496 



LIFE OF PROFESSOR HUXLEY 



Sanderson, Sir Burden, Vivisection 

 Bill, ii. 167, lO'J ; discussion 

 with Tyndall, 231 ; dines with, 

 308 



Sandon, Lord, leaves School Board, 

 u. 74 



Sandys, J. E., his speech presenting 

 Huxley for LL.D. at Cambridge, 

 ii. 267 ; letter to — " tenax pro- 

 positi," 268 



Satan, the prince of this world, iii. 

 220, 299, 301, 335 



Saturday Review, science in, i. 201 



Sauropsida, i. 424 



Savages, interview with, i. 74 



Savigny, his observations on Salpa 

 supplemented, i. 83 ; his mor- 

 phological method adopted, 

 134 



Schlagintweit, the brothers, i. 329 



Schmitz, Dr. L., head of Interna- 

 tional College, i. 389 



Schomburgk, Sir Richard, i. 341 



School Board, work on, ii. 23-47 ; 

 his campaign continued in " Ad- 

 ministrative Nihilism," 62 

 compromise, letters on, iii. 281 ; 

 Diggleite attack on the com- 

 promise, 334 



Schurman, Professor, on design in 

 evolution, iii. 56 



Science and Agriculture, iii. 193 



Science and Art Department, lectures 

 for, 1. 159 ; value of examina- 

 tious, 366 

 examinations, ii. 347 



"Science and Art in Relation to 

 Education," ii. 318 



Science and creeds, iii. IS ; and its 

 prophets, 322 



"Science and Culture," ii. 280 



" Science and Religion, Truthfulness 

 in," iii. 91 



" Science at Sea," i. 67 sq. 



Science, in public schools, i. 400 

 in elementary schools, ii. 24, 30, 

 38 ; the great tragedy of, 16 ; 

 definition of, ii. 2S6 ; at Oxford, 

 431, 432 



Science, Biological, and Medicine, 

 ii. :-;07 



Science Primers begun, ii. 57 



Science teachers, need of, i. 401 



Science teaching : scheme for the 

 International College, i. 444 



"Scientific Education," i. 443 



Scientific missionaries, ii. 82 



Scott, D. H., extends text-book on 

 Biology, ii. 86 



Scott, John Godwin, i. 23 



Scott, Mrs. J. G. (Eliza Huxley). 

 visit to, ii. 207 

 Letters to— prospects of Rattle- 

 snake voyage, i. 35-37 ; first 

 scientific memoir, 48 ; engage- 

 ment, 54 ; last cruise and 

 Kennedy's expedition, 63 ; re- 

 turn and ambitions, 88 ; char- 

 acter of Forbes, 138 ; death of 

 his mother : first lecture : irony 

 of his position, 143 ; Royal 

 Medal : people he can deal with, 

 152 ; Science and Mammon, 

 154 ; rounds the Cape Horn of 

 his life, 170 ; position in 1S5S, 

 220 ; his home in 1859, 231 ; his 

 reputation : slavery, 362 

 Sea serpent, letters on, iii. 281, 282 

 Selborne, Lord, in Metaphysical 



Society, i. 452 

 Sensation, lecture on, ii. 262 

 Seth, Professor, letters to — thanks 

 for imderstanding him : condi- 

 tions of Romanes Lecture : Far- 

 aday on popular audiences, iii. 

 300 ; Prolegomena : Spinoza, 303 

 Sextou, T., and Parnell, iii. 182 

 Shaftesbury, Lord, quotes Huxley's 

 definition of religion and moral- 

 ity, ii. 32 n. ; charges him with 

 advocating vivisections before 

 children, 154 sq. ; letter frou), 

 156 

 Sharpey, Dr. William, help from : 

 Secretary Royal Society till 

 1871, i. 87, 91 

 Vivisection Bill, ii. 176 

 " Shehretz," ii. 426 ; iii. 210 

 Sidgwick, Wm. C, rebuke to the 



Speaker, iii. 178 

 Sin, origin of, iii. 192 (cp. i. 399) 

 Sinclair, Sir J. G. T., letter to, on 

 Babbage's calculating machine, 

 iii. 162 

 Sion College, meeting, i. 436 n., 451 

 declines to attend opening of new 

 buildings at, ii. 473 

 Skelton, Sir John, visits, ii. 198, 

 225 

 Letters to ^Noctes Avihrosianw, 

 ii. 199 ; advantage of quasi- 

 Scotch nationality : the Hermi- 

 tage too pleasant for work, 226 ; 

 biography and fiction : con- 

 science and letter writing, 271 ; 

 dinner and discussion, ib. ; 

 The Crookit Meg, a reference to 

 Huxley, 283 ; introduction to 

 Tyndall, 312 ; Mary Stuart and 

 the Casket Letters, 329 ; Glad- 



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