ifilii i iii Illl j|3 I Sill! ll il Pf I ""v LIBRARY j UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SAN DIEGO GOULD AND LINCOLN, 59 WASHINGTON STREET, BOSTON, Would call particular attention to the following valuable wonts described in their Catalogue of Publications, viz. : Hugh Miller's 'Works. Bayne's Worka. Walker's Works. Miall's Works. Bungener's Wo*k. Annnal of Scientific; Discovery. Knight's Knowledge is Power. Krummaeher's Suffering Saviour, Banvard's American Histories. The Aimwell Stories. Hewcomb's Works. Tweedie's Works. Chambers's Works. Harris' Works. Kitto's Cycloptedii of Biblical Literature. Mrs. Knignt's Life of Montgomery. Kitto's History of Palestin, Wheewell's Work. Wayland's Works. Agassiz's Works. William's Works. Guyot's Works. Thompson's Better Land. Kimball's Heaven. Valuable Works on Missions. Haven's Mental Philosophy. Buchanan's Modern Atheism. Cruden's Condensed Concordance. Eadie's Analytical Concordance. The Psalmist : a Collection of Hymns. Valuable School Books. Works for Sabbath Schools. Memoir of Amos Lawrence. Poetical Works of Milton, Cowper, Scott. Elegant Miniature Volumes. Arvine's Cyclopasdia of Anecdotes. Kipley's Notes on Gospels, Acts, and Komans. Sprague's European Celebrities. Marsh's Camel and the Halllg. Kouet's Thesaurus of English Words. Haekett's Notes on Acts. M'Whorter's Yahveh Christ. Siebold and Stannius's Comparative Anatomy. Marco's Geological Map, V. 8. lieligious and Miscellaneous Works. Works in the various Departments "f Literature, Science and Art. iarris, .5., PUBLISHED BY GOULD AND LINCOLN, 59 WASHINGTON STBEET THE GREAT TEACHER) OT, Characteristics of our Lord's Ministry. "With an Intro- ductory Essay by HEMAN HCMPHRCT, D. D. 12mo, cloth. Price 85 cents. II. THE GREAT COMMISSION! or, the Christian Church constituted and charged to convey the Gospel to the world. A Prize Essay. With an Introductory Essay by WILLIAM R. WILLIAMS, D. D. 12mo, cloth. Price $1.00. III. THE PRE-ADAMITE EARTH; Contributions to Theological Science. New and Re- vised edition. 12mo, cloth. Price f 1.00. IV. MAN PRIMEVAL; or, the Constitution and Primitive Condition of the Unman Being. With a finely engraved Portrait of the Author. 12mo, cloth, Price 51.25. V. PATRIARCHY; or, The Family, its Constitution and Probation. Contribution* to Theo- logical Science. 12mo, cloth. Price (1.25. C7" The immense sale of Dr. Harris's Works, both in this country and in Europe, attest their intrinsic worth and great popularity. (11) OKKS BY HUGH MILLER, PUBLISHED BY GOULD AND LINCOLN, 59 "WASHINGTON STREET, BOSTON. I. THE OLD RED SANDSTONE; OR, NEW WALKS IN AN OLD FIELD. Illustrated with Plates and Geological Sections. 12mo, cloth. Price $1.00. "It is withal one of the most beautiful specimens of English composition to be found, convey- ing information on a most difficult and profound science, ill a style at once novel, pleasing and elegant" Da. SI-HAGUE, ALBAXT SHECTATOB. II. MY FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF ENGLAND AND ITS PEOPLE. "\VithafineEngravingoftheAuthor. 12mo, cloth. Price $1.00. A thrillinRlp interesting and instructive book of travels ; presenting the most perfectly life- like views of England and its People to be found in the language. III. THE FOOTPRINTS OF THE CREATOR; OR, THE ASTEROLEPIS OF STROM NESS. With numerous Illustrations. With a Memoir of the Author, by Louis AGASSIZ. 12mo, cloth. Price 81.00. Dr. Buckland said HE WOULD GIVE ms LEFT UAXD TO POSSESS SUCH POWEBS OF DESCBIP- TIOX AS THIS MAST. IV. MY SCHOOLS AND SCHOOLMASTERS; OR, THE STORY OF MY EDUCATION. AX AUTOBIOGRAPHY. With a full length Portrait of the Author. 12mo, cloth. Price $1.25. This is a personal narrative of a deeply interesting and instructive character, concerning one of the most remarkable men of the age. It should be read and studied by every young man in (he land. V. TESTIMONY OF THE ROCKS; OR, GEOLOGY IN ITS BEARINGS ON THE TWO THEOLOGIES, NATURAL AMJ REVEALED. "Thou shall be in league with the stones of the field." JOB. With numerous elegant Illustrations. One volume, royal 12mo. Price Sl-25. This is the largest and most comprehensive geological work of this distinguished author. It exhibits the profound learning, the felicitous style, and the scientific perception, which charac- terize his former works, while it embraces the latest results of geological discovery. But the great charm of the book lies in those passages of glowing eloquence, in which, having spread out his facts, the author proceeds to make deductions from them of the most striking and exciting character. C7"* The above works may be had in sets of unifc -m size and style of binding. IMPORTANT NEW WORKS. THE TESTIMONY OF THE ROCKS : or, Geology in its Bearings on the two Theologies, Natural and Revealed. By HUGH MILLER. "Thou shalt be in league with the stones of the field." Job. "With numerous elegant illustration.-. 12mo, cloth, $1 25. The completion of this important work employed the last hours of the lamented author, and may be considered his greatest and in fact Ids life work. MACATJLAY ON SCOTLAND. A Critique. By HUGH MILLER, Author of " Footprints of the Creator/ 1 &c. lOmo. flexible cloth, 25c. When we read Macaulay's last volumes, we said that they wanted nothing but the fiction to make an epic poem; and now it seems that they are not wanting even in that. PURITAN RECORDER. He meets the historian at the fountain head, tracks him through the old pamphlets and newspapers on which he relied,aud demonstrates that his own authorities are against him. BOSTON TKAN SCE:PT. THE GREYSON LETTERS. Selections from the Correspondence of K. E. H. GREYSO.N, Esq. Edited by HENRY ROGERS, Author of "The Eclipse of Faith." 12mo, cloth, $1.25. " Mr. Greyson and Mr. Rogers arc one and the same person. The whole work is from his pen ; and every letter is radiant with the genius of the author of the ' Eclipse of Faith.' " It discusses a wide range of subjects in the most attractive manner. It abounds in the keenest wit and humor, satire and logic. It fairly entitles Mr. Rogers to rank with Sydney Smith and Charles Lamb as a wit and humorist, and with Bishop Butler as a reasoner. If Mr. Rogers lives to accomplish our expectations, we feel little doubt that his name will share, with those of Butler and Pascal, in the gratitude and veneration of posterity. LONDON Qu A RTKRI.Y. Full of acute observation, of subtle analysis, of accurate logic, fine description, apt quotation, pithy remark, and amusing anecdote. . . . A book, not for one hour, but for all hours; not for one mood, but for every mood, to think over, to dream over, to laugh over. BOSTON JOURNAL. A truly good book, containing wise, true and original reflections, and written in an attractive style. Hon. GEO. S. HILLAHD, LL. D., in Boston Courier. Mr. Rogers has few equals as a critic, moral philosopher, and defender of truth. . . . This volume is full of entertainment, and full of food for thought, to feed on. PHILADELPHIA PRESBYTERIAN. The Letters are intellectual gems, radiant with beauty and the lights of genius, happily inter- mingling the grave and the gay. CHRISTIAN OBSERVER. ESSAYS IN BIOGRAPHY AND CRITICISM. By PETER BAYNE, M. A., Author of " The Christian Life, Social and Individual." Arranged in TWO SERIES, OE PARIS. 12mo, cloth, each, $1.25. This work is prepared by the author exclusively for his American publishers. It includes eigh- teen articles, viz.: FIRST SERIES : Thomas De Quincy. Tennyson and his Tenchers. Mrs. Borrett Browning. Recent Aspects of British Art. - John Ruskin. - Hugh Miller. The Modern Novel ; Dickens, tec, Ellis, Acton, and Currer Bell. Charles Kingsley. SECOND SERIES : S. T. Coleridge. T. B. Macaulay. Alison. Wellington. Napoleon. Flato. - Characteristics of Christian Civilization. Education ill the Nineteenth Century. The Pulpit and the Press. LIFE AND CHARACTER OF JAMES MONTGOMERY. Abridged from the recent London, seven volume edition. By MRS. II. C. KNIGHT, Author of ' Lady Iluutington and her Friends," &c. With a line likeness and an elegant illustrated title page on steel. 12mo, cloth, $1.25. This is tin original biography prepored from the abundant, but ill-digested materials con- tained in the seven octavo volumes of the London edition. The great bulk of that work, together With the heavy style of its literary e.ie.'r.tion, Tnust necessarily prevent its republicntion in this country. At the same time, the < ,li ri-jf a-.i put/'/: in America will expect some memoir of a poet whose hymns and sacred melodies ha- e Ace a t'c t <>' 'light of every household. This work, it is confi- dently hoped, will fully satisfy the p-jUJi I'rff* M u prepared by one who has already won distin- guished laurels in this department o1 htin'f/'l (X) WORKS RECENTLY PUBLISHED AND IN PRESS. THE LIFE AND POSTHUMOUS WOBKS OF THE REV. JOHN HARRIS, D. E>. Late Principal of New College, London, and formerly Theological Tutor of Chcshunt College. Edited by the Kev. PHILIP SMITH, B. A., Forn-erly a colleague of Dr. Harris in Cheshuut and New Colleges. This series of the Remains of their late lamented author will contain the SERMONS AND CHARGES delivered by him in various parts of the country, during the height of his reputation as a preacher. A TREATISE ON NATURAL AND REVEALED RELIGION, xhibiting, in one view, the latest results of his Theological Studies j and a Fragment, complete in itself, of the work which was in- terrupted by his death, on THE DIVINE GOVERNMENT OF NATIONS. Besides other Minor Writings and Fragments. The works will not extend beyond four elegant royal 12mo volumes. The MtJMOi i: will be in one volume, uniform with the works. The first volume, consisting of Sermons, has just been published, and the second volume will shortly be issued. The Sermons of Dr. Harris will probably prove to be among his most popular productions. They are quite unlike other writings of the same class. Many of them are master-pieces 01 originality and eloquence. Some of them will compare favorably with the most celebrated pieces of pulpit oratory. The pulpit was Dr. Harris's favorite theatre of action, and it is well known that he bestowed im- mense labor in preparation for it. In consequence, he acquired the highest reputation as a preacher, and his services were in constant request on important occasions. Thus it happened that most of the Sermons here presented were preached twenty times or more. But impressive as thry must have been when uttered by the living voice, they are scarcely less so when read from the printed page. They stir the soul like strains of martial music. THE POOR BOY AND MERCHANT PRINCE; or, ELEMENTS OF SUCCESS DRAWN PKOM THE LlFE AND CHARACTER OP THE LATE AMOS LAW- RENCE. A Book for Youth. By WILLIAM M. THAYER, author of "The Morning Star," " Life at the Fireside," etc. etc. 16mo, cloth. 75 cents. The publishers feel that the character of this little work warrants them in styling it ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS FOR BOYS THAT HAS EVER BEEN ISSUED. Its basis is the life and character of AMOS LAWRENCE, and its design is to do for boys what the " DIARY AND CORRESPONDENCE" of Lawrence is fitted to do for men, young and old. Lawrence is the model man to whom the eye of the boy ii directed in every chapter, and his sayings and doings, so far as they have a bearing on the subject in hand, are produced and commented upon. But Lawrence is not the only character presented; numerous anecdotes of other distinguished persons are introduced, all going to show that Lawrence, and such men, possessed certain elements of character essential to success, in common. The work is thus rendered extremely entertaining, while it is all the while highly instructive. HAR^SONY QUESTIONS ON THE FOUR GOSPELS, for the use of Sab- bath Schools. By Rev. S. B. SWAIN, D. D. VOL. I. 18mo. 12 eta. This is the first of a new series of Question Books, which will be completed in three volumes. The plan differs from all others in this, that it is based upon a HARMONY of the gospels. Instead of taking one of the gospels, that of Mathew, for instance, and going through with it, the author takes from ALL of the gospels those parts relating to the same event, and brings them together in the same Lesson. In this way the pupil gets a view of events in THE ORDER OF TIME, and also a view, at one glance, of all the connected circumstances. The questions are so framed as to avoid two ex- tremes ; that of multiplying difficulties on the one hand, and that of making everything easy on the other, hut few of the questions can be answered by YES or NO. A PEACTICAL bearing is given to the subjecf. of every lesson. THE EPISTLE OF PAUL TO THE ROMANS. With NOTES, chiefly Explanatory. Designed for Teachers in Sabbath Schools and Bible Classes, and as an Aid to Family Instruction. By HENRY J. RIPLEY, Prof in Newton Theo- logical Inst. 12mo, cloth, 67 cis.just published. ( j j ) NEW AND VALUABLE WORKS. MENTAL PHILOSOPHY; INCLUDING THE INTELLECT, THE SENSIBILITIES, AND THE WILL. BY JOSEPH HAVEN, PROFESSOR OP INTELLECTUAL AND MORAL PHILOSOPHY, AMHERST COLLEGE. Royal 12mo, cloth, $1.50. The need of a new text-book on Mental Philosophy has long been felt and acknowledged by emi- nent teachers in this department. While many of the books in use arc admitted to possess gr?at merits in some respects, none has been found altogether satisfactory AS A TEXT-BOOK. The author of this work, having learned by his own experience as a teacher of the science in one of our mDst flourishing colleges what was most to be desired, has here undertaken to supply the want. How far he has succeeded, those occupying similar educational positions are best fitted to judge. In now sub- mitting the work to their candid judgment, and to that of the public at large, particular attention is invited to the following characteristics, by which it is believed to be pre-eminently distinguished. 1. The COMPLETENESS with which it presents the whole suhject. Some text-books treat of only one class of faculties, the Intellect, for example, omitting the Sensibilities and the Will. This work includes the whole. The author knows of no reason why Moral Fhilsophy should not treat of the WHOLE mind in all its faculties. 2. It is strictly and thoroughly SCEINTIFIC. The author has aimed to make a science of the mind, not merely a series cf essays on certain faculties, like those of Stewart and Kcid. 3. It presents a careful ANALYSIS of the mind as a whole, with a view to ascertain its several facul- ties. This point, which has been greatly overlooked by writers on mental science, Prof. Haven has made a speciality. It has cost him immense study to satisfy himself in obtaining a true result 4. The HISTORY AND LITERATURE of each topic are made the subject of special attention. While some treatises are wholly deficient in this respect, others, as that of Stewart, so intermingle literary and critical disquisition, as seriously to interfere with the scientific statement of the topic in hand. Prof. Haven, on the contrary, has traced the history of each important branch of the science, and thrown the result into a separate section at the close. This feature is regarded as wholly original. 5. It presents the LATEST RUSCLTS of the science, especially the discoveries of Sir William Ham- ilton in relation to the doctrines of Perception and of Logic. On both of these subjects the work is Hamiltonian. The value of this feature will best be estimated by those who know how difficult of access the Hamiltonian philosophy has hitherto been. No American writer before Prof. Haven has presented any adequate or just account of Sir William's theory of perception and of reasoning. 6. The author has aimed to present the subject in an ATTRACTIVE STYLE, consistently with a thorough scientific treatment. He has proceeded on tr.e ground that a due combination of the POETIC element with the scientific would effi ct a great improvement in philosophic composition. Perspicuity and precision, at least, will be found to be marked features of his style. 7. The author has studied CONDENSATION. Some of the works in use are exceedingly diffuse. Prof. Haven has compressed into one volume what by other writers has been spicad over three or four. Both the pecuniary and the intellectual advantages of this condensation are obvious. Prof. Park, of Andover, having examined a large portion of the work in manuscript, snys, " It I* DISTINGUISHED I'or its clearness of style, perspicuity of method, candor of spirit, acumen and comprehensiveness of thought. I have been heartily interested in it" THE WITNESS OF GOD ; or The Natural Evidence of His Being and Perfections, as the Creator and Governor of the World, and the presumptions which it affords in favor of a Supernatural Revelation of His Will. By JAMES BUCHANAN, D. D., LL.D., Divinity Professor in the New College, Edinburgh; author of u Jlodern Atheism," etc. 12mo, cloth, $1.25. In press. GOTTIIOLD'S EMBLEMS; or, Invisible things understood by things that are made. BY CHRISTIAN SCKIVER, Minister of Magdeburg in 1671. Trans- lated from the twenty-eighth German edition, by the llev. KOBEUT MENZIES. 12iuo, cloth. 2>i press. THE EXTENT OF THE ATONEMENT in its Relations to God and the Universe. By THOMAS W. JENKYN. D. D. 12mo, cloth, 85 cts. In press. O3~ The calls for this most important and popular work, which for some time past has been out of print in this country, have been frequent and urgent. The publishers, therefore, are hnppy in being able to issue the work moKouoULY BEVISED BT THE AUTHOB, EXPUESSLY FOB THE AMERICA* EDITION. (kit) THE FOOT-PRINTS OF THE CREATOR: OR, THE ASTEROLEPIS OF STROMNESS. HUGH MILLER, AUTHOR OF "THE OLD RED SANDSTONE," ETC. " When I asked him how this earth could have been repeopled if ever it had under gone the same fate it was threatened with by the comet of 1683, he answered, 'that required the power of a Creator.' " Conduit's ' Conversation wit/t Sir Isaac JVewto* " FROM THE THIRD LONDON EDITION. WITH A MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR, BY LOUIS AGASSIZ. BOSTON: GOULD AND LINCOLN, 69 'WASHINGTON' STREET. NEW YORK : SHELDON, BLAKEMAN & CO. CINCINNATI: GEO. 3. BLANCHABJX 1858. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1850, by GOULD, KENDALL AND LINCOLN, fn the Clerk's Office of the District Caart for the District of Massachusetts. STEREOTYPED AT THE BOSTON STEREOTYPE FOUNDRY. Printed by G. C Rand & Co., No. 3 Cornliill TO SIR PHILIP DE MALPAS GREY EGERTON, BART., M. P., F. K. S. & G. S. To y -u, Sir, as our highest British authority on fossil fishes, I take the liberty of dedicating this little volume. In tracing the history of Creation, as illustrated in that ichthyic division of the vertebrata which is at once the most ancient and the most extensively preserved, I have introduced a considerable amount of fact and observation, for the general integrity ot which my appeal must lie, not to the writings of my friends the geologists, but to the strangely significant record in- scribed in the rocks, which it is their highest merit justly to interpret and faithfully to transcribe. The ingenious and popular author whose views on Creation I attempt contro- verting, virtually carries his appeal from science to the wan< of it. I would fain adopt an opposite course : And my use. on this occasion, of your name, may serve to evince the de sire which I entertain that the collation of my transcripts of hitherto uncopied portions of the geologic history with the IV DEDICATION. his.ory itself, should be in the hands of men qualified, by original vigor of faculty and the patient research of years, either to detect the erroneous or to certify the true. Fur- ther, I feel peculiar pleasure in availing myself of the op- portunity furnished me, by the publication of this little work, of giving expression to my sincere respect for one who, oc- cupying a high place in society, and deriving his descent from names illustrious in history, has wisely taken up the true position of birth and rank in an enlightened country and age ; and who, in asserting, by his modest, persevering la- bors, his proper standing in the scientific world, has rendered himself first among his countrymen in an interesting depart- ment cf Natural Science, to which there is no aristocratic or 'roy i ad." J lave the honor to be, Sir, With admiration and respect, Your obedient humble servant, HUGH MILLER. TO THE READER. THERE are chapters in this little volume which \v ill, I am afraid, be deemed too prolix by the general reader, and which yet the geologist would like less were there any portion of them away. They refer chiefly to organisms not hitherto figured nor described, and must owe their modicum of value to that very minuteness of detail which, by critics of the merely literary type, unacquainted with fossils, and not greatly interested in them, may be regarded as a formidable defect, suited to overlay the general subject of the work. Perhaps the best mode of compromising the matter may be to intimate, as if by beacon, at the cutset, the more repulsive chapters ; somewhat in the way that the servants of the Humane Society indi- VI TO THE READER. cate to the skater who frequents in winter the lakes in the neighborhood of Edinburgh, those parts of the ice on which he might be in danger of losing him- self. I would recommend, then, readers not particu- larly palaeontological, to pass but lightly over the whole of my fourth and fifth chapters, with the latter half of the third, marking, however, as they skim the pages, the conclusions at which I arrive regarding the bulk and organization of the extraordinary animal described, and the data on which these are founded. My book, like an Irish landscape dotted with green bogs, has its portions on which it may be perilous for the unpractised surveyor to make any considerable stand, but across which he may safely take his sights and lay down his angles. It will, I trust, be found, that in dealing with errors which, in at least their primary bearing, affect ques- tions of science, I have not offended against the cour- tesies of scientific controversy. True, they are errors which also involve moral consequences. There is a species of superstition which inclines men to take on trust whatever assumes the name of science ; and which seems to be a reaction on the old superstition, that had faith in witches, but none in Sir Isaac New- TO THE READER. Vll ton, and believed in ghosts, but failed to credit the Gregorian cabndar. And, owing mainly to the wide diffusion of this credulous spirit of the modern type, as little disposed to examine what it receives as its ancient unreasoning predecessor, the development doctrines are doing much harm on both sides of the Atlantic, especially among intelligent mechanics, and a class of young men engaged in the subordinate de- partments of trade and the law. And the harm, thus considerable in amount, must be necessarily more than merely considerable in degree. For it invariably hap- pens, that when persons in these walks become ma- terialists, they become also turbulent subjects and bad men. That belief in the existence after death, which forms the distinguishing instinct of humanity, is too essential a part of man's moral constitution not to be missed when away ; and so, when once fairly eradi- cated, the life and conduct rarely fail to betray its absence. But I have not, from any consideration of the mischief thus effected, written as if arguments, like cannon-balls, could be rendered more formidable than in the cool state by being made red-hot. I have not even felt, in discussing the question, as if I had a man before me as an opponent j for though my B Vlll TO THE READER. work conta'ns numerous references to the author of the " Vestiges," I have invariably thought on these occasions, not of the anonymous writer of the vol- ume, of whom I know nothing, but simply of an in- genious, well-written book, unfortunate in its facts, and not always very happy in its reasonings. Fur- ther, I do not think that palseontological fact, in its bearing on the points at issue, is of such a doubtful complexion as to leave the geologist, however much from moral considerations in earnest in the matter, any very serious excuse for losing his temper. In my reference to the three great divisions of the geologic scale, I designate as Palceozoic all the fossil- iferous rocks, from the first appearance of organic ex- istence down to the close of the Permian system ; all as Secondary, from the close of the Permian system down to the close of the Cretaceous deposits ; and all as Tertiary, from the close of the Cretaceous deposits down to the introduction of man. The wood-cuts of the volume, of which at least nine tenths of the whole represent objects never figured before, were drawn and cut by Mr. John Adams of Edinburgh, (8, Heriot Place,) with a degree of care and skill which has left me no reason to regret my distance TO THE HEADER. IX from the London artists and engravers. So far at least as the objects could be adequately represented on wood, and in the limited space at Mr. Adams' command, their truth is such that I can safely recom- mend them to the palaeontologist. In the accompa- nying descriptions, and in my statements of geologic fact in general, it will, I hope, be seen that I have not exaggerated the peculiar features on which I have founded, nor rendered truth partial in order to make it serve a purpose. Where I have reasoned and in- ferred, the reader will of course be able to judge for himself whether the argument be sound or the deduc- tion just ; and to weigh, where I have merely specu- lated, the probability of the speculation ; but as, in at least some of my statements of fact, he might lie more at my mercy, I have striven in every instance to make these adequately representative of the ac- tualities to which they refer. And so, if it be ulti- mately found that on some occasions I have misled others, it will, I hope, be also seen to be only in cases in which I have been mistaken myself. The first or popular title of my work, " Foot-prints of the Cre- ator," I owe to Dr. Hetherington, the well-known historian of the Church of Scotland. My other va- X TO THE READER. rious obligations to my friends, literary and scientific, the reader will find acknowledged in the body of the volume, as the occasion occurs of availing myself of either the information communicated, or the organ- ism, recent or extinct, lent me or given. HUGH MILLER, AUTHOR OF OLD RED SANDSTONE ' AND " FOOTPRINTS OP THE CREATOR THE geological works of Hugh Miller have excited the greatest interest, not only among scientific men, but also among general read- ers. There is in them a freshness of conception, a power of argu- mentation, a depth of thought, a purity of feelings, rarely met with in works of that character, which are well calculated to call forth sympathy, and to increase the popularity of a science which has al- ready done so much to expand our views of the Plan of Creation. The scientific illustrations published by Mr. Miller are most happily combined with considerations of a higher order, rendering both equally acceptable to the thinking reader. But what is in a great degree peculiar to our author, is the successful combination of Chris- tian doctrines with pure scientific truths. On that account, his works deserve peculiar attention. His generalizations have nothing of the vagueness which too often characterize the writings of those authors who have attempted to make the results of science subservi- ent to the cause of religion. Struck with the beauty of Mr. Miller'? works, it has for some time past been my wish to see them more exten- sively circulated in this country ; and I have obtained leave from the author to publish an American edition of his "Footprints of the Creator," for which he has most liberally furnished the publishers with the admirable wood-cuts of the original. While preparing some additional chapters, and various notes illus- trative of certain points alluded to incidentally in this work, .t waa deemed advisable to preface it with a short biographical notice of B* Xll HUGH MILLER. the author. I had already sketched such a paper, when I became acquainted with a full memoir of this remarkable man, containing most interesting details of his earlier life, written by that eminent historian of the " Martyrs of Science," the great natural philosopher of Scotland. It has occurred to me that, owing to the frequent ref- erences which I could not avoid to my own researches, I had better substitute this ample Biography for my short sketch, with such alter- ations and additions as the connection in which it is brought here would require. I therefore proceed to introduce our author with Sir David Brewster's own words : Of all the studies which relate to the material universe, there is none, perhaps, which appeals so powerfully to our senses, or which comes into such close and immediate contact with our wants and enjoyments, as that of Geology. In our hourly walks, whether on business or for pleasure, we tread with heedless step upon the ap- parently uninteresting objects which it embraces : but could we rightly interrogate the rounded pebble at our feet, it would read us an exciting chapter on the history of primeval times, and would tell us of the convulsions by which it was wrenched from its parent rock, and of the floods by which it was abraded and transported to its present humble locality. In our visit to the picturesque and the sublime in nature, we are brought into closer proximity to the more interesting phenomena of geology. In the precipices which protect our rock- girt shores, which flank our mountain glens, or which va- riegate our lowland valleys, and in the shapeless fragments at their base, which the lichen colors, and round which the ivy twines, we see the remnants of uplifted and shattered beds, which once re- posed in peace at the bottom of the ocean. Nor does the rounded boulder, which would have defied the lapidary's wheel of the Giant Age, give forth a less oracular response from its grave of clay, or from its lair of sand. Floated by ice from some Alpine summit, or hurried along in torrents of mud, and floods of water, it may have traversed a quarter of the globe, amid the crash of falling for- ests, and the death shrieks of the noble animals which they sheltered The mountain range, too, with its catacombs below, along which tht earthquake transmits its terrific sounds, reminds us of the mightj power by which it was upheaved ; while the lofty peak, with its cap of ice, or its nostrils of fire, places in our view the tremendous agencies which have beer, at work beneath us. But it is not merely amid the powers of external nature that the once hidden things of the Earth are presented to our view. Our HUGH MILLER. XU1 temples and our palaces are formed from the rocks of a primeval age ; bearing the very ripple-marks of a Pre- Adamite ocean, grooved by the passage of the once moving boulder, and embosoming the relics of ancient life, and the plants by which it was sustained. Our dwellings, too, arc ornamented with the variegated limestones, the indurated tombs of molluscous life, and our apartments heated with the carbon of primeval forests, and lighted with the gaseous element which it confines. The obelisk of granite, and the colossal bronze which transmit to future ages the deeds of the hero and the sage, are equally the production of the Earth's prolific womb ; and from the green bed of the ocean has been raised the pure and spot- less marble, to mould the divine lineaments of beauty, and perpetu- ate the expressions of intellectual power. From a remoter age, and a still greater depth, the primary and secondary rocks have yielded a rich tribute to the chaplet of rank, and to the processes of art. Exhibiting, as it peculiarly does, almost all those objects of inter- est and research, Scotland has been diligently studied both by na- tive and foreign observers ; and she has sent into the geological field a distinguished group of inquirers, who have performed a noble feat in exploring the general structure of the Earth, in decyphering its ancient monuments, and in unlocking those storehouses of mineral wealth, from which civilized man derives the elements of that gigan- tic power which his otherwise feeble arm wields over nature. The occurrence of shells on the highest mountains, and the re- mains of plants and animals, which the most superficial observer could not fail to notice, in the rocks around him, have for centuries commanded the attention and exercised the ingenuity of every stu- dent of nature. But though sparks of geological truth were from time to time elicited by speculative minds, it was not till the end of the last century that its great lights broke forth, and that it took the form and character of one of the noblest of the sciences. Without undervaluing the labors of Werner, and other illustrious foreigners, or those of our southern countrymen, Mitchell and Smith, at the close of the last century, we may characterize the commencement of the present as the brightest period of geological discovery, and place its most active locality in the northern metropolis of our island. It was doubtless from the lloyal Society of Edinburgh, as a centre, that a great geological impulse was propagated southward, and it was by the collision of the Wernerian and Huttonian views, the antagonist theories of water and of fire, that men of intellectual power were dmmoned from other studies ; and that grand truths, which fanati XIV HUGH MILLER. cism and intolerance had hitherto abjured, rose triumphant over the ignorance and bigotry of the age. The Geological Society of London, which doubtless sprung from the excitement in the Scottish metropo- lis, entered on the new field of research with a faltering step. The prejudices of the English mind had been marshalled with illiberal violence against the Huttonian doctrines. Infidelity and Atheism were charged against their supporters ; and had there been a Protes- tant Inquisition in England at that period of general political excite- ment, the geologists of the north would have been immured in its deepest dungeons. Truth, however, marched apace; and though her simple but ma- jestic procession be often solemn and slow, and her votaries few and dejected, yet on this, as on every occasion, she triumphed over the most inveterate prepossessions, and finally took up her abode in those very halls and institutions where she had been persecuted and re- viled. When their science had been thus acquitted of the charge of impiety and irreligion, the members of the Geological Society left their humble and timid position of being the collectors only of the materials of future generalizations, and became at once the most suc- cessful observers of geological phenomena, and the boldest asserters of geological truth. In this field of research, in which the physical, as well as the in - tellectual, frame of the philosopher is made tributary to science, two of our countrymen Sir Roderick Murchison and Sir Charles Lyell have been among our most active laborers. From the study of their native glens, these distinguished travellers, like the Humboldts and the Von Buchs of the continent, have passed into foreign lands, exploring the north and the south of Europe, and extending their labors to the eastern ranges of the Ural and the Timan, and to the Apallachians and the Alleghanies in the far west. But while our two countrymen were interrogating the strata of other lands, many able and active laborers had been at work in their own. Among the eminent students of the structure of the earth, Mr. Hugh Miller holds a lofty place, not merely from the discovery of new and undescribed organisms in the Old Ked Sandstone, but from the accuracy and beauty of his descriptions, the purity and elegance of his composition, and the high tone of philosophy and religion, which distinguishes all his writings. Mr. Miller is one of the few individuals in the history of Scottish science who have raised themselves above the labors of an humble profession, by the force of their genius and the excellence of their character, to a compara- HTJCH MILLER. XV lively high place in the social scale. Mr. Telford, like Mr. Miller, followed the profession of a stone-mason, before his industry and self- tuition qualified him for the higher functions of an architect and an engineer. And Mr. Watt and Mr. Rennie rose to wealth and fame without the aid of a university education. But, distin- guished as these individuals were, none of them possessed those qualities of mind which Mr. Miller has exhibited in his writings ; and, with the exception of Burns, the uneducated genius which has done honor to Scotland during the last century, has never displayed that mental refinement, and classical taste, and intellectual energy^ which mark all the writings of our author. "We wish that we could have gratified our readers with an authentic and even detailed narrative of the previous history of so remarkable a writer, and of the steps by which his knowledge was acquired, and the difficulties which he encountered in its pursuit ; but though this is not, to any great extent, in our power, we shall at least be able, chiefly from Mr. Miller's own writings, to follow him throughout his geological career. Mr. Miller was born at Cromarty, of humble but respectable pa- rents, whose history would have possessed no inconsiderable interest, even if it had not derived one of a higher kind from the genius and fortunes of their child. By the paternal side he was descended from a race of sea-faring people, whose family burying-ground, if we judge from the past, seems to be the sea. Under its green waves his father sleeps : his grandfather, his two granduncles, one of whom sailed round the world with Anson, lie also there ; and the same extensive cemetery contains the relics of several of his more distant relatives. His father was but an infant of scarcely a year old, at the death of our author's grandfather, and had to commence life as a poor ship-boy ; but such was the energy of his mind, that, when little turned of thirty, he had become the master and owner of a fine large -sloop, and had built himself a good house, which entitled his son to the franchise on the passing of the Reform Bill. Having unfortunately lost his sloop in a storm, he had to begin the world anew, and he soon became master and owner of another, and would have thriven, had he lived ; but the hereditary fate was too strong for him, and when our author was a little boy of five summers, his father's fine new sloop foundered at sea in a terrible tempest, and he and his crew were never more heard of. Mr. Miller had two sisters younger than himself, both of whom died ere they attained XVI HUGH MILLER. to womanhood. His mother experienced the usual difficulties which a -widow has to encounter in the decent education of her family ; but she struggled honestly and successfully, and ultimately found her reward in the character and fame of her son. It is from this excellent woman that Mr. Miller has inherited those sentiments and feelings which have given energy to his talents as the defender of revealed truth, and the champion of the Church of his fathers. Shrc was the great granddaughter of a venerable man, still well knrwn to tradition in the north of Scotland as Donald Roy of Nigg, a sort of northern Peden, who is described in the history of our Church as the single individual who, at the age of eighty, when the presbytery of the district had assembled in the empty church for the purpose of inducting an obnoxious presentee, had the courage to protest against the intrusion, and to declare " that the blood of the people of Nigg would be required at their hands, if they settled a man to the walls of that church." Tradition has represented him as a seer of visions, and a prophesier of prophecies ; but whatever credit may be given to stories of this kind, which have been told also of Knox, Welsh, and Rutherford, this ancient champion of Non-Intrusion was a man of genuine piety, and the savor of his ennobling beliefs and his strict morals has survived in his family for generations. If the child of such parents did not receive the best education which his native town could afford, it was not their fault, nor that of his teacher. The fetters of a gymnasium are not easily worn by the adventurous youth who has sought and found his pleas- ures among the hills and on the waters. They chafe the young and active limb that has grown vigorous under the blue sky, and never known repose but at midnight. The young philosopher of Cromarty was a member of this restless community ; and he had been the hero of adventures and accidents among rocks and woods, which are still remembered in his native town. The parish school was therefore not the scene of his enjoyments ; and while he was a truant, and, with reverence be it spoken, a dunce, while under its jurisdiction, he was busy in the fields and on the sea-shore in collecting those stores of knowledge which he was born to dispense among his fellow- men. He escaped, however, from school, with the knowledge of reading, writing, and a little arithmetic, and with the credit of unit- ing a great memory with a little scholarship. Unlike his illustrious predecessor, Cuvier, he had studied Natural History in the fields and among the mountains ere he had sought for it in books ; while the HUGH MILLER. XV11 French p -jlosopher had become a learned naturalist before he had even lookid upon the world of Nature. This singular contrast it is not difficult to explain. With a sickly constitution and a delicate frame, the youthful Cuvier wanted that physical activity which the observation of Nature demands. Our Scottish geologist, on the con- trary, in vigorous health, and with an iron frame, rushed to the rocks and the sea-shore in search of the instruction which was not provided for him at school, and which he could find no books to supply. After receiving this measure of education, Mr. Miller set out in February, 1821, with a heavy heart, as he himself confesses, " to make his first acquaintance with a life of labor and restraint : " " I was but a slim, loose-jointed boy at the time, fond of the pretty intangibilities of romance, and of dreaming when broad awake ; and wo- ful change ! I was now going to work at what Burns has instanced in his ' Twa Dogs ' as one of the most disagreeable of all employments to work in a quarry. Bating the passing uneasiness occasioned by a few gloomy anticipations, the portion of my life which had already gone by had been happy beyond the common lot. I had been a wanderer among rocks and woods, a reader of curious books, when I could get them, a gleaner of old traditionary stories, and now I was going to exchange all my day-dreams and all my amusements for the kind of life in which men toil every day that they may be enabled to eat, and eat every day that they may be enabled to toil. The quarry in which I wrought lay on the southern shore of a noble inland bay, or frith, rather, (the Bay of Cromarty,) with a little, clear stream on the one side, and a thick fir wood on the other. It had been opened in the Old Red Sandstone of the dis- trict, and was overtopped by a huge bank of diluvial clay, and which rose over it in some places to the height of nearly thirty feet." Old Red Sandstone, p. 4. After removing the loose fragments below, picks and wedges and levers were applied in vain by our author and his brother workmen to tear up and remove the huge strata beneath. Blasting by gun- powder became necessary. A mass of the diluvial clay came tumbling down, " bearing with it two dead birds, that in a recent storm had crept into one of the deeper fissures, to die in the shelter." While admiring the pretty cock goldfinch, and the light-blue and grayish- yellow woodpecker, and morali?Ang on their fate, the workmen were ordered to lay aside their tools, and thus ended the first day's labor of our young geologist. The sun was then sinking behind the thick fir wood behind him, and the long dark shadows of the trees stretch- XV111 HUGH MILLER. ing to the shore. Notwithstanding his blistered hands, and tie fatigue -which blistered them, he found himself next morning as light of heart as his fellow-laborers, and able to enjoy the magnificent scenery around him, Avhich he thus so beautifully describes : " There had been a smart frost during the night, and the rime lay white on the grass as we passed onwards through the fields ; but the sun rose in a clear atmosphere, and the day mellowed as it advanced into one of those delightful daj's of early spring which give so pleasing an earnest of what- ever is mild and genial in the better half of the year. All the workmen rested at midday, and I went to enjoy my half hour alone on a mossy knoll in the neighboring wood, which commands through the trees a wide prospect of the bay and the opposite shore. There was not a wrinkle on the water, nor a cloud in the sky ; and the branches were as moveless in the calm as if they had been traced on canvas. From a wooded promon- tory that stretched half way across the frith, there ascended a thin col- umn of smoke. It rose straight on the line of a plummet for more than a thousand yards ; and then, as reaching a thinner stratum of air, spread out equally on every side, like the foliage of a stately tree. Ben Wevis rose to the west, white with the yet unwasted snows of winter, and as sharply defined in the clear atmosphere as if all its sunny slopes and blue retiring hollows had been chiselled in marble. A line of snow ran along the oppo- site hills ; all above was white, and all below was purple." Old Red Sandstone, pp. 6, 7. In raising from its bed the large mass of strata which the gunpow- der had loosened, on the surface of the solid stone, our young quar- rier descried the ridged and furrowed ripple marks which the tide leaves upon every sandy shore, and he wondered what had become of the waves that had thus fretted the solid rock, and of what ele- ment they had been composed. His admiration was equally excited by a circular depression in the sandstone, " broken and flawed in every direction, as if it had been the bottom of a pool recently dried up, which had shrunk and split in the hardening." And before the day closed, a series of large stones had rolled down from the clay, " all rounded and water-worn, as if they had been tossed in the sea or the bed of a river for hundreds of years." Was the clay which enclosed them created on the rock upon which it lay ? No workman ever manufactures a half- worn article ! were the ejaculations o 4 the geologist at his alphabet. Our author and his companions were Foon removed to an easier wrought quarry, and one more pregnant with interest, which had Oeen opened "in a lofty wall of cliffs tliat overhangs the northern HUGH MILLER. XIX shore of the Moray Frith." Here the geology of the district exhib- ited itself in section. " "We see in one place the primary rock, with its veins of granite and quartz, its dizzy