society, ii. 454 



Lamarck, early study of, i. 242 ; 

 Darwin's theory not a modifica- 

 tion of his, 290 ; but an advance 

 on, 328 

 appreciation of, ii. 317 ; iii. 371 ; 

 not forgotten in England, iii. 18 



Lamlash Bay, naturalists' station 

 at, i. 223 



Lang, Andrew, Cock Lane and 

 Common Sense, iii. 396 



Language, Italian, ii. 284 



Language and Race, i. 380 ; ii. 6, 

 250 ; iii. 174 



Lankester, Dr., Sec. Ray Society, 

 i. 130 



Lankester, Professor B. Ray, on 

 Huxley's "Review of the Cell 

 Theory," i. 203 

 with him at Naples, ii. 75 ; illness 

 of, 77 ; on Rolleston's science 

 teaching, 83 n., 87 ; helps in the 

 new science teaching, 84 ; de- 



scribes lectures, ib. ; at Dohrn's 

 station, 141 

 review of Huxley's Collected Essays, 

 iii. 31S ; impression of him, 393 

 Letters to — Lymnseus as peri- 

 winkles, ii. 127 

 battles, like hypotheses, not to be 

 multiplied beyond necessity, iii. 

 93 ; immature fish, 124 ; Pas- 

 teur's treatment for rabies, 130 ; 

 report of Pasteur meeting, 132 ; 

 science schoolatOxford : trouble 

 over Booth affair, 192 ; ideal of 

 a modern university, 229 

 Latham, Dr. R. G., stands for 

 Registrarship at London Uni- 

 versity, i. 162 

 on the existence of the Established 

 Church, iii. 335 

 Lathrop, Mr. and Mrs., meeting 



with, ii. 206 

 Latin and culture, ii. 280 

 Latin fetish, ii. 124 ; iii. 59 

 Latin in Board schools, ii. 38 

 Latin verses, i. 400 

 Laugel, A. A., at x Club, i. 372 



meeting with, ii. 110 

 Law, i. 349 



abuse of the word, ii. 472 

 Lawrence, Lord, President of School 

 Board, ii. 26 ; on Huxley's re- 

 tirement, 41 ; leaves School 

 Board, 74 

 Lawrence, Sir William, his book On 

 Man, i. 257 ; acknowledgment 

 of Elementary Physiology, 410 

 Lay Sermons, published, ii. 3 ; popu- 

 larity of, 11 

 Lecky, W. E. H., letters to — on 

 Hume : needless assertions and 

 blunders, ii. 255 ; treatment of 

 Irish history, 325 

 books from : Irish leaders, iii. 180 

 Lectures, at Birmingham, li. 23, 52 

 at Bradford, ii. 23 

 on a Piece of Chalk, i. 429 

 Croonian, i. 204 

 on Cuttlefish, ii. 279 

 at Edinburgh, i. 278-285 

 Fullerian, i. 200, 213 

 on the Hand, ii. 194, 254 

 Hunterian, q.v. 

 Introductory, to the course at the 



School of Mines, i. 198 

 on Invertebrate Anatomy, in 



Medical Times, i. 233 

 at Leicester, ii. 23 

 London Institution, i. 445 ; ii. 51. 



213, 218, 262 

 Persistent Types, i. 248 



< 



? 



I 



