494 



LIFE OF PROFESSOK HUXLEY 



Pyrosoma, i. S3 ; further observa- 

 tious on, 305 



Quain, Dr. Richard, President Royal 



College of Surgeons, i. 450 

 Quakerism, rise of, compared lo rise 



of Christianity, iii. 170 

 Quarterly Review, attack on Darwin, 



ii. 151 sq. 

 Quekett, J. T., unfairly treated, i. 



136 



Race and Language, iii. 174 

 Radiata, a zoological lumber-room, 



i. 84, 189 

 Ramsay, Sir A. C, i. 202 ; ii. 90 

 Rankine, Professor, presentation to, 



at Liverpool, ii. 20 

 Ransom, Dr., indirectly determined 



his career, ii. 452 

 Rathbone, P. H., presides at the 



Sphinx Club dinner to Huxley, 



ii. 21 

 Rathbone, W. , wishes to send Hux- 



ley on a visit to India, ii. 49 

 Rathke, i. 204 

 RattlesTiake, H.M.S., enters, i. 35 ; 



quarters on, 37, 40 ; life on, 40 



sq. ; voyage of, 45 sq. ; 59 sq. ; 



ett'eet on Huxley's development, 



80 ; voyage of the, reviewed by 



Huxley, 67 sq. 

 Ravenna, ii. 383 

 Ray Society, helps publish Huxley's 



early papers, i. 109, 130 ; trans- 

 lation of Haeckel's Morphologic, 



440 

 Reader, the, i. 305 

 Reaumur, on the six - fingered 



Maltese, i. 250 

 appreciation of, iii. 371 

 Reconcilers, i. 345 

 Red Lion Club, i. 126, 132 

 Rede Lecture, on the Pearly Nautilus 



and Evolution, ii. 345, 347 

 Reed, Sir Charles, on Huxley's re- 

 tirement from the School Board, 



ii. 41 

 Reeks, Trenham, i. 225 

 on the temperature of a letter 



from Tyndall, ii. 117 

 Reformation, the New, ii. Ill 

 " Rehmes," ii. 426 ; iii. 209 

 Reid, Sir Jnhn Watt, at Haslar, i. 



35 ; advice, 82 

 Religion and morality, defined, ii. 



32 n. 

 Religion for men, iii. 272 

 Renan, tj^pic^l of ''he century ? iii. 



322 



Rendu, on glaciers, ii. 128 



Reptilia, fossil, memoirs on, i. 220 



Responsibility, illness and, ii. 411 

 (cp. iii. 400) 



Retirement, ii. 410, 414 ; at the age 

 of sixty, 418 ; pension, 415 sq. ; 

 remains Honorary Dean of 

 College of Science, 416 ; Civil 

 List pension, ib. 



R6ville, Dr., attacked by Gladstone, 

 iL 425, 426 



Ribaldry, heterodox, worse than 

 orthodox fanaticism, iii. 246, 

 368 



Rich, Anthony, legacy from, iii. 196 



Richardson, Sir John, selects Huxley 

 for scientific expedition, i. 34, 

 35, 39 ; letter to — on work done 

 during voyage, 83 ; meets again, 

 102, 137 

 seeks portrait of, iii. 197 



Rigg, Dr., on Huxley's retirement 

 from School Board, ii. 41 



Riley, Athelstan, attack on the 

 compromise, iii. 335 



Ripon, Bishop of, letter to— work 

 and influence of men of science, 

 iii. 19 



Riviere, Briton, R.A., letter to- 

 science training for his son, iii. 

 241 



Roberts, Father, on Galileo and the 

 Pope, ii. 424 



Robinson, Dr. Louis, simian charac- 

 teristics in infants, iii. 396 



Rogers, Rev. William, at Sion House 

 meeting, i. 436 ; letter to — on 

 physiography lectures, 445 



Roller, Mrs., letters to — Roman 

 architecture : Catacombs, ii. 

 388 ; endless sights of Rome, 

 401 ; Florence, 405 

 French women and French dishes : 

 superiority of the male figure, 

 iii. 120 ; money and a new house, 

 184 ; birthday letters : good 

 looks as a child, 198 ; love of 

 children: the "just man who 

 needeth no repentance " as a 

 father, 259 ; " the epistle of 

 Thomas," 418 



RoUeston, Professor G., visit to, i. 

 222 ; work on the simian brain, 

 275, 277 ; characterised, 303 

 teaches biology by types, ii. 83 n., 

 87 ; death of, 304 ; asked to 

 succeed, ib. 

 Letter to— his recovery, ii. 119 

 Roman Catholics and physical 

 science, i. 443 



i 