precipices of gneiss, and its huge masses of hornblende ; we find the secondary rock in another, with its bed of sandstone and shale, its spars, its clays, and its nodular limestones. We discover the still little known but highly interesting fossils of the Old Red Sandstone in one deposition ; we find the beautifully preserved shells and lignites of the lias in another. There are the remains of two several creations at once before us. The shore, too, is heaped with rolled fragments of almost every variety of rock, basalts, ironstones, hypersthenes, porphyries, bituminous shales, and micaceous schists. In short, the young geologist, had he all Europe before him, could hardly choose for himself a better field. I had, however, no one to tell me so at the time, for geology had not yet travelled so far north ; and so, without guide or vocabulary, I had to grope my way as I best might, and find out all its wonders for myself. But so slow was the process, and so much was I a seeker in the dark, that the facts contained in these few sentences were the patient gatherings of years." Old Red Sand-stone, pp. 9, 10. In this rich field of inquiry, our author encountered, almost daily, new objects of wonder and instruction. In one nodular mass of limestone he found the beautiful ammonite, like one of the finely sculptured volutes of an Ionic capital. Within others, fish-scales and bivalve shells ; and in the centre of another he detected a piece of decayed wood. Upon quitting the quarry for the building upon which the workmen were to be employed, the workmen received half a holiday, and our young philosopher devoted this valuable interval to search for certain curiously shaped stones, which one of the quarriers told him resembled the heads of boarding-pikes, and which, under the name of thunder-bolts, were held to be a sovereign remedy for cattle that had been bewitched. On the shore two miles off, where he expected these remarkable bodies, he found deposits quite different either from the sandstone cliffs or the primary rocks further to the west. They consisted of " thin strata of limestone, alternating with thicker beds of a black slaty substance," which burned with a bright flame and a bituminous odor. Though only the eighth part of an inch thick, each layer contained thousands of fossils peculiar to the lias, scallops and gryphites, ammonites, twigs and leaves of plants, cones of pine, pieces of charcoal, and scales of fishes, the impressions being of a chalky whiteness, contrasting strikingly with their black bituminous lair. Among these fragments of animal and vegetable life, he at last detected his thunder-bolt in the c XX HUGH MILLER. form of a Belcmnite, the remains of a kind of cuttle-fish long since extinct. In the exercise of his profession, which " was a wandering one," our author advanced steadily, though slowly and surely, in his geo- logical acquirements. " I remember," says he, " passing direct on one occasion from the wild western coast of Ross-shire, where the Old Red Sandstone leans at a high angle against the prevailing quartz rock of the district, to where, on the southern skirts of Mid-Lothian, the mountain limestone rises amid the coal. I have resided one season on a raised beach on the Moray Frith. I have spent the season immediately following amid the ancient granites and contorted schists of the central Highlands. In the north, I have laid open by thousands the shells and lignites of the Oolite ; in the south, I have disinterred from their matrices of stone or of shale the huge reeds and tree ferns of the carboniferous period. * * * In the north, there occurs a vast gap in the scale. The Lias leans unconformably against the Old Red Sandstone; there is no mountain limestone, no coal meas- ures, none of the New Red Marls or Sandstones. There are at least three entire systems omitted. But the upper portion of the scale is well- nigh complete. In one locality we may pass from the Lower to the Upper Lias, in another from the Inferior to the Great Oolite, and onward to the Oxford Clay and the Coral Rag. We may explore in a third locality beds identical in their organisms with the Wealden of Sussex. In a fourth, we find the flints and fossils of the chalk. The lower part of the scale is also well-nigh complete. The Old Red Sandstone is amply developed in Moray, Caithness, and Ross, and the Grauwacke very extensively in Banffshire. But to acquaint one's self with the three missing formations, to complete one's knowledge of the entire scale, by filling up the hiatus. it is necessary to remove to the south. The geology of the Lo- thians is the geology of at least two thirds of the gap, and perhaps a little more ; the geology of Arran wants only a few of the upper beds of the New Red Sandstone to fill it entirely." Old Red Sandstone, pp. 13-17. After having spent nearly fifteen years in the profession of a stone- mason, Mr. Miller was promoted to a position more suited to his genius. "When a bank was established in his native town of Crom- aity, he received the appointment of accountant, and he was thus employed, for five years, in keeping ledgers and discounting bills. When the contest in the Church of Scotland had come to a close, by the decision of the House of Lords in the Auchterarder Case, Mr. Miller's celebrated letter to Lord Brougham attracted the particu- lar attention of the party which was about to leave the Establish- ment, and he was selected as the most competent person to conduct HUGH MILLER. XXi C Vitness newspaper, the principal metropolitan organ of the Free Cl.iUch. The great success which this journal has met with is owing, doubtless, to the line articles, political, ecclesiastical, and geological, which Mr. Miller has written for it. In the few leisure hours which so engrossing an occupation has allowed him to enjoy, he has devoted himself to the ardent prosecution of scientific inquiries ; and we trust the time is not far distant when the liberality of his country, to which he has done so much honor, will allow him to give his whole time to the prosecution of science. Geologists of high character had believed that the Old Red Sand- stone was defective in organic remains ; and it was not till after ten years' acquaintance with it that Mr. Miller discovered it to be richly fossiliferous. The labors of other ten years were required to assign to its fossils their exact place in the scale. Among the fossils discovered by our author, the Pterichthys or winged fish is doubtless the most remarkable. He had disinterred it so early as 1831, but it was only in 1838 that he " introduced it to the acquaintance of geologists." It was not till 1S31 that Mr. Miller began to receive assistance in his studies from without. In the ap- pendix to Messrs. Anderson of Inverness's admirable Guide to the Highlands and Islands of Scotland, which " he perused with intense interest," he found the most important information, respecting the geology of the North of Scotland ; and during a correspondence with the accomplished authors of that work, many of his views were ae- veloped, aud his difficulties removed. In 1838, he communicated to Dr. Malcolmson of Madras, then in Paris, a drawing and description of the Pterichthys. His letter was submitted to Agassiz, and subse- quently a restored drawing was communicated to the Elgin Scientific Society. The great naturalist, as well as the members of the provincial society, were surprised at the new form of life which Mr. Miller had disclosed, and some of them, no doubt, regarded it with a sceptical eye. " Not many months after, however, a true bona fide Pterichthys was turned up in one of the newly-discovered beds of Nairnshire." In his last visit to Scotland, Agassiz found six species of the Pterichthys, three of which, and the wings of a fourth, were in Mr. Miller's collection. This remarkable animal has less resemblance than any other fossil of the Old Red Sandstone to anything that now exists. When first brought to view by the single blow of a hammer, there appeared on a ground of light- colored limestone the effigy of a creature, fash- ioned apparently out of jet, with a body covered with plates, two powerful looking arms articulated at the shoulders, a head as en- XX11 HUGH MILLER. tirely lost in the trunk as that of the ray, (or skate,) and a long angular tail, equal in length to a third of the entire figure. Its general resemblance is to the letter T, the upper part of the ver- tical line being swelled out, and the lower part ending in an angular point, the two horizontal portions being, in the opinion of Agassiz, organs of locomotion. To this remarkable fossil M. Agassiz has given the appropriate name of Pterichthys Milleri. An account of it, accompanied with two fine specimens, was communicated to the Geological Section of the British Association at Glasgow, in Sep- tember, 1840 ; and the most ample details, with accurate drawings, were afterwards published, in 1841, in Mr. Miller's first work, The Old Red Sandstone, which was dedicated to Sir Roderick Murchison, who was born on the Old lied Sandstone of the North, in the same district as Mr. Miller, and whose great acquirements and distin- guished labors are known all over the world among scientific men. This admirable work has already passed through three editions. From the originality and accuracy of its descriptions, and the im- portance of the researches which it contains, it has obtained for its author a high reputation among geologists ; while from the elegance and purity of its style, and the force and liveliness of its illustrations, it has received the highest praise from its more general readers.* Although we have been obliged, from the information which it contains of our author's early studies, to mention the " Old lied Sandstone" as if it had been his first work; yet so early as 1830, after he had made his first fossil discoveries at Cromarty, he com- posed a paper on the subject, (his first published production,) which appeared as one of the chapters of a small legendary and descriptive work, entitled The Traditional History of Cromarty, which did not appear till 1835. This chapter, entitled " The Antiquary of the World," possesses a high degree of interest. After describing the scene around him in its pictorial aspect, and under the warm associ- ations, which link it with existing life, he surveys it with the cool eye of an "antiquary of the world," studying its once buried monu- ments, and decyphering the alphabet of plants and animals, the hieroglyphics which embosom the history of past times and of suc- * Mr. Miller is the author also of Scenes and Legends of the JVortA of Scotland, ore vol. 8vo. ; A Letter fr urn one of tlic Scotch people to the Rigid Honorable Lord Bronghiin and Vau.z, on the op nions expressed by his Lordship In the Ji tichtcrarder disc ; and Tin Whiffgism of the O'd School, us exemplified in the Pts, scooped ou' internally like the letter V ; and were evidently intermedi ate in their character between the scales which cover the Glyptolepis and those of the Holoptychius. And the stellate markings which M. Eichwald graphically describes as mi- nute paps rising out of the middle of star-like wreaths of little leaflets, were restricted to the dermai plates of the head. Agassiz ultimately succeeded in classing the bones which had at first so puzzled him, into two divisions interior and dermal ; and the latter he divided yet further, though not without first lodging a precautionary protest, founded on the extreme obscurity of the subject, into cranial and opercular. Of the interior bones he specified two, a super-scapular bone, (supra-scapulaire,) that bone which in osseous fishes completes the scapular arch or belt, by uniting the scapula to the cranium ; and a maxillary or upper jaw-bone. But his world-wide acquaintance with existing fishes could lend him no assistance in determining the places of the dermal bones : they formed the mere fragments of a broken puzzle, of which the key was lost. Even in their detached and irre- ducible state, however, he succeeded in basing upon them several shrewd deductions. He inferred, in the first place, that the Asterohpis was not, as had been at first supposed, a cuirassed fish, which took its place among the Cephalaspians, but a strongly helmed fish of that Coelacanth family to which the Holoptychius and Glyptolepis belong ; in the second, that, like several of its bulkier cogeners, it was in all probability a broad, flat-headed animal ; and, in the third, that as its re- mains are found associated in the Russian beds with nume- rous detached teeth of large size, the boar tusks of Ku- orga, which present internally that peculiar microscopic OF THE ASTEROLEPIS. 51 character on which Professor Owen has erected his Den- drodic or tree-toothed family of fishes, it would in all like- lihood be found that both bones and teeth belonged to the same group. " It appears more than probable," he said, " that one day, by the discovery of a head or an entire jaw, it will be shown that the genera Dendrodus and Asterolepis form but one." As we proceed, the reader will see how justly the ichthyologist assigned to the Asterolepis its place among the Coelacanths, and how entirely his two other con- jectures regarding it have been confirmed. " I have had in general," he concluded, " but small ctnd mutilated fragments of the creature's bones submitted to me, and of these, even the surface ornaments not well preserved ; but I hope the immense materials with which the Old Red Sandstone of Russia has furnished the savans of that country will not be lost to science ; and that my labors on this interesting genus, incomplete as they are, will excite more and more the atten- tion of geologists, by showing them how ignorant we are of all the essential facts concerning the history of the first inhab- itants of our globe." I know not what the savans of Russia have been doing for the last few years ; but mainly through the labors of an intelligent tradesman of Thurso, Mr. Robert Dick, one of those working men of Scotland of active curiosity and well- developed intellect, that give character and standing to the rest, I arn enabled to justify the classification and confirm the conjectures of Agassiz. Mr. Dick, after acquainting him- self, in the leisure hours of a laborious profession, with the shells, insects, and plants of the northern locality in which he resides, had set himself to study its geology ; and with this view he procured a cooy of the little treatise on the Old Red Sandstone to which 1 have already referred, and which 52 RECENT HISTOEY OF THE ASTEEOLEPIS. was at that time, as Agassiz's Monograph of the Old Red fishes had not yet appeared, the only work specially devoted to the palaeontology of the system, so largely developed in the neighborhood of Thurso. With perhaps a single excep- tion, for the Thurso rocks do not yet seem to have yielded a Pterichthys, he succeeded in finding specimens, in a state of better or worse keeping, of all the various ichthyolites which I had described as peculiar to the Lower Old Red Sandstone. He found, however, what I had not described, the remains of apparently a very gigantic ichthyolite ; and, communi- cating with me through the medium of a common friend, he submitted to me, in the first instance, drawings of his new set of fossils ; and ultimately, as I could arrive at no sat- isfactory conclusion from the drawings, he with great liber- ality made over to me the fossils themselves. Agassiz's Monograph was not yet published ; nor had I an opportu- nity of examining, until about a twelvemonth after, the casts, in the British Museum, of the fossils of Professor Asmus. Besides, all the little information, derived from various sources, which I had acquired respecting the Rus- sian Chelonichlhys, for such was its name at the time, referred it to the cuirassed type, and served but to mislead. I was assured, for instance, that Professor Asmus regarded his set of remains as portions of the plates and paddles of a gigantic Pterichthys, of from twenty to thirty feet in length. And so, as I had recognized in the Thurso fossils the peculiarities of the Holoplychian (Ccelacanth) family, 1 at first failed to identify them with the remains of the great Russian fish. All the larger bones sent me by Mr. Dick were, I found, cerebral ; and the scales associated with these Jidicated, not a cuirass-protected, but a scale-covered body and exhibited, in their sculptured and broadly imbri- FAMILY OF THE ASTEROLEPIS. Ot> cated surfaces, the well-marked Coelacanth style of disposition and ornament. But though I could not recognize in either bones or scales the remains of one ichthyolite more of the Old Red Sandstone, " that could be regarded as manifesting as peculiar a type among fishes as do the Ichthyosauri and Plesiosauri among reptiles," * I was engaged at the time in a course of inquiry regarding the cerebral development of the earlier vertebrata, that made me deem them scarce less interesting than if I could. Ere, however, I attempt com- municating to the reader the result of my researches, I must introduce him, in order that he may be able to set out with me to the examination of the Asterolepis from the same start- ing-point, to the Coelacanth family, indisputably one of the oldest, and not the least interesting, of its order. So far as is yet known, all the fish of the earliest fossilif- erous system belonged to the placoid or " broad plated " order, a great division of fishes, represented in the existing seas by the Sharks and Rays, animals that to an internal skele- ton of cartilage unite a dermal covering of points, plates, or spines of enamelled bone, and have their gills fixed. The dermal or cuticular bones of this order vary greatly in form, according to the species or family : in some cases they even vary, according to their place, on the same individual. Those button-like tubercles, for instance, with an enamelled thorn, bent like a hook, growing out of the centre of each, which run down the back and tail, and stud the pectorals of the thorn-back, (Raja clavata,) differ very much from the smaller thorns, with star-formed bases, which roughen the other parts of the creature's body ; and the bony points which mottle * Agassiz's description of the Pterichthys, as quoted by Humboldt, in his Cosmos. 5* 54 FAMILY the back and sides of the s.iarks are, in most of the known species, considerably more elongated and prickly than the points which cover their fiirs, belly, and snout. The extreme forms, however, of the shagreen tubercle or plate seem to be those of the upright prickle or spine on the one hand, and of the slant-laid, rhomboidal, scale-shaped plate on the other. The minuter thorns of the ray (fig. 2, a) exemplify the extreme of the prickly type ; the fins, ab- domen, and anterior part of the head of the spotted dog-fish (Scy Ili- um stellare) are covered by lozenge- shaped little plates, which glisten with enamel, and are so thickly set that they cover the entire surface of the skin, (fig. 3, ,) and these a Shagreen of the TJiornback seem equally illustrative of the scale- (Rajaclavata.) like fornflt They are s h ag reen b Shagreen of Sphagodvs, . . a placoid of the Upper P omts passing into osseous scales, Silurian* without, however, becoming really such ; though they approach them so nearly in the shape and disposition of their upper disks, that the true scales, also osse- ous, of the Acantliodes sulcatus, (fig. 3, a,) a Ganoid of the Coal Measures, can scarce be distinguished from them, even when microscopically examined. It is only when seen in section that the d'stinctive difference appears. The true scale of the Acanthodes, though considerably elevated in the centre, seems to have been planted on the skin ; whereas the scale-like sha- green of the dog-fish is elevated over it on an osseous pedicle or footstalk (fig. 5, a) as a mushroom is elevated over the sward * From Hutchison's Silurian System. OF THE ASTEROLEPIS. 55 on its stem ; and the base of the stalk Fig. 3. is found to resemble in its stellate charac- ter that of a shagreen point of the prickly type. The apparent scale is, we find, a bony prickle bent at right angles a little over its base, and flattened into a rhom- boidal disk atop. In small fragments of shagreen, (fig. 2, b ) which have been detected in the oone-bed of the Upper Ludlow Rocks, sulcatus. (Upper Silurian,) and constitute the most b. Shagreen ofScy ilium ancient portions of this substance known , stelUt ' ( Snout ^ (Mag. eight diameters.) to the palaeontologist, the osseous tuber- cles are, as in the minuter spikes of the ray, of the upright thorn-like type ; they merely serve to show that the pla- coids of the first period possesssed, like those of the exist- ing seas, an ability of secreting solid bone on their cuticular surfaces ; and that, though at least such of them as have bequeathed to us specimens of their dermal armature pos- sessed it in the form farthest removed from that of their im- mediate successors the ganoid fishes, they resembled them not less in the substance of which their dermoskeletal, than in that of which their endoskeletal, parts were composed. For the internal skeleton in both orders, during these early ages, seems to have been equally cartilaginous, and the cutic- ular skeleton equally osseous. In the ichthyolitic formation immediately over the Silurians, that of the Lower Old Red Sandstone, the Ganoids first appear; and the members of at least one of the families of the deposit, the Acanths, a family rich in genera and species, seem to have formed connecting ILks between this second order and their placoid predecessors. They were covered with true 56 FAMILY scales, (fig. 4, a,) and their free gills were protected by gill- covers; and so they must be regarded as real Ganoids ; but as the shagreen of the spotted dog-fish nearly ap- proaches, in form and character, to ga- noid scales, without being really such, the scales of this family, on the other hand, approached equally near, without changing their nature, to the shagreen of the Placoids, especially to that of the spiked dogfish, (Spinax Acanthias.) (Fig. 4, Z.) We even find on their under surfaces what seems to be an approxi- mation to the characteristic footstalk. They so considerably thicken in the middle from their edges inwards, (fig. 5, c,) as to terminate in their centres in obtuse points. With these shagreen- like scales, the heads, bodies, and fins of all the species of at least two , ^\ ^ * ne -A-canth genera, Cheiracan- t/ius and Dip] acanthus, were as thick- a. Section of shagreen of j covere d as the heads, bodies, and Scylhum stellar e. b. Under surface of do. fins of the sharks are with their sha- green ; and so slight was the degree of imbrication, that the portion of each scale overlaid by the two scales in immediate advance of it did not ex- ceed the one twelfth part of its entire area. In the scale of the C heir acanthus we find the covered portion indicated by a smooth, narrow band, that ran along its anterior edges, and which the furrows that fretted the exposed surface did not a. Scales of Cheiracan- thus microlepidotus. b. Shagreen of Spinax Acanthias. (Snout.) (Mag. eight diameters.) Kg. 5. a c. Section of scales of Cheiracanlhus micro- lejridotus. d. Under surface of do. (Mag. eight diameters.) OP THE ASTEEOLEPIS. 57 6. traverse. It may be added, that both genera had the anterior edge of their fins armed with strong spines, a characteris- tic of several of the Placoid families. In the Dipterian genera Osteolepis and Diplopterus the scales were more unequivocally such than in the Acanths, and more removed from shagreen. The under surface of each was traversed longitudinally by a raised bar, which attached it to the skin, and which, in the transverse section, serves to remind one of the shagreen footstalk. They are, besides, of a rhomboidal form ; and, when seen in the finer speci- mens, lying in their proper places on what had been once the creature's body, they seem merely laid down side by side in line, like those rows of glazed tiles that pave a cathe- dral floor ; but on more care- ful examination, we find that each little tile was deeply grooved on its higher side and (The single scales mag. two diame- end, (for it lay diagonally in re- ters ; ~ the others nat ' size ' ) lation to the head,) like the flags of a stone roof, (fig. 6, a,) Osteolepis microlepido- tus. b. Scales of an undescribed species of Glyplolepis.* * These stales, which occur in a detached state, in a stratified clay of the Old Red Sandstone, near Cromarty, present for their size a larger extent of cover than the scales of any other Ganoid. 58 FAMILY that its lateral and anterior neighbors impinged upon it along these grooves to the extent of about one third its area, and that it impinged, in turn, to the same extent on the scales that bordered on it posteriorly and latero-posteriorly. Now, in the Ccelacanth family, (and on this special point the foregoing rerna? ks are intended to bear,) the scales, which were gen- erally of a round or irregularly oval form, (fig. 6, J,) over- lapped each other to as great an extent as in any of the exist- ing fishes of the Cycloid or Ctenoid orders, to as great an extent, for instance, as in the carp, salmon, or herring. In a slated roof there is no part on which the slates do not lie double, and along the lower edge of each tier they lie triple ; there is more of slate covered than of slate seen : where- as in a tile-roof, the covered portion is restricted to a small strip running along the top and one of the edges of each tile, and the tiles do not lie double in more than the same degree in which the slates lie triple. The scaly cover of the two gen- era of Dipterians to which I have referred was a cover on the tile-roof principle ; and this is an exceedingly common char- acteristic of the scales of the Ganoids. The scaly cover of the Coelacanths, on the other hand, was a cover on the sZae regarded, found detached, as at least a reptilian, if not mammalian, bone. The disposition of the palatal teeth of the Dipterus will scarce fail to remind the mechanist of the style 0f grooving resorted to in the formation of mill-stones for *he grinding of flour ; nor is it wholly improbable that, in correspondence with the rotatory motion of the stones to which the grooving is specially adapted, jaws so hinged may Aave possessed some such power of lateral motion as that exemplified by the human subject in the use of the molar teeth. The protection afforded by the osseous covering of both the upper and under surface of the cranium of this ichthyolite has 88 CEREBRAL DEVELOPMENT resulted, in several instances, in the preservation, though al- ways in a greatly compressed state, of the cranium itself, and the consequent exhibition of two very important cranial cavi- ties, the brain-pan proper, and the passage through which the spinal cord passed into the brain. In the sturgeon the brain occupies nearly the middle of the head ; and there is a con- siderable part of the occipital region traversed by the spine in a curved channel, which, seen in profile, appears wide at the nape, but considerably narrower where it enters the brain-pan, and altogether very much resembling the interior of a minia- ture hunting-horn. And such exactly was the arrangement of the greater cavities in the head of. the Dipterus. The por- tion of the cranium which was overlaid by what may be re- garded as the occipital plate was traversed by a cavity shaped like a Lilliputian bugle-horn ; while the hollow in which the brain was lodged lay under the two parietal plates, and the little elliptical plate in the centre. The accompanying print, (fig. 22,) though of but slight show, may be regarded by the Fig. 22. LONGITUDINAL SECTION OF HEAD OF DIPTERFS readsr with some little interest, as a not inadequate represen- tation of the most ancient brain-pan on which human eye has yet looked, as, in short, the type of cell in which, myriads of ages ago, in at least one genus, that mysterious substance was lodged, on whose place and development so very much in the scheme of creation was destined to depend. The speci- men from which the figure is taken was laid open laterally by chance exposure to the waves on the shores of Thurso i OF THE EARLIER VERTEBRATA. 89 another specimen, cut longitudinally by the saw of the lapi- dary, yields a similar section, but greatly more compressed in the cavities ; on which, of course, as unsupported hollows, the compression to which the entire cranium had been exposed chiefly acted. When the top and bottom of a box are violently forced together, it is the empty space which the box encloses that is annihilated in consequence of the violence. It is deserving of notice, that the analogies of the cranial cavities in this ancient Ganoid should point so directly on the cranial cavities of that special Ganoid of the present time which unites a true skull of cartilage to a dermal skull of osseous plates, a circumstance strongly corroborative of the general evidence, negative and positive, on which I have con- cluded that the true skulls of the first Ganoids weiv. also car- tilaginous. It is further worthy of observation, that in all the sections of the cranium of Dipterus which I have yet ex- amined, the internal line is continuous, as in the Placoids, from nape to snout, and that the true skull presents no trace of those cerebral vertebrae of which skulls are regarded by Oken and his disciples as developments. Historically at least, the progress of the ichthyic head seems to have been a progress from simple cartilaginous boxes to cartilaginous boxes covered with osseous plates, that performed the func tions, whether active or passive, of internal bones ; and then from external plates to the interior bones which the plates had previously represented, and whose proper work they had done. The principle which rendered it necessary that the divis ions which exist in the dermal skulls of the first Ganoids should so closely correspond with the divisions which exist in the internal skulls of the osseous fishes of a greatly later neriod. does not seem to lie far from the surface. Of the 8* 90 CEREBRAL DEVELOPMENT solid parts of the ichthyic head, a certain set of pieces afford protection to the brain and cerebral nerves, and to some of the organs of the senses, such as those of seeing and hearing ; while another certain set of pieces constitute the framework through which an important class of functions, manducatory and respiratory, are performed. The protective bones of merely passive function are fixed, whereas the bones of active function, such as the jaws, the osseous framework of the opercules, and the hyoid bones, are to the necessary extent free i. e, capable of independent motion. Of course, the detached character necessary to the free cerebral bones would be equally necessary in cerebral plates united dermally to the pieces of the cartilaginous framework, which performed in the ancient fish the functions of these free bones. And hence jaw plates, opercular plates, and hyoid plates, whose homolog- ical relation with recent jaws and opercular and hyoid bones cannot be mistaken. They were operative in performing identical mechanical functions, and had to exist, in conse- quence, in identical mechanical conditions. And an equally simple, though somewhat different principle, seems to have regulated the divisions of the fixed cranial bucklers of the Old Red Ganoids, and to have determined their homologies with the fixed cerebral bones of the osseous fishes. These cranial bucklers, extending from nape to snout, pro- tected the exposed upper surface of the cartilaginous skull, and conformed to it in shape, as a helmet conforms to the, shape of the head, or a breast-plate to the shape of the chest. And as the cartilaginous heads resembled in general out- line the osseous ones, the buckler which covered theii upper surface resembled in general outline the upper su? face of the osseous skull. It was in no case entirely a flat plate ; but in every species rounded over the snout. OF THE EARLIER VERTEBRA PA 91 and in most species at the sides ; and so, in order that its characteristic proportions might be preserved throughout the various stages of growth in the head which it covered, it had to be formed from several distinct centres of ossification, and to extend in area around the edges of the plates originated from these. The workman finds no difficulty in adding to the size of a piece of straight wall, whether by heighten- ing or lengthening it ; but he cannot add to the size of a dome or arch, without first taking it down, and then erecting it anew on a larger scale. In the domes and arches of the animal kingdom, the problem is solved by building them up of distinct pieces, few or many, according to the demands of the figure which they compose, and rendering these pieces capable of increase along their edges. It is on this principle that the Cystidea, the Echinidse, the Chelonian carapace and plastron, and the skulls of the osseous Vertebrata, are constructed. It is also the principle on which the cranial bucklers of the ancient Ganoids were formed.* And from the general re- semblance in figure of these bucklers to the upper surface of the osseous skull, the separate parts necessary for the building up of the one were anticipated, by many ages, in the building up of the other ; just as we find external arches of stone * In all probability it is likewise the principle of the placoid skull. The numerous osseous points by which the latter is en- crusted, each capable of increase at the edges, seem the minute bricks of an ample dome. It is possible, however, that new points may be formed in the interstices between the first formed ones, as what anatomists term the triquetra or Wormiana form between the serrated edges of the lambdoidal suture in the human skull; and that the osseous surface of the cerebral dome may thus ex- *end, as the dome itself increases in size, not through the growth of the previously existing pieces, the minute bricks of my illus- tration, but through the addition of new ones. Equally, in eithet case, h >wever, that essential difference betwee*. the pi a 92 CEREBRAL DEVELOPMENT which were erected two thousand years ago, constructed oa the same principle, and relatively of the same parts, as internal arches of brick built in the present age. Doubtless, however; with this mechanical necessity for correspondence of parts in the formation of corresponding erections, there may have mingled that regard for typical resemblance which seems so marked a characteristic of the style, if I may so express myself, in which the Divine Architect gives expression to his ideas. The external osseous buckler He divided after the general pattern which was to be exemplified, in latter times, in the divisions of the internal osseous skull ; as if in illustration of that " ideal exemplar " which dwelt in his mind from eternity, and on the palpable existence of which sober science has based deductions identical in their scope and bearing with some of the sublimest doctrines of the theo- logian. " The recognition," says Professor Owen, " of an ideal exemplar for the vertebrated animals, proves that the knowledge of such a being as man existed before man ap- peared ; for the Divine mind which planned the archetype also foreknew all its modifications. The archetypal idea was coid skull and the placoid vertebra, to which I have referred, appears to hinge on the circumstance, that while the osseous nucleus of each vertebral Fig. 23. centrum could form, in even its most compli- cated shape, from a single point, the osse- ous walls of the cranium had to be formed from hundreds. The accompanying diagram serves to show after what manner the verte- bral centrum in the Ray enlarges with the SECTIO N OF VERTEBRAL growth of the animal, by addition of bony CENTRUM OF THORN- HI atter external to the point in the middle, BACK. at which ossification first begins. The hori- zontal lines indicate the lines of increment in the two internal cones which each centrum comprises, and the vertical ones the lines of increment in the lateral pillars. OF THE EARLIER VERTEBRATA. 93 manifested in the flesh, under divers such modifications, upon this planet, long prior to the existence of those animal species that actually exemplify it." But while we find place in that geological history in which every character is an organism, for the " ideal exemplar" of Professor Owen, we find no place in it for the vertebrae-de- veloped skull of Professor Oken. The true genealogy of the head runs in an entirely different line. The nerves of the cerebral senses did not, we find, originate cerebral verte- bra3, seeing that the heads of the first and second geologic periods had their cerebral nerves, but not their cerebral verte- brae ; and that what are regarded as cerebral-vertebrae ap- pear for the first time, not in the early fishes, but in the reptiles of the Coal formation. The line of succession through the fish, indicated by the Continental assertor of the development hypothesis, is a line cut off". All the existing evidence conspires to show that the placoid heads of the Si- lurian system were, like the placoid heads of the recent period, mere cartilaginous boxes ; and that in the succeeding system there existed ganoidal heads, that to the internal car- tilaginous box added external plates of bone, the homologues, apparently, so far at least as the merely cuticular could be representative of the endo-skeletal, of the opercular, max- illary, frontal, and occipital bones in the osseous fishes of a long posterior period, fishes that were not ushered upon the scene until after the appearance of the reptile in its highest forms, and of even the marsupial quadruped. 94 STRUCTURE THE ASTEF.OLEPIS, ITS STRUCTURE, BULK, AND ASPECT. WITH the reader, if he has accompanied me thus far, I shall now pass on to the consideration of the remains of the Astero- lepis. Our preliminary acquaintance with the cerebral pecu- liarities of a few of its less gigantic contemporaries will be found of use in enabling us to determine regarding a class of somewhat resembling peculiarities which characterized this hugest Ganoid of the Old Red Sandstone. The head of the Asterolepis, like the heads of all the other Coelacanths, and of all the Dipterians, was covered with osse- ous plates, its body with osseous scales ; and, as I have already had occasion to mention, it is from the star-like tu- bercles by which the cerebral plates were fretted that M. Eichwald bestowed on the creature its generic name. Agas- siz has even erected species on certain varieties in the pat- tern of the stars, as exhibited on detached fragments; but I am far from being satisfied that we are to seek in their peculiarities of style the characters by which the several species were distinguished. The stellar form of the tu- bercle seems to have been its normal or most perfect form, as it was also, with certain modifications, that of the tuber- cle of the Coccosteus and Pterichthys ; but its development as a complete star was comparatively rare : in most cases the tubercles existed without the rays, frequently in the insu- OF THE ASTEROLEPIS. 95 lated pap-like shape, but not rare.y confluent, or of an elon- gated or bent form ; and when to these the characteristic rays were added, the stars produced were of a rather eccen- tric order, stars somewhat resembling the shadows of stars seen in water. Individual specimens have already been found, on which, if we recognize the form of the tubercle as a specific character, several spe- cies might be erected. The ac- Fig. 24. companying wood-cut (fig. 24) rep- resents, from a Thurso specimen, what seems to be the true normal pattern of these cerebral carvings. Seen in profile () the tubercles resemble little hillocks, perforated " at their base by single lines of Dermal tvbercles of Asterolepi,. (Mag. two diameters.) thickly-set caves ; while seen from above, (a,) the narrow piers of bone by which the caves are divided take the form of rays. The reader will scarce fail to recognise in this print the coral Monticularia of Lamarck, or to detect, in at least the profile, the peculiarity which sug- gested the name. The scales whbh cevered the creature's body (fig. 25) were, in proportion to its size, considerably smaller and thinner than those of the Holoptychius, which, however, they greatly resemble in their general style of sculpture. Each, on the lower part of its exposed field, was, we see, fretted by longi- tudinal anastomosing ridges, which, in the upper part, break into detached angular tubercles, placed with the apex down- wards, and hollowed, leaf-like, in the centre ; while that cov- ered portion which was overlaid by the scales immediately above we find thickly pitted by microscopic hollows, that give to this part of the field, viewed under a tolerably high 96 STRUCTURE Fig. 25. PORTION OF CARVED SUR- FACE OF SCALE. (Mag. four di- ameters.) (SCALES OF ASTEROLEPIS. (Nat. size.) si~fzce of scale. b. Exterior surface. Aibtgnifying power, a honeycombed appearance. Iho central and lower parts of the interior sur- face of the scale (a) are in most of the speci- mens irregularly roughened ; while a broad, smooth band, which runs along the top and sides, and seems to have furnished the line of attachment to the creature's body, is compara- tively smooth. The exterior carvings, though they demand the assistance of the lens to see them aright, are of s ; ngular elegance and beauty ; as perhaps ih ) accompanying wood- cut, (fig. 26,) whicr givci a magnified view of a portion of the scale uniTiev\&u;iy above (b) from the middle of the honeycombed field on the right side, to where the anastomosing ridges OF THE ASTEROLEPIS. 97 bend gracefully in their descent, may in some degree serve to show. I have seen a richly inlaid coat of mail, which was once worn by the puissant Charles the Fifth ; but its elaborate carvings, though they belonged to the age of Benvenuto Cellini, were rude and unfinished, compared with those which fretted the armor of the Asterolepis. " The creature's cranial buckler, which was of great size and strength, might well be mistaken for the carapace of some Chelonian fish of no inconsiderable bulk. The cranial buck- lers of the larger Dipterians were ample enough to have cov- ered the corresponding part in the skulls of our middle-sized market-fish, such as the haddock and whiting ; the buckler of a Coccosteus of the extreme size would have covered, if a little altered in shape, the upper surface of the skull of a cod ; but the cranial buckler of Asterolepis, from which the accom- panying wood-cut was taken, (fig. 27,) would have considerably more than covered the corresponding part in the skull of a large horse ; and I have at least one specimen in my collec- tion which would have fully covered the front skull cf an ele- phant. In the smaller specimens, the buckler somewhat resembles a laborer's shovel divested of its handle, and sore- ly rust-eaten along its lower or cutting edge. It consisted of plates, connected at the edges by flat squamous sutures, or, as a joiner might perhaps say, glued together in bevelled joints. And in consequence of this arrangement, the same plates which seem broad on the exterior surface appear compara- tively narrow on the interior one, and vice versa ; the occipi- tal plate, (a,) which, running from the nape along the centre of the buckler, occupies so considerable a space on its outer surface, exhibits inside a superficies reduced at least one half. Like nine tenths of its contemporaries, the Asterolepis ex- hibits the little central plate between the eyes; but the 9 98 STRUCTURE Fig. 27. CRANIAL STICKLER OP ASTEHOLEPIS. (One fifth nat. size, linear.) eye orbits, unlike those of the Coccosteus, and of all the Dipterian genera, which were half-scooped out of the cranial buckler, half-encircled by detached plates, were placed com- pletely within the field of the buckler, a circumstance in which they resemble the eye orbits of the Pterichthys y and, among existing fish, those of the sea-wolf. The characteristic is also a distinctive one in Cuvier's second family of the Acanthopterygii, the " fishes with hard cheeks." A deep line immediately over the eyes, which, however, indicated no suture, but seems to have been mere- ly ornamental, forms a sort of rudely tatooed eyebrow ; the marginal lines parallel to the lateral edges of the buck- ler were also mere tatooings ; but all the others indicated joints which, though more or less anchylosed, had a real OF THE ASTEROLEPIS. 99 existence. So flat was the surface, that the edge of a ruler rests upon it, in my several specimens, both lengthwise and across ; but it was traversed by two flat ridges, which, stretch- ing from the corners of the latero-posterior, i. e. parietal, plates, (&, &,) converged at the little plate between the eyes ; while along the centre of the depressed angle which they formed, a third ridge, equally flat with the others, ran towards the same point of convergence from the nape. The three ridges, when strongly relieved by a slant light, resemble not inadequately an impression, on a large scale, of the Queen's broad arrow. Fig. 28. INNER SURFACE OF CRANIAL BUCKLER OF ASTEROLEPIS. (One fifth nat. size, linear.) The inner surface of the cranial buckler of Asterolepis, (fig. 28,) that which rested on the cartilaginous box which formed the creature's interior skull, stands out in bo.der relief from the stone than its outer surface, and forms a more 100 STRUCTURE picturesque object. Like the inner surfaces of the bucklers of Coccosteus and Pterichthys, but much more thickly than these, it was traversed by minute channelled markings, some- what resembling those striae which may be detected in the flatter bones of the ordinary fishes, and which seem in these to be mere interstices between the osseous fibres. And in the plates, as in the bones, they radiate from the centres of ossifi- cation, which are comparatively dense and massy, towards the thinner overlapping edges. These radiating lines are equally well marked in the cerebral bones of the human foetus. The three converging ridges on the outer surface we find on the inner surface also, the lateral ones a little bent in the mid- dle, but so directly opposite those outside, that the thicken- ing of the buckler which takes place along their line is at least as much a consequence of their inne'r as of their outer elevation over the general platform. A fourth bar ran transversely along the nape, and formed the cross beam on which the others rested ; for the three longitudinal ridges may be properly regarded as three strong beams, which, ex- tending from the transverse beam at the nape to the front, where they converged like the spokes of a wheel at the nave, gave to the cranial roof a degree of support of which, from its great flatness, it may have stood in need. In cranial bucklers in which the average thickness of the plates does not exceed three eighth parts of an inch, their thickness in the centre of the ridges exceeds three quarters. The head of the largest crocodile of the existing period is defended by an armature greatly less strong than that worn by the Asterolepis of the Lower Old Red Sandstone. Why this ancient Ganoid shoild have been so ponderously helmed we can but doubtfully guess ; we only know, that when na- are arms her soldiery, there are assailants to be resisted and OF THE ASTEROLEPIS. 