5" 



LIFE OF PROFESSOR HUXLEY 



Hand, lecture on, i. 525, 533. 



Harcourt, Sir W., letter to, suppres- 

 sion of physiological experiment, 

 i. 467. 



Hardwicke, printer, i. 223-24. 



Harrison, F., in Metaphysical Society, 

 i- 338; attacks agnosticism, ii. 

 23S sq. ; controversy with : the 

 " Apologetic Irenicon," 318 sq.; 

 attack of, philosophically borne, 

 363- 



Harrison, J., letter to — science and 

 agriculture, i i. 300. 



Hartington, Lord, science should be 

 aided like the army and navy, ii. 

 164; technical education, 165; let- 

 ter to — Deceased Wife's Sister 

 Bill, 233. 



Hartismere, Lord, Vivisection Bill, i. 

 469. 



Harvey, i. 216; lecture on, 520, 523; 

 article on, ii. 1 ; tercentenary, 

 38s sq. 



Haughton, Professor S., leaves Natu- 

 ral History Review, i. 225. 



Hay, Sir John, visit to, at Tangier, 

 i. 397- 



Head, Francis, " javelins," ii. 182. 



Healy, T., and Parnell, ii. 292. 



Heathorn, Henrietta Anne (see Mrs. 

 T. H. Huxley), engagement, i. 

 39, 40; description of, 40; remote 

 prospect of marriage, 48, 49; ar- 

 rives in England, 138. 



Heathorn, Mrs., i. 242. 



Helmholtz, i. 279. 



Helps, Sir A., i. 279. 



Henslow, Professor, i. 96, 97, 160, 195, 

 196, 201 ; death of, 243; relation 

 to Darwin, ii. 42. 



Herring, memoir on, i. 159 ; experi- 

 ments as to the spawning of, 166; 

 address on, ii. 30. 



Herschel, Sir John, i. 64. 



Hesitation, no good ever done by, i. 

 432. 



Hippocampus, i. 206, 215. 



Hird, Dr., presents testimonial to, ii. 

 73- 



Hirst, Thomas Archer, i. 243; and x 

 Club, 277, 281, 282; character of, 

 419; Royal Medal, ii. 66; illness 

 of, 209; death of, 352. 



Histology, work on, i. 159. 



Historical Association of Lancashire 

 and Cheshire, presentation to 

 Huxley, i. 360. 



Hobhouse, Lord, Huxley secures in- 

 tellectual freedom, ii. 430. 



Hockenhull, Swanus de, ancestor of 

 the family of Huxley, i. 2. 



Holiday, work, i. 391, 513, 530, 53*1 

 borne well, ii. 45; definition of, 



63. 



Holland, Sir Henry, on Plato, ii. 451. 



Home Rule, letter to A. Grey, ii. 

 132; also 144, 188. 



Hooker, Sir J. D., his case * prece- 

 dent, i. 31, 61, 64; at Ipswich, 97; 

 at his marriage, 140 ; on Snow- 

 don with, 155 ; relations with 

 Darwin, 178; on species, 182, 190; 

 at Oxford, i860, 195, 200, 201, 202; 

 origin of friendship with, 232; re- 

 monstrates with Huxley on excur- 

 sions into philosophy,247; x Club, 

 278, ii. 128; clubs not for the old, 

 i. 282; with Huxley in Brittany, 

 308; President British Associa- 

 tion, 319; with Huxley in the 

 Eifel, 353 ; presentation to, at 

 Liverpool, 360; on Huxley's in- 

 tellect, 392 ; trouble with official 

 chief, 405, 408, 412, 419; account 

 of trip to the Auvergne, 420 sqq. ; 

 receives Order of the Pole Star, 

 427; on Belfast meeting of British 

 Association, 432, 445; unable to 

 write obituary of Darwin, ii. 41 ; 

 P.R.S., 54; vigour of, 174; his 

 treatment by Government, 176 ; 

 friendship with, 225 ; Royal So- 

 ciety's Medal, 431; Huxley's love 

 of the garden, 469-71. 

 Letters from — on his work on micro- 

 organisms, i. 356; Dana's obitu- 

 ary of Gray, ii. 205. 

 Letters to — his selection for the 

 Royal Medal, i. 119; E. Forbes, 

 126; his approaching marriage* 

 139 (two); submerged forest, 140; 

 British Museum Collections, 144; 

 science in the Saturday Review, 

 150; glacier paper, 155; Swiss 

 trip, 156; election to Imp. Acad. 

 Caes. : Fullerian Lectures, 161; on 



