Books: Episcopophagous Frogman
T. H. HUXLEY (330 pp.)Cyril Bibby Horizon ($5).
"Has a Frog a Soul, and of what Nature is that Soul, Supposing it to Exist?"
The question, which no longer seems urgent, was debated amid burning interest 90 years ago by London's Metaphysical Society, whose members included Cardinal Manning. William Ewart Gladstone and Alfred Lord Tennyson. The Society represented a kind of summit conference in the cold war between science and religion a war that made the Victorian mind, for all its surface confidence, highly fissionable.
The biggest frogman in the metaphysical puddle was a great, eloquent, side-whiskered, doggedly handsome jumping jack of all intellectual trades called Thomas Henry Huxley. For a while, belief seemed to be a question of Genesis or The Origin of Species, Adam or ape, God or Darwinand Evolutionary Biologist Huxley, as "Darwin's bulldog," was widely suspected of not being pro-God. For the line Huxley himself preferred to tread, a sort of high wire stretched between scientific fact and an unknowable God. he coined the word agnostic.
Scientific Humanist. Something of T. H. Huxley's prodigious reputationDarwin himself confessed that his own intelligence was "infantile" beside Huxley'scomes through in Biographer Cyril Bibby's book. He is abetted in forewords by Huxley's two greatly talented grandsons : Sir Julian and Aldous Huxley. Ironically. Scientist Julian praises grandfather's prose, while Stylist Aldous praises his pedagogics. Without much help from pedestrian Author Bibby, who bears down too heavily on Huxley's role as an educational reformer, the book crackles with examples of Huxley's wit as his other careers unfoldphysician, biologist, lecturer, theological controversialist. The greatest "scientific humanist" of his age, Huxley was once tempted to become a brewer in Australia, an artist and a poetthough Huxley's quoted lines on the death of Tennyson prove nothing but that he had read Tennyson and knew he was dead.*
"A highly improbable combination of genes," in Grandson Julian's phrase, is needed to explain Huxley's many-faceted genius. His father, who died mad, was a poor schoolmaster at Great Ealing (a school attended by Thackeray, Cardinal Newman and W. S. Gilbert); Tom was a pupil there briefly, and hated it. As a "plebeian,"' which is what he proudly called himself, young Huxley could not hope for a university education in 19th century England, but a scholarship and a medical brother-in-law saved him from the obscurity of the uneducated. He graduated in medicine from London's Charing Cross Hospital, served as a surgeon in the Royal Navy where his duties were largely confined to dredging up and dissecting marine organisms. He sent a constant stream of reports and papers to learned societies back home, and at 26, he had made enough of an impression to be elected a fellow of the Royal Society. Thus he began his life task, which was, as he saw it, to "convert the Christian Heathen of these islands to the true faith," i.e., science.
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