101 a state of war to be maintained. The posterior central plate, the homologuc apparently of the occipital bone, was curiously carved into an ornate massive leaf, like one of the larger leaves of a Co/nthian capital, and terminated beneath, where the stem s.^ould have been, in a strong osseous knob, fashioned like a ^ike head. Two plates immediately over it, the homologues of the superior frontal bone, with the little nasal plate which, perched atop in the middle, lay between the creature's eyes, resembled the head and breast in the female figure, at least not less closely than those of the " lady in the lobster ; " the posterior frontal plates in which the outer and nether half of the eye orbits were hollowed formed a pair of sweeping wings, and thus in the centre of the buckler we are presented with the figure of an angel, robed and winged, and of which the large sculptured leaf forms the body, traced in a style in no degree more rude than we might expect to see exemplified on the lichen-encrusted shield of some ancient tombstone of that House of Avenel which bore as its arms the effigies of the Spectre Lady. Children have a peculiar knack in detecting such resemblances ; and the discovery of the angel in the cranium of the Asterolepis I owe to one of mine. It is on this inner side of the cranial buckler, where there are no such pseudo-joinings indicated as on the external sur- face, that the homologies of the plates of which it is com- posed can be best traced. It might be well, however, ere setting one's self to the work of comparison, to examine the skulls of a few of the osseous fishes of our coast, and to maik how very considerably they differ from one another in their lines of suture and their general form. The cerebral divis- ions of the conger-eel, for instance, are very unlike those of the haddock or whiting ; and the sutures in the head of the 9* 102 STRUCTURE gurnard are dissimilarly arranged from those in the head of the perch. And after tracing the general type in the more anomalous forms, and finding, with Cuvier, that in even these the '' skull consists of the same bones, though much subdivid- ed, as the skulls of the other vertebrata," we will be the bet- ter qualified for grappling with the not greater anomalies which occur in the cranial buckler of the Asterolepis. The occipital plate, A, a, a, (fig. 29,) occupies its ordinary place Fig. 29. PLATE OF CRANIAL BXTCXLEK OP ASTEROLEPIS. opposite the centre of the nape ; the two parietals, B, B, rest beside it in their usual ichthyic position of displacement ; the superior frontal we find existing, as in the young of many ani- mals, in two pieces, C, ; the nasal plate I, placed immediately m advance of it, is flanked, as in the cod, by the anterior front- als, D, D ; the posterior frontals, F, F, which, when viewed as in the print, from beneath, seem of considerable size, and OF THE ASTEEOLEPIS. 103 describe aterally and posteriorly about one half the eye orbits, have their area on the exterior surface greatly reduced by the overriding squamose sutures of the plates to which they join ; and lastly, two of these overlying plates, E, E, which, occurring in the line of the lateral bar or beam, are of great strength and thickness, and lie for two thirds of their length along the parietals, and for the remaining third along the superior frontals, represent the mastoid bones. Such, so far as I have been yet able to read the cranial buckler of the Asterolepis, seem to be the homologies of its component plates. There were no parts of the animal more remarkable than its jaws. The under jaws, for the nether maxillary con- sisted, in this fish, as in the placoid fishes, and in the quad- yupeds generally, of two pieces joined in the middle, were, like those of the Holoptychius, boxes of bone, which enclosed central masses of cartilage. The outer and under sides were thickly covered with the characteristic star-like tubercles ; and along the upper margin or lip there ran a thickly-set row of small broadly-based teeth, planted as directly on the edge of the exterior plate as iron spikes on the upper edge of a gate, (fig. 30.) Mr. Parkinson expresses some wonder, in Pig. 30. PORTION OF UNDER JAW OF ASTEROLEPIS, (OUTER BIDS.) (One half nat. size.) 104 STRUCTURE his work on fossils, that, in a fine ichthyolite in the British Museum, not only the teeth should have been preserved, but also the lips ; but we now know enough of the construction of the ancient Ganoids to cease wondering. The lips were formed of as solid bone as the teeth themselves, and had as fair a chance of being preserved entire ; just as the metallic rim of a cogged wheel has as fair a chance of being preserved as the metallic cogs that project from it. Immedi- ately behind the front row, in which the teeth present the ordinary ichthyic appearance, there ran a thinly-set row of huge reptile teeth, based on an interior platform of bone, which formed the top of the cartilage-enclosing box composing the jaw. These were at once bent outwards and twisted laterally, somawhat like nails that have been drawn out of wood by the claw of a carpenter's hammer, and bent awry with the wrench, (fig. 31.) They were furrowed Fig. 31. PORTION OF UNDER JAW OF ASTEROLEPIS, (INNER SIDE.) (One half nat. size.) longitudinally from point to base by minute thickly-set striae , and were furnished laterally, in most of the specimens, though not in all, with two sharp cutting edges. The reptile had as yet no existence in creation ; but we see its future OF THE ASTEROLEPIS. 105 coming symbolized in the dentition of this ancient Ganoid : it, as it were, shows us the crocodile lying entrenched behind the fish. The interior structure of these reptile teeth is very remarkable. In the longitudinal section we find numerous cancelli, ranged lengthwise along the outer edges, but much crossed, net-like, within, greatly more open towards the base than at the point, and giving place in the centre to a hollow space, occasionally traversed by a few slim osseous partitions. In the transverse section these cancelli are found to radiate from the open centre towards the circumference, like the spokes of a wheel from the nave ; and each spoke seems as if, like Aaron's rod, it had become instinct with vegetative life, and had sprouted into bransh and blossom. Seen in a microscope of limited field, that takes in, as in the accompanying print, (fig. 32,) not more Fig. 32. PORTION CI 1 TRANSVERSE SECTION 0? REPTILE TOOTH OP ASTEROLEPI8 a. Nat. size. b. Mag. twelve diametert. 106 STRUCTURE than a fourth part of the section, the appearance presented is that of a well-trained wall tree. And hence the generic name Dendrodus, given by Professor Owen to teeth found detached in the deposits of Moray, when the creatures to which they had belonged were still unknown, a name, however, which will, I suspect, be found synonymous rather with that of a family than of a genus ; for so far as I have yet examined, I find that the dendrodic or tree-like tooth, was, in at least the Old Red Sandstone, a characteristic of all the Crelacanth family. I may mention, however, as a curious subject of inquiry, that the Coeiacanths of the Coal Measures seem to have had their reptile teeth formed of pure ivory, a substance vrhich I have not yet detected among the reptile- fish of the Old Red. Towards the base of the reptile teeth of Asterolepis, the interstices between the branches greatly widen, as in the branches of a tree in winter divested of its foliage, (fig. 33, c;) the texture also opens towards the base in the _/?s/t-teeth outside, in which, how- ever, the pattern in the transverse section is greatly less complex and ornate than that which the reptile teeth exhibits. When cut across near the point, they appear each as a thick ring, (Z>,) tra- versed by lines that radiate towards the half way down, they A. Section of Jaw of Asterolepis. c. Reptile tooth as shown in sec: ton. a, b, # c- -Row of ichthyic teeth in dermal plate of jaw. B. Magnified representatives of ichthyic teeth, a and b, in A. centre ; when cut across about somewhat resemble, seen under a high magnifying power, OF THE ASTEROLEPIS. 107 those cast-iron wheels on which the engineer mounts his railway carriages, (a.) In the longitudinal section their line of junction with the jaw is marked by numerous openings, but by no line of division, and they appear as thickly dotted by what were once canaliculi, or life points, as any portion of the dermal bone on which they rest. It seems truly wonderful, when one considers it, to what minute and obscure ramifications that variety of pattern which nature so loves to maintain is found to descend. It descends in the fishes, both recent and extinct, to even the microscopic structure of their teeth ; and we find, in consequence, not less variety of figure in the sliced fragments of the teeth of the ichthyolites of a single formation, than in the carved blocks of an extensive calico print-yard. Each species has its own distinct pattern, as if, in all the individuals of which it con- sisted, the same block had been employed to stamp it ; and each genus its own general type of pattern, as if the same radical idea, variously altered and modified, had been wrought upon in all. In the Dendrodic (Cas\a.canl\i ?) family, for in- stance, it is the radical type, that from a central nave there should radiate, spoke-like, a number of arborescent branches ; but in the several genera and species of the family, the branches belong, if I may so express myself, to different shrubs, and present dissimilar outlines. It has appeared to me, that at least a presumption against the transmutation of species might be based on those inherent peculiarities of structure which are thus found to pervade the entire texture of the framework of animals. If we find erections differing from one another merely in external form, we have no difficulty in conceiving how, by additions and alterations, they might be brought to exhibit a perfect uniformity of plan and aspect : transmutation, development, progression, (if one may 108 STRUCTURE use such terms,) seem possible in such circumstances. But if the buildings differ from each other, not only in external form, but also in every brick and beam, bolt and nail, no mere scheme of external alteration could ever induce a real resem- blance. Every brick would have to be taken down, and every beam and bolt removed. The problem could not be wrought by the remodelling of an old house : the only mode of solving it would be by the erection of a new one. Of the upper maxillary bones of the Asterohpis, I only know that a considerable fragment of one of the pieces, recognized as such by Agassiz, has been found in the neigh- borhood of Thurso by Mr. Dick, unaccompanied, however, by any evidence respecting its place or function. It exhibits none of the characteristic tubercles of the dermal bones, and no appearance of teeth; but is simply a long bent bone, re- sembling somewhat less than the half of an ancient bow of steel or horn, such a bow as that which Ulysses bended in the presence of the suitors. By some of the Russian geolo- gists this bone was at first regarded as a portion of the arm or wing of some gigantic Pterichthys. In the accompanying print (fig. 34) I have borrowed the general outline from that Fig. 34. MAXILLARY BONE ? (One fourth nat. size, linear.) of a specimen of Professor Asmus, of which a cast may be seen in the British Museum ; while the shaded portion rep- OF THE ASTEROLEPIS. 100 resents the fragment found by Mr. Dick. The intermaxillary bones, like the dermal plates of the lower jaw, were studded by star-like tubercles, and bristled thickly along their lowei edges with the ichthyic teeth, flanked by teeth of the reptilian character. The opercules of the animal consisted, as in the sturgeon, of single plates (fig. 35) of great massiveness ard size, thickly tubercled outside, with- -,. Tig. 30. out trace of joint or suture, and marked on their under surface by channelled lines, that radiate, as in the other plates, from the centre of ossifica- tion. That space along the nape which intervened between the oper- cules, was occupied, as in the Dip- INNER SURFACE OF OPEK- . j T- 7 i ^i_ i x CULUM OF ASTEROLEPIS. terns and Diplopterus, by three plates, (One fifth nat. size, linear.) which covered rather the anterior portion of the body than the posterior portion of the head, and which, in the restoration of Osteolepis, (fig. 13,) appear as the plates, 9, 9, 9. I can say scarce any thing regarding the lateral plates which lay between the intermaxillaries and the cranial buckler, and which exist in the Osteolepis, fig. 13, as the plates 2, 4, 5, 6, and 7 ; nor do 1 know how the snout terminated, save that in a very imperfect specimen it exhibits, as in the Diplopterus and Osteolepis, a rounded outline, and was set with teeth. That space comprised within the arch of the lower jaws, in which the hyoid bone and branchiostegous rays of the osseous fishes occur, was filled by a single plate of great size and strength, and of singular form, (fig. 36 ;) and to this plate, ex- isting as a steep ridge running along the centre of the interior surface, and thickening into a massy knob at the anterior ter- mination, that nail-shaped organism, which t have described 10 110 HYOID PLATE. (One ninth nat. size, linear.) as one of the most characteristic bones of the As^enlepis, belonged. In the Osteolepis, the space corresponding to that occupied by this hyoid plate was filled, as shown in fig. 14, by five plates of not inelegant form ; and the divisions of the arch resembled those of a small Gothic window, in which the single central mullion parts into two branches atop. In the Holoptychius and Glyptolepis there were but two plates ; for the central mullion, i. e. line of division, did not branch atop ; and in the Asterolepis, where there was no line of division, the strong nail-like bone occupied the place of the central mullion. The hyoidal armature of the latter fish was strongest in the line in which the others were weakest. Each of the five hyoid plates of the Osteolepis, or of the two plates of the Glyptolepis or Holoptychius, had its own centre of ossification ; and in the single plate of Asterolepis, the centre of ossification, as shown by the radiations of the fibre, was the nat'Z-head. This head, placed in immediate con- tact with the strong boxes of bone which composed the under jaw, just where their central joining occurred, seems to have lent them a considerable degree of support, which at such a juncture may have been not unnecessary. In some of the nail-heads, belonging, it is probable, to a different species of Asterolepis from that in #hich the nail figured in page 7 OF THE ASTEEOLEPIS. Ill Fist. 37. and the plate in the opposite page, occurrerf, for its general form is different, (fig. 37,) there appear well- marked ligamentary impressions closely resem- bling that little spongy pit in the head of the human thigh-bone to which what is termed the round ligament is attached. The entire hyoid- plate, viewed on its outer side, resembles in form the hyoid-bone, or cartilage rather, of the spotted dog-fish, (Scyllium stellar e ;) but its area was at least a hundred times more extensive than in the largest Scyllium, and, like all the dermal plates of the Asterolepis, it was thickly fretted by the characteristic tubercles. In the Ray, as in the Sharks, the piece of thin cartilage of which this plate seems the homologue, is a flat, semi-transparent disk ; and there is no part of the animal in which the progress of those (One half nat. bony molecules which encrust the internal framework may be more distinctly traced, as if in the act of creeping over what they cover, in slim threads or shooting points, and much resembling new ice creeping in a frosty evening over the surface of a pool. That suite of shoulder-bones that in the osseous fishes forms the belt or frame on which the opercules rest, and fur- nishes the base of the pectorals, was represented in the As- terolepis, as in the sturgeon, by a ring of strong osseous plates, which, in one of the two species of which trace is to be found among the rocks of Thurso, were curiously fretted on theii external surfaces, and in the other species comparatively smooth. The largest, or coracoidian plate of the ring, as it occurs in the more ornate species, (fig. 38,) might be readily enough mistaken, when seen with only its surface exposedi NAIL-LIKE BONE OF HYOID PLATE. 1 12 STRUCTURE Fig. 38. SHOULDER (l. C. CORACOID ?) PLATE OF ASTEROLEPIS. (One third nat. size, linear.) for the ichthyodorulite of some large fish, allied, mayhap, to the Gyracanllius formosus of the Coal Measures ; but when detached from the stone, the hollow form and peculiar striae of the inferior surface serve to establish its true character as a dermal plate. The diagonal furrowings which traversed it, as the twisted flutings traverse a Gothic column moulded after the type of the Apprentice Pillar in Roslin chapel, seem to have underlaid the edge of the opercule ; at least I find a similar arrangement in the shoulder-plates of a large species of Diplopterus, which are deeply grooved and furrowed where the opercule rested, as if with the design of keeping up a communication between the branchiae and the external ele- ment, even when the gill-cover was pressed closely down upon them. And, as in these shoulder plates of the Dip~ lopterus the furrows yield their place beyond the edge of the opercule to the punctulated enamel common to the outer surface of all the creature's external plates and scales, we find them yielding their place, in the shoulder-plates of the Asterolepis, to the starred tubercles. A few detached bones, that bear on their outer surfaces the dermal markings, must have belonged to that angular- shaped portion of the head which intervened between the cranial buckler and the intermaxillary bone ; but the key for assigning to them their proper place is still to find ; and I suspect that no amount of skill on the part of the compa- OF THE ASTEROLEPIS. 113 rative anatomist will ever qualify him to complete the work of restoration without it. I have submitted to the reader the cranial bucklers of Jive several genera of the ganoids of the Old Red Sandstone ; but no amount of study bestowed on these would enable even the most skilful ichthyologist tc restore a sixth ; nor is the lateral area of the head, which was, I find, variously occupied in each genus, less difficult to lest ore than the buckler which surmounted it. Two of the more entire of these dermal bones I have figured (fig. 39, a and b) in the hope of assisting future inquirers, who, were Fig. 39. 123 DEBMAL BONES OF ASTEROLEPIS. (One third nat. size, linear.) they to pick up all the other plates, might yet be unable, lacking the figured ones, to complete the whole. The curiously-shaped plate a, represented in its various sides by the figures 1, 2, 3, is of an acutely angular form in the trans- verse section, (the external surface, 1, forming an angle which varies from thirty to forty-five degrees with the base, 3 ;) and as it lay, it is probable when in its original place, 10* 114 STRUCTURE immediately under the edge of the cranial buckler, it may have served to commence the line of deflection from the flat top of the head to the steep descent of the sides, just as what are technically termed the s;?Mr-stones in a gable-head serve to commence the line of deflection from the vertical outline }f the wall to the inclined line of the roof, or as the spring- stones of ah arch serve to commence the curve. A few internal bones in my possession are curious, but exceed- Fig. 40. in gty puzzling- Ths bone a, fig. 40, which resembles a rib, or bran- chiostegous ray, of one of the or- dinary fishes, formed apparently part of that osseous style which in fishes such as the haddock and cod we find attached to the suite of shoulder-bones, and which, ac- cording to Cavier, is the analogue of the coracoidian bone, and, ac- INTERNAL BONES OF ASTEHO- cordi iQ p rofessor QwCD, the ana- LEPIS. . logue of the clavicle. Fig. b is a (One half nat. size, linear.) mere fragment, broken at both ends, but exhibiting, in a state of good keeping, lateral expan- sions, like those of an ancient halbert. Fig. c, 41, which is also a fragment, though a more considerable one, bears in its thicker and straighter edge a groove like that of an ichthyodorulite, which, however, the bone itself in no degree resembles. Fig. d is a flat bone, of a type common in the skeleton of fishes, but which, in mammals, we find exemplified in but the scapulars. It seems, like these, to have furnished the base to which some suite of movable bones was articulated, in all likelihood that proportion of the carpal bonelets of the pectoral fins which are attached in OF THE ASTEEOLEPIS. Fig. 41. 115 INTERNAL BONES OP ASTEROLEPIS. (One third nat. size, linear.) the osseous fishes to its apparent homologue, the radius. Fig. e, a slim light bone, which narrows and thickens in the centre, and flattens and broadens at each end, was probably a scapula or shoulder-blade, a bone which in most fishes splices on, as a sailor would say, by squamose jointings, to the coracoi- dian bone at the one end, and the super-scapular bone at the other. As indicated by its size, it must have belonged to a small individual : it is, however, twice as long, and about six times as bulky, as the scapula of a large cod. Of the bone represented in fig. 42, 1 have determined, from a Cromarty specimen, the place and use : it formed the inte- rior base to which one of the ventral fins was attached. In all fishes the bones of the hinder extremities are inadequately represented : in none do we find the pelvic arch complete ; and to that nether portion of it which we do find represented, and which Professor Owen regards as the homologue of the 1 16 STRUCTURE. Fig. 42. ISCHIUM OP ASTEBOLEPIS. (One half nat. size, linear.) os ischium or hip-bone, the homologues of the metatarsal and oe-bones are attached, to the exclusion of the bones of the thigh and leg. In the Abdominales, fishes such as the salmon and carp, that have the ventrals placed behind the abdomen, in the position analogous to that in which the hinder legs of the reptiles and mammals occur, the ischiatic bones generally exist as flat triangular plates, with their heads either turned inwards and downwards, as in the herring, or outwards and downwards, as in the pike ; whereas in some of the cartilaginous fishes, such as the Rays and Sharks, they exist as an undivided cartilaginous band, stretched transversely from ventral to ventral. And such, with but an upward di rection, appears to have been their position in the Asterolepis They seem to have united at the narrow neck A, over the middle of the lower portion of the abdomen ; and to the notches of the flat expansion B, notches which exactly re- semble those of the immensely developed carpal bones of the Ray, five metatarsal bones were attached, from which the fin expanded. It is interesting to find the number in this ancient representative of the vertebrata restricted to five, a number greatly exceeded in most of the existing fishes, but which is the true normal number of the vertebrate sub-king- dom as shown in all the higher examples, such as man, the qvadrumana, and in most of the carnaria. The form of this OF THE ASTEROLEPIS. 117 bone somewhat resembfes that of the analogous bone in those fishes, such as the perch and gurnard, cod and haddock, which have their ventrals suspended to the scapular belt ; but its position in the Cromarty specimen, and that of the ventrals in the various specimens of the Coelacanth family in which their place is still shown, forbids the supposition that it was so suspended, a circumstance in keeping with all the exist- ing geological evidence on the subject, which agrees in indi- cating, that of the low type of fishes that have, monster-like, their feet attached to their necks, the Old Red Sandstone does not afford a trace. This inferior type, now by far the most prevalent in the ichthyic division of the animal kingdom, does not seem to have been introduced until near the close of the Secondary period, long after the fish had been degraded from its primal place in the fore front of creation. In one of my specimens a few fragments of the rays are preserved, (fig. 43, &.) They aie about the eighth part of an inch in diametoi- : depressed in some cases in the centra, as if, over the a SES^SsSi internal hollow formed by the decay of _ 7 6^11^9^ the cartilaginous centre, the bony crust ,. , . , ' j u a - Single joint of ray of of which they are composed had given Thomback. way ; and, like the rays of the thorn- b. Single joint of ray of back, they are thickened at the joints, " epis ' and at the processes by which they were attached to the ischiatie base. It may be proper, I should here state, that of some of the internal bones figured above I have no better evidence that they belonged to the Asterolepis, than that they occur in the same beds with the dermal plates which bear the char- acteristic star-like markings, that they are of very consid- erable size, and that they formed no part of the known fishes of the formation. 118 STRUCTURE On exactly the same grounds I infer, that certain large cop- rolites of common occurrence in the Thurso flagstones, which contain the broken scales of Dipterians, and exhibit a curi- ou*'y twisted form, (fig. 44,) also belonged to the Asterolepis ; Fig. 44. COPROLITES OF ASTEROLEPIS. (Nat. Size.*) and from these, that the creature was carnivorous in its hab- its, an inference which the character of its teeth fully cor- roborates ; and farther, that, like the sharks and rays, and some of the extinct Enaliosaurs, it possessed the spiral dis- position of intestine. Paley, in his chapter on the compensa- tory contrivances palpable in the structure of various animals, refers to a peculiar substitutory provision which occurs in a * One of the Thurso coprolites in my possession is about one fourth longer than the larger of the two specimens figured here, and pearly thrice as broad. OF THE ASTEiOLEPIS. 119 certain amphibious animal described in the Memoirs of the French Academy. " The reader will remember," he says, ** what we have already observed concerning the intestinal canal, that its length, so many times exceeding that of the body, promotes the extraction of the chyle from the aliment, by giving room for the lacteal vessels to act upon it through a greater space. This long intestine, whenever it occurs, is in other animals disposed in the abdomen from side to side, in returning folds. But in the animal now under our notice, the matter is managed otherwise. The same intention is mechanically effectuated, but by a mechanism of a different kind. The animal cf which I speak is an amphibious quadruped, which our authors call the Alopecias or sea- fox. The intestine is straight from one end to the other, but in this straight, and consequently short intestine, is a winding, cork-screw, spiral passage, through which the food, not without several circumvolutions, and, in fact, by a long route, is conducted to its exit. Here the shortness of the gut is compensated by the obliquity of the perforation." This structure of intestine, which all the true Placoids possess, and at least the Sturiones among existing Ganoids, seems to have been an exceedingly common one during both the Palaeozoic and Secondary periods. It has left its impress on all the better preserved coprolites of the Coal Measures, so abundant in the shales of Newhaven and Burdie House, and on those of the Lias and Chalk. It seems to be equally a characteristic of well nigh all the bulkier coprolites of the Lower Old Red Sandstone.* In these, however, it manifests * In two of these, in a collection of several score, I have failed to detect the spiral markings, though their state of keeping is decidedly good. There are other appearances which lead me to 120 STRUCTURE OF THE ASTEROLEPIS. a peculiar trait, which I have failed to detect in any of the recent fishes ; nor have I yet seen it indicated, in at least the same degree, by the Carboniferous or Secondary coprolitic remains. In the bowels which moulded the coprolites of Lyme-Regis, of the Chalk, and of the Newhaven and Granton beds, a single screw must have winded within the cylindrical tube, as a turnpike stair winds within its hollow shaft ; and such also is the arrangement in the existing Sharks and Rays ; whereas the bowels which moulded the coprolites of the Lower Old Red Sandstone must have been traversed by triple or quadruple screws laid closely together, as we find the stalk of an old-fashioned wine-glass traversed by its Ihickly-set spiral lines of thread-like china. And so, while on the surface of both the Secondary and Carboniferous coprolites there is space between the screw-like lines for numerous cross markings that correspond to the thickly set veiny branches which traverse the sides of the recent placoid bowel, the entire surface of the Lower Old Red coprolites is traversed by the spiral markings. Is there nothing strange in the fact, that after the lapse of may hap millions of years, nay, it is possible, millions of ages, we should be thus able to detect at once general resemblance and special dissimilarity in even the most perishable parts of the most ancient of the Ganoids ? I must advert, in passing, to a peculiarity exemplified in the state of keeping of the bones of this ancient Ganoid, in at least the deposites of Orkney and Caithness. The original animal matter has been converted into a dark-colored bitumen, suspect that the Asterolepis was not the only large fish of the Lower Old Red Sandstone ; but my facts on the subject are too inconclusive to justify aught more than sedulous inquiry. STATE OF KEEPING OF ITS REMAINS. 121 which in some places, where the remains lie thick, pervades the crevices of the rocks, and has not unfrequently been mistaken for coal. In its more solid state it can hardly be distinguished, when used in sealing a letter, a purpose which it serves indifferently well, from black wax of the ordinary quality ; when more fluid, it adheres scarce less strongly to the hands than the coal-tar of our gas-works and dock-yards. Underneath a specimen of Asterolepis, first pointed out to me in its bed among the Thurso rocks by Mr. Dick, and which, at my request, he afterwards raised and sent me to Edinburgh, packed up in a box, there lay a quantity of thick tar, which stuck as fast to my fingers, on lifting out the pieces of rock, as if I had laid hold of the planking of a newly tarred yawl. What had been once the nerves, muscles, and blood of this ancient Ganoid still lay under its bones, and reminded me of the appearance presented by the remains of a poor suicide, whose solitary grave, dug in a sandy bank in the north of Scotland, had been laid open by the encroachments of a river. The skeleton, with pieces of the dress still wrapped round it, lay at length along the sec- tion ; and, for a full yard beneath, the white dry sand was consolidated into a dark-colored pitchy mass, by the altered animal matter which had escaped from it, percolating down- wards, in the process of decay. la consequence of the curious chemical change which has thus taken place in the animal juices of the Asterolepis, its remains often occur in a state of beautiful preservation : the pervading bitumen, greatly more conservative in its effects than the oils and gums of an old Egyptian undertaker, has maintained, in their original integrity, every scale, plate, and bone. They may have been much broken ere they were first committed to the keeping of the rock, or in disentangling 11 122 THE ASTEROLEPIS : them from its rigid embrace ; but they have, we find, caught no harm when under its care. Ere the skeleton of the Bruce, disinterred after the lapse of five centuries, was recommitted to the tomb, such measures were taken to secure its preservation, that, were it to be again disinterred, even after as many more centuries had passed, it might be found retaining unbroken its gigantic proportions. There was molten pitch poured over the bones, in a state of sufficient fluidity to permeate all the pores, and fill up the central hollows, and which, soon hardening around them, formed a bituminous matrix, in which they may lie unchanged for a thousand years. Now, exactly such was the process to which nature resorted with these gigantic skeletons of the Old Red Sandstone. Like the bones of the Bruce, they are bones steeped in pitch ; and so thoroughly is every pore and hollow still occupied, that, when cast into the fire, they flame like torches. Though black as jet, they still retain, too, in a considerable degree, the peculiar qualities of the original substance. The late Mr. George Sanderson of Edinburgh, one of the most ingenious lapidaries in the kingdom, and a thoroughly intelligent man, made several preparations for me, for microscopic examination, from the teeth and bones ; and though they were by far the oldest vertebrate remains he had ever seen, they exhibited, he informed me, in the working, more of the characteristics of recent teeth and bone than any other fossils he had ever operated upon. Recent bone, when in the course of being reduced on the wheel to the degree of thinness necessary to secure transparency, is apt, under the heat induced by the friction, to acquire a springy elasticity, and to start up from the glass slip to which it has been cemented ; whereas bone in the fossil state usually lies as passive, in such circumstances, as the stone which en- STATE OF KEEPING OF ITS REMAINS. 123 velopes it. Mr. Sanderson was, however, surprised to find that the bone of the Asterolepis still retained its elasticity, and was scarce less liable, when heated, to start from the glass, a peculiarity through which he at first lost several preparations. I have seen a human bone that had for ages been partially embedded in a mass of adipocere, partially enveloped in the common mould of a churchyard, exhibit two very different styles of keeping. In the adipocere it was as fresh and green as if it had been divested of the integu- ments only a few weieks previous ; whereas the portion which projected into the mould had become brittle and porous, and presented the ordinary appearance of an old churchyard bone. And what the adipocere had done for the human bone in this case, seems to have been done for the bones of the Astero- lepis by the animal bitumen. The size of the Asterolepis must, in the larger specimens, have been very great. In all those ganoidal fishes of the Old lied Sandstone that had the head covered with osseous plates, we find that the cranial buckler bore a certain defi- nite proportion, various in the several genera and species, to the length of the body. The drawing-master 'still teaches his pupils to regulate the proportions of the human figure by the seven head-lengths which it contains ; and perhaps shows them how an otherwise meritorious drafts- man,* much employed half an age ago in drawing for the wood-engraver, used to render his figures squat and ungrace- ful by making them a head too short. Now, those ancient Ga- noids which possessed a cranial buckler may, we find, be also measured by head-lengths. Thus, in the Coccostcus decipiens, .he length of the cranial buckler from nape to snout equalled * The late Mr. John Thurston. 124 THE ASTEROLEPIS : one fifth the entire length of the creature from snout to tail. TLe entire length of the Glyptolepis was equal to about five one half times that of its cranial buckler. The Pteruhthys was formed in nearly the same proportions. The Diplopterus was fully seven times the length of its buckler ; arid the Osteolepis from six and a half to seven. In all the cranial bucklers of the Asterolepis yet found, the snout is wanting. The very fine specimen figured in page 99 (fig. 28) terminates abruptly at the little plate between the eyes , the specimen figured in page 98 (fig. 27) terminates at the upper line of the eye. The terminal portion which formed the snout is wanting in both, and we thus lack the measure, or module, as the architect might say, by which the propor- tions of the rest of the creature were regulated. We can, however, very nearly approximate to it. A hyoid plate in my collection (fig. 45) is, I find, so exactly proportioned in 3i?3 to the cranial buckler, (fig. 28,) that it might have be- Fig. 45. HYOID PLATE OF THURSO ASTEROLEPIS.* (One fifth the nat. size, linear.) * The shaded plate, (a,) accidentally presented in this specimen, belongs to the upper part of the head. It is the posterior frontal plate F, which half- encircled the eye orbit, (see fig. 29 ;) and I have introduced it into the print here, as in none of the other prints, or of my other specin 7 KZXM Plynlimmon ff Group. I a > 4 - Bala Limestone. 6 Fish, 1847, (Geologists of S Government \ Survey.) Snowdon Group. C * Fucoids. that he had found " de- fences of Jishes " in the Upper Llandeilo Flags, and by Sir Roderick Murchison,that the " de- fence of an Onc/ms" had been detected by the geologists of the Gov- ernment survey, in the Limestone near Bala. Sir Roderick referred in the same number to the remains of a fish found by Professor Phillips in the Wenlock Shale. And such, up to the pres- ent time, is the actual amount of the evidence with which we have to deal, and the dates of its piecemeal production. Let us next consider the order of its occurrence in the geologic scale. The better marked sub-divisions of the Si- lurian System, as de- scribed in the great work specially devoted to it, may be regarded as seven in number. An eighth has since been UPPER AND LOWER. 139 added, by the transference of the Tilestones from the lower part of the Old Red Sandstone group, to the upper part of the Silurian group underneath ; but in order the better to show how ichthyi: discovery has in its slow course penetrated into the depths, I shall retain the divisions recognized as those of the system when that course began. The highest or most modern Silurian deposit, then, (No. 1 of the accompanying diagram,) is the Upper Ludlow Rock ; and it is in the superior- strata of this division that the bone-bed discovered in 1838 occurs ; while the exceedingly minute vertebrate remains described by Professor Phillips in 1842 occur in its base. The division next in the descending order is the Aymestry Limestone, (No. 2 ;) the next (No. 3) the Lower Ludlow rock ; then (No. 4) the Wenlock or Dudley Limestone occurs ; and then, last and oldest deposit of the Upper Silurian forma- tion, the Wenlock shale, (No. 5.) It is in the fourth, or Wen- lock Limestone division, that the defensive spine described in the " Edinburgh Review " for 1845 as the oldest vertebrate organism known at the time, was found ; * while the verte- brate organism found by Professor Phillips belongs to the fifth, or base deposit of the Upper Silurian. Further, the American spines of Onondago and Oriskany, described in 1846, occurred in rocks deemed contemporary with those of the Wenlock division. We next cross the line which separates the base of the Upper from the top of the Lower Silurian deposits, and find a great arenaceous formation, (No. 6,) known as the Caradoc Sandstones ; while the Llandeilo Flags, (No. 7,) the formation upon which the sandstones rest, compose, according tc the sections of Sir Roderick, published in 1839, the lowest * " The shales alternating with the WenlTek Limestone." (Edinburgh 140 FISHES OF THE SILURIAN ROCKS : deposit of the Lower Silurian rocks. And it is in the upper part of this lowest member of the system that the ichthyic defences, announced in 1847 by Professor Sedgwick, occur. Vertebrate remains have now been detected in the same relative position in the seventh and most ancient member of the system, that they were found to occupy in its first and most modern member ten years ago. But this is not all. Beneath the Lower Silurian division there occur vast fossiliferous deposits, to which the name "Cambrian System" was given, merely provisionally, by Sir Roderick, but which Professor Sedgwick still retains as representative of a distinct geologic period ; and it is in these, greatly below the Lower Silurian base line, as drawn in 1839, that the Bala Limestones occur. The Plynlimmon rocks (a) a series of conglom- erate, grauwacke, and slate beds, several thousand yards in thickness intervene between the Llandeilo Flags and the Limestones of Bala, (6.) And, of consequence, the defensive spine of the Onchus, announced in 1847 as detected in these limestones by the geologists of the Government Survey, must have formed part of a fish that perished many ages ere the oldest of the Lower Silurian formations began to be de- posited. Let us now, after this survey of both the amount of our materials, and the order and time of their occurrence, pass on to the question of size, as already stated. Did the ichthyic remains of the Silurian System, hitherto examined and described, belong to large or to small fishes ? The question cannot be altogether so conclusively answered as in the case of those Ganoids of the Lower Old Red Sandstone whose dermal skeletons indicate their original dimensions and form. m fishes of the Placoid order, such as the Sharks and Rays, Jie dermal skeleton is greatly less continuous and persistent UPPER AND LOWER. 141 ban in su :vi Ganoids as the DipteriansandCcelacanths ; and when their remains occur in the fossil state, we can reason, in most instances, regarding the bulk of the individuals of which they formed part, merely from that of detached teeth or spines, whose proportion to the entire size of the animals that bore them cannot be strictly determined. We can, indeed, do little more than infer, that though a large Placoid may have been armed with but small spines or teeth, a small Placoid could not have borne very large ones. And to this Placoid order all the Silurian fish, from the Aymestry Limestone to the Cam- brian deposits of Bala inclusive, unequivocally belong. Nor, as has been already said, is there sufficient evidence to show that any of the ichthyic remains of the Upper Ludlow rocks do not belong to it. It is peculiarly the order of the system. The Ludlow bone-bed contains not only defensive spines, but also teeth, fragments of jaws, and shagreen points ; whereas, in all the inferior deposits which yield any trace of the ver- tebrata, the remains are those of defensive spines exclusively. Let us, then, take the defensive spine as the part on which to found our comparison. One of the best marked Placoids of the Upper Ludlow bone-bed is that Onchus Murchisoni to Avhich the distinguished geologist whose name it bears refers, in his communication, as so nearly resembling the oldest Placoid yet known, that of the Bala Limestone. And the living fishes with which the Onchus Murchisoni must be compared, says Agassiz, though " the affinity," he adds, " may be rather distant," are those of the genera " Cestracion, Centrina, and Spinax" I have placed before me a specimen of recent Spinax, of a species well known to all my readers on the sea-coast, the Spinax Acanthias, or common clog-fish, so little a favorite with our fishermen. It measures exactly two feet three inches in 142 FISHES OF THE SILURIAN ROCKS: length ; ana of the defensive spines of its two dorsals, these spear-liice thorns on the creature's back immediately in advance of the fins, which so frequently wound the fisher's hand, the anterior and smaller measures, from base to point, an inch and a half, and the posterior and larger, two inches. I have also placed before me a specimen of Cestra- cion Phillippi, (the Port Jackson Shark,) a fish now recog- nized as the truest existing analogue of the Silurian Placoids. It measures twenty-two three fourth inches in length, and is furnished, like Spinax, with two dorsal spines, of which the anterior and larger measures from base to point one one half inch, and the posterior and smaller, one one fifth inch. But the defensive spine of the Onchus Murchisoni, as exhibited in one of the Ludlow specimens, measures, though mutilated at both ends, three inches and five eighth parts in length. Even though existing but as a fragment, it is as such nearly twice the length of the largest spine of the dog-fish, unmuti- lated and entire, and considerably more than twice the length of the largest spine of the Port Jackson Shark. The spines detected by Professor Phillips, in an inferior stratum of the same upper deposit, were, as has been shown, of microscopic minuteness ; and when they seemed to rest on the extreme horizon of ichthyic existence as the most ancient remains of their kind, the author of the " Vestiges " availed himself of the fact. He regarded the little creatures to which they had belonged as the foetal embryos of their class, or to employ the language of the Edinburgh Reviewer as " the tokens of Nature's first and half-abortive efforts to make fish out of the lower animals." From the latter editions of his work, the paragraph to which the Reviewer refers has, I find, been expunged ; fpr the horizon has greatly extended, and what seemed to be its line of extreme distance has travelled into the UPPER AND LOWER. 