526 



LIFE OF PROFESSOR HUXLEY 



Huxley laboratory, ii. 295. 

 Huxley's layer, i. 23. 



Iddesleigh, Lord, letter to — Civil List 

 pension, ii. 116. 



Idols, tendency to make, ii. 72. 



Ilkley, at, ii. 149, 179. 



Illustrious, H.M.S., ordered to join, 

 i. 80. 



Immortality, i. 260, ii. 322 (cp. ii. 

 29, 67). 



Immortality and the conservation of 

 energy, ii. 299. 



Imperial Institute, ii. 160-65. 



Impromptu speaking, ii. 440. 



Incapacity, machinery needed to facili- 

 tate its descent, i. 384. 



India, proposed visit to, i. 381; the 

 shortest way home from, 404, 408. 



Indian Empire, i. 524. 



Individuality, animal, i. 100, 142; lec- 

 ture on, 106. 



Induction, and Babbage's calculating 

 machine, ii. 278 sq. 



Intellect, English and Italian the 

 finest, i. 366. 



International College, i. 290 sq. ; sci- 

 ence at, 331. 



International Medical Congress, ii. 

 34 sq. 



Invertebrata, lectures on, i. 317. 



Ireland, interest in, ii. 47, 48. 



Irish affairs, ii. 291, 292; Parnell's re- 

 tirement, 292, 293 ; the cause of 

 all Irish trouble, 292; reason for 

 being a Unionist, 312. 



Irving, Sir Henry, visit from, ii. 446. 



Italian, ii. 444. 



Italy, visit to, ii. 87-110; moral of, in. 



Jamaica Committee, i. 300-304. 



James, Margaret, grandmother of T. 

 H. Huxley, i. 1. 



Jamieson, Professor E., i. 117. 



Jean Paul, Biography of the Twins, 

 i. 51. 



Jebb, Professor, on Erasmus, ii. 419. 



Jenner, and F.R.S., ii. 119. 



Jewsbury, Miss, friendship with, i.441. 



Jex Blake, Miss, letters to — on medi- 

 cal education for women, i. 415, 

 416; about her examination, 449. 



Jodrell, T. J. P., good advice, i. 95; at 



x Club, 279 ; wishes Huxley to 

 visit India, 381 n. 



John Inglesant suggests a scientific 

 novel, ii. 46. 



Johns Hopkins University, inaugural 

 address at, i. 500. 



Jones, Rymer, i. 102. 



Jones, Wharton, influence of his teach- 

 ing, i. 22, 27; comes to his first 

 lecture, 108. 



Joule, Dr., his work for science, ii. 173. 



Jowett, B., silence during opposition 

 to D.C.L. for Huxley, i. 355; visit 

 from, ii. 306; power of the priest- 

 hood, 401; last illness of, 387. 

 Letter to — science at Oxford, ii. 127, 

 128. 



Judd, Professor, theories of coral 

 reefs, ii. 170. 



Kalisch, Dr., zoological part of his 

 Commentary on Leviticus revised, 

 ii. 3i5- 



Karslake, Sir J. B., on Vivisection 

 Commission, i. 472. 



Kelvin, Lord, on Huxley's work in 

 support of Darwinism, i. 224. 



Kennedy, E. B.,his expedition, i. 45, 48. 



Kerville, H. G. de, letter to — Causeries 

 sur le Trans formisme : Lamarck : 

 atheism, ii. 172. 



Kidd, B., on Social Evolution, ii. 406. 



King, Clarence, letter to, on Marsh's 

 collections, i. 497. 



King's College, London, rejected for 

 chair at, i. 86, 116. 



Kingsley, Charles, first meeting with, 

 i. 131; opinion of Newman, ii, 240. 

 Letters to — on his son Noel's death: 

 his philosophy, i. 233-38; on spe- 

 cies and sterility : anthropomor- 

 phism, 258; intellect in man and 

 animals: genius a " sport " • 

 Christian dogmas criticised, 259 ; 

 matter and spirit, 261 ; on prayer, 

 266; Royal Institution lecture: 

 superstitions of men of science: 

 working-men's lectures: original 

 sin and Darwinism: whales, 279, 

 298; on Jamaica affair, 302, 303; 

 on Comte, 322. 



Kingsley, Miss, letters from Charles 

 Kingsley, i. 481. 



