s: 



LIFE OF PROFESSOR HUXLEY 



Stephenson, G., i. 248, 249. 

 " Stewart, Professor Balfour, editor of 

 Science Primers, i. 387, ii. 2. 



Stocks, John Ellerton, i. 19, 68. 



Stokes, Sir G. G., i. 167; presentation 



to, at Liverpool, 360. 



Letter from — Parliament and the 



Presidency of the Royal Society, 



ii. 186. 



Letters to, ii. 186, 187 (cp. 184, 185). 



Strachey, E., i. 279. 



Strachey, Sir R-, appreciation of, ii. 

 414. 



Strauss, on the Resurrection, ii. 238. 



Struthers, Professor, visits, i. 439. 



Style, i. 231, 297, 319, 534, ii. 308; in- 

 fluence of his, i. 320; cannot judge 

 of his own compositions in MS., 

 532; the first pages of an essay 

 the chief trouble, ii. 157. 



Suarez, his teaching examined, 1. 392. 



Suicide, moral, ii. 49. 



Sullivan, Captain, at Falkland Islands, 

 i- 57- 



Sunday evening gatherings, 445 sg. ; 

 impression on friends, 446, 447 sg. 



Sunday Society, unable to support 

 prominently while P.R.S., ii. 61. 



Supernaturalism, ii. 317. 



Sydenham College, i. 18. 



Sydney, projected chair of Natural 

 History at, i. 83, 100. 



Sylvester, Professor, i. 15:. 



Tait, Professor, reconciliation with 

 Tyndall, i. 313; makes Huxley 

 play golf, 390. 



Taylor, Miss H., criticism of '* Ad- 

 ministrative Nihilism," i. 396. 



Taylor, Canon Isaac, language and 

 race, ii. 287. 



Taylor, Robert, Christianity compared 

 to Babism, ii. 242. 

 Letter to — success of Christianity 

 and the story of Christ, ii. 243. 



Teachers, lectures to, i. 406 sg. f 510. 



Technical Education, address on, i. 

 507; continuation of his work on 

 the School Board, ib. ; Report to 

 the Guilds, 508; engineers the 

 City and Guilds Institute, ib.; 

 supply of teachers, 509; speech at 

 the Society of Arts, ib. ; build- 



ings, ib.; letter on his aims, 510; 

 relation of industry to science, ii. 

 160; Imperial Institute, ib. sg.; 

 letters to Times, 162 sgq. ; cam- 

 paign interrupted by pleurisy, 

 165; at Manchester in the au- 

 tumn, 190-93. 



Technical education in agriculture, ii. 



300. 

 Teeth, writes on, i. 151. 



Tegumentary organs, article on, i. 151, 

 Teleology, i. 489 sq. ; see also s.v. De- 

 sign. 



" Tenax propositi," i. 81, 142. 



Tenby, survey work at, i. 122; fossil 

 forest at, 140. 



Tennessee, on the geology of, i. 499. 



Tennyson, " Ode on Wellington," i. 

 11; in Metaphysical Society, 337, 

 338; death of, ii. 358; visits to, 

 ib.; scientific insight of, 358, 359; 

 his talk, 359; insensibility to mu- 

 sic, ib.; on Browning's music, ib.; 

 funeral, ib. ; poem on, 360, 361. 

 Letter to — thanks for " Demeter '' : 

 envies his vigour, ii. 257. 



Tenterden, Lady, at Lynton, ii. 45. 



Tethea, on the anatomy of, i. 81. 



Theism, philosophical difficulties of, 

 ii. 153- 



Theological doctrines, truth under- 

 lying, ii. 321, 322. 



Theology, sentimental, ii. 322. 



Thompson, Archbishop, on modern 

 thought and positivism, i. 321; 

 and Metaphysical Society, 338. 



Thompson, Sir Henry, on Clifford's 

 illness, i. 537. 



Thomson, John, surgeon on the Rat- 

 tlesnake, i. 32, 34. 



Thomson, Joseph, description of Hux- 

 ley's lectures at Edinburgh, i. 

 475- 



Thomson, Sir W. (Lord Kelvin), 

 reconciliation with Tyndall, i. 313. 



Thomson, Sir Wyville, and Bathyb- 

 ius, i. 318; his course at Edin- 

 burgh taken by Huxley, 475, 480; 

 criticism of Darwin, ii. 15. 



Thorpe, Professor, and new Univer- 

 sity scheme, ii. 331. 



Thought, as a " function " of the 

 brain, ii. 299. 



