登陆注册
15743900000002

第2章 INTRODUCTION(1)

I

THE LIFE OF HUXLEY

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 surgeon on board the Rattlesnake, and of his scientific work during the four years'

cruise, Huxley gives a vivid description in the autobiography. As a result of his investigations on this voyage, he published various essays which quickly secured for him a position in the scientific world as a naturalist of the first rank. A testimony of the value of this work was his election to membership in the Royal Society.

Although Huxley had now, at the age of twenty-six, won distinction in science, he soon discovered that it was not so easy to earn bread thereby. Nevertheless, to earn a living was most important if he were to accomplish the two objects which he had in view. He wished, in the first place, to marry Miss Henrietta Heathorn of Sydney, to whom he had become engaged when on the cruise with the Rattlesnake; his second object was to follow science as a profession. The struggle to find something connected with science which would pay was long and bitter; and only a resolute determination to win kept Huxley from abandoning it altogether.

Uniform ill-luck met him everywhere. He has told in his autobiography of his troubles with the Admiralty in the endeavor to get his papers published, and of his failure there. He applied for a position to teach science in Toronto; being unsuccessful in this attempt, he applied successively for various professorships in the United Kingdom, and in this he was likewise unsuccessful. Some of his friends urged him to hold out, but others thought the fight an unequal one, and advised him to emigrate to Australia. He himself was tempted to practice medicine in Sydney; but to give up his purpose seemed to him like cowardice. On the other hand, to prolong the struggle indefinitely when he might quickly earn a living in other ways seemed like selfishness and an injustice to the woman to whom he had been for a long time engaged. Miss Heathorn, however, upheld him in his determination to pursue science; and his sister also, he writes, cheered him by her advice and encouragement to persist in the struggle. Something of the man's heroic temper may be gathered from a letter which he wrote to Miss Heathorn when his affairs were darkest. "However painful our separation may be," he says, "the spectacle of a man who had given up the cherished purpose of his life . . . would, before long years were over our heads, be infinitely more painful." He declares that he is hemmed in by all sorts of difficulties. "Nevertheless the path has shown itself a fair one, neither more difficult nor less so than most paths in life in which a man of energy may hope to do much if he believes in himself, and is at peace within." Thus relieved in mind, he makes his decision in spite of adverse fate.

"My course of life is taken, I will not leave London--I WILL make myself a name and a position as well as an income by some kind of pursuit connected with science which is the thing for which Nature has fitted me if she has ever fitted any one for anything."But suddenly the long wait, the faith in self, were justified, and the turning point came. "There is always a Cape Horn in one's life that one either weathers or wrecks one's self on," he writes to his sister. "Thank God, I think I may say I have weathered mine--not without a good deal of damage to spars and rigging though, for it blew deuced hard on the other side." In 1854 a permanent lectureship was offered him at the Government School of Mines;also, a lectureship at St. Thomas' Hospital; and he was asked to give various other lecture courses. He thus found himself able to establish the home for which he had waited eight years. In July, 1855, he was married to Miss Heathorn.

The succeeding years from 1855 to 1860 were filled with various kinds of work connected with science: original investigation, printing of monographs, and establishing of natural history museums. His advice concerning local museums is interesting and characteristically expressed. "It [the local museum if properly arranged] will tell both natives and strangers exactly what they want to know, and possess great scientific interest and importance.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 上清天关三图经

    上清天关三图经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 随身空间圆梦

    随身空间圆梦

    求你们别乱带入,什么涉及敏感话题,大家当我在写平行空间行不姜茗为了保住父亲的心血,带着空间先穿修真界,再穿异界,后回到现实,以便帮父亲度过难关,圆自己的心愿
  • 春雪

    春雪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 重生之平凡人生路

    重生之平凡人生路

    一个珠宝小商人重生回1994年,平平常常,没有异能,没有系统,没有种马,平平淡淡才是真。
  • 限时逼婚:霸道总裁的宠妻

    限时逼婚:霸道总裁的宠妻

    手握繁城尊贵神豪甘石霓的软肋,毫无背景的宋淇文做了一个疯狂的事——强嫁,逼娶。本想顶着甘太太的称号兴风作浪,丢尽甘家的脸,可是……神豪因为娶她而被甘老爷子净身出户。从此,神豪变成了土渣。“老婆,我没钱吃饭。”“老婆,水管漏了。”人人都知道她这个穷剩女养了只妖孽小白脸。甘石霓这人,逆性狂傲,目中无人,唯独喜欢对她又搂又抱。他压抑着怒火跟她玩了一场,却从没想过会玩上瘾。
  • 寰宇无圣

    寰宇无圣

    世间传言,得见原始之门,可问道巅峰,铸就长生永恒。宁缺,体藏原始之门的神秘少年,遭人逼迫之下逆世重修!当玄黄再造,盛世复苏,且看他如何搅风云,动乾坤,掌罗诸神。……登天阙,踏血歌,寰宇无圣,力伐苍穹!
  • 错生花

    错生花

    苏浅浅五岁时,在胡子叔叔和胡子阿姨的婚礼?认识了陈子昂。他送她的第一件礼物是一束满天星。“哇!满天星!”“你叫苏浅浅吗?我叫陈子昂,很高兴和你一起见证胡子叔叔和胡子阿姨的婚礼!”“恩?我也很幸运!”“你很喜欢满天星?”“恩!”苏浅浅对这束花儿爱不释手。“苏浅浅,你真好看!”“啊?”“我喜欢你!”原来,真正的第一次,是在那天,不过是四个字!
  • 中国古塔

    中国古塔

    中国古塔是中国五千年文明史的载体之一,被佛教界人士尊为佛塔。在当代中国辽阔美丽的大地上,随处都可以看到古塔的踪影。这些千姿百态的古塔,其造型之华美,结构之精巧,雕刻、装饰之华丽,都堪称古代建筑中的精品。我国的古塔虽然种类繁多,建筑材料和构成方法不尽相同,但是,这些古塔的基本结构是大体一样的。古塔由四部分组成:地宫、塔基、塔身、塔刹。塔这种古老的建筑,不仅被佛教界人士广为尊重,也为各地山林园林增添了绚丽的色彩。金东瑞编著的《中国古塔》介绍了我国的古塔文化,内容包括:中国古塔的起源、历史沿革、塔的结构、塔的材质、塔的造型、中国古塔文化等。
  • TFBOYS之我和你的幸福时光

    TFBOYS之我和你的幸福时光

    讲述三人毕业,各自忙自己的工作,但三人也经常也聚在一块,对方有什么事情,第一时间都会知道……在工作中,遇到了自己喜欢的女孩,鼓起勇气向女生表白对方答应后,两人公开恋情,恩爱的在一起……
  • 灵武圣帝之异界纵横

    灵武圣帝之异界纵横

    灵武大陆,万族林立,群雄并起:东境魔族,皇之玄天,乱世间;西域妖族,帝之无夜,昼不息;南阁主灵,灵之南天,镇天地;北宗修武,武之乾坤,战无敌!看一孱弱少年如何从群雄并起的灵武大陆脱颖而出,叱咤风云,纵横天下……