igin of Species_, 136, 137;
reply to Bishop of Oxford, 138;
defence of Darwinism, 140;
on Darwin's death, 147, 148;
on Lyell's death, 80
Hybridity, Lyell's discussion on, 65, 103
Hypotheses of Creation, twofold character of, 5-8
Ideas _v._ Actions, Wallace on, 4
Independent discovery of Natural Selection by Wallace, 113;
Darwin's letter on, 113
Italian geologists, their anticipation of evolutionary ideas, 17
JACOB, his frauds based on ideas of heredity and variation, 9
JAMESON, R., founds Wernerian Society 1807, 25;
influence on Darwin, 97
_Journal of Researches_, by Darwin, 106;
dedicated to Lyell, 72
King's College, London, Lyell professor at, 65, 66
Kinnordy, Lyell at, 42, 43, 46
KIRWAN, DE LUC, and WILLIAMS, opposition to Hutton, 25
LAMARCK, his _Hydrogeologie_, 87;
_Philosophie Zoologique_, 88;
Lyell's admiration of, 64, 89;
criticism of theory, 64, 90;
views of Darwin on, 90, 91;
on geological time, 155
Lectures by Lyell, 65, 66
Linnean Society, papers of Darwin and Wallace at, 112, 129, 130
Literature, Lyell and, 52, 67;
Darwin and, 116, 117, 120;
his loss of interest in, 134, 135
LOCKHART and _Quarterly Review_, 60
LUCRETIUS, belief in Evolution, 3, 4
LYELL, CHARLES, use of term 'Creation,' 11;
on grandeur of idea of Evolution, 12;
birth and ancestry, 41;
education, 34, 42;
influence of Buckland on, 34, 42-44;
on Cuvier, 46;
change of views not due to Hutton's works, 45;
but to travel and observation, 45;
in East Anglia, 45;
in Strathmore, 46, 47;
abandons career as barrister for geology, 48;
work with Dr Mantell, 48;
visits to Continent, 48;
influence of von Hoff's works, 49;
of Scrope, 50;
his remarks on Hutton's supposed heresies, 51, 54;
influence of Gibbon on his literary style, 52;
praise of Hutton and Playfair at later date, 53;
review of Scrope's book on Auvergne, 56;
visit to Auvergne with Murchison, 56;
advocacy of travel for geologists, 56;
journeys in Italy, 58;
Lyell on Murchison, 57;
Murchison on Lyell, 58;
Lyell's avoidance of controversy, 63;
differences of opinion with Scrope, 62, 63;
attention to literary style, 65;
professorship at King's College, London, 65, 69;
lectures, 66;
controversies at Geological Society, 71;
aid of Darwin in discussions, 71;
his friendship with Darwin, 73, 104, 105;
his extreme caution, 75-77;
candour in
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