p 



LIST OF EVENING LECTURES. 



Ixix 



Date and Place 



1868. 

 1869. 

 1870. 

 1871. 



Norwich .. 



Exeter 



Liverpool . . 

 Edinburgh 



1872. Brighton 



1873, 

 1874. 



1875. 

 1876. 

 1877. 



Bradford 

 Belfast . . . 



Bristol .... 

 Glasgow . 

 Plymouth . 



1878. Dublin 



I 



1879. 

 1880. 

 1881. 



1882. 

 1883. 



Sheffield 

 Swansea 

 York 



Southamp- 

 ton. 

 Southport 



Lecturer 



1884. Montreal... 



188.5. Aberdeen. 



1886. 

 1887. 



Birmingham 

 Manchester 



J. Fergusson, F.R.S 



Dr. W. Odlincf, F.K.S 



Prof. J. Pliillips, LL.D.,F.R.S. 

 J. Norman Lockj'er F.E.S. .. 



Prof. J. Tyndall, LL.D., F.R.S. 

 Prof .W. J. i\racquorn Rankine, 



LL.D.. F.R.S. 

 F. A. Abel, F.R.S 



E. B. Ti'lor, F.R.S 



Prof. P. Martin Duncan, M.B., 



F.R.S. 

 Prof. W. K. ClifEord 



Subject of Discourse 



Prof. W. C.Williamson, F.R.S. 

 Prof. Clerk Maxwell, F.R.S. 

 Sir John Lubbock,Bart..M.P., 



F.R.S. 

 Prof. Huxley, F.R.S 



W.Spottiswoode,LL.D.,F.R.S. 



F. J. Bramwell, F.R.S 



Prof. Tait, F.R.S. E 



SirWyville Thomson, F.R.S. 

 W. Warington Smyth, M.A., 

 F.R.S. 



Prof. Odling, F.R.S 



Ct. J. Romanes, F.L.S 



Prof. Dewar, F.R.S 



W. Crookes, F.R.S 



Prof. E. Ray Lankester, F.R.S. 

 Prof .W.Boyd Dawkins, F.R.S. 



Francis Galton, F.R.S 



Prof. Huxley, Sec. R.S 



W. Spottiswoode, Pres. R.S. 



Prof. Sir Wm. Thomson, F.R.S. 

 Prof. H. N. Moseley, F.R.S. 

 Prof. R. S. Ball, F.R.S 



Prof. J. G. McKendrick, 

 F.R.S.E. 



Prof. O. J. Lodge, D.Sc 



Rev. W. H. Dallinger, F.R.S. 



Prof. W. G. Adams, F.R.S. ... 



John Murray, F.R.S.E 



A. W. Riicker, M.A., F.R.S. 

 Prof. W. Rutherford, M.D. ... 

 Prof. H. B. Dixon, F.R.S. ... 

 Col. Sir F. de Winton, 

 K.C.M.G. 



Archaeology of the early Buddhist 

 Monuments. 



Reverse Chemical Actions. 



Vesuvius. 



The Physical Constitution of the 

 Stars and Nebulse. 



The Scientific Use of the Imagination. 



Stream-lines and Waves, in connec- 

 tion with Naval Architecture. 



Some recent Investigations and Ap- 

 plications of Explosive Agents. 



The Relation of Primitive to Modern 

 Civilisation. 



Insect Metamori^hosis. 



The Aims and Instruments of Scien- 

 tific Though t. 

 Coal and Coal Plants. 

 Molecules. 

 Common Wild Flowers considered 



in relation to Insects. 

 The Hypothesis that Animals are 



Automata, and its History. 

 The Colours of Polarised Light. 

 Railway Safety Appliances. 

 Force. 



The CJmUciiffer Expedition. 

 The Physical Phenomena connected 



with the Mines of Cornwall and 



Devon. 

 The new Element, Gallium. 

 Animal Intelligence. 

 Dissociation, or Modern Ideas of 



Chemical Action. 

 Radiant Matter. 

 Degeneration. 

 Primeval Man. 

 Mental Imagery. 

 The Rise and Progress of Palfeon- 



tology. 

 The Electric Discharge, its Forms 



and its Functions. 

 Tides. 



Pelagic Life. 

 Recent Researches on the Distance 



of the Sun. 

 Galvanic and Animal Electricity. 



Dust. 



The Modern Microscope in Re- 

 searches on the Least and Lowest 

 Forms of Life. 



The Electric Light and Atmospheric 

 Absorption. 



The Great Ocean Basins. 



Soap Bubbles. 



The Sense of Hearing. 



The Rate of Explosions in Gases. 



Explorations in Central Africa. 