143 middle of the prospect. But that the passage she aid have at all existed is a not uninstructive circumstance, and shows how unsafe it is, in more than external nature, to regard the line at which, for the time, the landscape closes, and heaven and earth seem to meet, as ir reality the world's end. The Wenlock spine, though certainly not microscopic, is, I am informed by Sir Philip Egerton,of but small size ; where- as the contemporary spine of the Onondago Limestone, though comparatively more a fragment than the spine of the Upper Ludlow Onchus, for it measures only three inches in length, is at least five times as bulky as the largest spine of Fig. 47. a. Posterior Spine of Spinax Acanthias. b. Fragment of Onondago Spine, (Natural Size.) Spinax Acanthias. Representing one of the massier fishes disporting amid the some four or five small ones, of which in my illustration, the naturalist catches a glimpse in ford- ing the unknown lake, it at least serves to show that all the Silurian ichthyolites must not be described as small, seeing that not only might many of its undetected fish have been large, but that some of those which have been detected were actually so. Another American spine, of nearly the same 144 FISHES OF THE SILURIAN ROCKS : formation, for it occurs in a limestone, varying from twenty to seventy feet in thickness, which immediately overlies that of the Onondago deposit, though still more fragmentary than the first, for its length is only two three eighth inches, maintains throughout a nearly equal thickness, a circum- stance in itself indicative of considerable size ; and in posi- tive bulk it almost rivals the Onondago one. Of the Lower Silurian and Bala fishes no descriptions or figures have yet appeared. And such, up to the present time, is the testi- mony derived from this department of Geology, so far as I have been able to determine it, regarding the size of the an- cient Silurian vertebrata. " No organism," says Professor Oken, " is, nor ever has one been, created, which is not mi- croscopic." The Professor's pupils and abettors, the assert- ors of the development hypothesis, appeal to the geological evidence as altogether on their side in the case ; and straight- way a few witnesses enter court. But, lo ! among the ex- pected dwarfs, there appear individuals of more than the average bulk and stature. Still, however, the question of organization remains. Did these ancient Placoid fishes stand high or low in the scale ? According to the poet, " What can we reason but from what we know ? " We are acquainted with the Placoid fishes of the present time ; and from these only, taking analogy as our guide, can we form any judgment regarding the rank and standing of their predecessors, the Placoids of the geologic periods. But the consideration of this question, as it is specially one on which the later assertors of the develop- ment hypothesis concentrate themselves, I must, to secure the space necessary for its discussion, defer till my next chapter. Meanwhile, I am conscious I owe an apology to the reader for what he must deem tedious minuteness of description, and a UPPER AND LOWER. 145 too prolix amplitude of statement. It is only by representing things as they actually are, and in the true order of their occurrence, that the effect of the partially selected facts and exaggerated descriptions of the Lamarckian can be adequate- ly met. True, the disadvantages of the more sober mode are unavoidably great. He who feels himself at liberty to arrange his collected shells, corals, and fish-bones, into artistically de- signed figures, and to select only the pretty ones, will be of course able to make of them a much finer show than he who is necessitated to represent them in the order and numerical proportions in which they occur on some pebbly beach washed by the sea. And such is the advantage, in a literary point of view, of the ingenious theorist, who, in making figures of his geological facts, takes no more of them than suits his purpose, over the man who has to communicate the facts as he finds them. But the homelier mode is the true one. " Could we obtain," says a distinguished metaphysician, "a distinct and full history of all that has passed in the mind of a child, from the beginning of life and sensation till it grows up to the use of reason, how its infant faculties began to work, and how they brought forth and ripened all the various notions, opin- ions, and sentiments which we find in ourselves when we come to be capable of reflection, this would be a treasure of natural history which would probably give more light into the human faculties than all the systems of philosophers about them since the beginning of the world. But it is in vain," he adds, " to wish for what nature has not put within the reach of our power." In like manner, could we obtain, it may be remarked, a full and distinct account of a single class of the animal kingdom, from its first appearance till the present time, " this would be a treasure of natural history which would cast more light " on the origin of liv jig existences, and the 13 146 FISHES OF THE SILURIAN ROCKS. true economy of creation, than all the theories of all the phi- losophers " since the beginning of the world." And in order to approximate to such a history as nearly as possible, and it does seem possible to approximate near enough to substantiate the true readings of the volume, and to correct the false ones, it is necessary that the real vestiges of crea- tion should be carefully investigated, and their order of sue cession ascertained. HIGH STANDING OF THE PLACOIDS. 147 HIGH STANDING OF THE PLACOIDS. OBJECTIONS CONSIDERED. WE have seen that some of the Silurian Placoids were large of size : the question still remains, Were they high in intel- ligence and organization ? The Edinburgh Reviewer, in contending with the author of the " Vestiges," replies in the affirmative, by claiming for them the first place among fishes. " Taking into account," he says, " the brain and the whole nervous, circulating, and generative systems, they stand at the highest point of a nat- ural ascending scale." They are fishes, he again remarks, that rank among " the very highest types of their class." " The fishes of this early age, and of all other ages pre- vious to the Chalk," says his antagonist, in reply, " are, for the most part, cartilaginous. The cartilaginous fishes CJwndropterygii of Cuvier are placed by that naturalist as a second series in his descending scale ; being, however, he says, ' in some measure parallel to the first? How far this is different from their being the highest types of the fish class, need not be largely insisted upon. Linnaeus, again, was so impressed by the low characters of many of this order, that he actually ranked them with worms. Some of tie cartila- ginous fishes, nevertheless, have certain peculiar features of organisation, chiefly connected with reproduction, in which 148 OBJECTIONS they excel other fish ; but such features are partly partaken of by families in inferior sub-kingdoms, showing that they cannot truly be regarded as marks of grade in their own class. When we look to the great fundamental characters, particularly to the framework for the attachment of the muscles, what do we find ? why, that of these Placoids, 'the highest types of their class,' it is barely possible to establish their being vertebrata at all, the back-bone having generally been too slight for preservation, although the ver- tebral columns of later fossil fishes are as entire as those of any other animals. In many of them traces can be ob- served of the muscles having been attached to the external plates, strikingly indicating their low grade as vertebrate animals. The Edinburgh Reviewer ' highest types of their class ' are in reality a separate series of that class, generally inferior, taking the leading features of organization of struc- ture as a criterion, but when details of organization are re- garded, stretching farther, both downward and upward, than the other series ; so that, looking at one extremity, we are as much entitled to call them the lowest, as the Reviewer, look- ing at another extremity, is to call them the ' highest of their class.' Of the general inferiority there can be no room for doubt. Their cartilaginous structure is, in the first place, analogous to the embryonic state of vertebrated animals in general. The maxillary and intermaxillary bones are in them rudimental. Their tails are finned on the under side only, an admitted feature of the salmon in an embryonic stage ; and the mouth is placed on the under side of the head, also a mean and embryonic feature of structure. These characters are essential and important, whatever the Edinburgh Reviewer may say to the contrary ; they are the characters which, above all, T am chiefly concerned in look- CONSIDERED. 149 ing to, for they are features of embryonic progress, and em- bryonic progress is the grand key to the theory of develop- ment." Such is the ingenious piece of special pleading which this most popular of the Lamarckians directs against the standing and organization of the earlier fishes. Let us examine it somewhat in detail, and see whether the slight admixture of truth which it contains serves to do aught more than to render current, like the gilding of a counterfeit guinea spread over the base metal, the amount of error which lies beneath. I know not a better example than that which it furnishes, of the entanglement and perplexity which the meshes of an arti- ficial classification, when converted, in argumentative pro- cesses, into symbols and abstractions, are sure to involve subjects simple enough in themselves. Fishes, according to the classification of a preponderating majority of the ichthyologists that have flourished from the earliest times down to those of Agassiz, have been divided into two great series, the Ordinary or osseous, and the Chon- dropterygii or cartilaginous. And these two divisions of the class, instead of being ranged consecutively in a continuous line, the one in advance of the other, have been ranged in two parallel lines, the one directly abreast of the other. There is this further peculiarity in the arrangement, that the line of the cartilaginous series, from the circumstance that some of its families rise higher and some sink lower in the scale than any of the ordinary fishes, outflanks the array of the osseous series at both ends. The front which it presents contains fewer genera and species than that of the osseous division ; but, like the front of an army drawn out in single file, it extends along a greater length of ground And to this long-fronted series of the cartilaginous, or, ae 13* 150 OBJECTIONS cording to Cuvier, chondropterygian fishes, thePlacoid families of Agassiz belong, among the rest, the Placoids of the Silu- rian formations, Upper and Lower. But though all the Pla- coids of this latter naturalist be cartilaginous fishes, all carti- laginous fishes are not Placoids. The Sturionidce are cartila- ginous, and are, as such, ranked by Cuvier among the Chan- dropterygii, whereas Agassiz places them in his Ganoid order. Many of the extinct fishes, too, such as the Acanthodei, Dip- terida, Cephalaspida, were, as we have seen, cartilaginous in their internal framework, and yet true Ganoids notwith- standing. The principle of Agassiz's classification wholly differs from that of Cuvier and the older ichthyologists ; for it is a classification founded, not on the character of the internal but on that of the cuticular or dermal skeleton. And while to the geologist it possesses great and obvious advan- tages over every other, for of the earlier fishes very little more than the cuticular skeleton survives, it has this further recommendation to the naturalist, that, (in so far at least as its author has been true to his own principles,) instead of anom- alously uniting the highest and lowest specimens of their class, the fishes that most nearly approximate to the reptiles on the one hand, and the fishes that sink furthest towards the worms on the other, it gathers into cue consistent order all the individuals of the higher type, distinguished above their fellows by their development of brain, the extensive range of '.heir instincts, and the perfection of their generative sys- tems. Further, the history of animal existences, as re- corded in the sedimentary rocks of our planet, reads a recom- mendation of this scheme of classification which it extends to no other. We find that in the progress of creation the fishes began to be bygroupes and septs, arranged according to the principle on which it erects its orders. The Placoids CONSIDERED. 151 came first, the Ganoids succeeded them, and theCtenoids and Cycloids brought up the rear. The march has been marshalled according to an appointed programme, the order of whicn it is peculiarly the merit of Agassiz to have ascertained. Now, may I request the reader to mark, in the first place, that what We have specially to deal with at the present stage of the argument are the Placoid fishes of the Silurian forma- tions, Upper and Lower. May I ask him to take note, in the second, that the long-fronted clwndropterygian series of Cuvier, though it includes, as has already b<_en said, the Placoid order of Agassiz, just as the red-blooded division of animals includes the bimana and quadrumana, is no more to be regarded as identical with the Placoids, than the red-blooded animals are to be regarded as identical with the apes or with the human family. It simply includes them in the character of one of the three great divisions into which it has been separated, the division ranged, if I may so express myself, on the extreme right of the line ; its middle portion, or main body, being composed of the Sturiones, a family on the general level of the osseous fishes ; while, ranged on the extreme left, we find the low division of the Suctorii, i. e. Cyclostomi, or Lampreys. But with the middle and lower divisions we have at present nothing to do ; for of neither of them, whether Sturiones or Suctorii, does the Silurian System exhibit a trace. Further be it remarked, that the scheme of classification which gives an abstract standing to the Chondropterygii, is in itself merely a certain perception of resemblance which existed in certain minds, having carti- lage for its general idea ; just as another certain perception of resemblance in oae other certain mind had cuticular skeleton for its general idea, and as yet another perception of resemblance in yet other certain minds had red blood for 152 OBJECTIONS its general idea. As shown by the disparities which obtain among the section which the scheme serves to separate from the others, it no more determines rank or standing than that gr3atly more ancient scheme of classification into "ring- streaked and spotted," which served to distinguish the flocks of the patriarch Jacob from those of Laban his father-in-law, but which did not distinguish goats from sheep, nor sheep from cattle. The effect of introducing, after this manner, generalizations made altogether irrespective of rank, and avowedly without reference to it, into what are inherently and specifically ques- tions of rank, admits of a simple iUustration. Let us suppose that it was not with the standing of the Silurian Placoids that we had to deal, but with that of the mammals of the recent period, including the quadrumana, and even the bimana, and that we had ventured to describe them, in the words of the Edinburgh Reviewer, as " the very highest types of their class." What would be thought of the reasoner who, in challenging the justice of the estimate, would argue that these creatures, men as well as monkeys, belonged simply to that division of red-blooded animals which includes, with the bimana and quadrumana, the frog, the gud- geon, and the earthworm 1 a division, he might add, "which, when details of organization are regarded, stretches farther, both downward and upward," than that division of the white- blooded animals to which the crab, the spider, the cuttle-fish, and the dragon fly belong ; " so that, looking at one extremity, any one is as much entitled to call the red-blooded animals the lowest division, as any other, looking at another ex- tremity, is to call them the highest division, of animals." What, it might well be asked in reply, has the earthworm, with its red Hood, to do in a question respecting the place CONSIDERED. 153 and standing of the bimana ? Or what, in the parallel case, have the Suctorii the worms of Linnaeus to do in a question respecting the place and standing of the real Placoids ? True it is that, according to one principle of classification, now grown somewhat obsolete, men and earth- worms are equally red-blooded animals ; true it is that, according to another principle of classification, the Placoids of Agassiz and the cartilaginous worms of Linnaeus are equally Ckondropterygii. The bimana and the earthworm have their red blood in common ; the glutinous hag and the true Placoids have as certainly their internal cartilage in common ; and if the fact of the red blood of the worm lowers in no degree the rank of the bimana, then, on the same principle, the fact of the internal cartilage of the glutinous hag cannot possibly detract from the standing of the true Placoid. In both cases they are creatures that entirely differ, the earth- worms from the bimana, and the cartilaginous worms from the Placoids ; and the classification which tags them together, whether it be that of Aristotle or that of Cuvier, cannot be converted into a sort of minus quantity, of force enough to detract from the value and standing of the bimana in the one case, or of the true Placoids in the other. It is in no degree derogatory to the human family that earth- worms possess red blood ; it is in no degree derogatory to the true Placoids that the Suctorii possess cartilaginous skeletons. Let the reader now mark the use which has been made, by the author of the " Vestiges," of the name and authority of Linnaeus. " Linnaeus," he states, " was so impressed by the low character of many of this order, (the Chondropterygii,) that he actually ranked them with worms." Now, what is the fac* here ? Simply that Linnaeus had no such general order 154 OBJECTIONS as the Chondropterygii in his eye at all. Though chiefly remarkable as a naturalist for the artificialness of his classifi- cations, his estimate of the cartilaginous fishes was remarkable though carried too far in its extremes, and in some degree founded in error for an opposite quality. It was an estimate formed, in the main, on a natural basis. Instead of taking their cartilaginous skeleton into account, he looked chiefly at their standing as animals ; and, struck with that extent of front which they present, and with both their superiority on the ex- treme right, and their inferiority on the extreme left, to the ordinary fishes, he erected them into two separate orders, the one lower and the other higher than the members of the osse- ous line. And so far was he from regarding the true Placoids those Chondropterygii which to an internal skeleton of cartilage add external plates, points, or spines of bone as low in the scale, that he actually raised them above fishes alto- gether, by erecting them into an order of reptiles, the order Amphibia Nantes. Surely, if the name of Linnaeus was to be introduced into this controversy at all, it ought to have been in connection with this special fact ; seeing that the point to be determined in the question under discussion is simply the place and standing of that very order which the naturalist rated so high, not the place and standing of the order which he degraded. It so happens that there is one of the Chon- dropterygii which, so far from being a true Placoid, does net possess a single osseous plate, point, or spine : it is a worm- like creature, without eyes, without movable jaws, without vertebral joints, without scales, always enveloped in slime, and greatly abhorred by our Scotch boatmen of the Moray Frith, who hold that it burrows, like the grave-worm, in the decaying bodies of the dead. And this creature, " the glutinous hag," or, according to north-country fishermen, the CONSIDERED. 15? " ramper-eel," or " poison-ramper," was regarded by Lin nseus as belonging, not to the class of fishes, but to th> Vermes. Now, this is the special fact with which, in thf development controversy, the author of the " Vestiges " con nects the name of the Swedish naturalist ! All the fish of the Silurian System belonged to that true Placoid order which Linnaeus, impressed by its high standing, erected into an order, not of worms, but of reptiles. He elevated A, the true Placoid, while he degraded B, the glutinous hag. But ?, was necessary to the argument of the author of the " Ves- tiges " that the earliest existing fish should be represented as fish tow in the scale ; and so he has cited the name and authority of Linna?us in its bearing against the glutinous hag B, as if it had borne against the standing of the true Placoid A. The Patagonians are the tallest and bulkiest men in the world, whereas their neighbors the Fuegians are a slim and diminutive race. And if, in some controversy raised regard- ing the real size of the more gigantic tribe, they were to be described as the " very tallest types of their class," any state- ment in reply, to the effect that some trustworthy voyager had examined certain races of the extreme south of America, and had found that they were both short and thin, would be neither relevant in its facts nor legitimate in its bearing. But if the controversialist who thus strove to strengthen his case by the voyager's authority, was at the same time fully aware that the voyager had seen not only the diminutive Fuegians, but also the gigantic Patagonians, and that he had described these last as very gigantic indeed, the introduction of the statement regarding the smaller race, when he wholly sank the statement regarding the larger, would be not mere y very irrelevant in the circumstances, but also very unfair. Such, however, is the style of statement to which the author of the 156 PROGRESS " Vestiges " has (I trust inadvertently) resorted in this con- troversy. It is not uninstructive to mark how slowly and gradually the naturalists have been groping their way to a right classifi cation in the ichthyic department of their science, and how it has been that identical perception of resemblance, having cartilage for its general idea, to which the author of the " Vestiges " attaches so much importance, that has served mainly to retard their progress. Not a few of the more dis- tinguished among their number deemed it too important a distinction to be regarded as merely secondary ; and so long as it was retained as a primary characteristic, the fishes failed to range themselves in the natural order; dissimilar tribes were brought into close neighborhood, while tribes nearly allied were widely separated. It failed, as has been shown, to influence LinnaBus ; and though he no doubt pressed his peculiar views too far when he degraded the glutinous hag into a worm, and elevated the Sharks and Rays into reptiles, it is certainly worthy of remark, that, in the scheme of class- ification which is now regarded as the most natural, that of Professor Muller, modified by Professor Owen, the ichthyic worms of the Swede are placed in the first and lowest order of fishes, the Dermopteri, and the greater part of his ichthyic reptiles, in the eleventh and highest, the Plagiostomi. Cuvier yielded, as has been shown, to the idea of resemblance founded on the material of the ichthyic framework, and so ranged his fishes into two parallel lines. Professer Oken, after first enunciating as law that " the char- acteristic organ of fishes is the osseous system," confessed the " great difficulty " which attaches to the question of skel- etal " texture or substance," and finally gave up the distinction founded on it as obstinately irreducible to the purposes of a OF ICHTHYIC CLASSIFICATION. . 157 natural classification. " The cartilaginous fishes," he says, " ap- pear to belong to each other, and are also usually arranged to- gether ; yet amongst them we find those species, such as the Lampreys, which obviously occupy the lowest grade of all fishes, while the Sharks and Rays remind us of the Reptilia." And so, sinking the consideration of texture altogether, he placed the family of the Lamprey, including the glutinous hag, at the bottom of ihe scale, and the Sharks and Rays at the top. Agassiz's system, peculiarly his own, has had the rare merit, as I have shown, of furnishing a key to the history of the fish in its several dynasties, which we may in vain seek hi any other. His divisions, if, retaining his strongly-marked Placoids and Ganoids, as orders stamped in the mint of nature, we throw his perhaps less obviously divisible Cteuoids and Cy- cloids into one order, the corneous or horn-covered, are scarcely less representative of periods than those great classes of the vertebrata, mammals, birds, reptiles, and fishes, which we find not less regularly ranged in their order of succession in the geologic record than in the " Animal Kingdom " of Cuvier, ;i shrewd corroboration, in both cases, I am dis- posed to th/' ik, of the rectitude of the arrangement. What seems to be the special defect of his system is, that having erected his four orders, and then finding a certain number of residuary families that, on his principle of cuticular character, stubbornly refused to fall into any determinate place, he dis- tributed them among the others, with reference chiefly to the totally distinct principle of Cuvier. Thus the Suctorii, soft, smooth, slimy-skinned fishes, that do not possess a single placoid character, and are not true Placoids, he has yet placed in his Placoid order, influenced, apparently, by the " per- ception of resemblance that has cartilage for its central idea ; " and the effect has been a massing into one anomalous 14 158 PROGRESS and entangled group the fishes of the first period of geologic history, with fishes of which we do not find a trace save in the existing scene of things, and of the highest families of their class with families that occupy the lowest place. But we live in an age in which even the benefactors of the world of mind cannot make false steps with impunity ; and so, while Agassiz's three ichthyic orders will continue to be recognized by the palaeontologist as the orders of three great geologic periods, the Suctorii have already been struck from off his higher fishes by the classification of Muller and Owen, and carried to that lowest point in the scale (indicated by Linnaeus and Oken) which their inferior standing renders so obviously the natural one. Some of my readers may per- haps remember how finely Bacon, in his " Wisdom of the Ancients," interprets the old mythologic story of Prometheus. Prometheus, says the philosopher, had conferred inestimable favors on men, by moulding their forms into shape, and bring- ing them fire from heaven ; and yet they complained of him and his teachings to Jupiter. And the god, instead of cen- suring their ingratitude, was pleased with the complaint, and rewarded them with gifts. In putting nature to the question, it is eminently wholesome to be doubting, cross-examining, complaining ; ever demanding of our masters and benefactors the philosophers, that they should reign over us, not arbitra- rily and despotically, " Like the old kings, with, high exacting looks, Sceptred and globed," but like our modern constitutional monarchs, who govern by law ; and, further, that an appeal from their decisions on all subjects within the jurisdiction of Nature should for ever lie open to Nature herself. The seeming ingratitude of such OF ICHTHYIC CLASSIFICATION. 159 a course, if the " complaints " be made in a right spirit and on proper grounds, Jupiter always rewards with gifts. Let us now see for ourselves, in this spirit, whether there may not be something absolutely derogatory, in the existence of a cartilaginous skeleton, to the creatures possessing it ; or whether a deficit of internal bone may not be greatly more than neutralized, as it assuredly must have been in the view of Linnaeus, Muller, and Owen, by a larger than ordinary share of a vastly more important substance. 160 RANK DEPENDENT THE PLACOID BRAIN. EMBRYONIC CHARACTERISTICS NOT NECESSARILY OF A LOW ORDER. THAT special substance, according to whose mass and de- gree of development all the creatures of this world take rank in the scale of creation, is not bone, but brain. Were ani- mals to be ranged according to the solidity of their bones, the class of birds would be assigned the first place ; the family of the Felidcz, including the tiger and lion, the second ; and the other terrestrial carnivora the third. Man and the herbiv- orous animals, though tolerably low in the scale, would be in advance of at least the reptiles. Most 'of these, however, would take precedence of the sagacious Delphinidce ; the osseous fishes would come next in order ; the true Placoids would follow, succeeded by the Sturiones ; and the Suctorii, i. e. Cyclostomi or Lampreys, would bring up the rear. There would be evidently no order here : the utter confusion of such an arrangement, like that of the bits of a dissected map flung carelessly out of its box by a child, would of itself demonstrate the inadequacy and erroneousness of the regulating principle. But how very different the appear- ance presented, when for solidity of bone we substi- tute development of brain I Man takes his proper place ON BRAIN, NOT BONE. 161 at the head of creation ; the lower mammalia follow, each species in due order, according to its modicum of intel- ligence ; the birds succeed the mammalia ; the reptiles suc- ceed the birds ; the fishes succeed the reptiles ; next in the long procession come the invertebrate animals ; and these, too, take rank, if not according to their development of brain proper, at least according to their development of the substance of brain. The occipital nervous ganglion of the scorpion greatly exceeds in size that of the earthworm ; and the occipital nervous ring of the lobster, that of the intes- tinal Ascaris. At length, when we reach the lowest or acrife division of the animal kingdom, the substance of brain altogether disappears. It has been calculated by natural- ists, that in the vertebrata, the brain in the class of fishes bears an average proportion to the spinal cord of about two to one ; in the class of reptiles, of about two and a half to one ; in the class of birds, of about three to one ; in the class of mammals, of about four to one ; and in the high-placed, sceptre-bearing human family, a proportion of not less than twenty-three to one. It is palpably according to development of brain, not development of bone, that we are to determine points of precedence among the animals, a fact of which no one can be more thoroughly aware than the author of the " Vestiges " himself. Of this let me adduce a striking in- stance, of which I shall make further use anon. " All life," says Oken, " is from the sea ; none from the continent. Man also is a child of the warm and shallow parts of the sea in the neighborhood of the land." Such also was the hypothesis of Lamarck and Maillet. In follow- ing up the view of his masters, the author of the " Vestiges " fixes on the Delphinidee as the sea-inhabiting progenitors of he simial family, and, through the simial family, of man. 14* RANK DEPENDENT For that highest order of the mammalia to which the Si' miadcc (monkeys) belong, " there remains," he says, " a basis in the Delphinidcz, the last and smallest of the cetacean tribes. This affiliation has a special support in the brain of the dolphin family, which is distinctly allowed to be, in pro- portion to general bulk, the greatest among mammalia next to the orang-outang and man. We learn from Tiedemann, that each of the cerebral hemispheres is composed, as in man and the monkey tribe, of three lobes, an anterior, a middle, and a posterior ; and these hemispheres present much more numerous circumvolutions and grooves than those of any other animal. Here it might be rash to found any thing upon the ancient accounts of the dolphin, its famil- iarity with man, and its helping him in shipwreck and various marine disasters ; although it is difficult to believe these sto- ries to be altogether without some basis in fact. There is no doubt, however, that the dolphin evinces a predilection for human society, and charms the mariner by the gambols which it performs beside his .vessel." Here, then, the author of the " Vestiges " palpably founds on a large development of brain in the dolphin, and on the manifestation of a correspondingly high order of instincts, and this altogether irrespective of the structure or compo- sition of the creature's internal skeleton. The substance to which he looks as all-important in the case is Irain, not lone. For were he to estimate the standing of the dolphin, not by Us brain, but by its skeleton, he would have to assign to it a place, not only not in advance of its brethren the mammalia of the sea, but even in the rear of the reptiles of the sea, the marine tortoises, or turtles, and scarce more than abreast of the osseous fishes. " Fishes," says Professor Owen, in his * Lectures on the Vertebrate Animals," " have the least pro- ON BRAIN, NOT BONE. 163 portion of earthy matter in their bones ; birds the largest. The mammalia, especially the active, predatory species, have more earth, or harder bones, than reptiles. In each class, however, there are differences in the density of bone among its several members. For example, in the fresh-water fishes, the bones are lighter, and retain more animal matter, than .n those which swim in the denser sea. And in the dolphin, a warm-blooded marine animal, they differ little in this re- spect from those of the sea-fish." Such being the fact, it is surely but fair to inquire of the author of the " Vestiges," ' why he should determine the rank and standing of the Del- phinidce according to one set of principles, and the rank and standing of the Placoids according to another and entirely different set ? If the Delphinidce are to be placed high in the scale, notwithstanding the softness of their skeletons, simply because their brains are large, why are the Placoids to be placed low in the scale, notwithstanding the largeness of their brains, simply because their skeletons are soft ? It is not too much to demand, that on the principle which he himself re- cognizes as just, he should either degrade the dolphin or ele- vate the Placoid. For it is altogether inadmissible that he should reason on one set of laws when the exigencies of \ is hypothesis require that creatures with soft skeletons should be raised in the scale, and on another and entirely differ- ent set when its necessities demand that they should be de- pressed. But do the Placoids possess in reality a large development of brain ? I have examined the brains of almost all the com- mon fish of our coast, both osseous and cartilaginous, not, I fear, with the skill of a Tiedemann, but all the more intel- ligently in consequence of what Tiedemann had previously done and written ; and so I can speak with some little con- 164 THE PLACOID BRAIN. fidence on the subject, so far at least as my modicum of ex- perience, thus acquired, extends. Of all the common fish of the Scottish seas, the spotted or lesser dog-fish bears, in proportion to its size, the largest brain ; the gray or picked dog-fish ranks next in its degree of development ; the Rays, in their various species, follow after ; and the osseous fishes compose at least the great body of the rear ; while still further behind, there lags a hapless class the Suctorii, one of which, the glutinous hag, has scarce any brain, and one, the Amphioxus or lancelet, wants brain altogether. I have compared the brain of the spotted dog-fish with that of a young alligator, and have found that in scarce any percep- tible degree was it inferior, in point of bulk, and very slightly indeed in point of organization, to the brain of the reptile. And the instincts of this Placoid family, one of the truest existing representatives of the Placoids of the Silurian Sys- tem * to which we can appeal, correspond, we invariably find, with their superior cerebral development. I have seen the common dog-fish, Spinax Acanthias, hovering in packs in the Moray Frith, some one or two fathoms away from the side of the herring boat from which, when the fishermen were engaged in hauling their nets, I have watched them, and have admired the caution which, with all their ferocity of disposition, they rarely failed to manifest ; how they kept aloof from the net, even more warily than the cetacea themselves, though both dog-fish and cetacea are occasionally entangled ; and how, when a few herrings were * The Silurian Placoids are most adequately represented by the Cestracion of the southern hemisphere ; but I know not that of the peculiar character and instincts of this interesting Placoid, the last of its race, there is any thing known. For its form and general ap- pearance see fig. 49, page 177. THE PLACOID BRAIN. 165 shaken loose from the meshes, they at once darted upon them, exhibiting for a moment, through the green depths, the pale gleam of their abdomens, as they turned upon their sides to seize the desired morsels, a motion rendered necessary by the position of the mouth in this family ; and how next, theii object accomplished, they fell back into their old position, and waited on as before. And I have been assured by intelligent fishermen, that at the deep-sea white-fishing, in which baited hooks, not nets, are employed, the degree of shrewd caution exercised by these creatures seems more extraordinary still. The hatred which the fisher bears to them arises not more from the actual amount of mischief which they do him, than from the circumstance that in most cases they persist in doing it with complete impunity to themselves. I have seen, said an observant Cromarty fisherman to the writer of these chapters, a pack of dog-fish watching beside our boat, as we were hauling our lines, and severing the hooked fish, as they passed them, at a bite, just a little above the vent, so that they themselves escaped the swallowed hook ; and I have frequently lost, in this way, no inconsiderable portion of a fishing. I have observed, however, he continued, that when a fresh pack of hungry dog-fish came up, and joined the pack that had been robbing us so coolly, and at their leisure, a sudden rashness would seize the whole, the united packs would become a mere heedless mob, and, rushing forward, they would swallow our fish entire, and be caught themselves by the score and the hundred. We may see something very similar to this taking place among even the shrewder mam- malia. When pug refuses to take his food, his mistress straightway calls upon the cat, and, quickened by the dread of the coming rival, he gobbles up his rations at once. With the comparatively ^arge development of brain, and the cor- 166 THE PLACOID INSTINCTS. esponding manifestations of instinct, which the true Placoids exhibit, we find other unequivocal marks of a general supe- itority to their class. In their reproductive organs they rank, riot with the common fishes, nor even with the lower rep- tiles, but with the Chelonians and the Sauria. Among the Rays, as among the higher animals, there are individual attachments formed between male and female : their eggs unlike the mere spawn of the osseous fishes, or of even the Batrachians, are, like those of the tortoise and the crocodile, comparatively few in number, and of considerable size : their young, too, like the young of birds and of the highei reptiles, pass through no such metamorphosis as those of the toad and frog, or of the amphibia generally. And some of their number the common dog-fish for instance are ovoviviparous, bringing forth their young, like the common viper and the viviparous lizard, alive and fully formed. " But such features," says the author of the " Vestiges," referring chiefly to certain provisions connected with the re- productory system in the Placoids, " are partly partaken of by families in inferior sub-kingdoms, showing that they cannot truly be regarded as marks of grade in their own class." Nay, single features do here and there occur in the inferior sub-kingdoms, which very nearly resemble single features in the placoid character and organization, which even very nearly resemble single features in the human character and organization ; but is there any of the inferior sub-kingdoms in which there occurs such a collocation of features ? or does such a collocation occur in any class of animals setting the Placoids wholly out of view which is not a high class? Nay, further, does there occur in any of the inferior sub- icingdoms existing even as a single feature that most THE PLACOID FRAMEWORK. 167 prominent, leading characteristic of this series of fishes, a large brain ? But is not the " cartilaginous structure " of the Placoids analogous to the embryonic state of vertebrated animals in gen- oral ? Do not the other placoid peculiarities to which the author of the " Vestiges " refers, such as the heterocercal or one-sided tail, the position of the mouth on the under side of the head, and the rudimental state of the maxillaries and intermaxillaries, bear fuither analogies with the embryonic state of the higher animals ? And is not " embryonic progress the grand key to the theory of development ? " Let us ex- amine this matter. " These are the characters," says this ingenious writer, " which, above all, I am chiefly concerned in looking to ; for they are features of embryonic progress, and embryonic progress is the grand key to the theory of develop- ment." Bold assertion, certainly ; but, then, assertion is not argument ! The statement is not a reason for the faith that is in the author of the " Vestiges," but simply an avowal of it ; it is simply a confession, not a defence, of the Lamarckian creed ; and, instead of being admitted as embodying a first principle, it must be put stringently to the question, in order to determine whether it contain a principle at all. In the first place, let us remark, that the cartilaginous structure of the Placoids bears no very striking analogy to the cartilaginous structure of the higher vertebrata in the embryonic state. In the case of the DelphinidcB, with then soft skeletons, the analogy is greatly more close. Bone consists of animal matter, chiefly gelatinous, hardened by a diffusion of inorganic earth. In the bones of young and foetal mammalia, inhabitants of the land, the gelatinous pre- vails ; in the old and middle-aged there is a preponderance of the earth. Now, in the bones of the dolphin there is 168 THE PLACOID FRAMEWORK. comparatively little earth. The analogies of its internal skeleton bear, not on the skeletons of its brethren the mature full-grown mammals of the land, but on the skeletons of their immature or foetal offspring. But in the case of the true Placoids that analogy is faint indeed. Their skeletons contain true bone ; the vertebral joints of the Sharks and Rays possess each, as has been shown, an osseous nucleus, which retains, when subjected to the heat of a common fire, the complete form of the joint ; and their cranial framework has its surface always covered over with hard osseous points. But though their skeletons possess thus their modicum of bone, unlike those of embryonic birds or mammals, they contain, in what is properly their cartilage, no gelatine. The analogy signally fails in the very point in which it has been deemed specially to exist. The cartilage of the Chondropterygii is a substance so essentially different from that of young or embryonic birds and mammals, and so unique in the animal kingdom, that the heated water in which the one readily dis- solves has no effect whatever upon the other. It is, however, a curious circumstance, exemplified in some of the Shark family,* though it merely serves, in its exceptive character, to establish the general fact, that while the rays of the double fins, which answer to the phalanges, are all formed of this indissoluble cartilage, those rays which constitute their outer framework, with the rays which constitute the framework of all the single fins, are composed of a mucoidal cartilage, which boils into glue. At certain definite lines a change occurs in the texture of the skeleton ; and it is certainly suggestive of thought, that the difference of substance which the change involves distinguishes that * Such as the dog-fishes, picked and spotted. THE EMBRYONIC TAIL. 169 part of the skeleton which is homologically representative of the skeletons of the higher vertebrata, from that part of it which is peculiar to the creature as a fish, viz. the dorsal and caudal rays, and the extremities of the double fins. These emphatically ichthyic portions of the animal may be dissi- pated by boiling, whereas what Linnaeus would perhaps term its reptilian portion abides the heat without reduction. But is not the one-sided tail, so characteristic of the sharks, and of almost all the ancient Ganoids, also a characteristic of the young salmon just burst from the egg ? Yes, assuredly ; and, so far as research on the subject has yet extended, of not only the salmon, but of all the other osseous fishes in their fcetal state. The salmon, on its escape from the egg, is a little monster of about three quarters of an inch in length, with a huge heart-shaped bag, as bulky as all the rest of its body, depending from its abdomen. In this bag provident nature has packed up for it, in lieu of a nurse, food for five weeks ; and, moving about every where in its shallow pool, with its provision knapsack slung fast to it, it reminds one disposed to be fanciful, save that its burden is on the wrong side, of Scottish soldiers of the olden time summoned to attend their king in war, " Each, on his back, a slender store, His forty days' provision bore, As ancient statutes tell." Around that terminal part of the creature's body traversed by the caudal portion of the vertebral column, which com- mences in the salmon immediately behind the ventrals, there runs at this period, and for the ensuing five weeks in which it does not feed, a membranous fringe or fin, which exactly resembles that of the tadpole, and which, existing simply aa an expansion of the skin, exhibits no mark or rays. In the 70 EMBRYONIC PECULIARITIES place of the true caudal fin, however, we rr.z,y detect wit.i the assistance of a lens, an internal framework with two well-marked lobes, and ascertain, further, that this fail is set on awry, the effect of a slight upward bend in the crc ixture's body. And when viewed in a strong light as a transparency we perceive that the spinal cord takes the same upward bend and, as in the sturgeon, passes in an exceedingly attenuated form into the upper lobe. What may be regarded as the design of the arrangement is probably to be found in the pe culiar form given to the little creature by the protuberan bag in front. A wise instinct teaches it, from the moment of its exclusion from the egg, to avoid its enemies. In the in- stant the human shadow falls upon its pool, we see it darting into some recess at the side or bottom, with singular alacrity ; and in order to enable it to do so, and to steer itself aright, as, like an ill-trimmed vessel, deep in the water ahead, the balance of its body is imperfect, there is, if 1 may so ex- press myself, a heterocercal peculiarity of helm required. It has got an irregularly-developed tail to balance an irregularly- developed body, as skiffs lean on the one beam and full on the other require, in rowing, a cast of the rudder to keep them straight in their course. Sinking altogether, however, the final cause of the peculi- arity, and regarding it simply as a foetal one, that indicates a certain stage of imperfection in the creature in which it oc- curs, on what principle, I ask, are we to infer that what is a sign of immaturity in the young of one set of animals, is a mark of inferior organization in the adult forms of another set ? The want of eyes in any of the animal families, or the want of organs of progression, or a fixed and sedentary con- dition, like that of the oyster, are all marks of great inferion ty. And yet, if we admit the principle, that what are evidences NOT NECESSARILY OF A LOW ORDER. 