492 



LIFE OF PROFESSOR HUXLEY 



Lord of the Admiralty), i. 105, 

 145 

 Norwich, Fishery Exhibition at, ii. 



300 sq. 



Oakley, Sir Herbert, vicar of Ealing, 

 i. 5 



Objects of the sea-shore, letters on, 

 iii. 205, 206 



Oceanic Hydrozoa, i. 109, 111, 190, 213, 

 230 ; loses priority by delay, 236 ; 

 still of use in 1S07, 417 



Officers, retired, in administrative 

 posts, ii. 328 



Official work, growth of, ii. Ill ; 

 climax of, ii. 331 



Oken, his speculations, i. 150, 204 



Oliver, Professor, i. 303, 366 



Opinions which cannot be held 

 " without grave personal sin," 

 ii. 2 



Optimism, i. 816 



Origin of Species, i. 230 ; effect of its 



publication, 239; "a flash of 



light," 245 ; review in Times, 



255 ; criticism on the, 364 



influence of, ii. 1; "coming of 



age " of, 277 srj. 

 difficulty of, iii. 62, 63 ; and theory 

 of evolution, 329 



Original sin and Darwinism, i. 399 

 (cp. iii. 190) 



Orthodox Christianity, how regarded 

 by many men of science, i. 320, 

 345 sq. 



Osbom, Professor Henry Fairfield, 

 reminiscences quoted, i. 423 

 account of Huxley at Oxford, 1894, 

 iii. 326 : description of his 

 lectures, 377 ; impromptu lectur- 

 ing, 383 ; simian characteristics 

 of infants, story of Huxley, 396 n. 



Ossory, Mr., with Huxley in Egypt, 

 ii. 73 



Owen, Sir Richard, introduction to, 

 i. 36, 39 ; visits, 85 ; supports 

 claims of Huxley, 86, 87, 91, 

 116 ; at the Geological Club, 91 ; 

 his pay, 99 ; as man of science, 

 136 ; his Parthenogenesis, ib. ; 

 civiUty of, 138 ; support for 

 F.B.S., 139; breach with, 204; 

 at Aberdeen British Association, 

 224, 225 ; his morphological 

 speculations, 230 ; the British 

 Cu\ner, ib., 234; style of, 257 ; 

 on the Ape question at Oxford, 

 261, 269, 277, 278, 289 ; at Cam- 

 bridge British Association, 287 ; 

 on air-cells of birds in flight, 



307 ; criticises Darwin on spon- 

 taneous generation, 351, 357 ^l 

 author of article on " Oken and ^1 

 the Arclietype," 361 " 

 his books to be asked for by 

 Dohm, ii. 81 ; attack on Hooker, 

 99 

 Mrs. Carlyle's saying about, iii. 

 26 ; death of, 272 ; statue to, 

 273 ; review of his work : a 

 piece of antiquity, 321 ; review 

 of, in Nature, 322 



Owens College, governor of, ii. 101 ; 

 ' opening of, 118 



Oxford, compared with London, i. 

 222 ; Huxley refuses Linacre 

 Professorship, 228 

 invited to accept Linacre Pro- 

 fessorship a second time, ii. 304 ; 

 invited to be master of Uni- 

 versity College, 306 ; receives 

 D.C.L., 411, 419 (cp. 13); science 

 at, 431, 432 ; iii. 192 ; letter on 

 chair of English Literature, ii. 

 468 ^ 



addresses at, a contrast, iii. 297 ^f 



Oysters, on, ii. 331 



Paget, Sir James, address from, at 

 Medical Congress, ii. 308 

 supports London University Re 

 form, iii. 234 



Paleontology, work at, i. 190 ; " The 

 Method of Paleontology," ib. 

 rise and progress of, ii. 309 ; would 

 have led to invention of evolu- 

 tionary hypothesis, 310 



Paley, Evidences, and argument from 

 design, ii. 345 



Pangenesis, i. 387 



Pantheon, admiration of, ii. 442 



Parker, T. Jeffery, on Huxley and 

 the practical teaching of biology, 

 ii. 82 sq. ; teaching by types, 86 ; 

 persuades him to change course 

 of teaching, 87 ; and to alter 

 biological course, iii. 376 ; Ency- 

 clopaedia work between H and 

 L, ii. 192 

 impression of Huxley, iii. 393 ; as 

 administrator, 375 ; as lecturer, 

 376 ; with his children, 409 

 Letter to— book dedicated to him : 

 renewed vigour : " cultivons 

 notre jardin " the whole duty 

 of man, iii. 201 



Parker, W. K., and the F.R.S., i. 

 391 

 Letters to— i. 352 ; bids him re- 

 model his work on the Struthi- 



