Thomas Henry Huxley

Autobiography and Selected Essays


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       Thomas Henry Huxley

      Autobiography and Selected Essays

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664644381

       PREFACE

       INTRODUCTION

       I — THE LIFE OF HUXLEY

       II — SUBJECT-MATTER, STRUCTURE, AND STYLE

       III — SUGGESTED STUDIES IN SUBJECT-MATTER, STRUCTURE, AND STYLE

       THOMAS HENRY HUXLEY — AUTOBIOGRAPHY 1

       ON THE ADVISABLENESS OF IMPROVING NATURAL KNOWLEDGE 19

       A LIBERAL EDUCATION 49

       ON A PIECE OF CHALK 57

       THE PRINCIPAL SUBJECTS OF EDUCATION 76

       THE METHOD OF SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATION 86

       ON THE PHYSICAL BASIS OF LIFE 92

       ON CORAL AND CORAL REEFS 110

       NOTES

       AUTOBIOGRAPHY

       ON THE ADVISABLENESS OF IMPROVING NATURAL KNOWLEDGE (1866)

       A LIBERAL EDUCATION (1868)

       ON A PIECE OF CHALK

       THE PRINCIPAL SUBJECTS OF EDUCATION (1882)

       THE METHOD OF SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATION (1863)

       ON THE PHYSICAL BASIS OF LIFE (1868)

       ON CORAL AND CORAL REEFS (1870)

       REFERENCE BOOKS

       Table of Contents

      The purpose of the following selections is to present to students of English a few of Huxley's representative essays. Some of these selections are complete; others are extracts. In the latter case, however, they are not extracts in the sense of being incomplete wholes, for each selection given will be found to have, in Aristotle's phrase, "a beginning, a middle, and an end." That they are complete in themselves, although only parts of whole essays, is due to the fact that Huxley, in order to make succeeding material clear, often prepares the way with a long and careful definition. Such is the nature of the extract A Liberal Education, in reality a definition to make distinct and forcible his ideas on the shortcomings of English schools. Such a definition, also, is The Method of Scientific Investigation.

      The footnotes are those of the author. Other notes on the text have been included for the benefit of schools inadequately equipped with reference books. It is hoped, however, that the notes may be found not to be so numerous as to prevent the training of the student in a self-reliant and scholarly use of dictionaries and reference books; it is hoped, also, that they may serve to stimulate him to trace out for himself more completely any subject connected with the text in which he may feel a peculiar interest. It should be recognized that notes are of value only as they develop power to read intelligently. If unintelligently relied upon, they may even foster indifference and lazy mental habits.

      I wish to express my obligation to Miss Flora Bridges, whose careful reading of the manuscript has been most helpful, and to Professor Clara F. Stevens, the head of the English Department at Mount Holyoke College, whose very practical aid made this volume possible.

      A. L. F. S.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      Of Huxley's life and of the forces which moulded his thought, the Autobiography gives some account; but many facts which are significant are slighted, and necessarily the later events of his life are omitted. To supplement the story as given by him is the purpose of this sketch. The facts for this account are gathered entirely from the Life and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley, by his son. For a real acquaintance with Huxley, the student should consult this source for himself; he will count the reading of the Life and Letters among the rare pleasures which have come to him through books.

      Thomas Henry Huxley was born on May 4, 1825. His autobiography gives a full account of his parents, his early boyhood, and his education. Of formal education, Huxley had little; but he had the richer schooling which nature and life give an eager mind. He read widely; he talked often with older people; he was always investigating the why of things. He kept a journal in which he noted thoughts gathered from books, and ideas on the causes of certain phenomena. In this journal he frequently wrote what he had done and had set himself to do in the way of increasing his knowledge. Self-conducted, also, was his later education at the Charing Cross Hospital. Here, like Stevenson in his university days, Huxley seemed to be idle, but in reality, he was always busy on his own private end. So constantly did he work over the microscope that the window at which he sat came to be dubbed by his fellow students "The Sign of the Head and Microscope." Moreover, in his regular courses at Charing Cross, he seems to have done work sufficiently notable to be recognized by several prizes and a gold medal.

      Of his life after the completion of his medical course, of his search for work, of his appointment as assistant