171 cf immatu:ity in the young members of one family are signs of inferior organization in the fully-grown members of another, it could easily be shown that eyes and legs are defects, and that the unmoving oyster stands higher in the scale than the ever-restless fish or bird. The immature Tubularia possess locomotive powers, whereas in their fully developed state they remain fixed to one spot in their convoluted tubes. The im- mature Lepas is furnished with members well adapted for swimming, and with which it swims freely ; .as it rises towards maturity, these become blighted and weak ; and, when fully grown, fixed by its fleshy pedicle to the rock or float- ing log to which it attached itself in its transition state, it is no longer able to swim. The immature Balanus is fur- nished with two eyes : in its state of maturity these are ex- tinguished, and it passes its period of full development in darkness. Further, it is not generally held that in the human family a white skin is a decided mark of degradation, but rather the reverse ; and yet nothing can be more certain than that the Negro foetus has a white skin. Since eyes, and or- gans of progression, and a power of moving /reely, and a white skin, are mere embryonic peculiarities in the Balanus the Lepas, the Tulularia, and the Negro, and yet are in them- selves, when found in the mature animal, evidences of a high, not of a low standing, on what principle, I ask, are we to infer tnat the peculiarity of a heterocercal tail, embryonic in the saimon, is, when found in the mature Placoid, an evi- dence, not of a high standing, but of a lo\v 5 Every true analogy in the case favors an exactly opposite view. In the heterocercal or one-sided tail, the vertebral joints gradually diminish, as in the tails of the Sauria and Opltidia, till they terminate in a point ; whereas the homocercal tail common to the osseous fishes exhibits no true analogy with the tails 172 THE PLACOID TAIL. of the h'gher ordars. Its abruptly terminating vertebral col- umn, immensely developed posterior processes, and broadlv expanded osseous rays, seem to be simply a few of the many marks of decline and degradation which fishes, the oldest of the vertebrata, exhibit in this late age of the world, and which, in at least the earlier geologic periods, when they were great- ly younger as a class, they did not betray. Fig. 48. a. Tail of Spinax Acanthias. b. Tail of Ichthyosaurus Tenuirostris , (Buckland.) In illustration of this view, I would fain recommend tc the reader a simple experiment. Let him procure the tail of a common dog-fish, (fig. 48, a,) and cutting it across about half an inch above where the caudal fin begins, let him boil it smartly for about half an hour. He will first see it swell, THE PLACOID TAIL. 173 and then burst, all around those thinner parts of the fin that are traversed by ths caudal rays, wholly mucoidal, as shown by this test, in their texture, and which yield to the boiling water, as if formed of isinglass. They finally dissohe, and drop away, with the surrounding cuticular integument ; and then there only remains, as the insoluble framework of the whole, the bodies of the vertebrae, with their neural and hcemal processes. The tail has now lost much of its ichthyic character, and has acquired, instead, a considerable degree of resemblance to the reptilian tail, as exemplified in the sau- rians. I have introduced into the wood -cut, for the purpose of comparison, the tail of the ichthyosaurus, (J.) It consists, like the other, of a series of gradually diminishing vertebrae, and must have also supported, says Professor Owen, a pro- pelling fin, placed vertically, as in the shark, which, how- ever, from its perishable nature, has in every instance dis- appeared in the earth, as that of the dog-fish disappears in the boiling water. It will be seen that its processes are com- paratively smaller than those of the fish, and that the bodies of its vertebras are shorter and bulkier ; but there is at least a general correspondence of the parts ; and were the tail of the crocodile, of which the vertebral bodies are slender and the processes large, to be substituted for that of the enaliosaur here, the correspondence would be more marked still. After thus developing the tail of the reptile out of that of the fish, as the cauldron-bearing Irish magician of the tale developed young ladies out of old women, simply by lolling, let the reader proceed to a second stage of the experiment, and see whether he may not be able still further to develope the reptilian tail so obtained, into that of the mammal, by burning. Let him spread it out on a piece of iron hoop, and thrust it into the fire ; and then, after exposure for some time to a red heat has 15 * 174 THE PLACOID TAIL. consumed and dissipated its merely cartilaginous portions, such as the neural and hcemal processes, with the little pieces which form the sides of the neural arch, and left only the whitened bodies of the vertebrae, let him say whether the bony portion which remains does not present a more exact resemblance to the mammiferous tail that of the dog, for example than any thing else he ever saw. The Lamarck- ians may well deem it an unlucky circumstance, that one spe- cial portion of their theory should demand the depreciation of the heterocercal tail, seeing that it might be represented with excellent effect in another, as not merely a connecting link in the upward march of progression between the tail of the true fish and that of the true reptile, but as actually containing in itself as the caterpillar contains the future pupa and but- terfly the elements of the reptilian and mammiferous tail. If there be any virtue in analogy, the heterocercal tail is, I repeat, of a decidedly higher type than the homocercal one. It furnishes the first example in the vertebrata of the coc- cygeal vertebrae diminishing to a point, which characterizes not only all the higher reptiles, but also all the higher mam- mals, and which we find represented by the Os coccygis in man himself. But to this special point I shall again refer. With regard to that rudimentary state of the occipital framework of the Placoids to which the author of the " Ves- tiges" refers, it may be but necessary to say that, notwith- standing the simplicity of their box-like skulls, they bear in their character, as cases for the protection of the brain, at least as close an analogy to the skulls of the higher ani- mals, as those of the osseous fishes, which consist usually of the extraordinary number of from sixty to eighty bones, a mark the author of the " Vestiges " himself being judge ,n the cars rather of inferiority than the reverse. " Ele- THE PLACOID CRANIUM AND MOUTH. 175 vation is marka.. in the scale," we find him saying, " by an animal exchang ng a multiplicity of parts serving one end, for a smaller number." The skull of a cod consists of about thrice as many separate bones as that of a man. But I do not well see that in this case the fact either of simplicity in excess or of multiplicity in excess can be insisted upon in either direction, as a proper basis for argument Nearly the same remark applies to the maxillaries as to the skull. The under jaw in man consists of a single bone ; that of the thorn- back if we do not include the two suspending ribs, which belong equally to the upper jaw of two bones, (the number in all the mammiferous quadrupeds :^ that of the cod of four bones, and, if we include the suspending ribs, of twelve. On what principle are we to hold, with one as the repre- sentative number of the highest type of jaw, that two in- dicates a lower standing than four, or four than twelve ? In reference to the further statement, that in many of the an- cient fishes " traces can be observed of the muscles hav- 'ng been attached to the external plates, strikingly indi- cating their low grade as vertebrate animals," it may be answer enough to state, that the peculiarity in question was not a characteristic of the most ancient fishes, the Placoids Df the Silurian system, but of some Ganoids of the suc- ceeding systems. The reader may remember, as a case in point, the example furnished by the nail-like bone of Asferolepis, figured in page 111, in which there exists depres- sions resembling that of the round ligament in the head of the quadrupedal thigh-bone. And as for the remark that the opening of tne mouth of the Placoid, " on the under side of the head," is indicative of a low embryonic condition, it might be almost sufficient to remark, in turn, that the lowest family of fishes that to which the supposed worms 176 THE PL AC DID of Linnaeus belong have the mouth not under, tut at the anterior termination of the, head, in itself an evidence that the position of the mouth at the extremity of the muz- zle, common to the greater number of the osseous fishes, can be no ^ery high character, seeing that the humblest of the Suclorii possess it; and that many osseous fishes, whose mouths open, not on the under, but the upper side of the snout, as in the distorted and asymetrical genus Platessa, are not only in no degree superior to their bony neighbors, and far inferior to the placoid ones, but bear, in direct con- sequence of the arrangement, an expression of unmistakable stupidity. The objection, however, admits of a greatly more conclusive reply. " This fish, to speak in the technical language of Agassiz," says the Edinburgh Reviewer, in reference to the ancient ichthyolite of the Wenlock Shale, " undoubtedly belongs to the Cestraciont family of the Placoid order, proving to demonstration that the oldest known fossil fish [1845J be- longs to the highest type of that division of the vertebrata.' 7 may add, that the character and family of this ancient specimen was determined by our highest British authority in fossil ichthyology, Sir Philip Egerton. And it is in depre- ciation of Professor Sedgwick's statement regarding its high standing that the author of the " Vestiges " refers to the supposed inferiority indicated by a mouth opening, not at the extremity of the muzzle, but under the head. Let us, then, fully grant, for the argument's sake, that the occurrence of the mouth in the muzzle is a sign of superiority, and its oc- currence under the head a mark of great inferiority, and ihen ascertain how the fact stands with regard to the Cestra- cion. " The Cesfracion sub-genus," says Mr. James Wilson, in his admirable treatise on fishes, which forms the article CRANIUM AND MOUTH. 177 IcHTin OLOG7 ir. the " Encyclopedia Britannica," " has the temporal aper.ure, the anal fin, and rounded teeth, of Squalus Mustelus ; but the mouth is TERMINAL, or AT THE EX- TREMITY OF THE POINTED MUZZLE." The accompanying Fig. 49. POET JACKSON SHAEK, (Cestrocion Phittippi.) figure, (fig. 49,) taken from a specimen of Cestracion in the collection of Professor John Fleming, may be recorded as of some little interest, both from its direct bearing on the point in question, and from the circumstance that it represents, not inadequately for its size, the sole surviving species (Cestracion Phillippi) of the oldest vertebrate family of creation. With this family, so far as is yet known, ichthyic existence first be- gan. It does not appear that on the globe which we inhabit there was ever an ocean tenanted by living creatures al all that had not its Cestracion, a statement which could not be made regarding any other vertebrate family. In Agassiz's " Tabular View of the Genealogy of Fishes," the Cestracionts, and they only, sweep across the entire geologic scale. And, as shown in the figure, the mouth in this ancient family, instead of opening, as in the ordinary sharks, under the middle of the head, o expose them to the suspicion of being creatures of 178 GESTATION low and embryonic character, opened in a broad, honest-look- ing muzzle, very much resembling that of the hog. The mouths of the most ancient Placoids of which we know any thing; did not, I reiterate, open under their heads. But why introduce the element of embryonic progress into this question at all ? It is not a question of embryonic pro- gress. The very legerdemain of the sophist the juggling by which he substitutes his white balls for black, or converts his pigeons into crows consists in the art of attaching the conclusions founded on the facts or conditions of one sub- ject, to some other subject essentially distinct in its nature. Gestation is not creation. The history of the young of ani- mals in their embryonic state is simply the history of the fcetal young ; just as the history of insect transformation, in which it has been held by good men, but weak reasoners, that there exists direct evidence of the doctrine of the resurrection, is the history of insect transformation, and of nothing else. True, the human mind is so constituted that it converts all nature into a storehouse of comparisons and analogies ; and this fact of the metamorphosis of the creeping caterpillar, after first passing through an intermediate period of apparent death as an inert aurelia, into a winged image, seemed to have seized on the human fancy at a very early age, as won- derfully illustrative of life, death, and the future state. The Egyptians wrapped up the bodies of their dead in the chrysalis form, so that a mummy, in their apprehension, was simply a human pupa, waiting the period of its enlargement ; and the Greeks had but one word in their language for butterfly and the soul. But not the less true is it, notwithstanding, f hat the facts of insect transformation furnish no legitimate key to the totally distinct facts of a resurrection of the body, and of a ife after death. And on what principle, then, are we to trace NOT CREATION. 179 the origin of past dynasties in the changes of the foetus if not the rise of the future dynasty in the transformations of the caterpillar? "These [embryonic] characters [that of the heterocercal tail, and of the mouth of the ordinary shark type] are essential and important," remarks the author of the " Vestiges," " whatever the Edinburgh Reviewer may say to the contrary ; they are the characters which, above all, I am chiefly concerned in looking to, for they are the features of embryonic progress, and embryonic progress is the grand key to the theory of development." Yes ; the grand key to the theory of fatal development ; for embryonic progress is foetal development. But on what is the assertion based that they form a key to the history of creation ? Aurelia are not human bodies laid out for the sepulchre, nor are butterflies human souls ; as certainly gestation is not creation, nor a life of months in the uterus a succession of races for mil- lions of ages outside of it. On what grounds, then, is the assertion made ? Does it embody the result of a discovery, or announce the message of a revelation ? Did the author of the " Vestiges " find it out for himself, or did an angel from heaven tell it him ? If it be a discovery, show us, we ask^ the steps through which you have been conducted to it ; if a revolution produce, for our satisfaction, the evidence on which it rests. For we are not to accept as data, in a ques- tion of science, idle comparisons or vague analogies, whether produced through the intentional juggling of the sophist, or involuntarily conjured up in the dreamy delirium of an excited fancy. It is one of the difficulties incident to the task of replying to any dogmatic statement of error, that every mere annun- ciation of a false fact or false principle must be met by elab- orate counter-statement or carefully constructed argument, 180 APOLOGY. and that prolixity is thus unavoidably entailed on the contro- versialist who labors to set right what his antagonist has set wrong. The promulgator of error may be lively and enter- taining, whereas his pains-taking confutator runs no small risk of being tedious and dull. May I, however, solicit the for- bearance of the reader, if, after already spending much time in skirmishing on ground taken up by the enemy, one of the disadvantages incident to the mere defendant in a contro- versy of this nature, I spend a little more in indicating what I deem the proper ground on which the standing of the earlier vertebrata should be decided. To the test of brain I have already referred, as all-important rn the question : I would now refer to the test of what may be termed liomological symmetry of organization. THE PRINCIPLE OF DEGRADATION. 181 THE PROGRESS OF DEGRADATION. ITS HISTORY. THOUGH all animals be fitted by nature for the life which their instincts teach them to pursue, naturalists have learned to recognize among them certain aberrant and mutilated forms, in which the type of the special class to which they belong seems distorted and degraded. They exist as the monster families of creation, just as among families there ap- pear from time to time monster individuals, men, for in- stance, without feet, or hands, or eyes, or with their feet, hands, or eyes grievously misplaced, sheep with their fore legs growing out of their necks, or ducklings with their wings attached to their haunches. Among these degraded races, that of the footless serpent, which " goeth upon its belly," has been long noted by the theologian as a race typi- cal, in its condition and nature, of an order of hopelessly degraded beings, borne down to the dust by a clinging curse ; and, curiously enough, when the first comparative anatomists m the world give their readiest and most prominent instance of degradation among the denizens of the natural world, it is this very order of footless reptiles that they select. So far as the geologist yet knows, the Ophidians did not appear during the Secondary ages, when the monarchs of creation belonged HI 182 THE PRINCIPLE to the reptilian division, but were ushered upon the scene in the times of the Tertiary deposits, when the mammalian dynasty had supplanted that of the Iguanodon and Met,alosau- rus. Their ill omened birth took place when the influence of their house was on the wane, as if to set such a stamp of utter hopelessness on its fallen condition, as that set by the birth of a worthless or idiot heir on the fortunes of a sinking family. The degradation of the Ophidians consists in the absence of limbs, an absence total in by much the greater number of their families, and represented in others, as in the boas and pythons, by mere abortive hinder limbs con- cealed in the skin ; but they are thus not only monsters through defect of parts, if I may so express myself, but also monsters through redundancy, as a vegetative repe- tition of vertebra and ribs, to the number of three or four hundred, forms the special contrivance by which the want of these is compensated. I am also disposed to regard the poison-bag of the venomous snakes as a mark of degra- dation ; it seems, judging from analogy, to be a pro- tective provision of a low character, exemplified chiefly in the invertebrate families, ants, centipides, and mosqui- tos, spiders, wasps, and scorpions. The higher carnivora are, we find, furnished with unpoisoned weapons, which, like those of civilized man, are sufficiently effective, simply from the excellence of their construction, and the power with which they are wielded, for every purpose of assault or defence, It is only the squalid savages and degraded boschmen of creation that have their feeble teeth and tiny stings steeped in venom, and so made formidable! Monstros- ity through displacement of parts constitutes yet another form of degradation ; and this form, united, in some instances, to the other two, we find curiously exemplified in the geological OF DEGRADATION. 183 history of the fish, a history which, with all its blanks and missing portions, is yet better known than that of any other division of the vertebrata. And it is, I am convinced, from a survey of the progress of degradation in the great ichthyic division, a progress recorded as " with a pen of iron in the rock for ever," and not from superficial views founded on the cartilaginous or non-cartilaginous texture of the ichthyic skeleton, that the standing of the kingly fishes of the earlier periods is to be adequately determined. Any other mode of survey, save the parallel mode which takes development of brain into account, evolves, we find, nothing like principle, and lands the inquirer in inextricable difficulties and incon- sistencies. In all the higher non-degraded vertebrata we find a certain uniform type of skeleton, consisting of the head, the vertebral column, and four limbs ; and these last, in the various sym- metrical forms, whether exemplified in the higher fish, the. higher reptiles, the higher birds, the higher mammals, or in man himself, occur always in a certain determinate order. In all the mammals, the scapular bases of the fore Jimbs begin opposite the eighth vertebra from the skull backwards, the seven which go before being cervical or neck vertebrae ; in the birds, a division of the vertebrata that, from their pecu- liar organization, require longer and more flexible necks than the mammals, the scapulars begin at distances from the occiput, varying, according to the species, from opposite the thirteenth to opposite the twenty-fourth vertebra ; and in the reptiles, a division which, according to Cuvier, " presents a greater diversity of forms, characters, and modes of gait, than any of the other two," they occur at almost all points, from opposite the second vertebra, as in the frog, to opposite the thirty-third or thirty-fourth vertebra, as in some species 184 PROGRESS of plesiosaurus. But in all, whether mammals, birds, or undegraded reptiles, they are so placed, that the creatures possess necks, of greater or less length, as an essential portion of their general type. The hinder limbs have also in all these three divisions of the animal kingdom their typical place. They occur opposite, or very nearly opposite, the posterior termination of the abdominal cavity, and mark the line of separation between the vertebrae of the trunk (dorsal, lumbar, and sacral) and the third and last, or caudal division of the column, a division represented in man by but four vertebioe, and in the crocodile by about thirty-five, but which is found to exist, as I have already said, in all the more per- fect forms. The limbs, then, in all the symmetrical animals of the first three classes of the vertebrata, mark the three great divisions of the vertebral column, the division of the neck, the division of the trunk, and the division of the tail. Let us now inquire how the case stands with the fourth and lowest class, that of the fishes. In those existing Placoids that represent the fishes of the earliest vertebrate period, the places of the double fins, pectorals and ventrals, which form in the ichthyic class the true homologues of the limbs, correspond to the places which these occupy in the symmetrical mammals, birds, and reptiles. The scapular bases of the fore or pectoral fins ordinarily be- gin opposite the twelfth or fourteenth vertebra ;* but they range, as in man and the mammals, in a forward direction, so that the fins themselves are opposite the eighth or tenth. The pelvic bases of the ventral fins are placed nearly opposite the base of the abdomen, so that, as in all the symmetrical animals, the * The twelfth, in fyinax Acanthias, and the fourteenth in Scyllium Welfare. OF DEGRADATION. 185 vent opens between, or nearly between, those hinder limbs which the bases support. In the Rays, which, so far as is yet known, did not appear in creation until the Secondary ages had begun, the bases of the fore limbs, i. e. pectoral fins, are attached to the lower part of a huge cervical vertebra, nearly equal in length to all the trunk vertebrae united ; and in the Chimeridoe, which also first; appear in the Secondary division, they are attached, as in the osseous fishes, to the hinder part of the head. But in the representatives of all those Silurian Placoids yet known, of which the family can be determined, or any thing with safety predicated, the cervical division is found to occur as a series of vertebrae : they pre- sent in this, as in the hinder portion of their bodies, the homo- logical symmetry of organization typical of that vertebral sub kingdom to which they belong. In the second great period of ichthyic existence, that of the Old Red Sandstone, we find the first example, in the class of fishes, of " monstrosity through displacement, of parts," and apparently also in at least two genera, though the evi- dence on this head be not yet quite complete of " mon- strosity through defect of parts." In all the Ganoids of the period, with (so far as we can determine the point) only .two exceptions, the scapular bases of the fore limbs are brought forward from their typical place opposite the base of the cervi- cal vertebrae, and stuck on to the occipital plate. There occurs, in consequence, in one great order of the ichthyic class, such a departure from the symmetrical type as would take place in a monster example of the human family in whom the neck had been annihilated, and the arms stuck on to the back of the he-jd. And in the genera Coccosteus and Pterichthys we find tne first example of degradation through defect. In the Pterichthys the hinder limbs seem wanting ; 16* 186 PROGRESS and in the Coccosteus we find no trace of the fore limbs. The one resembles a monster of the human family born without hands, and the other a monster born without feet. Ages and centuries pass, and long unreckoned periods come to a close ; and then, after the termination of the Palseozoic period, we see that change taking place in the form of the ichthyic tail, U) which I have already referred, (and to which I must refer at least once more,) as singularly illustrative of the progress of degradation. Yet other ages and centuries pass away, during wYich the reptile class attains to its fullest development, in point of size, organization, and number ; and then, after the times of the Cretaceous deposits have begun, we find yet another remarkable monstrosity of displacement introduced among all the fishes of one very numerous order, and among no inconsiderable proportion of the fishes of another. In the newly-introduced Ctenoids, (Acanthopterygii,) and in those families of the Cycloids which Cuvier erected into the order Malacopterygii sub-brachiati, the hinder limbs are brought forward, and stuck on to the base of the previously misplaced fore limbs. All the four limbs, by a strange monstrosity of displacement, are crowded into the place of the extinguished neck. And such, at the present day, is the prevalent type among fishes. Monstrosity through defect is also found to in- crease ; so that the snake-like apoda, or feet-wanting fishes, form a numerous order, some of whose genera are devoid, as in the common eels and the congers, of only the hinder limbs ; while in others, as in the genera Mursena and Synbranchus, both hinder and fore limbs are wanting. In the class of fishes, as fishes now exist, we find many more evidences of the mon- strosity which results from both the misplacement and defect of parts, than in the other three classes of the vertebrata united ; an J knowing their geological history better than that of any of OF DEGRADATION. 187 the others, we know, in consequence, that the monstrosities did not appear early, but late, and that the progress of the race as a whole, though it still retains not a few of the higher forms, has been a progress, not of development from the low to the high, but of degradation from the high to the low. The reader may mark for himself, in the flounder, plaice, halibut, or turbot, fishes of a family of which there appears no trace in the earlier periods, an extreme example of the degradation of distortion superadded to that of displacement. At a first glance the limbs seem but to exhibit merely the amount of natural misarrangement and misorder common to the Acantlwpterygii and Sub-lrachiati ; the base of the pectorals are stuck on to the head, and the base of the ven- trals attached to that of the pectorals. From the circum- stance, however, that the creature is twisted half round and laid on its side, we find that at least one of the pairs of double fins the pectorals perform the part of single fins, one projecting from the animal's superior, the other from its inferior side, in the way the anal and dorsal tins project from the upper and under surfaces of other fishes ; while its real dorsal and anal fins, both developed very largely, and in order to preserve its balance in about an equal degree, and wonderfully correspondent in form, perform, from their lateral position, the functions of single fins. Indeed, at a first glance they seem the anafogues of the largely-developed pec- torals of a very different family of flat fishes, the Rays. It would appear as if single and double fins, by some such mutual agreement as that which, according to the old ballad, took place between the churl of Auchtermuchty and his wife, had agreed to exchange callings, and perform each the work of the other. The *ail, too, possesses, in consequence of the twist, not the vertical position of other fish-tails, but 188 PROGKESS is spread ou: horizontally, like the tails of the cetacea. It is, however, in the head of the flounder and its cogeners that we find the more extraordinary distortions exemplified. In order to accommodate it to the general twist, which rendered lateral what in other fishes is dorsal and abdominal, and dor- sal and abdominal what in other fishes is lateral, one half its features had to be twisted to the one side, and the other half to the other. The face and cranium have undergone such a change as that which the human face and cranium would un- dergo, were the eyes to be drawn towards the left ear, and the mouth tosvards the right. The skull, in consequence, exhibits, in its fixed bones, a strange Cyclopean character, unique among the families of creation : it has its one well-marked eye orbit opening, like that of Polyphemus, direct in the middle of the fore part of its head ; while the other, external to the cranium altogether, we find placed among the free bones, di- rectly over the maxillaries. And the wry mouth twisted in the opposite direction, as if to keep up such a balance of de- formity as that which the breast-hump of a hunchback forms to the hump behind is in keeping with the squint eyes. The jaws are strangely asymmetrical. In symmetrical fishes the two bones that compose the anterior half of the lower jaw are as perfectly correspondent in form and size as the left hand or left foot is correspondent, in the human subject, to the right hand or right foot ; but not such their character in the floun- der. The one is a broad, short, nearly straight bone ; the other is larger, narrower, and bent like a bow ; and while the one contains only from four to six teeth, the other contains from thirty to thirty-five. Scarcely in the entire ichthyic kingdom are there any two jaws that less resemble one another than the two halves of the jaw of the flounder, turbot, halibut, or plaice. The intermaxillary bones are equally ill matched : the one is OF DEGRADATION. 189 fully twice the s ze of the other, and contains about thrice as many teeth. T.iat bilateral symmetry of the skeleton which is so invariable a characteristic of the vertebrata, that ordinary observers, who have eyes for only the rare and the uncom- mon, fail to remark it, but which a Newton could regard as so wonderful, and so thoroughly in harmony with the uniformity of the planetary system, has scarce any place in the asymmet- rical head of the flounder. There exists in some of our north country fishing villages an ancient apologue, which, though not remarkable for point or meaning, at least serves to show that this peculiar example of distortion the rude fishermen of a former age were observant enough to detect. Once on a time the fishes met, it is said, to elect a king ; and their choice fell on the herring. " The herring king ! " contempt- uously exclaimed the flounder, a fish of consummate vanity, and greatly piqued on this occasion that its own presumed claims should have been overlooked ; " where, then, am I ? " And straightway, in punishment of its conceit and rebellion, " its eyes turned to the back of its head." Here is there a story palpably founded on the degradation of misplacement and distortion, which originated ages ere the naturalist had recognized either the term or the principle. It would be an easy matter for an ingenious theorist, not much disposed to distinguish between the minor and the master laws of organized being, to get up quite as unexcep- tionable a theory of degradation as of development. The one-eyed, one-legged Chelsea pensioner, who had a child, un- born at the time, laid to his charge, agreed to recognize his relationship to the little creature, if, on its coming into the world, it was found to have a green patch over its eye, and a wooden leg. And, in order to construct a hypothesis of progressive degradation, the theorist has but to take for 190 PROGRESS granted the transmission to other generations of defects and compensating redundancies at once as extreme and acciden- tal as the loss of eyes c; limbs, and the acquisition of timber legs or green patches. The snake, for instance, he might re- gard as a saurian, that, having accidentally lost its limbs, ex- erted itself to such account throughout a series of generations, in making up for their absence, as to spin out for itself, by dint of writhing and wriggling, rather more than a hundred ad- ditional vertebrae, and to alter, for purposes of greater flexibil- ity, the structure of all the rest. And as fishes, when nearly stunned by a blow, swim for a few seconds on their side, he might regard the flounders as a race of half-stunned fishes, pre- viously degraded by the misplacement of their limbs, that, instead of recovering themselves from the blow given to some remote parent of the family, had expended all their energies in twisting their mouths round to what chanced to be the under side on which they were laid, and their eyes to what chanced to be the upper, and that made their pectorals serve for anal and dorsal fins, and their anal and dorsal fins serve for pecto- rals. But while we must recognize in nature certain laws of disturbance, if I may so speak, through which, within certain limits, traits which are the result of habit or circumstance in the parents are communicated to their offspring, we would err as egregiously, did we take only these into account, with- out noting that infinitely stronger antagonist law of reproduc- tion and restoration which, by ever gravitating towards the original type, preserves the integrity of races, as the astrono- mer would, who, in constructing his orrery, recognized only that law of propulsion through which the planets speed through the heavens, without taking into account that antag- onist law of gravitation which, by maintaining them in their orbits, insures the regularity of their movements. The lav OF DEGRADATION. 191 of restoration would recover and right the st jnnecl fish laid on its side ; the law of reproduction would gi\e limbs to the offspring of the mutilated saurian. We have evidence, in the extremeness of the degradation in these cases, that it cannot be a degradation hereditarily derived from accident. Nature is, we find, active, not in perpetuating the accidental wooden legs and green patches of ancestors in their de- scendants, but in restoring to the offspring the true limbs and eyes which the parents have lost. It is, however, not with a theory of hereditary degradation, but a hypothesis of gradual development, that I have at present to deal ; and what I have to establish as proper to the present stage of my argument is, that this principle of degradation really exists, and that the history of its progress in creation bears directly against the assumption that the earlier vertebrata were of a lower type than the vertebrata of the same ichthyic class which exist now.* * It will scarce be urged against the degradation theory, that those races which, tried by the tests of defect or misplacement of parts, we deem degraded, are not less fitted for carrying on what in their own little spheres is the proper business of life, than the non-degraded orders and families. The objection is, however, a possible one, and one which a single remark may serve to obviate. It is certainly true that the degraded families are thoroughly fit- ted for the performance of all the work given them to do. Tl ey greatly increase when placed in favorable circumstances, and, when vigorous and thriving, enjoy existence. But then the same may be said of all animals, without reference to their place in the scale ; the mollusc is as thoroughly adapted to its circumstances, and as fitted to accomplish the end proper to its being, as the mam- miferous quadruped, and the mammiferous quadruped as man him- self ; but the fact of perfect adaptation in no degree invalidates the other not less certain fact of difference of rank, nor proves that the mollusc is equal to the quadruped, or the quadruped to man. And, 192 PROGRESS The progress of the ichthyic tail, as recorded in geologic history, corresponds with that of the ichthyic limbs. And as in the existing state of things we find fishes that nearly represent, in this respect, all the great geologic periods, I say nearly, not fully, for I am acquainted with no fish ade- quately representative of the period of the Old Red Sand- stone, it may be well to cast a glance over the contemporary series, as illustrative of the consecutive one. In those Placoids of the shark family that to a large brain unite homological symmetry of organization, and represent the fishes of the first period, we find, as I have already shown, that the ver- tebra gradually diminish in the caudal division of the column, until they terminate in a point, a circumstance in which they resemble not merely the betailed reptiles, but also all the higher mammiferous quadrupeds, and even man himself. And it is this peculiarity, stamped upon the less de- structible portions of the framework of the tail, vertebra and processes, rather than the one-sided or heterocercal form of the surrounding fin, composed of but a mucoidal substance, that constitutes its grand characteristic ; seeing that in some Placoid genera, such as Scyllium Slellare, the terminal portion of the fin is scarce less largely developed above than below, and that in others, as in most of the Ray family, the under lobe of the fin is wholly wanting. In the sturgeon, one of the few Ganoids of the present time, we become sensible of a peculiar modification in this heterocer- of course, the remark equally bears on the reduced as on the unele- vated, on lowncss of place when a result of degradation in races pertaining to a higher division of animals, as on lowness of place when a result of the humble standing of the division to which the races belong. OF DEGRADATION. 193 ?al type of tail ; the lower lobe is, we find, composed, as in Spinax and Scyllium, of rays exclusively ; while through the centre of the upper lobe there runs an acutely angular patch of lozenge-shaped plates, like that which runs through the centre of the double fins of Dipterus and the Crelacanths. Cut while in the sharks the gradually diminishing vertebras stand out in bold relief, and form the thickest portion of the tail, that which represents them in the sturgeon (the angular patch) is slim and thin, slimmer in the middle than even at the sides ; in part a consequence, no doubt, of the want, in this fish, of solid vertebrae, but a consequence also of the extreme attenuation of the nervous cord, in its prolongation into the lobe of the fin. Further, the rays of the tail its peculiarly ichthyic portion, which are purely mucoidal in Spinax, Scyllium, and Cestracion have become osseous in the sturgeon. Thejish has set and become fixed, as cement sets in a building, or colors are fixed by a mordant. And it is worthy of special remark that, correspondent with the peculiarly ichthyic development of tail in this fish, we find the prevailing ichthyic displacement of the fore limbs. Again, in the Lepidosteus, another of the true Ganoids which still exist, the internal angle of the upper lobe of the tail wholly disappears, and with the internal angle the pro- longation of the nervous cord. Still, however, it is what the tail of the sturgeon would become were the angular patch to be obliterated, and rays substituted instead, it is a tail set on awry. And in this fish also we find the ichthyic displacement of fore limb. One step more, and we arrive at the homo- cercai or equal-lobed tail, which seems to attain to its most extreme type in those fishes in which, as in the perch and flounder, the last vertebral joint, either very little or very abruptly diminished in size, expands into broad processes 17 194 PROGRESS without homologue in the higher animals, on which fhe cau dal rays rest as thejr bases. And in by much the larger proportion of these fishes all the four limbs are slung round the neck ; they at once exhibit the homocercal tail in its broadest type, and displacement of limb in its most extreme form. Now, in tracing the geologic history of the ichthyic tail, we find these several steps or gradations from the heterocercal to the homocercal, represented by periods and formations. The Siluran periods may be regarded as representative of that true heterocercal tail of the Placoids. exemplified in Spinax, (page 172, fig. 48,) and Cestracion, (page 177, fig. 49.) The whole caudal portion of this latter animal, commencing imme- diately behind the ventrals, is, as becomes a true tail, slim, when compared with its trunk ; the vertebrae are of very considerable solidity ; the rays mucoidal ; and where the spinal column runs into the terminal fin, it takes such an up- ward turn as that which the horse-jockey imparts, by the process of nicking, to the tails of the hunter and the race- horse. And with the heterocercal tail, so true in its homolo- gies to the tails of the higher vertebrata, we find associated, as has been shown, the true homological position of the fore limbs. With the commencement of the Old Red Sandstone the ganoidal tail first presents itself; and we become sensible of a change in the structure of the attached fin, similar to that exemplified in the caudal rays of the sturgeon. As shown by the irregularly-angular patch of scales which in all the true Ccelacanths, and almost all the Dipterians,* runs through the * The vertebral column in the genus Diplopterus ran, as in the placoid genus Scy Ilium, nearly through the middle of the caudsu fin. OF DEGRADATION. 195 upper lobe of the fin, and terminates in a point, (see fig. 50,) it must have oosscssed the gradually diminishing vertebrae, or Fig. 50. TAIL OF OSTEOLEPIS. a diminishing spinal cord, their analogue ; but the rays, fairly set, as their state of keeping in the rocks certify, exist as nar- row oblong plates of solid bone ; and their anterior edges are strengthened by a line of osseous defences, that pass from scales into rays. And in harmonious accompaniment with this fairly stereotyped edition of the ichthyic tail, we find, in the fishes in which it appears, the first instance of displace- ment of limb) the bases of the pectorals being removed from their original position, and stuck on to the nape of the neck. It may be remarked, in passing, that in the tails of two ganoid- al genera of this period, the Coccosteus and Pterichthys, the analogies traceable lie rather in the direction of the tails of the Rays than in those of the Sharks ; and that one of these, the Coccosteus, seems, as has been already intimated, to have had no pectorals, while it is doubtful whether in the Pterichlln,'* the pectorals were not attached to the shoulder, instead o. the head. In the Carboniferous and Permian systems there occur, especially among the numerous species* of the genus Palcconiscus, tails of the type exemplified by the 196 PROGRESS internal angle of the tail of the sturgeon : the lozenge-shaped scales run in acutely angular patches through their upper lobes ; but such is their extreme flatness, as shown by the disposition of the enamelled covering, that it appears exceedingly doubt- ful whether any vertebral column ran beneath ; they seem but to have covered greatly diminished prolongations of the spinal cord. In the base of the Secondary division, another long stage towards the existing state of things, we find, with the homocercal tail, which now appears for the first time, numerous tails like that of the L^piaos- Jews, (fig. 51,) of an intermediate type; they acciput ; fig. c, those homocercal Ganoids of the Trias Lias, Oolite, and Silurian. Old Red, &c. Lias, &c. e JGL .a. Cretaceous. -f- abed Flacoid. Het. Ganoid. Horn. Ganoid. Ctenoid. 17* Platessa. 198 PROGRESS I am aware, that by some very distinguished comparative anatomists, among the rest Professor Owen, the attachment, so common among fishes, of the scapular arch and the fore limhs to the occipital bone, is regarded, not as a displacement, but as a normal and primary condition of the parts. Recog- nizing in the scapular bones the ribs of the occipital centrum, the anatomists of this school of course consider them, when found articulated to the occiput, as in their proper and origi- nal place, and as in a state of natural dislocation when re- moved, as in all the reptiles, birds, and mammals, farther down. We find Professor Oken borrowing support to his hy- pothesis from this view. The limbs, he tells us, are simply ribs, that in the course of ages have been set free, and have become by development what they now are. And it is un questionably a curious and interesting fact, that there are cer- tain animals, such as the crocodile, in which every centrum of the vertebral column, and of every vertebra of the head, has its ribs or rib-like appendages, with the exception of the oc- cipital centrum. And it is another equally curious fact, that there is another certain class of animals, such as the osseous horn-covered fishes, with the Sturionidse, Salamandroidei,and at least one genus among the Placoids, (the Chimseroidei,) in which this occipital centrum bears as its ribs the scapular bones, with their appendages the fore limbs. It is the centrum without ribs that is selected in these animals as the centrum to which the "VVcalden, whose tails spread out into broad terminal processes, "with- out homologue in the higher animals ; fig. d, those Acanthopterygii of the Chalk that, in addition to the non-homological processes, have both fore limbs and hinder limbs stuck round the head ; while lig. e represents the asymmetrical Platessa, of the same period, with one of its eyes in the middle of its head, and the other thrust out to the side. OF DEGRADATION. 