The Life and Letters of Thomas 
Henry Huxley, vol 1 
 
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Title: The Life and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley Volume 1 
Author: Leonard Huxley 
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE 
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LIFE AND LETTERS OF THOMAS HENRY HUXLEY 
BY HIS SON 
LEONARD HUXLEY. 
 
IN THREE VOLUMES. 
VOLUME 1. 
 
PREFACE TO THE AMERICAN EDITION. 
The American edition of the "Life and Letters of Thomas Henry 
Huxley" calls for a few words by way of preface, for there existed a 
particular relationship between the English writer and his transatlantic 
readers. 
From the time that his "Lay Sermons" was published his essays found 
in the United States an eager audience, who appreciated above all 
things his directness and honesty of purpose and the unflinching spirit 
in which he pursued the truth. Whether or not, as some affirm, the 
American public "discovered" Mr. Herbert Spencer, they responded at 
once to the influence of the younger evolutionary writer, whose wide 
and exact knowledge of nature was but a stepping-stone to his interest 
in human life and its problems. And when, a few years later, after more 
than one invitation, he came to lecture in the United States and made 
himself personally known to his many readers, it was this widespread 
response to his influence which made his welcome comparable, as was 
said at the time, to a royal progress.
His own interest in the present problems of the country and the 
possibilities of its future was always keen, not merely as touching the 
development of a vast political force--one of the dominant factors of 
the near future--but far more as touching the character of its 
approaching greatness. Huge territories and vast resources were of 
small interest to him in comparison with the use to which they should 
be put. None felt more vividly than he that the true greatness of a 
nation would depend upon the spirit of the principles it adopted, upon 
the character of the individuals who make up the nation and shape the 
channels in which the currents of its being will hereafter flow. 
This was the note he struck in the appeal for intellectual sincerity and 
clearness which he made at the end of his New York "Lectures on 
Evolution." The same note dominates that letter to his sister--a 
Southerner by adoption--which gives his reading of the real issue at 
stake in the great civil war. Slavery is bad for the slave, but far worse 
for the master, as sapping his character and making impossible that 
moral vigour of the individual on which is based the collective vigour 
of the nation. 
The interest with which he followed the later development of social 
problems need not be dwelt on here, except to say that he watched their 
earlier maturity in America as an indication of the problems which 
would afterwards call for a solution in his own country. His share in 
treating them was limited to examining the principles of social 
philosophy on which some of the proposed remedies for social troubles 
were based, and this examination may be found in his "Collected 
Essays." But the educational campaign which he carried on in England 
had its counterpart in America. It was not only that he was chosen to 
open the Johns Hopkins University as the type of a new form of 
education; there and elsewhere pupils of his carried out in America his 
methods of teaching biology, while others engaged in general education 
would write testifying to the influence of his ideas upon their own 
methods of teaching. But it must be remembered that nothing was