53<5 



LIFE OF PROFESSOR HUXLEY 



" Science at Sea," i. 50 sq. 



Science, in public schools, i. 299; in 

 elementary schools, 362, 366, 373; 

 the great tragedy of, 356; defini- 

 tion of, ii. 14; at Oxford, 127, 128. 



Science, Biological, and Medicine, 

 ii. 34. 



Science Primers begun, i. 387. 



Science teachers, need of, i. 299. 



Science teaching: scheme for the In- 

 ternational College, i. 331. 



" Scientific Education," i. 330. 



Scientific missionaries, i. 406. 



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

 Biology, 1. 409. 



Scott, John Godwin, i. 18. 



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

 to, i. 498. 

 Letters to — prospects of Rattlesnake 

 voyage, i. 26, 27 ; first scientific 

 memoir, 35; engagement, 40; last 

 cruise and Kennedy's expedition, 

 47, 48; return and ambitions, 65; 

 character of Forbes, 103; death of 

 his mother, 107; first lecture: 

 irony of his position, 108; Royal 

 Medal, 114; people he can deal 

 with, us; Science and Mammon, 

 116; rounds the Cape Horn of his 

 life, 127; position in 1858, 168; his 

 home in 1859, 173; his reputation, 

 271; slavery, 272. 



Sea serpent, letters on, ii. 367, 368. 



Selborne, Lord, in Metaphysical So- 

 ciety, i. 338. 



Sensation, lecture on, ii. 1. 



Seth, Professor, letters to — thanks for 

 understanding him! conditions of 

 Romanes Lecture: Faraday on 

 popular audiences, ii. 380; Pro- 

 legomena: Spinoza, 382. 



Sexton, T., and Parnell, ii. 292. 



Shaftesbury, Lord, quotes Huxley's 

 definition of religion and morali- 

 ty, i. 368 n. ; charges him with 

 advocating vivisections before 

 children, 460 sqq. ; letter from, 461. 



Sharpey, Dr. William, help from: 

 Secretary Royal Society till 1871, 

 i. 65, 68; Vivisection Bill, i. 471. 



" Shehretz," ii. 123, 314. 



Sidgwick, Wm. C, rebuke to the 

 Speaker, ii. 289. 



Sin, origin of, ii. 299 (cp. i. 297). 



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

 Babbage's calculating machine, 

 ii, 278. 



Sion College, declines to attend open- 

 ing of new buildings at, ii. 157. 



Sion House meeting, i. 325 n., 337. 



Skelton, Sir John, visits, i. 492, 512. 

 Letters to— Nodes Ambrosianae, i. 

 492; advantage of quasi-Scotch 

 nationality : the Hermitage too 

 pleasant for work, 513; biography 

 and fiction: conscience and letter 

 writing, ii. 7; dinner and discus- 

 sion, 8; The Crookit Meg, a refer- 

 ence to Huxley, 16; introduction 

 to Tyndall, 38; Mary Stuart and 

 the Casket Letters, 50; Gladstone 

 as controversialist, 130; nature 

 and suffering, 142, 143; historians 

 and practical discipline : an an- 

 tagonist " rouses his corruption) 

 i95» 196; retirement from London,. 

 303; the Casket Letters, 223; lim- 

 itations of the Romanes Lecture, 

 381 ; mending the irremediable, 

 3S2. 



Skull, theory of the Vertebrate, i. 152 

 further investigations, 165, 244. 



Slavery, i. 272. 



Smalley, G. W„ Huxley in New York 

 harbour, i. 494; description of 

 him as a lecturer, ii. 440; his 

 friends and talk, 446. 



Smith, Robertson, at x Club, i. 279. 



Smith, Sir William, i. 267; and Inter- 

 national College, 291 ; effect of the 

 name " vivisection," 459. 



Smith, Right Hon. W. H., Bible-read- 

 ing in schools, i. 367. 



Smyth, Warington W., i. 151; death 

 of, ii. 276. 



Snakes, lecture on, ii. 1. 



Socialism, State, and natural selec- 

 tion, ii. 284. 



Societies and ladies, i. 228. 



Society and societies, i. 348. 



Society for the propagation of com- 

 mon honesty, i. 214. 



Society of Arts, speech at, i. 509. 



Speaker, the, insinuations of, rebuked, 

 ii. 289. 



Species and sterility, i. 257. 