199 scapular ribs should be attached. Be it remembered, how- ever, that while it is unquestionably the part of the compara- tive anatomist to determine the relations and homologies of those parts of which all animals are composed, and to inter- pret the significancy in the scale of being of the various modes and forms in which they exist, it is as unquestionably the part of the geologist to declare their history, and the order of their succession in time. The questions which fall to be determined by the geologist and anatomist are entirely different. It is the function of the anatomist to decide re- garding the high and the low, the typical and the aberrant ; and so, beginning at what is lowest or highest in the scale, or least or most symmetrical in type, he passes through the in- termediate forms to the opposite extreme : and such is the order natural and proper to his science. It is the vocation of the geologist, on the other hand, to decide regarding the early and the late. It is with time, not with rank, that he has tc deal. Nor is it in the least surprising that he should seem at issue with the comparative anatomist, when, in classifying his groupes of organized being according to the periods of their appearance, there is an order of arrangement forced upon him, different from that which, on an entirely different prin- ciple, the anatomist pursues. Nor can there be a better illustration of a collision of this kind, than the one furnished by the case in point. That peculiarity of structure which, as the lowest in the vertebral skeleton, is to the comparative anatomist the primary and original one, and which, as such, furnishes him with his starting point, is to the geologist not primary, but secondary, simply because it was not primary, but secondary, in the order of its occurrence. It belongs, so far as we yet know, not to the first period of verte- brate existence, but to the second ; and appeal's in geologic 200 PROGRESS history as does that savage state which certain philosophers have deemed the original condition of the human species, in the history of civilization, when read by the light of the Re- vealed Record, under the shadow of those gigantic ruins of the East that date only a few centuries after the Flood. It is found to be a degradation first introduced during the lapse of an intermediate age, not the normal condition which ob- tained during the long cycles of the primal one. It indicates, not the starting point from which the race of creation began, but the stage of retrogradation beyond it at which the pilgrims who set out in a direction opposite to that of the goal first arrived.* * I would, however, respectfully suggest, that that theory of cer- ebral vertebrae, on which, in this question, the comparative anato- mists proceed as their principle, and which finds as little support in the geologic record from the actual history of the fore limbs as from the actual history of the bones of the cranium, may be more inge- nious than sound. It is a shrewd circumstance, that the rocks refuse to testify in its favor. Agassiz, I find, decides against it on other than geological grounds ; and his conclusion is certainly rendered not the less worthy of careful consideration by the fact that, yielding to the force of evidence, his views on the subject underwent a thor- ough change. He had first held, and then rejected it. "I have shared," he says, " with a multitude of other naturalists, the opinion which regards the cranium as composed of vertebrae ; and I am con- sequently in some degree called upon to point out the motives which have induced me to reject it." " M. Oken," he continues, " was the first to assign this signification to the bones of the cranium. The new doctrine he expounded was received in Germany with great enthusiasm by the school of the philosophers of nature. The author conceived the cranium to con- sist of three vertebrae, and the basal occipital, the sphenoid, and the ethmoid, were regarded as the central parts of these cranial vertebrae. On these alleged bodies of vertebrae, the arches enveloping the cen- tral parts of the nervous system were raised, while on the opposite side were attached the inferior pieces, which went to form the vege- tative arch destined to embrace the intestinal canal and the large vessels. It would be too tedious to enumerate in this place the OF DEGRADATION. 201 This fact of degradation, strangely indicated in geologic history, with reference to all the greater divisions of the animal kingdom, has often appeared to me a surpassingly wonderful one. We can see but imperfectly, in those twi- light depths to which all such subjects necessarily belong ; and yet at times enough does appear to show us what a very superficial thing infidelity may be. The general ad- vance in creation has been incalculably great. The lower divisions of the vertebrata preceded the higher; the fish changes which each author introduced, in order to modify this mat- ter so as to make it suit his own views. Some went the length of affirming that the vertebrae of the head were as complete as those of the trunk ; and, by means of various dismemberments, separations, and combinations, all the forms of the cranium were referred to the vertebra?, by admitting that the number of pieces was invariably fixed in every head, and that all the vertebrata, whatever might be their organization in other respects, had in their heads the same number of points of ossification. At a later period, what was erro- neous in this manner of regarding the subject was detected ; but the idea of the vertebral composition of the head was still retained. It was admitted as a general law, that the cranium was composed of three primitive vertebrae, as the embryo is of three blastodermic leaf- lets ; but that these vertebrae, like the leaflets, existed only ideally, and that their presence, although easily demonstrated in certain cases, could only be slightly traced, and with the greatest difficulty, in other instances. The notion thus laid down of the virtual existence of cranial vertebrae did not encounter very great opposition ; it could not be denied that there was a certain general resemblance between the osseous case of the brain and the rachidian canal ; the occipital, in particular, had all the characteristic features of a vertebra. But whenever an attempt was made to push the analogy further, and to determine rigorously the anterior vertebrae of the cranium, the ob- server found himself arrested by insurmountable obstacles, and he was obliged always to revert to the virtual existence. " In order to explain my idea clearly, let me have recourse to an example. It is certain that organized bodies are sometimes endowed with virtual qualities, which, at a certain period of the being's life, elude dissection, and all our means of investigation. It is thus, that 202 PROGRESS preceded the reptile, the reptile preceded the bird, the bird preceded the mammiferous quadruped, and the mammiferous quadruped preceded man. And yet, is there one of these great divisions in which, in at least some prominent feature, the present, through this mysterious element of degradation, is not inferior to the past ? There was a time in which the ichthyic form constituted the highest example of life ; but he seas during that period did not swarm with fish of the degraded type. There was, in like manner, a time when all at the moment of their origin, the eggs of all animals have such a resemblance to each other, that it -would be impossible to distinguish, even by the aid of the most powerful microscope, the ovarial egg of a craw-fish, for example, from that of true fish. And yet who would deny that beings in every respect different from each other exist in these eggs ? It is precisely because the difference manifests itself at a later period, in proportion as the embryo develops itself, that we are authorized to conclude, that, even from the earliest period, the eggs were different, that each had virtual qualities proper to itself, although they could not be discovered by our senses. If, on the con- trary, any one should find two eggs perfectly alike, and should observe two beings perfectly identical issue from them, he would greatly err if he ascribed to these eggs different virtual qualities. It is therefore necessary, in order to be in a condition to suppose that virtual properties peculiar to it are concealed in an animal, that these properties should manifest themselves once, in some phase or other of its development. Now, applying this principle to the theory of cranial vertebrae, we should say, that if these vertebrae virtually exist in the adult, they must needs show themselves in reality, at a certain periol of development. If, on the contrary, they are found neither in the embryo nor the adult, I am of opinion that we are entitled likewise to dispute their virtual existence. "Here, however, an objection maybe made to me, drawn from the physiological value of the vertebrae, the function of which, as is well known, is, on the one hand, to furnish a solid support to the muscular contractions which determine the movements of the trunk, and, on the other, to protect the centres of the nervous system, by forming a more or less solid case completely around them. The bodies of the vertebrae are particularly destined to the first of these OF DEGRADATION. 203 the carnivora and all the herbivorous quadrupeds were repre- sented by reptiles ; but there are no such magnificent reptiles on the earth now as reigned over it then. There was an after time, when birds seem to have been the sole represen- tatives of the warm-blooded animals ; but we find, from the prints of their feet left in sandstone, that the tallest men might have " Walked inder their huge legs, and peeped about." Further, there was an age when the quadrupedal mammals offices ; the neurapophyses to the second. What can be more natu- ral than to admit, from the consideration of this, that in the head, the bodies of the vertebrae diminish in proportion as the moving function becomes lost, while the neurapophyses are considerably de- veloped for protecting the brain, the volume of which is very consid- erable, when compared with that of the spinal marrow ? Have we not an example of this fact in the vertebrae of the tail, where the ueurapophyses become completely obliterated, and a simple cylin- drical body alone remains ? Now, may it not be the case, that in the head, the bodies of the vertebras have disappeared ; and that, in con- sequence, there is a prolongation of the cord only as far as the moving functions of the vertebrae extend ? There is some truth in this argument, and it would be difficult to refute it a priori. But it loses all its force the moment that we enter upon a detailed examin- ation of the bones of the head. Thus, what would we call, accord- ing to this hypothesis, the principal sphenoid, the great wings of the sphenoid, and the ethmoid, which form the floor of the cerebral cav- ity ? It may be said they are apophyses. But the apophyses pro- tect the nervous centres only on the side and above. It may be said that they are the bodies of the vertebrae. But they are formed without the concurrence of the dorsal cord ; they cannot, therefore, be the bodies of the vertebrae. It must therefore be allowed, that these bones at least do not enter into the vertebral type ; that they are in some measure peculiar. And if this be the case with them, why may not the other protective plates be equally independent of the vertebral type ; the more so, because the relations of the fron- tals and parietals vary so much, that it would be almost impossible to assign to them a constant place ? " "204 PROGRESS OF DEGRADATION. were the magnates of creation ; but it was an age in which the sagacious elephant, now extinct, save in the comparatively small Asiatic and African circles, and restricted to two species, was the inhabitant of every country of the Old World, from its southern extremity to the frozen shores of the northern ocean ; and when vast herds of a closely allied and equally colossal genus occupied its place in the New. And now, in the times of the high-placed human dynasty, of those formally delegated monarchs of creation, whose nature it is to look behind them upon the past, and before them, with mingled fear and hope, upon the future, do we not as certainly see the elements of a state of ever-sinking degradation, which is to exist for ever, as of a state of ever- increasing perfectibility, to which there is to be no end ? Nay, of a higher race, of which we know but little, this much we at least know, that they long since separated into two great classes, that of the " elect angels," and of " an- gel* that kept not their first estate." THE SILURIAN MOLLUSCS. 205 EVIDENCE OF THE SILURIAN MOLLUSCS -OF THE FOSSIL FLORA. ANCIENT TREE. AFTER dwelling at such length on the earlier fishes, it may seem scarce necessary to advert to their lower contemporaries the mollusca, that great division of the animal kingdom which Cuvier places second in the descending order, in his survey of the entire series, and first among the inverte- brates ; and which Oken regards as the division out of which the immediately preceding class of the vertebral animals have been developed. " The fish," he says, " is to be viewed as a mussel, from between whose shells a monstrous abdomen has grown out." There is, however, a peculiarity in the mol- luscan group of the Silurian system, to which I must be per- mitted briefly to refer, as, to employ the figure of Sterne, it presents "two handles" of an essentially different kind, and as in all such two-handled cases, the mere special pleader is sure to avail himself of only the handle which best suits his purpose for the time. Cuvier's first and highest class of the mollusca is formed of what are termed the Cephalopods, a class of creatures possessed of great freedom of motion : they can walk, swim, and seize their prey; they have what even tie lowest fishes, 18 206 EVIDENCE OF such as the lancelet, want, a brain enclosed in a cartilagi- nous cavity in the head, and perfectly formed orgaus of sight ; they possess, too, what is found in no other mollusc, organs of hearing ; and in sagacity and activity they prove more than matches for the smaller fishes, many of which they overmas- ter and devour. With this highest class there contrasts an exceedingly low molluscous class at the bottom of the scale, or, at least, at what is now the bottom of the scale ; for they constitute Cuvier's ffth class ; while his sixth and last, the Cir- rhopodes, has been since withdrawn from the molluscs alto- gether, and placed in a different division of the animal king- dom. And this low class, the Brachiopods, are creatures that, living in bivalve shells, unfurnished with spring hinges to throw them open, and always fast anchored to the same spot, can but thrust forth, through the interstitial chinks of their prison- houses, spiral arms, covered with cilia, and winnow the water for a living. Now, it so happens that the molluscan group of the Silurian system is composed chiefly of these two extreme classes. It contains some of the other forms ; but they are few in number, and give no character to the rocks in which they occur. There was nothing by which I was more im- pressed, in a visit to a Silurian region, than that in its an-- cient graveyards, as in those of the present day, though in a different sense, the high and the low should so invariably meet together. It is, however, not impossible that, in even the present state of things, a similar union of the extreme forms of the marine mollusca may be taking place in deep- sea deposits. Most of the intermediate forms provided with shells capable of preservation, such as the shelled Gastero- poda and the Conchifers, are either littoral, or restricted to comparatively small depths ; whereas the Brachiopoda are deep-sea shells ; and the Cephalopoda may be found voyaging THE SILURIAN MOLLUSCS. 207 far from land, in the upper strata of the sea above them. Even in t.ie seas that surround our own island , the Brachiopodous mol- luscs terebratula and crania have been found, ever since deep-sea dredging became common, to be not very rare shells ; and in the Mediterranean, where they are less rare still, fleets of Argonauts, the representatives of a highly organized family of the Cephalopods, to which it is now believed the Bellerophon of the Paleozoic rocks belonged, may be seen skimming along the surface, with sail and oar, high over the profound depths in which they lie. And, of course, when death comes, that comes to high and low, the remains of both Argonauts and Brachiopods must lie together at the bottom, in beds almost totally devoid of the intermediate forms. Now, the author of the " Vestiges," in maintaining his hypothesis, suspends it on the handle furnished him by the immense abundance of the Silurian Brachiopods. The Silu- rian period, he says, exhibits " a scanty and most defective development of life ; so much so, that Mr. Lyell calls it, par excellence^ the age of Brachiopods, with reference to the by no means exalted bivalve shell-fish which forms its pre. dominant class. Such being the actual state of the case, I must persist in describing even the fauna of this age, which we now know was not the first, as, generally speaking, such a humble exhibition of the animal kingdom as we might ex- pect, upon the development theory, to find at an early stage of the history of organization." The reader will at once dis- cern the fallacy here. The Silurian period was peculiarly an age of Brachiopods, for in no other period were Brachio- pods so numerous, specifically or individually, or of such size or importance ; whereas it was not so peculiarly an age of Cephalopods, for these we find introduced in still greater num- bers during the Liasic and Oolitic periods. In 1848, when 208 EVIDENCE OF P:ofessor Edward Forbes edited the Palseontological map of Britain and Ireland, which forms one of the very admirable series of " Johnstone's Physical Atlas," the Cephalopods of the Silurian rocks of England and Wales were estimated at forty-eight species, and the Brachiopods at one hundred and fifty; whereas at the same date there were two hundred and five Cephalopods of the Oolitic formations enumerated, and but fifty-four Brachiopods. It is the molluscs of the infe- rior, not thosa of the superior class, that constitute (with their contemporaries the Trilobites) the characteristic fossils of the Silurian rocks ; and hence the propriety of the distinctive name suggested by Sir Charles Lyell. But in the develop- ment question, what we have specially to consider is, not the numbers of the low, but the standing of the high. A country may be distinctively a country of flocks ana herds, or a country of the carnivorous mammalia, or, like New South Wales or the Galapagos, a country of marsupial animals or of reptiles. Its human inhabitants may be merely a few hunters or shep- herds, too inconsiderable in numbers, and too much like their brethren elsewhere, to give it any peculiar standing as a home of men. But in estimating the highest point in the scale to which the animal kingdom has attained within its limits, it is of its few men, not of its many beasts, that we must take note. And the point to be specially decided re- garding the organisms of the Silurian system, in this ques- tion, is, not the proportion in number which the lower forms bore to the higher, but the exact rank which the higher bore in the scale of existence. Did the system furnish but a single Cephalopod or a single fish, we would yet have as certainly to determine that the chain of being reached as high as the Cephalopod or the fish, as if the remains of these crea- ure* constituted its most abundant fossils. The chain of THE SILURIAN MOLLUSCS. 209 animal life reached quite as high on the evening of the sixth day of creation, when the human family was restricted to a single pair, as it does now, when our statists reckon up by millions the inhabitants of the greater capitals of the world ; and the special pleader who, in asserting the contrary, would insist on determining the point, not by the rank of the men of Eden, but by the number of minnows or sticklebacks that swarmed in its rivers, might be perhaps deemed ingenious in his expedients, but certainly not very judicious in the use of them. It is worthy of remark, however, that the Brachiopods of those Palaeozoic periods in which the group occupied such large space in creation, consisted of greatly larger and more important animals than any which it contains in the present day. It has yielded to what geological history shows to be the common fate, and sunk into a state of degradation and decline. The geological history of the vegetable, like that of the animal kingdom, has been pressed into the service of the development hypothesis ; and certainly their respective courses, both in actual arrangement and in their relation to human knowledge, seem wonderfully alike. It is not much more than twenty years since it was held that no exogenous plant existed during the Carboniferous period. The frequent occurrence of Coniferse in the Secondary deposits had been conclusively determined from numerous specimens ; but, founding on what seemed a large amount of negative evi- dence, it was concluded that, previous to the Liasic age, nature had failed to achieve a tree, and that the rich vege- tation of the Coal Measures had been exclusively composed of magnificent immaturities of the vegetable kingdom, of gigantic ferns and club-mosses, thut attained to the size of forest trees, and of thickets of the swamp-loving horsetail 18* 210 EVIDENCE OF family of plants, that well nigh rivalled ir. height those for- ests of masts whicl darken the rivers of our great commercial cities. Such was the view promulgated by M. Adolphe Brongniart; and it may be well to remark that, so far as the evidence on which it was based was positive, the view was sound. It is a fact, that inferior orders of plants were de- veloped in those ages in a style which, in their present state of degradation, they never exemplify : they took their place, not, as now, among the pigmies and abortions of creation, but among its tallest and goodliest productions. It is, however, not a fact that they were the highest vegetable forms of their time. True exogenous trees also existed in great numbers and of vast size. In various localities in the coal fields of both England and Scotland, such as Lennel Braes and Allan Bank in Berwickshire, High-Heworth, Fellon, Gates- head, and Wideopen near Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and in quarries to the west of the city of Durham, the most abundant fossils of the system are its true woods. In the quarry of Craigleith, near Edinburgh, three huge trunks have been laid open during the last twenty years, within the space of about a hundred and fifty yards, and two equally massy trunks, within half that space, in the neighboring quarry of Granton, all low in the Coal Measures. They lie diagonally athwart the strata, at an angle of about thirty, with the nether and weightier portion of their boles below, like snagb in the Mississippi ; and we infer, from their general direction, that the stream to which they reclined must have flowed from nearly north-east to south-west. The current was probably that of a noble river, which reflected on its broad bosom the shadow of many a stately tree. With the exception of one of the Granton specimens, which still retains its strong-kneed roots, they are all msre portions of trees, rounded at both THE FOSSIL FLORA. 211 ends, as if by attrition or decay ; and yet one of these por- tions meisures about six feet in diameter by sixty-one feet 111 length another four feet in diameter by seventy feet in length; and the others, cf various thickness, but all bulky enough to equal the masts of large vessels, range in length from thirty-six to forty-seven feet. It seems strange to one who derives his supply of domestic fuel from the Dalkeith and Falkirk coal-fields, that the Carboniferous flora could ever have been described as devoid of trees. I can scarce take up a piece of coal from beside my study fire, without detecting in it frag- ments of carbonized wood, which almost always exhibit the characteristic longitudinal fibres, and not unfrequently the medullary rays. Even the trap-rocks of the district enclose, in some instances, their masses of lignite, which present in their transverse sections, when cut by the lapidary, the net- like reticulations of the coniferse. The fossil botanist, who devoted himself chiefly to the study of microscopic structure, would have to decide, from the facts of the case, not that trees were absent during the Carboniferous period, but that, in consequence of their having been present in amazing numbers, their remains had entered more palpably and exten- sively into the composition of coal than those of any other vegetable.* So far as is yet known, they all belonged to the * It is stated by Mr. Witham, that, " except in a few instances, he had ineffectually tried, with the aid of the microscope, to obtain some insight into the structure of coal. Owing," he adds, " to its great opacity, which is probably due to mechanical pressure, the action of chemical affinity, and the percolation of acidulous waters, all traces of organization appear to have been obliterated." I have heard the late Mr. Sanderson, who prepared for Mr. Witham most of the speci- mens figured in his well-known work on the " Internal Structure oi Fossil Vegetables," and from whom the materials of his statement on 212 EVIDENCE OF two great divisions of the coniferous family, araucarians and pines. The huge trees of Craigleith and Granton were of the former tn.be, and approximate more nearly to Altingia excclsa, Fig. 53. ALTINGIA EXCELS A, (NORFOLK-ISLAND PINE.) From a young specimen in the Botanic Garden, Edinburgh. this point seem to have been derived, make a similar remaxk. It -was rare, he said, to find a bit of coal that exhibited the organic struc- ture. The case, however, is far otherwise ; and the ingenious me- chanic and his employer were misled, simply by the circumstance, that it is rare to find pieces of coal which exhibit the ligneous fibre, existing in a state of keeping solid enough to stand the grinding of the lapidary's wheel. The lignite usually occurs in thin layers of a substance resembling soft charcoal, at which, from the loose adhesion of the fibres, the coal splits at a stroke ; and as it cannot be prepared as a transparency, it is best examined by a Stanhope lens. It will be found, tried in this manner, that so far is vegetable fibre from being of rare occurrence in coal, our Scotch coal at least, that almost every cubic inch e 5ntains its hundreds, nay, its thousands, of cells, THE FOSSIL FLORA. 213 the Norfolk-Island pine, a noble araucarian, that rears its proud head from a hundred and sixty to two hundred feet over the soil, and exhibits a green and luxuriant breadth of foliage rare among tie Coniferae, than any other living tree. Beyond the Coal Measures terrestrial plants become ex- tremely rare. The fossil botanist, on taking leave of the lower Carboniferous beds, quits the land, and sets out to sea ; and it seems in no way surprising, that the specimens which he there ado's to his herbarium should consist mainly of Fuca- CCCB and ConfervecB. The development hypothesis can borrow no support from the simple fact, that while a high terrestrial vegetation grows upon dry land, only algae grow in the sea ; and even did the Old Red Sandstone and Silurian systems fur- nish, as their vegetable organisms, fucoids exclusively, the evidence would amount to no more than simply this, that the land of the Palaeozoic periods produced plants of the land, and the sea of the Palaeozoic periods produced plants of the sea In the Upper Old Red Sandstone, the formation of the Holoptychius and the Slagonolepis, the only vegetable re- Tiains which I have yet seen are of a character so exceedingly obscure and doubtful, that all I could venture to premise re- garding them is, that they seem to be the fragments of sorely comminuted fucoids. In the formation of the Middle Old Red, that of the Cephalaspis and the gigantic lobster of Car- mylie, the vegetable remains are at once more numerous and better defined. I have detected among the gray micaceous sandstones of Forfarshire a fucoid furnished with a thick, squat stem, that branches into numerous divergent leaflets or fronds, of a slim parallelogrammical, grass-like form, and which, as a whole, somewhat resembles the scourge of cords attached to a handle with which a boy whips his top. And 214 EVIDENCE OF Professor Fleming describes a still more remarkable vegeta- ble organism of the same formation, " which, occurring in the form of circular, flat patches, composed each of numer- ous smaller contiguous circular pieces, is altogether not unliko what might be expected to result from a compressed berry, such as the bramble or rasp." In the Lower Old Red, the formation of the Coccosteus and Cheir acanthus, the re- mains of fucoids are more numerous still. There are gray slaty beds among the rocks of Navity, that owe their fissile character mainly to their layers of carbonized weed ; and " among the rocks of Sandy-Bay, near Thurso," says Mr. Dick, " the dark impressions of large fucoids are so numer- ous, that they remind one of the interlaced boughs and less bulky pine-trunks that lie deep in our mosses." A portion of a stem from the last locality, which I owe to Mr. Dick, meas- ures three inches in diameter ; but the ill-compacted cellular tissue of the algse is but indifferently suited for preservation ; and so it exists as a mere coaly film, scarcely half a line in thickness. The most considerable collection of the Lower Old Red fucoids which I have yet seen is that of the Rev. Charlea Clouston of Sandwick, in Orkney, a skilful cultivator of geological science, who has specially directed his pala3ontol- ogical inquiries on the vegetable remains of the flagstones of his district, as the department in which most remained to be done ; but his numerous specimens only serve to show what a poverty-stricken flora that of the ocean of the Lower Old Red Sandstone must have been. I could detect among them but two species of plants ; the one an imperfectly pre served vegetable, more nearly resembling a club-moss than P.ught e.se whioh I have seen, but which bore on its surface, THE FOSSIL FLORA. 215 instead of the well-marked scales of the Lycopodia-ea, irreg- ular rows of tubercles, that, when elongated in the profile, as sometimes happens, might be mistaken for minute, ill-de- fined leaves ; the other, a smooth-stemmed fucoid, existing on the stone in most cases as a mere film, in which, however, thickly-set longitudinal fibres are occasionally traceable, and which may be always distinguished from the other by its sharp-edged outline, and from the circumstance that its stems continue to retain the same diameter for considerable distances, after throwing otT at acute angles numerous branches nearly as bulky as themselves. In a Thurso specimen, about two feet in length, which I owe to the kindness of Mr. Dick, there are stems continuous throughout, that, though they ramify in that space into from six to eight branches, are nearly as thick atop as at bottom. They are the remains, in all proba- bility, of a long, flexible weed, that may have somewhat resembled those fucoids of the intertropical seas, which, streaming slantwise in the tide, rise not unfrequently to the surface in from fifteen to twenty fathoms of water ; and as, notwithstanding their obscurity, they are among the most perfect specimens of their class ye found, and contrast with the stately araucarians of the Coal Measures, in a style which cannot fail to delight the heart of every assertor of the de- velopment hypothesis, I present them to the reader from Mr. Dick's specimen, in a figure (fig. 54) which, however slight its interest, has at least the merit of being true. The stone exhibits specimens of the two species of Mr. Clouston's collection, the sharp-edged, fioely-striated weed, a, and that roughened by tubercles, b ; which, besides the distinctive character manifested on its surface, dif- fers from the other in rapidly losing breath with every branch which it throws off, and, in consequence, runs soon 216 EVIDENCE OF to a point. The cut on the opposite page (fig. 55) repre- sents not inadequately the cortical peculiarities of the two Fig. 54. FCCOIDS Of THB LOWER OLD RED SANDSTONE. a. Smooth-stemmed species. b. Tubercled specie*. (One sixth nat. size, linear.) THE FOSSIL FLORA. 217 Fig. 55. a. Smooth-stemmed species. b. Tvberclcd species. (Natural size.) species when best preserved. The surface of the tubercle d one will perhaps remind the Algologist of the knobbed surface of the thong or receptacle of Himanthalia lorea, a recent fucoid, common on the western coast of Scotland, but rare on the east. An Orkney specimen lately sent me by Mr. William Watt, from a quarry at Skaill, has much the appearance of one of the smaller ferns, such as the moor-worts, sea spleen-worts, or maiden-hairs. It exists as an impression in diluted black, on a ground of dark gray, and has so little sharpness of outline, that, like minute figures in oil-paintings, it seems more distinct when viewed at arm's length than when microscopically examined ; but enough remains to show that it must have been a terrestrial, not a marine plant. The accompanying print (fig. 56) may be regarded as no un- faithful representation of this unique fossil in its state of imperfect keeping. The vegetation of the Silurian system, from its upper beds down till where we reach the zero of life, is, like that of the Old Red Sandstone, almost exclusively fucoidal. In the older fossiliferous deposits of the system in Sweden, Russia, the Lake Districts of England, Canada, and the United States, fucoids occur, to the exclusion, so far as 13 19 '218 EVIDENCE OF Fig. 56. J23X? OP THE LOWER OLD B.ED 8AXDSTONE. ^ (Natural size.) yet known, of every other vegetable form ; and such is th&ir abundance in some localities, that they render the argilla- ceous rocks in which they lie diffused, capable of being fired as an alum slate, and exist in others as seams of a compact anthracite, occasionally used as fuel. They also occur in those districts of Wales in which the place and sequence of the various Silurian formations were first determined, though apparently in a state of keeping from which little can be premised regarding their original forms. Sir Roderick Murchison sums up his notice of the vegetable remains of the system in the province whence it derives its name, by stating, that he had submitted his specimens to " Mr. Robert Browp and Dr. Greville, and that neither of these eminent botanists were able to say much more regarding them than that they were fucoid-like bodies." Such are the vegetable organisms of the Old Red Sand- stone and Silurian systems: they are the remains of the THE FOSSIL FLORA. 219 ancient marine plants of ancient marine deposits, and, as such, lend quite as little support to the developmen hypothesis as the recent alga? of our existing seas. The case, stated in its most favorable form, amounts simply to this, that at certain early periods, represented by the Upper and Lower Silu- rian and the Old Red deposits, the seas produced sea-plants ; and that, at a certain later period, that of the Carboniferous system, the land produced land-plants. But even this, did it stand alone, would be a too favorable statement. I have seen, on one occasion, the fisherman bring up with his nets, far in the open sea, a wild rose-bush, that, though it still bore its characteristic thorns, was encrusted with serpula, and laden with pendulous lobularia. It had been swept from its original habitat by some river in flood, that had undermined and torn down the bank on which it grew ; and after float- ing about, mayhap for months, had become so saturated with water, that it could float no longer. And in that single rose-bush, dragged up to the light and air from its place among Sertularia, Flustra, Serpula, and the deep-sea fucoids, I had as certain an evidence of the existence of the dico- tyledonous plant, as if I had all the families of the Rosacese before me. Now, we are furnished by the more ancient for- mations with evidence regarding the existence of a terres- trial vegetation, such as that which the rose-bush in this case supplied. We cannot expect that the proofs should be nu- merous. In the chart of the Pacific attached to the better editions of " Cook's Voyages," there are several notes along the tract of the great navigator, that indicate where, in mid ocean, trees or fragments of trees had been picked up. These entries, however, are but few, though they belong to all the three voyages together : if I remember aright, there are only five entries in all, two in the Northern,- and three 220 EVIDENCE OF in the Southern Pacific. The floating shrub or tree, at a great distance from land, is of rare occurrence in even the present scene of things, though the breadth of land be great, and trees numerous ; and in the times of the Silurian and Old Red Sandstone systems, when the breadth of land was ap- parently not great, and trees and shrubs, in consequence, not numerous, it must have been of rarer occurrence still. We learn, however, from Sir Charles Lyell, that in the " Hamil- ton group of the United States, a series of beds that cor- responds in many of its fossils with the Ludlow rocks of England, plants allied to the Lepidodendra of the Carbonif- erous type are abundant ; and that in the lower Devonian strata of New York the same plants occur associated with ferns." And I am able to demonstrate, from an interesting fossil at present before me, that there existed in the period of the Lower Old Red Sandstone vegetable forms of a class greatly higher than either Lepidodendra or ferns. In my little work on the Old Red Sandstone, 1 have referred to an apparent lignite of the Lower Old Red of Cromarty, which presented, when viewed by the microscope, marks of che internal fibre. The surface, when under the glass, re- sembled, I said, a bundle of horse-hairs lying stretched in par- allel lines : and in this specimen alone, it was added, had I found aught in the Lower Old Red Sandstone approaching to proof of the existence of dry land. About four years ago I had this lignite put stringently to the question by Mr. Sanderson; and deeply interesting was the result. I must first mention, however, that there cannot rest the shadow of a doubt regard- ing the place of the organism in the geologic scale. It is une- quivocally a fossil of the Lower Old Red Sandstone. I found it partially embedded, with many other nodules half-disinterred by the sea, in an ichthyolitic deposit, a few hundred yards tc THE FOSSIL FLOKA. 221 the east of the town of Cromarty, which occurs more than four hundred feet over the Great Conglomerate base of the system. A nodule that lay immediately beside it contained a well-preserved specimen of the Coccosteus De.cipiens ; and in the nodule in which the lignite itself is contained, (fig. 57,) Fig. 57. LIGNITE OP THE LOWER. OLD RED SANDSTONE. (One third nat. size, linear.) the practised eye may detect a scattered group of scales of Diplacanthus, a scarce less characteristic organism of the lower formation. And what, asks the reader, is the character of this very ancient vegetable, the most ancient, by three whole formations, that has presented its internal structure tc the microscope ? Is it as low in the scale of development as in the geological scale ? Does this venerable Adam of the forest appear, Ike the Adam of the infidel, as a squalid, ill- formed savage, with a rugged shaggy nature, which it would require the suggestive necessities of many ages painfully to lick into civilization ? Or does it appear rather like the Adam 19* 222 ANCIENT CONIFER. of the poet and the theologian, independent, in its instanta neoasly-derived perfection, of all after development ? " Adam, the goodliest man of men since born His sons." Is its tissue vascular or cellular, or, like that of some of the cryptogamia, intermediate ? Or what, in fine, is the nature and bearing of its mute but emphatic testimony, on that dor- trine of progressive development of late so strangely resus citated ? In the first place, then, this ancient fossil is a true wood, a Dicotyledonous or Polycotyledonous Gymnosperm, that, like the pines and larches of our existing forests, bore naked seeds, which, in their state of germination, developed either double lobes to shelter the embryo within, or shot out a fringe of ver- ticillate spikes, which performed the same protective func- tions, and that, as it increased in bulk year after year, received its accessions of growth in outside layers. In the transverse section the cells bear the reticulated appearance which distin- guish the coniferaB, (fig. 58, a ;) the lignite had been exposed in its bed to a considerable degree of pressure ; and so the open- ings somewhat resemble the meshes of a net that has been drawn a little awry ; but no general obliteration of their origi- nal character has taken place, save in minute patches, where they have been injured by compression or the bituminizing process. All the tubes indicated by the openings are, as in re- cent coniferaB, of nearly the same size ; and though, as in many of the more ancient lignites, there are no indications of annual rings, the direction of the medullary rays is distinctly traceable. The longitudinal sections are rather less distinct than the transverse one ; in the section parallel to the ra- dius of the 6te7i or bole the circular disks of the coniferse ANCIENT CONIFEE. Fie. 58 223. INTERNAL SrHfTTTTRE OP LIGNITE OF LOWER OLD RED 8ANDSTOWB. a. Transverse section. b. Longitudinal section, (parallel to radtlis, or medullary rays.) c. Longitudinal section, (tangental, or parallel to the bark.) (Mag. forty diameters.) were at first not at all detected ; and, as since shown by a very fine microscope, they appear simply as double and triple lines of undefined dots, (&,) that somewhat resemble the stip- pled markings of the miniature painter; nor are the open- ings of the medullary rays frequent in the tangental section (/. e. that parallel to the bark,) (c;) but nothing can be better defined than the peculiar arrangement of the woody fibre, and the longitudinal form of the ceils. Such is the character of this, the mo^t ancient of lignites yet found, that yields to 224 ANCIENT CONIFER. the microscope the peculiarities of its original structure. We find in it an unfafien Adam, not a half-developed savage.* The olive leaf which the dove brought to Noah established at least three important facts, and indicated a few more. It showed most conclusively that there was dry land, that there were olive trees, and that the climate of the sur- rounding region, whatever change it might have undergone, was still favorable to the development of vegetable life. * On a point of such, importance I find it necessary to strengthen my testimony by auxiliary evidence. The following is the judg- ment, on this ancient petrifaction, of Mr. Nicol of Edinburgh, confessedly one of our highest living authorities in that division of fossil botany which takes cognizance of the internal structure of lignites, and decides, from their anatomy, their race and family : "Edinburgh, 19th July, 1845. " DEAR SIR, I have examined the structure of the fossil wood which you found in the Old Red Sandstone at Cromarty, and have no hesitation in stating, that the reticulated texture of the trans- verse sections, though somewhat compressed, clearly indicates a coniferous origin ; but as there is not the slightest trace of a disc to be seen in the longitudinal sections parallel to the medullary rays, it is impossible to say whether it belongs to the Pine or Arau- carian division. I am, &c., ""WILLIAM NICOL." It will be seen that Mr. Nicol failed to detect what I now deem the discs of this conifer, those stippled markings to which I have referred, and which the engraver has indicated in no exaggerated style, in one of the longitudinal sections (b~) of the wood-cut given above. But even were this portion of the evidence wholly want- ing, we would be left in doubt, in consequence, not whether the Old Ked lignite formed part of a true gymnospermous tree, but whether that tree is now represented by the pines of Europe and America, or by the araucarians of Chili and New Zealand. Were I to risk an opinion in a department not particularly my province, it would be in favor of an araucarian relationship. ANCIENT CONIFER. 225 And, further, it might be very safely inferred from it, that if olive trees had survived, other trees and plants must have survived also ; and that the dark muddy prominences round which the ebbing currents were fast sweeping to lower levels, would soon present, as in antediluvian times, their coverings of cheerful green. The olive leaf spoke not of merely a partial, but of a general vegetation. Now, the coniferous lignite of the Lower Old Red Sandstone we find charged, like the olive leaf, with a various and singularly interesting evidence. It is something to know, that in the times of the Coccosteus and Asterolepis there existed dry land, and that that land wore, as at after periods, its soft, gay mantle of green. It is some- thing also to know, that the verdant tint was not owing to a profuse development of the mere immaturities of the vege- table kingdom, crisp, slow-growing lichens, or watery spore- propagated fungi that shoot up to their full size in a night, nor even to an abundance of the more highly organized fam- ilies of the liverworts and the mosses. These may have abounded then, as now ; though we have not a shadow of evidence that they did. But while we have no proof what- ever of their existence, we have conclusive proof that there existed orders and families of a rank far above them. On the dry land of the Lower Old Red Sandstone, on which, according to the theory of Adolphe Brogniart, nothing higher than a lichen or a moss could have been expected, the ship- carpenter might have hopefully taken axe in hand, to explore the woods for some such stately pine as the one described by Milton, " Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the mast Of some great admiral." Viewed simply in its picturesque aspect, this olive leaf of the Old Red seems not at all devoid of poetry. We sail 226 ANCIENT CONIFER. upwards into the high geologic zones, passing from ancient to still more ancient scenes of being ; and, as we voyage along, find ever in the surrounding prospect, as in the existing scene from which we set out, a graceful intermixture of land and water continent, river, and sea. We first coast along the land o." the Tertiary, inhabited by the strange quadrupeds of Cuvier, and waving with the reeds and palms of the Paris Basin ; the land of the Wealden, with its gigantic iguanodon rustling amid its tree ferns and its cycadese, comes next ; then comes the green land of the Oolite, with its little pouched insectivorous quadruped, its flying reptiles, its vast jungles of the Brora equisetum, and its forests of the Helmsdale pine ; and then, dimly as through a haze, we mark, as we speed on, the thinly scattered islands of the New Red Sandstone, and pick up in our course a large floating leaf, veined like that of a cabbage, which not a little puzzles the botanists of the ex- pedition. And now we near the vast Carboniferous continent, and see along the undulating outline, between us and the sky, the strange forms of a vegetation, compared with which that of every previously seen land seems stunted and poor. We speed day after day along endless forests, in which gigantic club-mosses wave in air a hundred feet over head, and skirt interminable marshes, in which thickets of reeds overtop the mast-head. And, where mighty rivers come rolling to the sea, we mark, through the long-retiring vistas which they open into the interior, the higher grounds of the country covered with coniferous trees, and see doddered trunks of vast size, like those of Granton and Craigleith, reclining under the banks in deep muddy reaches, with their decaying tops turned adown the current. At length the furthermost promontory of this long range of coast comes full in view : we near it, \ye have come up abreas 3' it: we see the shells of the Moun- ANCIENT CONIFER. 