INDEX 



489 



Relation of Man to the Lower 



Animals, i. 259 

 Royal Institution, i. 24S, 276, 286 ; 



ii. 52, 175, 19-1, 196, 218, 262, 331 

 at School of Mines, i. 213 

 to working men, i. 200, 213, 259, 



276, 298 sq., 360 ; ii. 23, 52, 194, 



262, 279 

 at Zoological Gardens, ii. 262, 279 

 Lecturing, warnings about his early 



style, i. 127 

 Leigh ton. Sir F., and literary 



honours, iii. 24 

 Leuckart, Professor, letter to — 



morphological work, i. 234 

 Lewald, Fanny, autobiogi'aphy of, i. 



438 

 Liberal education, 1. 430 

 Liberal Thinkers, Association of, ii. 



265 

 Lichfield, native place of Thomas 



Huxley, i. 2 

 Liddon, Canon, abuse of the word 



"law," ii. 472 

 sermon on "law" leads to article 



on pseudo-scientific realism, iii. 



11 ; sermon in reply to Lux 



Mundi occasion of " The 



Lights of the Church and the 



Light of Science," 160 

 Life, compared to a whirlpool, ii. 358 

 Lilly, W. S., replies to, ii. 469 

 Linnean Medal awarded to Huxley, 



iii. 154 

 Linnean Society, elected to, i. 216 

 Literary Gazette, notice of Huxley in, 



i. 131 

 Littlehampton, i. 435 

 Littre, Life of Comte, i. 434 

 Liverpool, address before the Philo- 



mathic Society, i. 443 

 address before Liverpool Institute, 



ii. 318 

 President British Association at, 



ii. 14 ; %'isit to slums, 20 ; moral 



influence of commerce, 21 

 Lockyer, Sir Norman, Science Editor 



of the Reader, i. 305 

 Logical consequences defined, ii. 132 

 London Hospital, address at, ii. 356 

 London Institution, lectures at, on 



physiography, i. 445 ; ii. 218 

 London University, examiner at, i. 



213, 222, 343 ; science examina- 

 tions at, 342 " 

 on Senate of, ii. 347 

 London University Reform, iii. 225- 



240 

 Louisiade Archipelago, i. 73 

 Lourdes, miracle of, ii. 102 



Lowe, Robert (Lord Sherbrooke), 

 thinks Huxley should be at the 

 head of the Natural History 

 Collections, i. 357 

 wishes him to be Trustee of the 

 British Museum, ii. 356 ; iii. 62 



Lubbock, Sir John (Lord Aveburj'), 

 i. 235, 303 ; at Oxford, 1860, 263, 

 271 ; joins x Club, 370 ; with 

 Huxley in Brittany, 414 

 presentation to, at Liverpool, ii. 

 20 



Lucas, Mr., and the Times review of 

 the Origin, i. 255 



Lucretius, i. 328 



Lux Mundi, controversy raised by, 

 iii. 160 



Lyell, Sir Charles, i. 91, 346 ; article 

 on, by Owen, 136 ; reads the 

 Origin before publication, 240 ; 

 influence of the Principles of 

 Geology, 243 ; iii. 19 ; supports 

 Darwin, i. 249 ; leads Huxley to 

 take up ethnology, i. 285 ; on 

 editing the Katural History 

 Review, 303 ; opinion of Huxley, 

 293 ; description of his address 

 at the Geological Society, 297 

 Letters from — on popular lectures, 

 i. 301 ; to Sir C. Bunbury, species 

 question, 245 

 Letters to — on species, i. 249 ; on 

 skull measuring, 285 ; on Man's 

 Place, 289 ; reply to criticisms 

 as to the simian brain : Darwin 

 shows a vera causa for evolution, 

 289 ; simian brain, 291 ; on 

 women's education, 306 ; on 

 Labyrinthodonts, 381 ; work on 

 fossils, especially tiom Spitz- 

 bergen, 411 



Lynton, holiday at, ii. 321 



Macclesfield, Samuel Huxley mayor 



of, in 1746, i. 2 

 MacgilUvray, John, i. 47, 57, 61 

 Macleay, William Sharp, i. 52, 55, 

 67 ; letter to, on English scien- 

 tific world, 132 

 M'Clure, Rev. E., letter to — motive 

 to get at the truth in all things : 

 immortality and the conserva- 

 tion of energy : thought as a 

 " function " of the brain : origin 

 of sin, iii. 190 

 MacWiUiam, Dr., F.R.S., i. 66 

 Madeira, i. 45 ; iii. 152, 155, 264 

 Magee, Bi.shop, controversy with, 

 iii. 107 sq., Ill, 112 ; end of, 113 

 Malins, Vice-Chancellor, remarks on 