2SY tain Lirrsstone glittering white along its further shore, and the green depths under our keel lightened by the flush of innumerable corals ; and then, bidding farewell to the land forever, for so the geologists of but five years ago would have advised, we launch into the unmeasured ocean of the Old Red, with its three consecutive zones of animal life. Not a single patch of land more do those geologic charts exhibit which we still regard as new. The zones of the Silurian and Cambrian succeed the zones of the Old Red ; and, darkly fringed by an obscure bank of cloud ranged along the last zone in the series, a night that never dissipates settles down upon the deep. Our voyage, like that of the old fabulous navigators of five centuries ago, terminates on the sea in a thick darkness, beyond which there lies no shore and there dawns no light. And it is in the middle of this vast ocean, just where the last zone of the Old Red leans against the first zone of the Silurian, that we have succeeded in dis- covering a solitary island unseen before, a shrub-bearing land, much enveloped in fog, but with hills that at least look green in the distance. There are patches of floating sea- weed much comminuted by the surf all around it ; and on one projecting headland we see clear through our glasses a cone-bearing tree. This certainly is not the sort of arrangement demanded by the exigencies of the development hypothesis. A true wood at the base of the Old Red Sandstone, or a true Placoid in the Limestones of Bala, very considerably beneath the base of the Lower Silurian system, are untoward misplacements for the purposes of the Lamarckian ; and who that has watched the progress of discovery for the last twenty years, and seen the place of the earliest ichthyolite transferred from the Carboniferous to the Cambrian system, and that of the 228 ANCIENT CONIFER. earliest exogenous lignite from the Lias to the Lower De- vonian, will now venture to say that fossil wood may not yet be detected as low in the scale as any vegetable organism whatever, or fossil fish as low as the remains of any animal ? But though the response of the earlier geologic systems be thus unfavorable to the development hypothesis, may not men such as the author of the " Vestiges " urge, that the geologic evidence, taken as a whole, and in its bearing on groupes and periods, establishes the general fact that the lower plants and animals preceded the higher, that the conifera, for instance, preceded our true forest trees, such as the oak and elm, that, in like manner, the fish preceded the reptile, that the reptile preceded the bird, that the bird preceded the mammiferous quadruped and the quadrumana, and that the mammiferous quadruped and the quadrumana preceded man ? Assuredly yes ! They may and do urge that Geology furnishes evidence of such a succession of ex- istences ; and the arrangement seems at once a very won- derful and very beautiful one. Of that great and imposing procession of being of which this world has been the scene, the programme has been admirably marshalled. But the order of the arrangement in no degree justifies the inference based upon it by the Lamarckian. The fact that fishes and reptiles were created on an earlier day than the beasts of the field and the human family, gives no ground whatever for the belief that " the peopling of the earth was one of a natural kind, requiring time," or that the reptiles and fishes have been not only the predecessors, but also the progenitors of the beasts and of man. The geological phenomena, even had the author of the " Vestiges " been consulted in their arrangement, and permitted to determine their se- quence, would yet have failed to furnish, not merely an AJICIENT CONIFER. adequate foundation for the development hypothesis, but even the slightest presumption in its favor. In making good the assertion, may I ask the reader to follow me through the details of a simple though somewhat lengthened illustration ? 20 230 SUPERPOSITION SUPERPOSITION NOT PARENTAL RELATION. THE BEGINNINGS OF LIFE. SEVERAL thousand years ago, ere the upheaval of the ast of our raised beaches, there existed somewhere on the Bijtish coast a submarine bed, rich in sea-weed and the less destruc- tible zoophytes, and inhabited by the commoner crustacese and molluscs. Shoals of herrings frequented it every autumn, haunted by their usual enemies the dog-fish, the cod, and the porpoise ; and, during the other seasons of the year, it was swum over by the ling, the hake, and the turbot. A con- siderable stream, that traversed a wide extent of marshy country, waving with flags and reeds, and in which the frog and the newt bred by millions, entered the sea a few hun- dred yards away, and bore down, when in flood, its modicum of reptilian remains, some of which, sinking over the sub- marine bed, found a lodgment at the bottom. Portions of reeds and flags were also occasionally entombed, with now and then boughs of the pine and juniper, swept from the higher grounds. Through frequent depositions of earthy matter brought down by the streamlet, and of sand thrown up by the sea, a gradual elevation of the bottom went on, till at length the deep-sea bed came to ex'ist as a shallow bank, over which birds of the wader family stalked mid-leg NOT PARENTAL RELATION. 231 deep when plying for food ; and on one occasion a small por- poise, losing his way, and getting entangled amid its shoals, perished on it, and left his carcass to be covered up by its mud and silt. That elevation of the land, or recession of tho sea, to which the country owes its last acquired marginal strip of soil, took place, and the shallow bank became a flat meadow, raised some six or eight feet above the sea-level. Herbs, shrubs, and trees, in course of time covered it over; and then, as century succeeded century, it gathered atop a thick stratum of peaty mould, embedding portions of birch and hazel bushes, and a few doddered oaks. When in this state, at a comparatively recent period, an ItalL.n boy, ac- companied by his monkey, was passing over it, when the poor monkey, hard-wrought and ill-fed, and withal but indiffer- ently suited originally for braving the rigors of a keen north- ern climate, lay down and died, and his sorrowing master covered up the remains. Not many years after, the mutilated corpse of a poor shipwrecked sailor was thrown up, during a night-storm, on the neighboring beach : it was a mere frag- ment of the human frame, a mouldering unsightly mabs, de- composing in the sun ; and a humane herd-boy, scooping out a shallow grave for it, immediately over that of the monkey, buried it up. Last of all, a farmer, bent on agricultural im- provement, furrowed the flat meadow to the depth of some six or eight feet, by a broad ditch, that laid open its organic contents from top to bottom. And then a philosopher of the school of Maillet and Lamarck, chancing to come that way, stepped aside to examine the phenomena, and square them with his theory. First, along the bottom of the deep ditch he detects marine organisms of a low order, and generally of a small size. 232 SUPERPOSITION There are dark indistinct markings traversing the gray si.t which he correctly enough regards as the remains of fucoids ; and blent with these, he finds the stony cells of flustra, the calcareous spindles of the sea-pen, the spines of echinus, and the thin granular plates of the Crustacea. Layers of mus- sel and pecten shells come next, mixed up with the shells of buccinum, natica, and trochus. Over the shells there occur defensive spines of the dog-fish, blent with the button-like, thornset bouclesof the ray. And the minute ske'etons of her- rings, with the vertebral and cerebral bones of coa, rest over these in turn. He finds, also, well-preserved bits of reed, and a fragment of pine. Higher up, the well-marked bones of the frog occur, and the minute skeleton of a newt ; higher still, the bones of birds of the diver family ; higher still, the skeleton of a porpoise ; and still higher, he discovers that of a monkey, resting amid the decayed boles and branches of dicot- yledonous plants and trees. He pursues his search, vastly delighted to find his doctrine of progressive development so beautifully illustrated ; and last of all he detects, only a few inches from the surface, the broken remains of the poor sailor. And having thus collected his facts, he sets himself to collate them with his hypothesis. To hold that the zoophytes had been created zoophytes, the molluscs molluscs, the fishes fishes, the reptiles reptiles, or the man a man, would be, ac- cording to our philosopher, alike derogatory to the Divine wis- dom and to the acumen and vigor of the human intellect : it would be " distressing to him to be compelled to picture the power of God, as put forth in any other manner than in those slow, mysterious, universal laws, which have so plainly an eternity to work in ; " nor, with so large an amount of evi- dence before him as that which the ditch furnishes, evidence NOT PARENTAL RELATION. 233 conclusive to the effect that creation is but development, does he find it necessary either to cramp his faculties or outrage his taste, by a weak yielding to the requirements of any such belief. Meanwhile the farmer, a plain, observant, elderly man, comes up, and he and the philosopher enter into conversa- tion, " I have been reading the history of creation in the side of your deep ditch," says the philosopher, " and find the record really very complete. Look there," he adds, pointing to the unfossiliferous strip that runs along the bottom of the bank ; " there, life, both vegetable and animal, first began. It began, struck by electricity out of albumen, as a con- geries of minute globe-shaped atoms, each a hollow sphere within a sphere, as in the well-known Chinese puz- zle ; and from these living atoms were all the higher forms progressively developed. The ditch, of course, exhibits none of the atoms with which being first commenced ; for the atoms don't keep ; we merely see their place indicated by that unfossiliferous band at the bottom ; but we may detect immediately over it almost the first organisms into which parting thus early into the two great branches of organic be- ing they were developed. There are the fucoids, first-born among vegetables, and there the zoophytes, well nigh the lowest of the animal forms. The fucoids are marine plants ; for, according to Oken, ' all life is from the sea, none from the continent ;' but there, a few feet higher, we may see the remains of reeds and flags, semi-aqueous, semi-aerial plants of the comparatively low monocotyledonous order into whicl the fucoids were developed ; higher still we detect fragments of pines, and, I think, juniper, trees and shrubs of the land of an intermediate order, into which the reeds and flags were developed in turn ; and in that peaty layer immediately be- neath the vegetable mould, there occur boughs and trunks 20* 234 SUPERPOSITION of blackened oak, a noble tree of the dicotyledonous division, the highest to which vegetation in its upward course has yet attained. Nor is the progress of the other great branch of organized being that of the animal kingdom less dis- tinctly traceable. The zoophytes became Crustacea and mol- luscs, the Crustacea and molluscs, dog-fishes and herrings, the dog-fish, a low placoid, shot up chiefly into turbot, cod, and ling ; but the smaller osseous fish was gradually convert- ed into a batrachian reptile ; in short, the herring became a frog, an animal that still testifies to its ichthyological origin, by commencing life as a fish. Gradually, in the course of years, the reptile, expanding in size and improving in faculty, passed into a warm-blooded porpoise ; the porpoise at length, tiring of the water as he began to know better, quitted it altogether, and became a monkey, and the monkey by slow degrees improved into man, yes, into man, my friend, who has still a tendency, especially when just shooting up to his full stature, and studying the ' Vestiges,' to resume the monkey. Such, Sir, is the true history of creation, as clearly recorded in the section of earth, moss, and silt, which you have so opportunely laid bare. Where that ditch now opens, the generations of the man atop lived, died, and were developed. There flourished and decayed his great-great- great-great-grandfather the sea-pen, his great-great-great- grandfathsr the mussel, his great-great-grandfather the her- ring, his great-grandfather the frog, his grandfather the porpoise, and his father the monkey. And there also lived, died, and were developed, the generations of the oak, from the kelp- weed and tangle to the reed and the flag, and from the reed and the flag, to the pine, the juniper, the hazel, and the birch." " Master," replies the farmer, " I see you are a scholar, NOT PARENTAL RELATION. 235 and, I suspect, a wag. It would take a great deal of believ- ing to believe all that. In the days of my poor old neigh- bor the infidel weaver, who died of delirium tremens thirty years ago, I used to read Tom Paine ; and, as I was a little wild at the time, I was, I am afraid, a bit of a sceptic. It wasn't easy work always to be as unbelieving as Tom, espe- cially when the conscience within got queasy ; but it would be a vast deal easier, Master, to doubt with Tom than to believe with you. I am a plain man, but not quite a fool ; and as I have now been looking about me in this neigh- borhood for the last forty years, I have come to know that it gives no assurance that any one thing grew out of any other thing because it chances to be found atop of it, Master. See, yonder is Dobbin lying lazily atop of his bundle of hay ; and yonder little Jack, with bridle in hand, and he in a few minutes will be atop of Dobbin. And all I see in that ditch, Master, from top to bottom, is neither more nor less than a certain top-upon-bottom order of things. I see sets of bones and dead plants lying on the top of other sets of bones and dead plants, things lying atop of things, as I say, like Dobbin fin the hay and Jack upon Dobbin. I doubt not the sea was once here, Master, just as it was once where you see the low-lying field yonder, which I won from it ten years ago. I have carted tangle and kelp-weed where I now cut clover and rye-grass, and have gathered periwinkles where I now see snails. But it is clean against experience, as my poor old neighbor the weaver used to say, against my experience, Master, that it was the kelp-weed that became the rye-grass, or that the periwinkles freshened into snails. The kelp-weed and periwinkles belong to those plants and animals of the sea that we find growing in only the sea ; the rye-grass and snails, to tlnse plants and Animals of the land 236 SUPERPOSITION that we fin! growing on only the land. It is contrary to all experience, and all testimony too, that the one passed into the other, and so I cannot believe it ; but I do and must be lieve, instead, 'for it is not contrary to experience, and much according to testimony, that the Author of all created both land productions and sea productions at the ' times before ap- pointed,' and 'determined the bounds of their habitation.' ' By faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God ; ' and I find I can be a believer on God's terms at a much less expense of credulity than an infidel on yours." But in this form at least it can be scarce necessary that the argument should be prolonged. The geological phenomena, I repeat, even had the author of the " Vestiges " been consulted in their arrangement, and permitted to determine their sequence, would fail to furnish a single presumption in favor of the development hypothe- sis. Does the ditch-side of my illustration furnish it with a single favoring presumption ? The arrangement and se- quence of the various organisms are complete in both the zoological and phytological branch. The fla*g and reed succeed the fucoid ; the fir and juniper succeed the flag and reed ; and the hazel, birch, and oak succeed the fir and juniper. In like manner, and with equal regularity, zoophytes, the radiata, the articulata, mollusca, fishes, reptiles, birds, and mammals, are ranged, the superior in succession over the inferior classes, in the true asceniing order; and yet we at once see that the evidence of tr.D ditch-side, amounting in the aggregate to no more than this, that the remains of the higher lie over those of the lower organisms, gives riot a shadow of support to the hypothesis that the lower produced the higher. For, accord- ing to the honest farmer, the fact that any one thing is HOT IARENTAL RELATION. 237 ng cf\ i^e top of any other thing, furnishes no pre- n wha*5 w er that the thing below stands in the rela- tian of pa-ent tc Cae tl.ing a^nve. And the evidence which the well-ranged organisms of tho ditch-side do not furnish, the organisms of the entire geo\>gic scale, even were they equally well ranged, would fail to supply. The fossiliferous portion of the ditch-side of my illuetxation may be, let us sup- pose, some five or six feet in thickness ; the fossiliferous portion of the earth's crust must be some five or six miles in thickness. But the mere circumstance of space introduces no new element into the question. Equally in both cases the fact of superposition is not identical with the fact of parental relation, nor even in any degree an analogous fact. As, however, the succession of remains in the fossiliferous series of rocks is infinitely less favorable to the develop- ment hypothesis than that of the organisms of the ditch-side, it is not very surprising that the disciples of the development school should be now evincing a disposition to escape from the ascertained facts of Geology, and the legitimate conclu- sions based upon these, unto unknown and unexplored prov- inces of the science ; or that they should be found virtually urging, that though some of the ascertained facts may seem to bear against them, the facts not yet ascertained may be found telling in their favor. Such, in effect, is the course taken by the author of the " Vestiges," in his " Explanations," when, availing himself of a difference of opinion which ex- ists among some of our most accomplished geologists regard- ing the first epochs of organized existence, he takes part with the section who hold that we have not yet penetrated to the deposits representative of the dawn of being, and that fossil-charged formations may yet be detected beneath the oldest rocks of what is now regarded as the lowest fossilifer- 238 THE BEGINNINGS ous system. Sir Charles Lyell and Mr. Leonard Horner represent the ahler and better-known assertors of this last view ; while Sir Roderick Murchison and Professor Sedgwick rank among .he more distinguished assertors of the antago- nist one. It would be of course utterly presumptuous in ihe writer of these pages to attempt deciding a question regarding which such men differ ; but in forming a judg- ment for myself, various considerations incline me to hold, that the point is now very nearly determined at which, to employ the language of Sir Roderick, " life was first breathed into the waters." The pyramid of organized ex- istence, as it ascends in the by-past eternity, inclines sen- sibly towards its apex, that apex of " beginning' 1 '' in which, on far other than geological grounds, it is our privilege to believe. The broad base of the superstructure, planted on the existing now, stretches across the entire scale of life, animal and vegetable ; but it contracts as it rises into the past; man the quadrumana the quadrupedal mammal the bird and the reptile are each in succession struck from off its breadth, till we at length see it with the ver- tebrata, represented by only the fish, narrowing, as it were, to a point ; and though the clouds of the upper region may hide its extreme apex, we infer from the declination of its sides, that it cannot penetrate much farther into the pro- found. When Steele and Addison were engaged in break- ing up, piecemeal, their Spectator Club, killing off good Sir Roger de Coverly with a defluction, marrying Will Honeycomb to his tenant's daughter, and sending away Captain Sentry and Sir Andrew Freeport to their estates in the country, it was shrewdly inferred that the " Spec- tator " himself was very soon to quit the field ; and the sudden discontinuance of his lucubrations justified the in- OF LIFE. 239 ference. And a corresponding style of reasoning, based on the corresponding fact of the breaking up and piece- meal disappearance of the group of organized being, seems equally admissible. It is somewhat difficult *o conceive how at least many more volumes of the geokgic record than the known ones could be got up without the club. Further, so far as yet appears, the fish rr.ust have lived in advance of the rep- tile during the three protracted periods of the Old Red Sandstone, the two still more protracted periods of the Up- per and Lower Silurians, and the perhaps more protracted period still of the Cambrian deposits ; in all, apparently, a greatly more extended space than that in which the rep- tile lived in advance of the quadrupedal mammal, or the quadrupedal mammal lived in advance of man. On prin- ciples somewhat similar to those on which, with reference to the average term of life, the genealogist fixes the probable period of some birth in his chain of succession of which he cannot determine the exact date, it seems natural to infer that the birth of the fish should have taken place at least not earlier than the times of the Cambrian system. There is another consideration, of at least equal, if not greater weight. A general correspondence is found to obtain in wide- ly-separated localities, in the organic contents of that lowest band of the Lower Silurian or Cambrian system in which fossils have been detected. In Russia, in Sweden, in Norway, in the Lake district of England, and in the United States, there are certain rocks which occupy relatively the same place, and en- close what may be described generally as the same remains. They occur in Scandinavia as that " fucoidal band " of Sir Ro- derick Murchison which forms the base of the vast Palseozoic basin of the Baltic ; they exist in Cumberland and Westmore- land as the Skiddaw slates of Professor Sedgwick, and bear 240 THE BEGINNINGS also their fucoidal impressions, blent with graptolites ; they are present in Norii America as those Potsdam sandstones of the States' geologists in which fucoids so abound, mixed with a minute lingula, that they impart to some portions of the strata a carboniferous character. But with these deep-lying beds in all the several localities, thousands of miles apart, in which their passage into the inferior deposits has been traced, fossils cease. And why cease with them ? In one locality the ancient ocean may have been of such a depth in the period immediately previous, and represented, in consequence, by the strata immediately beneath, that no animal could have lived at its bottom, though I do not well see why the re- mains of those animals who, like the shark and pilot-fish, are frequently seen swimming*over the profoundest depths, might not, did such exist at the time, be notwithstanding found at its bottom ; or in another locality every trace of organization in the nether rocks may have been obliterated, at some posterior period, by fire. But it is difficult to imagine that that uniform cessation of organized life at one point, which seems to have conducted Sir Roderick Murchison and Professor Sedgwick to their conclusion, should have been thus a mere effect of ac- cident. Accident has its laws, but uniformity is not one of them ; and should the experience be invariable, as it already seems extensive, that immediately beneath the fucoidal beds organic remains cease, I do not see how the conclusion is to be avoided, that they represent the period in which at least existences capable of preservation were first introduced. Every case of coincident cessation which has occurred since the determination of the second case, must be reckoned, not simply as an additional unit in evidence, but, on the prin- ciples which determine mathematical probability, as a unit multiplied, first by the chances against its occurrence, re- OF LIFE. 241 garcled as a mere contingency in thai exact formation, and second, by the sum of all the previous occurrences at the same point. In this curious question, however, which it must be the part of future explorers in the geological field definitely to settle, the Lamarckian can have no legitimate stake. It is but na- tural that, in his anxiety to secure an ultimate retreat for his hypothesis, he should desire to see that darkness in which ghosts love to walk settling down on the extreme verge of the geological horizon, and enveloping in its folds the first begin- nings of life. But even did the cloud exist, it is, if 1 may so express myself, on its nearer side, where there is light, not within nor beyond it, where there is none, that the battle must be fought. It is to Geology as it is known to be, that the Lamarckian has appealed, not to Geology as it is not known to be. He has summoned into court existing wit- nesses ; and, finding their testimony unfavorable, he seeks to neutralize their evidence by calling from the " vasty deep," of the unexamined and the obscure, witnesses that " won't come," that by the legitimate authorities are not known even to exist, and with which he himself is, on his own confession, wholly unacquainted, save in the old scholastic character of mere possibilities. The possible fossil can have no more standing in this controversy than the "possible angel" He tells us that we have not yet got down to that base-line of all the fossiliferous systems at which life first began ; and very possibly we have not. But what of thai ? He has carried his appeal to Geology as it is; he has referred his case to the testimony of the known witnesses, for in no case can the unknown ones be summoned or produced. It js on the evidence of the known, and the known only, that the exact value of his claims must be determined ; and his 21 242 THE BEGINNINGS OF LIFE. appeal to the unknown serves but to show how thni.ughly he himself feels that the actually ascertained evidence bears against him. The severe censure of Johnson on reasoners of this class is in no degree over-severe. " He who will deter- mine," said the moralist, " against that which he knows, be- cause there may be something which he knows not, he that can set hypothetical possibility against acknowledged cer- tainty, is not to be admitted among reasonable beings." But the honest farmer's reminiscences of his deceased neighbor the weaver, and his use at second-hand of Hume's experience-argument, naturally lead me to another branch of the subject. LAMARCKIAN HYPOTHESIS. 243 LAMAKCKIAN HYPOTHESIS OF THE ORIGIN OF PLANTS. ITS CONSEQUENCES. I HAVE said that the curiously-mixed, semi-marine, semi- lacustrine flora of the Lake of Stennis became associated in my mind, like the ancient Asterolepis of Stromness, with the development hypothesis. The fossil, as has been shown, represents not inadequately the geologic evidence in the question, the mixed vegetation of the lake may be regarded as forming a portion of the phytological evidence. " All life," says Oken, " is from the sea. Where the sea organism, by self-elevation, succeeds in attaining into form, there issues forth from it a higher organism. Love arose ou of the sea-foam. The primary mucus (that in which elec- tricity originates life) was, and is still, generated in those very parts of the sea where the water is in contact with earth and air, and thus upon the shores. The first creation of the or- ganic took place where the first mountain summits projected out of the water, indeed, without doubt, in India, if the Himalaya be the highest mountain. The first organic forms, whether plants or animals, emerged from the shallow parts of the sea." Maillet wrote to exactly the same effect a full century ago. " In a word," we find him saying, in his " Telliamed," 244 LAMAKCKIAN HYPOTHESIS " do not herbs, plants, roots, grains, and all of this kind that the earth produces and n Irishes, come from the sea? Is it not at least natural to think so, since we are certain that all our habitable lands came originally from the sea ? Besides, in small islands far from the contirent, which have appeared hut a few ages ago at most, and where it is manifest that never any man had been, we find shrubs, herbs, roots, and sometimes animals. Now, you must be forced to own either that these productions owed their origin to the sea, or to a new creation, which is absurd." It is a curious fact, to which, in the passing, I must be permitted to call the attention of the reader, that all the leading assertors of the development hypothesis have been bad geologists. Maillet had for his errors and deficiencies the excellent apology that he wrote more than a hundred years ago, when the theory of a universal ocean, promul- gated by Leibnitz nearly a century earlier, was quite as good as any of the other theories of the time, and when jreology, as a science, had no existence. And so we do not wonder at an ignorance which was simply that of his age, when we find him telling his readers that plants must have originated in the sea, seeing that " all our habitable lands came originally from the sea ; " meaning, of course, by the statement, not at all what the modern geologist would mean were he to employ even the same words, but simply that there was a time when the universal ocean co- vered the whole globe, and that, as the waters gradually di- minished, the loftier mountain summits and higher table- lands, in appearing in their new character as islands and continents, derived their flora from what, in a universal ocean, could be the only possible existing flora, that of the sea But what shall we say of the equally profound ignorance OF THE ORIGIN OF PLANTS. 245 manifested by Professor Oken, a living authority, whom we find prefacing for the Ray Society, in 1847, the English translation of his " Elements of Physio-philosophy ? " " The first creation of the organic took place," we find him saying, " where the first mountain summits projected out of the sea, indeed, without doubt, in India, if the Himalaya lie the highest mountain" Here, evidently, in this late age of the world, in which Geology does exist as a science, do we find the ghost of the universal ocean of Leibnitz walking once more, as if it had never been laid. Is there now in all Bri- tain even a tyro geologist so unacquainted with geological fact as not to know that the richest flora which the globe ever saw had existed for myriads of ages, and then, becoming extinct, had slept in the fossil state for myriads of ages more, ere the highest summits of the Himalayan range rose over the surface of the deep ? The Himalayas disturbed, and bore up along with them in their upheaval, vast beds of the Oolitic system. Belemnites and ammonites have been dug out of their sides along the line of perpetual snow, seventeen thousand feet over the level of the sea. What in the recent period form the loftiest mountains of the globe, existed as portions of a deep-sea bottom, swum over by the fishes and reptiles of the great Secondary period, when what is now Scotland had its dark forests of stately pine, repre- sented in the present age of the world by the lignites of Helms- dale, Eathie, and Eigg, and when the plants of a former creation lay dead and buried deep beneath, in shales and fire- clay, existing as vast beds of coal, or entombed in solid rock, as the brown massy trunks of Granton and Craigleith. And even ere these last existed as living trees, the conifer- ous lignite of the Lower Old Red Sandstone found at Cro- marty had passed into the fossil state, and lay as a semi- 21* 246 LAMARCKIAN HYPOTHESIS calcareous, semi-bituminous mass, amid perished Dipterians and extinct Coccostei. So much for the Geology of the Ger- man Professor. And be it remarked, that the actualities in this question can be determined by only the geologist. The mere naturalist may indicate from the analogies of his science, what possibly might have taken place ; but what really did take place, and the true order in which the events occurred, it is the part of the geologist to determine. It cannot be out of place to remark, further, that geological discovery is in no degree responsible for the infidelity of the development hypothesis ; seeing that, in the first place, the hypothesis is greatly more ancient than the discoveries, and, in the second, that its more prominent assertors are exactly the men who Know least of geological fact. But to this special pcint I shall again refer. The author of the " Vestiges " is at one, regarding the sup- posed marine origin of terrestrial plants, with Maillet and Oken ; and he regards the theory, we find him stating in his " Explanations," as the true key to the well-established fact, that the vegetation of groupes of islands generally corre- sponds with that of the larger masses of land in their neigh- borhood. Marine plants of the same kinds crept out of the sea, it would seem, upon the islands on the one hand, and upon the larger masses of land on the other, and thus pro- duced the same flora in each ; just as tadpoles, after passing their transition state, creep out of their canal or river on the opposite banks, and thus give to the fields or meadows on the right-hand side a supply of frogs, of the same appearance and size as those poured out upon the fields and meadows of the left. " Thus, for example," we find him saying, " the Galapagos exhibit general characters in common with South America; and the Cape de Verd islands, with Africa. They OF THE ORIGIN OF PLANTS. ^4 are, in Mr. Darwin's lappy phrase, satellites to those continents, in respect of natural history. Again," he continues, " when masses of land are only divided from each other by narrow seas, the'-e is usually a community of forms. The European and African shores of the Mediterranean present an example. Our own islands afford another of far higher value. It appears that the flora of Ireland and Great Britain is various, or rather that we have five floras or distinct sets of plants, and that each of these is partaken of by a portion of the opposite continent. There are, first, a flora confined to the west of Ireland, and imparted likewise to the north-west of Spain ; second, a flora in the south-west promontory of England and of Ireland, extending across the Channel to the north-west coast of France ; third, one common to the south-east of Eng- land and north of France ; fourth, an Alpine flora developed in the Scottish and Welsh Highlands, and intimately related co that of the Norwegian Alps ; fifth, a flora which prevails over a large part of England and Ireland, ' mingled with other floras, and diminishing slightly as we proceed west- ward : ' this bears intimate relation with the flora of Ger- many. Facts so remarkable would force the meanest fact- collector or species-demonstrator into generalization. The really ingenious man who lately brought them under notice (Professor Edward Forbes) could only surmise, as their ex- planation, that the spaces now occupied by the intermediate seas must have been dry land at the. time when these floras were created. In that case, either the original arrangement of the floras, or the selection of land for submergence, must have been apposite to the case in a degree far from usual. The necessity for a simpler cause is obvious, and it is found in the hypothesis of a spread of terrestrial vegetation from the sea into the lands adjacent. The community of forms in the vari- 248 LAMAECKIAN HYPOTHESIS ous regions opposed to each other merely indicates a distinct marine creation in each of the oceanic areas respectively interposed, and which would naturally advance into the lands nearest to it, as far as circumstances of soil and climate were found agreeable." Such, regarding the origin of terrestrial vegetation, are the views of Maillet, Oken, and the author of the " Vestiges." They all agree in holding that the plants of the land existed in their first condition as weeds of the sea. Let me request the reader at this stage, ere we pass on to the consideration of the experience-argument, to remark a few incidental, but by no means unimportant, consequences of the belief. And, first, let him weigh for a moment the comparative demands on his credulity of the theory by which Professor Forbes accounts for the various floras of Jie Brit- ish Islands, and that hypothesis of transmutation which the author of the " Vestiges " would so fain put in its place, as greatly more simple, and, of course, more in accordance with ;he principles of human belief. In order to the reception of ihe Professor's theory, it is necessary to hold, in the first place, that the creation of each species of plant took place, not by repetition of production in various widely-separated cen- tres, but in some single centre, from which the species prop- agated itself by seed, bud, or scion, across the special area which it is now found to occupy. And this, in the first in- stance, is of course as much an assumption as any of those assumed numbers or assumed lines with which, in algebra and the mathematics, it is necessary in so many calculations to set out, in quest of some required number or line, which, without the assistance of the assumed ones, we might de- spair of ever finding. But the assumption is in itself neither unnatural nl .r violent ; there are various very remarkable anal- OF THE ORIGIN OF PLANTS. 249 ogies which lend it support ; the facts which seeiii least to harmonize with it are not wholly irreconcilable, and are, besides, of a merely exceptional character ; and, further, it has been adopted by botanists of the highest standing.* It * The following digest from Professor Balfour's very admi- rable " Manual of Botany," of what is held on this curious sub- ject, may be not unacceptable to the reader. " It is an interesting question to determine the mode in which the various species and tribes of plants were originally scattered over the globe. Vari- ous hypotheses have been advanced on the subject. Linnaeus en- tertained the opinion that there was at first only one primitive centre of vegetation, from which plants were distributed over the globe. Some, avoiding all discussions and difficulties, suppose that plants were produced at first in the localities where they are now seen vegetating. Others think that each species of plant originated in, and was diffused from, a single primitive centre ; and that there were numerous such centres situated in different parts of the world, each centre being the seat of a particular number of species. They thus admit great vegetable migratians, similar to those of the human races. Those who adopt the latter view recognize in the distribu- tion of plants some of the last revolutions of our. planet, and the action of numerous and varied forces, which impede or favor the dissemination of vegetables in the present day. They endeavor to ascertain the primitive flora of countries, and to trace the vegetable migrations which have taken place. Daubeny says, that analogy favors the supposition that each species of plant was originally formed in some particular locality, whence it spread itself gradu- ally over a certain area, rather than that the earth was at once, by the fiat of the Almighty, covered with vegetation in the manner we at present behold it. The human race rose from a single pair ; and the distribution of plants and animals over a certain definite area would seem to imply that the same was the general law. Anal- ogy would lead us to believe that the extension of species over the earth originally took place on the same plan on which it is con- ducted at present, when a new island starts up in the midst of the ocear, produced either by a coral reef or a volcano. In these cases the whole surface is not at once overspread with plants, but a gradual progress of vegetation is traced from the accidental intro- 250 CONSEQUENCES is necessary t4 hold, in the second place, in order to the re ception of the theory, that the area of the earth's surface occupied by the British Islands and the neighboring coasts of the Continent once stood fifty fathoms higher, in relation to the existing sea-level, than it does now, a belief which, whatever its specific grounds or standing in this particular case, is at least in strict accordance with the general geologi- cal phenomena of subsidence and elevation, and which, so far from outraging any experience founded on observation or testimony, runs in the same track with what is known of wide areas now in the course of sinking, like that on the Italian coast, in which the Bay of Baise and the ruins of the temple of Serapis occur, or that in Asia, which includes the Run of Cutch ; or of what is known of areas in the course of rising, like part of the coast of Sweden, or part of the coast of South America, or in Asia along the western shores of Aracan. Whereas, in order to close with the simpler an- r agonistic belief of the author of the " Vestiges," it is neces- sary to hold, contrary to all experience, that dulce and hen- ware * became, through a very wonderful metamorphosis, cabbage and spinnage ; that kelp-weed and tangle bour- geoned into oaks and willows ; and that slack, rope-weed, and green-raw^ shot up into mangel-wurzel, rye-grass, and clover. Simple, certainly ! An infidel on terms sueh as these could with no propriety be regarded as an unbeliever. It is well duction of a single seed, perhaps, of each species, wafted by winds or floated by currents. The remarkable limitation of certain species to single spots on the globe seems to favor the supposition of specific centres." * Rhodomenia palmata and Alaria esculenta. t Pcrphyra laciniata, Chorda Jilum, and Enteromorpha compressa. OF THE LAMARCKIAN HYPOTHESIS 251 that the New Testament makes no such extraordinary de- mands on human credulity. Let us remark further, at this stage, that, judging from the generally received geological evidence in the case, very little time seems to be allowed by the author of the " Vestiges " . c or that miraculous process of transmutation through which the low alga3 of our sea-shores are neld to have passed into high orders of plants wh'ch constitute the prevailing British flora. The boulder clay, which rises so high along our hills, and which, as shown by its inferior position on the lower grounds, is decidedly the most ancient of the country's superficial de- posits, is yet so modern, geologically, that it contains only recent shells. It belongs to that cold, glacial, post-Tertiary period, in which what is now Britain existed as a few groupes of insulated hill-tops, bearing the semi-arctic vegetation of our fourth flora, that true Celtic flora of the country which we now find, like the country's Celtic races of our own species, cooped up among the mountains. The fifth or Germanic flora must have been introduced, it is held, at a later period, when the climate had greatly meliorated. And if we are to hold that the plants of this last flora were devef- oped from sea- weed, not propagated across a continuity of land from the original centre in Germany, OT borne by cur- rents from the mouths of the Germanic rivers, the theory of Mon. C. Martins, then must we also hold that that de- velopment took place since the times of the boulder clay, and that fucoids and confervas became dicotyledonous and niorio- cotyledonous plants during a brief period, in which the Pui - pura laplllus and Turritella terebra did not alter a single whorl, and the Cyprina islandica and Astarte borealis re- tained unchanged each minute projection of their hinges, and each nicer peculiarity of their muscular impressions. Crea- 252 CONSEQUENCES tion would be greatly less wonderful than a sudden transmu tativt- process such as this, restricted in its operation to groupes of English, Irish, and Manx plants, identical with groupes in Germany, when all the various organisms around them, such as our sea-shells, continued to be exactly what they had been for ages before. A process of development from the lowest to the highest forms, rigidly restricted to the flora of a coun- try, would be simply the miracle of Jonah's gourd several thousand times repeated. I must here indulge in a few remarks more, which, though they may seem of an incidental character, have a direct bear- ing on the general subject. The geologist infers, in all his reasonings founded on fossils, that a race or species has ex- isted from some one certain point in the scale to some other certain point, if he find it occurring at both points together. He infers on this principle, for instance, that the boulder clay, which contains only recent shells, belongs to the recent or post-Tertiary period; and that the Oolite and Lias, which contain no recent shells, represent a period whose existences have all become extinct. And all experience serves to show that his principle is a sound one. In creation there are many species linked together, from their degree of similarity, by the generic tie ; but no perfect verisimilitude obtains among them, unless hereditarily derived from the one, two, or more individuals, of contemporary origin, with which the race be- gan. True, there are some races that have spread over very wide circles, the circle of the human family has become identical with that of the globe ; and there are certain plants and animals that, from peculiar powers of adaptation to the varieties of soil and climate, mayhap also from the tena- cious vitality of their seeds, and their facilities of transport by natural means, are likewise diffused very widely. There OF THE LAMARCKIAN HYPOTHESIS. 253 are plants, too, such as the common nettle and some of the ordinary grasses, which accompany civilized man all over the globe, he scarce knows how, and spring up unbidden where- ever he fixes his habitation. He, besides, carries with him the common agricultural weeds : there are localities in the United States, says Sir Charles Lyell, where these exotics out- number the native plants ; but these are exceptions to the prevailing economy of distribution ; and the circles of species generally are comparatively limited and well defined. The mountains of the southern hemisphere have, like those of Switzerland and the Scotch Highlands, their forests of coniferous trees ; but they furnish no Swiss pines or Scotch firs ; nor do the coasts of New Zealand or Van Dieman's Land supply the European shells or fish. True, there may be much to puzzle in the identity of what may be termed the exceptional plants, equally indigenous, apparently, in circles widely sep- arated by space. It has been estimated that there exist about a hundred thousand vegetable species, and of these, thirty Antarctic forms have been recognized by Dr. Hooker as identical with European ones. Had Robinson Crusoe failed to remember that he had shaken the old corn-bag where he found the wheat and barley ears springing up on his island, he might have held that he had discovered a new centre of the European cerealia. And the process analogous to the shaking of the bag is frequently a process not to be remem- bered. There are several minute lochans in the Hebrides and the west of Ireland in which there occurs a small plant of the cord-rush family, (Eriocaulon septangulare,) which, though common in America, is nowhere to be found on the European Continent. It is the only British plant which be- longs to no other part of Europe. How was it transpcirted across the Atlantic ? Entangled, mayhap, in the form of a 22 254 CONSEQUENCES single seed, for its seeds are exceedingly light and small, in the plumage of some water-fowl, free of both sea and lake, it had been carried in the germ from the weed-skirted edge of some American swamp or mere, to some mossy lochan of Connaught or of Skye ; and one such seed trans- ported by one such accident, unique in its occurrence in thousands of years, would be quite sufficient to puzzle all the botanists forever after. I have seen the seed of one of our Scotch grasses, that had been originally caught in the matted fleece of a sheep reared among the hills of Sutherland, and then wrought into a coarse, ill-dressed woollen cloth, carried about for months in a piece of underclothing. It might have gone over half the globe in that time, and, when cast away with the worn vestment, might have originated a new circle for its species in South America or New Holland. There are seeds specially contrived by the Great Designer to be carried far from their original habitats in the coats of animals, a mode which admits of transport to much greater distances than the mode, also extensively operative, of consigning them for conveyance to their stomachs ; and when we see the work in its effects, we are puzzled by the want of a record of an emigratory process, of which, in the circum- stances, no record could possibly exist. Unable to make out a case for the " shaking of the bag," we bethink us, in the emergency, of repetition of creation. But in circles separat- ed by time, not space, by time, across whose dim gulfs no voyager sails, and no bird flies, and over which there are no means of transport from the point where a race once fails, to any other point in the future, we find no repetition of species. If the production of perfect duplicates or tripli- cates in independent centres were a law of nature, our works of physical science could scarce fail to tell us of identical OF THE LAJIARCKIAN HYPOTHESIS. 255 species found occurring in widely-separated systems, Scotch firs and larches, for instance, among the lignites of the Lias, or Cyprina islandica and Ostrea edulis among the shells of the Mountain Limestone. But never yet has the geologist found in his systems or formations any such evidence as facts such as these might be legitimately held to furnish, of the independent de novo production of individual members of any single species. On the contrary, the evidence lies so en- tirely the other way, that he reassns on the existence of a family relation obtaining between all the members of each species, as one of his best established principles. If mem- bers of the same species may exist through de novo produc- tion, without hereditary relationship, so thoroughly, in con- sequence, does the fabric of geological reasoning fall to the ground, that we find ourselves incapacitated from regarding even the bed of common cockle or mussel shells, which we find lying a few feet from the surface on our raised beaches, as of the existing creation at all. Nay, even the human re- mains of our moors may have belonged, if our principle of relationship in each species be not a true one, to some for- mer creation, cut off from that to which we ourselves belong, by a wide period of death. All palseontological reasoning is at an end forever, if identical species can originate in in- dependent centres, widely separated from each other by pe- riods of time ; and if they fail to originate in periods sepa- rated by time, how or why in centres separated by space ? Let the reader remark further, the bearing of those facts from w'.iich this principle of geological reasoning has been derived, on the development hypothesis. We find species restricted to circles and periods ; and though stragglers are occasionally found outside the circle in the existing state of thhgs, never are they found beyond their^ period among 256 CONSEQUENCES the remains of the past. It was profoundly argued by Cu- vier, that life could not possibly have had a chemical origin. " In fact," we find him remarking, " life exercising upon the elements which at every instant form part of the living body, and upon those which it attracts to it, an action contrary to that which would be produced without it by the usual chem- ical affinities, it is inconsistent to suppose that it can itself be produced by these affinities." And the phenomena of re- striction to circle and period testify to the same effect. Noth ing, on the one hand, can be more various in character and aspect than the organized existences of the various circles and periods ; nothing more invariable, on the other, than the results of chemical or electrical experiment. And yet, to use almost the words of Cuvier, " we know of no other power in nature capable of reuniting previously separated molecules," than the electric and the chemical. To these agents, accord- ingly, all the assertors of the development hypothesis have had recourse for at least the origination of life. Air, water, earth existing as a saline mucus, and an active persistent electri- city, are the creative ingredients of Oken. The author of the " Vestiges" is rather less explicit on the subject: he simply refers to the fact, that the " basis of all vegetable and animal substances consists of nucleated cells, that is, of cells having granules within them;" and states that globules of a resem- bling character " can be produced in albumen by electrici- ty ; " and that though albumen itself has not yet been pro- duced by artificial means, the only step in the process of creation which is wanting, it is yet known to be a chemical composition, the mode of whose production may " be any day discovered in the laboratory." Further, he adopts, as part of the foundation of his hypothesis, the pseudo-experi- ment of Mr. Weekes, who holds that out of certain saline OF THE LAMAECKIAN HYPOTHESIS. 257 preparations, actod upon by electricity, he can produce cer tain living animalcula of the rnite family ; the vital and th< organized out of the inorganic and the dead. In all suet cases, electricity, or rather, according to Oken, galvanism, is r egarded as the vitalizing principle. " Organism" says the German, " is galvanism residing in a thoroughly homogene ous mass A galvanic pile pounded into atoms must become alive. In this manner nature brings forth or- ganic bodies." I have even heard it seriously asked whether electricity be not God ! Alas ! could such a god, limited in its capacity of action, like those " gods of the plains " in which the old Syrian trusted, have wrought, in the character of Creatoi 1 , with a variety of result so endless, that in no geo- logic period has repetition taken place ? In all that purports to be experiment on the development side of the question, we see nothing else save repetition. The Acarus Crossi of Mr. Weekes is not a new species, but the repetition of an old one, which has been long known as the Acarus horridus, a little bristle-covered creature of the mite family, that harbors in damp corners among the debris of outhouses, and the dust and dirt of neglected workshops and laboratories. Nay, even a change in the chemical portion of the experiment by which he believed the creature to be produced, failed to secure va riety. A powerful electric current had been sent, in the first instance, through a solution of silicate of potash, and, after a time, the Acarus horridus crawled out of the fluid. The cur- rent was then sent through a solution of nitrate of copper, ai:d after a due space, the Acarus horridus again creeped out. A solution of ferro-cyanate of potash was next subjected to the current, and yet again, and in greater numbers than on the two former occasions, there appeared, as in virtue, it would seem, of its extraordinary appetency, to be the same ever- 22* 258 CONSEQUENCES recurring Acarus Iwrridus, How, or in what form, the little creature should have been introduced into the several experi- ments, it is not the part of those who question their legiti- macy to explain ; it is enough for us to know, that individ- uals of the family to which the Acarus belongs are so re- markable for their powers of life, even in their fully developed state, as to resist, for a time, the application of boiling water, and to live long in alcohol. We know, further, that the germs of the lower animals are greatly more tenacious of vi- tality than the animals themselves ; and that they may exist in their state of embryonism in the most unthought of and elusive forms; nay, as the recent discoveries regarding al- t3rations of generation have conclusively shown, that the germ which produced the parent may be wholly unlike the germ that produces its offspring, and yet identical with that which produced the parent's parent. Save on the theory of a quiescent vitality, maintained by seeds for centuries within a few inches of the earth's surface, we know not how a layer of shell, sand, or marl, spread over the bleak moors of Har- ris, should produce crops of white clover, where only heath had grown before ; nor how brakes of doddered furze burnt down on the slopes of the Cromarty Sutors should be so fre- quently succeeded by thickets of raspberry. We are not, however to give up the unknown, that illimitable province in which science discovers, to be a wild region of dream, in which fantasy may invent. There are many dark places in the field of human knowledge which even the researches of ages may fail wholly to enlighten; but no one derives a right from that circumstance to people them with chimeras and phantoms. They belong to the philosophers of the future, not to the visionaries of the present. But while it is not our part to explain now, in the experiments of Mr. Weekes, thfl OF THE LAMAECKIAN HYPOTHESIS. 259 chain :f life from life has been maintained unbroken, we can most conclusively show, that that world of organized existence of which we ourselves form part, is, and ever has been, a world, not of tame repetition, but of endless variety. It is palpably not a world of Acaridce of one species, nor yet of creatures developed from these, under those electric or chemical laws of which the grand characteristic is inva- riability of result. The vast variety of its existences speak not of the operation of unvarying laws, that represent, in their uniformity of result, the unchangeableness of the Di- vinity, but of creative acts, that exemplify the infinity of His resources. Let the reader yet further remark, if he has followed me through these preliminary observations, what is really in- volved in the hypothesis of the author of the " Vestiges," re- garding the various floras common to the British islands and the Continent. If it was upon his scheme that England, Ire- land, and the mainland of Europe came to possess an identi- cal flora, production de novo and by repetition of the same species must have taken place in thousands of instances along the shores of each island and of the mainland. His hypothe- sis demands that the sea-weed on the coast of Ireland should have been developed, first through lower, and then higher forms, into thousands of terrestrial plants, that exactly the same process of development from sea-weed into terres- trial plants of the same species should have taken place on the coast of England, and again on the coasts of the Con- tinent generally, and that identically the same vegetation shod d have been originated in this way in at least three great centres. And if plants of the same species could have had three distinct centres of organization and development, why not three hundred, or three thousand, or three hundred thou- 260 CONSEQUENCES sand ? Nor will it do to attempt escaping from the difficulty, by alleging that there is the groundwork in the case of at least a common marine vegetation to start from ; and that thus, ; f we have not properly the existence of the direct hereditary tie among the various individuals of each species, we may yet recognize at least a sort of collateral relationship among them, derived from the relationship of their marine ancestry. For relationship, -in even the primary stage, the author of the " Vestiges " virtually repudiates, by adopting, as one of the foundations of his hypothesis, with, of course, all the legitimate consequences, the experiments of Mr. Weekes. The animalculae-making process is instanced as representative of the first stage of being, that in which dead inorganic matter assumes vitality ; and it corresponds, in the zoological branch, to the production of a low marine vegetation in the phytological one. A certain semi-chemical, semi-electrical process, originates, time after time, certain numerous low forms of life, identical in species, but con- nected by no tie of relationship : such is the presumed result of the Weekes experiment. A certain further process of development matures low forms of life, thus originated, into higher species, also identical, and also wholly unconnected by the family tie : such are the consequences legitimately involved in that island-vegetation theory promulgated by the author of the " Vestiges." And be it remembered that Mr. Weekes' process, so far as it is simply electrical and chemical, is a process which is as capable of having been gone through in all times and all places, as that other process of strewing marl upon a moor, through which certain rustic experimenters have held that they produced white clover. It could have been gone through during the Carboniferous or the Silurian period ; for all truly chemical and electrical experiments OF THE LAMA1CKIAN HYPOTHESIS. 261 would hav 3 resulted in manifestations of the same phenom- ena then as now ; an acid would have effervesced as freely with an alkali; and each fibre of an electrified feather had feathers then existed would have stood out as decided- ly apart from all its neighbors. We must therefore hold, if we believe with the author of the " Vestiges," first, from the Weekes experiment, that in all times, and in all places, every centre of a certain chemical and electric action would have become a new centre of creation to certain recent species of low, but not very low, organization ; and, second, from his doctrine regarding the identity of the British and Continental floras, that in the course of subsequent development from these low forms, the process in each of many widely-sepa- rated centres, widely separated both by space and time, would be so nicely correspondent with the process in all the others, that the same higher recent forms would be ma- tured in all. And to doctrines such as these, the experience of all Geologists, all Phytologists, all Zoologists, is diametri- cally opposed. If these doctrines be true, their sciences are false in their facts, rnd '.die and unfounded in their principles. 262 THE TWO FLORAS, THE TWO FLORAS, MARINE AND TERRESTRIAL. BEARING OF THE EXPERIENCE ARGUMENT. Is the reader acquainted with the graphic verse, and scarce less graphic prose, in which Crabbe describes the appear- ances presented by a terrestrial vegetation affected by the waters of the sea ? In both passages, as in all his purely descriptive writings, there is a solidity of truthful observa- tion exhibited, which triumphs over their general homelinesa of vein. " On either side Is level fen, a prospect wild and wide, With, dykes on either hand, by ocean self-supplied. Far on the right the distant sea is seen, And salt the springs that feed the marsh between ; Beneath an ancient bridge the straitened flood Rolls through its sloping banks of slimy mud ; Near it a sunken boat resists the tide, That frets and hurries to the opposing side ; The rushes sharp, that on the borders grow, Bend their brown florets to the stream below, Impure in all its course, in all its progress slow. Here a grave Flora scarcely deigns to bloom, Nor wears a rosy blush, nor sheds perfume. The few dull flowers that o'er the place are spread, Partake the nature of their fenny bed ; Here on its wiry stem, in rigid bloom, Grows the salt lavender, that lacks perfume ; MARINE AND TERRESTRIAL. 263 Here the dwarf sallows creep, the septfoil harsh, And the soft slimy mallow of the marsh. Low on the ear the distant billows sound, And just in view appears their stony bound." " The ditches of a fen so near the ocean," says the poet, in the note which accompanies this passage, " are lined with irregular patches of a coarse-stained laver; a muddy sedi- ment rests on the horse-tail and other perennial herbs which in part conceal the shallowness of the stream ; a fat-leaved, pale-flowering scurvy-grass appears early in tne year, and the razor-edged bullrush in the summer and autumn. The fen itself has a dark and saline herbage : there are rushes and arrow-head; and in a few patches the flakes of the cot- ton-grass are seen, but more commonly the sea-aster, the dull- est of that numerous and hardy genus ; a thrift, blue in flower, but withering, and remaining withered till the winter scatters it ; the salt-wort, both simple and shrubby ; a few kinds of grass changed by the soil and atmosphere ; and low plants of two or three denominations, undistinguished in the general view of scenery ; such is the vegetation of the fen where it is at a small distance from the ocean." And such are the descriptions of Crabbe, at once a poet and a botanist. In referring to the blue tint exhibited in salt- fens by the pink-colored flower of the thrift, (Statice Armeria,} he might have added, that the general green of the terrestrial vegetation likewise assumes, when subjected to those modified marine influences under which plants of the land can continue to live, a decided tinge of blue. It is further noticeable, that the general brown of at least the larger algse presents, as they creep upwards upon the beach to meet with these, a marked tinge of yellow. The prevailing brown of the one flora approximates towards yellow, the prevailing 264 THE TWO FLORAS, green of the other towards blue ; and thus, instead of mu- tually merging into some neutral tint, they assume at their line of meeting directly antagonistic hues. But what does experience say regarding the transmutative conversion of a marine into a terrestrial vegetation, that experience on which the sceptic founds so much ? As I walked along the green edge of the Lake of Stennis, selvaged by the line of detached weeds with which a recent gale had strewed its shores, and marked that for the first few miles the accumulation consisted of marine algae, here and there mixed with tufts of stunted reeds or rushes, and that as I re- ceded from the sea it was the alga? that became stunted and dwarfish, and that the reeds, aquatic grasses, and rushes, grown greatly more bulky in the mass, were also more fully developed individually, till at length the marine vegetation altogether disappeared, and the vegetable debris of the shore became purely lacustrine, I asked myself whether here, if anywhere, a transition flora between lake and sea ought not to be found ? For many thousand years ere the tall gray obelisks of Stennis, whose forms I saw this morning reflected in the v/ater, had been torn from the quarry, or laid down in mystic circle on their flat promontories, had this lake admitted the waters of the sea, and been salt in its lower reaches and fresh in its higher. And during this protracted period had its quiet, well-shattered bottom been exposed to no disturbing influences through which the delicate process of transmu- tation could have been marred or arrested. Here, then, if in any circumstances, ought we to have had in the broad, permanently brackish reaches, at least indications of a vege- tation intermediate in its nature between the monocotyle- dons of the lake and the alga? of the sea ; and yet not a vestige of such an intermediate vegetation could I find MARINE AND TERRESTRIAL. 265 among the up-piled debris of the mixed floras, marine and Jacustrine. The lake possesses no such intermediate vege- tation. As the water freshens in its middle reaches, the algoe become dwarfish and ill-developed ; one species after another ceases to appear, as the habitat becomes wholly un- favorable to it ; until at length we find, instead of the brown, rootless, flowerless fucoids and confervse of the ocean, the green, rooted, flower-bearing flags, rushes, and aquatic grasses of the fresh water. Many thousands of years have failed to originate a single intermediate plant. And such, tested by a singularly extensive experience, is the general evidence. There is scarce a chain-length of the shores of Britain and Ireland that has not been a hundred and a hundred times explored by the botanist, keen to collect and prompt to register every rarity of the vegetable kingdom ; but has he ever yet succeeded in transferring to his herbarium a single plant caught in the transition state ? Nay, are there any of the laws under which the vegetable kingdom exists better known than those laws which fix certain species of the alga3 to certain zones of coast, in which each, according to the overly- ing depth of water and the nature of the bottom, finds the only habitat in which it can exist? The rough-stemmed tangle (Laminaria digit ata) can exist no higher on the shore than the low line of ebb during stream-tides ; the smooth-stemmed tangle (Laminaria saccharina) flourishes along an inner belt, partially uncovered during the ebbs of the larger neaps ; the forked and cracker kelp-weeds (Fucus serratus and Fucus nodosus) thrive in a zone still less deeply covered by water, and which even the lower neaps expose. And at least one other species of kelp-weed, the Fucus vesiculosus, occurs in a zone higher still, though, as it creeps upwards on the rocky 23 266 THE TWO FLORAS, beach, it loses i.s characteristic bladders, and becomes short and narrow of frond. The thick brown tufts of Fucus canali- culatus, which in the lower and middle reaches of the Lake of Stennis I found heaped up in great abundance along the shores, also rises high on rocky beaches, so high in some instances, that during neap-tides it remains uncovered by the" water for days together. If, as is not uncommon, there be an escape of land springs along the beach, there may be found, where the fresh water oozes out through the sand and gravel, an upper terminal zone of the confervas, chiefly of a green color, mixed with the ribbon-like green laver, ( Uiva latissima,) the purplish-brown laver, (Porphyra lad- niata,) and still more largely with the green silky Ente- romorpha, (. compressa.) * And then, decidedly within the line of the storm-beaches of winter, not unfrequently in low sheltered bays, such as the Bay of Udale or of Nigg, where the ripple of every higher flood washes, we may find the vegetation of the land represented by the sen- tinels and picquets of its outposts coming down, as if to meet with the higher-growing plants of the sea. In salt marshes the two vegetations may be seen, if I may so ex- press myself, dovetailed together at their edges, at least one species of club-rush (Scirpus maritimvs) and the common salt- wort and glasswort (Salsola kali and Salicornia procumbens) encroaching so far upon the sea as to mingle with a thinly- * " Dr. Ncill mentions," says the Rev. Mr. Landsborough, in his complete and very interesting " History of British Sea-Weeds," " that on our shores alga; generally occupy zones in the following order, be- ginning from deep -water: F. Filum ; F. esculentus and bulbosus , F. diyitatus, saccharinus, and lorcus ; F. serra j us and crisf us ; F. nodo- sus and veslculosus ; F. canaliculatus ; and, last of all, F. pygmtBus-, which is satisfied if it be within reach of the spray." MARINE AND TERRESTRIAL. 267 scattered and sorely-diminished fucus, that bladderless va- riety of the Fucus vesiculosus to which I have already referred, and which may be detected in such localities, shooting forth its minute brown fronds from the pebbles. On rocky coasts, where springs of fresh water come trickling down along the fissures of the precipices, the observer may see a variety of Rhodomenia palmata the fresh- water dulse of the Moray Frith creeping upwards from the lower limits of produc- tion, till just where the common gray balanus ceases to grow. And there, short and thick, and of a bleached yel- low hue, it ceases also ; but one of the commoner marine confervse, the Conferva arcta, blent with a dwarfed En- teromorpha, commencing a very little below where the dulse ends, and taking its place, clothes over the runnels with its covering of green for several feet higher : in some cases, where it is frequently washed by the upward dash of the waves, it rises above even the flood-line ; and in some crevice of the rock beside it, often as low as its upper edge, we may detect stunted tufts of the sea-pink or of the scurvy- grass. But while there is thus a vegetation intermediate in place between the land and the sea, we find, as if it had been selected purposely to confound the transmutation theory, that it is in no degree intermediate in character. For, while it is chiefly marine weeds of the lower division of the con- fervse that creep upwards from the sea to meet the vegeta- tion of the land, it is chiefly terrestrial plants of the higher division of the dicotyledons that creep downwards from the land to meet the vegetation of the sea. The salt-worts, the glass-worts, the arenaria, the thrift, and the scurvy-grass, are all dicotyledonous plants. Nature draws a deeply-marked line of division where the requirements of the transmutativc hypothesis would demand the nicely graduated softness of a 268 BEARING shade i one ; and, addressing the strongly marked floras on either hand, even more sternly than the waves themselves, demands that to a certain definite bourne should they come, and no farther. But in what form, it may be asked, or with what limita- tions, ought the Christian controversialist to avail himself, in this question, of the experience argument ? Much ought to depend, I reply, on the position taken up by the opposite side. We find no direct reference made by the author of the " Vestiges " to the anti-miracle argument, first broached by Hume, in a purely metaphysical shape, in his well-known " Inquiry," and afterwards thrown into the algebraic form by La Place, in his Essai philosophiquesurlesProbalilit.es. But we do not detect its influences operative throughout the entire work. It is because of some felt impracticability on the part of its author, of attaining to the prevailing belief in the miracle of creation, that he has recourse, instead, to the so-called law of development. The law and the miracle are the alternatives placed before him ; and, rejecting the miracle^ he closes with the law. Now, in such circumstances, he can have no more cause of complaint, if, presenting him with the experience argument of Hume and La Place, we demand that he square the evidence regarding the existence of his law strictly ac- cording to its requirements, than the soldier of an army that charged its field-pieces with rusty nails would have cause of complaint if he found himself wounded by a missile of a similar kind, sent against him by the artillery of the enemy. You cannot, it might be fairly said, in addressing him, ac- quiesce in the miracle here, because, as a violation of the laws of nature, there are certain objections, founded on invariable experience, which bear direct against your belief in it. Well, nere are the obje ;tions, in the strongest form in which they OF THE EXPERIENCE ARGUMENT. 269 nave yet been stated ; and here is your hypothesis respecting the development of marine algse into terrestrial plants. We hold that against that h pothesis the objections bear at least as directly as against any miracle whatever, nay, that not only is it contrary to an invariable experience, but opposed also to all testimony. We regard it as a mere idle dream. Maill at dreamed it, and Lamarck dreamed it, and Oken dreamed it ; but none of them did more than merely dream it : its existence rests on exactly the same basis of evidence as that of Whang the miller's " monstrous pot of gold and diamonds," of which he dreamed three nights in succession, but which he never succeeded in finding. If we are in error in our estimate, here is the argument, and here the hypothesis ; give us, in support of the hypothesis, the amount of evidence, founded on a solid experience, which the argument demands. But to leave the experience argument in exactly the state in which it was left by Hume and La Place, would be doing no real justice to our subject. It is in that state quite suffi- cient to establish the fact, that there can be no real escape from belief in acts of creation never witnessed by man, to processes of development never witnessed by man ; seeing that a presumed law beyond the cognizance of experience must be as certainly rejected, on the principle of the argu- ment, as a presumed miracle beyond that cognizance. It places the presumed law and the presumed miracle on exactly the same level. But there is a palpable flaw in the anti-mira- cle argument. It does not prove that miracles may not have taken place, but that miracles, whether they have taken place or no, are not to be credited, and this simply because they are miracles, i. e. violations of the established laws of nature. And if it be possible for events to take place which man, on certain principles, is imperatively required not to credit, these 23* 270 BEARING principles must of course serve merely to establish a discrep- ancy between the actual state of things, and what is to be believed regarding it. And thus, instead of serving purposes of truth, they are made to subserve purposes of error ; for the existence of truth in the mind is neither more nor less than the existence of certain conceptions and beliefs, ade- quately representative of what actually zs, or what really has taken place. I cannot better illustrate this direct tendency of the anti- miracle argument to destroy truth in the mind, by bringing the mental beliefs into a state of nonconformity with the pos- sible and actual, than by a quotation from La Place himself: " We would not," he says, " give credit to a man who would affirm that he saw a hundred dice thrown into the air, and that they all fell on the same faces. If we had ourselves been spectators of such an event, we would not believe our own eyes till we had scrupulously examined all the circumstances, and assured ourselves that there was no trick or deception. After such an examination, we would not hesitate to admit it, notwithstanding its great improbability ; and no one would have recourse to an inversion of the laws of vision in order to account for it." Now, here is the principle broad- ly laid down, that it is impossible to communicate by the evidence of testimony, belief in an event which might happen, and which, if it happened, ought on certain condi- tions to be credited. No one knew better than La Place himself, that the possibility of the event which he instSnced could be represented with the utmost exactitude by figures. The probability, in throwing a single die, that the ace will be presented on its upper face, is as one in six, six being the entire number of sides which the cube can possibly pre- sent, and the side with tl e ace being one of these ; the CF THE EXPERIENCE ARGUMENT. 271 probability that in throwing a pair of dice the aces of both will be at once presented on their upper faces, is as one in thirty-six, as against the one sixth chance of the ace being presented by the one, there are also six chances that the ace of the other should not concur with it; and in throwing three dice, the probability that their three aces should be at once presented is, of course, on the same principle, as one in six times thirty-six, or, in other words, as one in two hundred and sixteen. And thus, in ascertaining the exact degree of probability of the hundred aces at once turning up, we have to go on multiplying by six, for each die we add to the num- ber, the product of the immediately previous calculation. Unquestionably,the number of chances against, thus balanced with the single chance for, would be very great ; but its exist- ence as a definite number would establish, with all the forceof arithmetical demonstration, the possibility of the event; and if an eternity were to be devoted to the throwing into the air of the hundred dice, it would occur an infinite number of times. And yet the principle of Hume and La Place forms, when adopted, an impassable gulf between this possibility and hu- man belief. The possibility might be embodied, as we see, in an actual occurrence, an occurrence witnessed by hun- dreds ; and yet the anti-miracle argument, as illustrated by La Place, would cut ofT all communication regarding it be- tween these hundreds of witnesses, however unexceptionable their character as such, and the rest of mankind. The prin- ciple, instead of giving us a right rule through which the beliefs in the mind are to be rendered correspondent with the reality of things, goes merely to establish a certain imperfec- tion of transmission from one mind to another, in consequence of which, realties in fact, if very extraordinary ones, could not possibly be received as objects of belief, nor the mental 272 BEARING appreciation of things be rendered adequately concurrent with the state in which the tilings really existed. Nor is the case different when, for a possibility which the arithmetician can represent by figures, we substitute the miracle proper. Neither Hume nor La Place ever attempted to show that miracles could not take place ; they merely di- rected their argument against a belief in them. The wildest sceptic must admit, if in any degree a reasonable man, that there may exist a God, and that that God may have given laws to nature. No demonstration of the non-existence of a Great First Cause has been ever yet attempted, nor, until the knowl- edge of some sceptic extends over all space, ever can be rationally attempted. Merely to doubt the fact of God's ex- istence, and to give reasons for the doubt, must till then form the highest achievements of scepticism. And the God who may thus exist, and who may have given laws to nature, may also have revealed himself to man, and, in order to secure man's reasonable belief in the reality of the revelation, may have temporarily suspended in its operation some great natural law, and have thus shown himself to be its Author and Master. Such seems to be the philosophy of miracles; which are thus evidently not only not impossibilities, but even not improbabilities. Even were we to permit the sceptic himself to fix the numbers representative of those several mays in the case, which I have just repeated, the chances against them, BO to speak, would be less by many thousand times than the chances against the hundred dice of La Place's illustration all turning up aces. The existence of a Great First Cause is at least as probable the sceptic himself being judge in the matter as the new-existence of a Great First Cause ; and so the probability in this first stage of the ar- gument, instead of being, as in the case of the single die, OF THE EXPERIENCE ARGUMENT. 273 only one to six, is as one to one. Again, in accordance with an sxpectation so general among the human family as to form one of the great instincts of our nature, an instinct to which every form of religion, true or false, bears evidence, it is in no degree less probable that this God should have revealed himself to man, than that he should not have re- vealed himself to man ; and here the chances are again as one to one, not, as in the second stage of the calculation on the dice, as one to thirty-six. Nor, in the third and last stage, is it less probable that God, in revealing himself to man, should have given miraculous evidence of the truth of the revelation, so that man " might believe in Him for His work's sake," than that He should not have done so ; and here yet again the chances are as one to one, not as one to two hun- dred and sixteen. No rational sceptic could fix the chances lower ; nay, no rational sceptic, so far as the existence of a Great First Cause is concerned, would be inclined to fix them so low : and yet it is in order to annihilate all belief in a possibility against which the chances are so few as to be represented scepticism itself being the actuary in the case by three units, that Hume and La Place have framed their argument. Miracles may have taken place, the probabili- ties against them, stated in their most extreme and exag- gerated form, are by no means many or strong ; but we are nevertheless not to believe that they did take place, simply because miracles they were. Now, the effect of the establish ment of a principle such as this would be simply, I repeat, the destruction of the ability }f transmitting certain beliefs, how- ever w a ll founded originally, from one set or generation of men to another. These beliefs the first set or generation might, on La Place's own principles, be compelled to enter- tain. The evidence of the senses, however wonderful the 274 BEARING event which they certified, is not, he himself tells us, to be resisted. But the conviction which, on one set of principles, these men were on no account to resist, the men that came immediately after them were, on quite another set of prin- ciples, on no account to entertain. And thus the anti-miracle argument, instead of leadirg, as all true philosophy ought, to an exact correspondence between the realities of things and the convictions received by the mind regarding them, palpably forms a bar to the reception of beliefs, adequate to the possi; bilities of actual occurrence or event, and so constitutes an imperfection or flaw in the mental economy, instead of work- ing an improvement. And, in accordance with this view, lex mass of phenomena there should have been two totally distinct modes of the exercise of the Divine power, the mode by miracle and the mode by law." " Unlikely ! " re- joins the philosopher ; " on what grounds ? " " 0, just un likely" says the auxiliary ; " unlikely that God should be at once operating on matter through the agency of natural laws, of which man knows much, and through the agency of miracu 286 THE DEVELOPMENT HYPOTHESIS lous acts, of the nature of which man knows nothing. But I have not thought out the subject any further : you have, in the statement already made, my entire argument.' 1 '' " Ay, I see," the author of the " Essay on Miracles " would probably have remarked ; " you deem it unlikely that Deity should not only work in part, as he has always done, by means of which men, clever fellows like you and me think they know a great deal but that he should also work in part, as lie has always done, by means of which they know nothing at all. Admirably reasoned out ! You are, I make no doubt, a sound, zealous unbeliever in your private capacity, and your argument may have great weight with your own mind, and be, in conse- quence, worthy of encouragement in a small way; but allow me to suggest that, for the sake Df the general cause, it should be kept out of reach of the enemy. There are in the Churches Militant on both sides of the Tweed shrewd com- batants, who have nearly as much wit as ourselves.'' I think I understand the reference of the author of the " Vestiges " to the dream " of a special action of Deity in every change of wind and the results of each season." Taken with what immediately goes before, it means something considerably different from those fancies of the " untutored Indian," who, according to the poet, " Sees God in clouds, or hears him in the wind." There is a school of infidelity, tolerably well known in the capital of Scotland as by far the most superficial which our country has yet seen, that measures mind with a tape-line and the callipers, and, albeit not Christian, laudably exem- plifies, in a loudly expressed regard for science, the Christian grace of loving its enemy. And the belief in a special Prov- idence, who watches over and orders all things, and without whose permission there falleth not even a " sparrow to the IN ITS EMBRYONIC STATE. 287 ground," the apostles of this school set wholly asi le, substi- tuting, instead, a belief in the indiscriminating operation of natural laws ; as if, with the broad fact before them that even man can work out his will merely by knowing and di- recting these laws, the God by whom they were instituted should lack either the power or the wisdom to make them the pliant ministers of Jtis. It is, I fear, to the distinctive tenet in the creed of this hapless school that the author of the " Vestiges " refers. Nor is it in the least surprising, that a writer who labors through two carefully written vol- umes,* to destroy the existing belief in " God's works of Creation," should affect to hold that the belief in his " works of Providence " had been destroyed already. But faith in a special superintendence of Deity is not yet dead : nay, more. He who created the human mind took especial care, in its con- struction, that, save in a few defective specimens of the race, the belief should never die. The author of the " Vestiges " complains of the illiberality with which he has been treated. " It has appeared to vari- ous critics," we find him saying, " that very sacred princi- ples are threatened by a doctrine of universal law. A natu- ral origin of life, and a natural basis in organization for the operations of the human mind, speak to them of fatalism and materialism. And, strange to say, those who every day give views of physical cosmogony altogether discrepant .1 appear- ance with that of Moses, apply hard names to my book for suggesting an organic cosmogony in the same way, liable to inconsiderate odium. I must firmly protest against this mode of meeting speculations regarding nature. The object of rny * " Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation," and " Explanation, being a Sequel to the Vestiges." 288 THE DEVELOPMENT HYPOTHESIS book, whatever may be said of the manner in which it is treated, is purely scientific. The views which I give of the history of organization stand exactly on the same ground upon which the geological doctrines stood fifty years ago, I am merely endeavoring to read aright another chapter of the mystic book which God has placed under the attention of his creatures. . . The absence of all liberality in my reviewers is striking, and especially so in those whose geologi- cal doctrines have exposed them to similar misconstruction. If the men newly emerged from the odium which was thrown upon Newton's theory of the planetary motions had rushed forward to turn that odium upon the patrons of the dawning science of Geology, they would have been prefiguring the conduct of several of my critics, themselves hardly escaped from the rude hands of the narrow-minded, yet eager to join that rabble against a new and equally unfriended stranger, as if such were the best means of purchasing impunity for them- selves. I trust that a little time will enable the public to pen- etrate this policy." Now, there is one very important point to which the author of this complaint does not seem to have adverted. The as- tronomer founded his belief in the mobility of the earth and the immobility of the sun, not on a mere dream-like hy- pothesis, founded on nothing, but on a wide and solid base of pure induction. Galileo -was no mere dreamer; he was a discoverer of great truths, and a profound reasoner regard- ing them : and on his discoveries and his reasonings, com- pelled by the inexorable laws of his mental constitution, did he build up certain deductive beliefs, which had no previous existence in his mind. His convictions were consequents, not antecedents. Such, also, is the character of geological discovery and inference, and of the existing belief, their OLDER THAN ITS ALLEGED FOUNDATIONS. 289 joint production, regarding the great antiquity of the globe. No geologist worthy of the name began with the belief, and then set himself to square geological phenomena with its require- ments. It is a deduction, a result ; not the starting as- sumption, or given sum, in a process of calculation, but its ulti- mate finding or answer. Clergymen of the orthodox Churches, such as the Sumners, Sedgwicks, Bucklands, Conybeares, and Pye Smiths of England, or the Chalmerses, Duncans, and Flem- ings of our own country, must have come to the study of this question of the world's age with at least no bias in favor of the geological estimate. The old, and, as it has proven, erroneous reading of the Mosaic account, was by much too general a one early in the present century, not to have exert- ed upon them, in their character as ministers of religion, a sensible influence of a directly opposite nature. And the fact of the complete reversal of their original bias, and of the broad unhesitating finding on the subject which they ulti- mately substituted instead, serves to intimate to the unin- itiated the strength of the evidence to which they submitted. There can be nothing more certain than that it is minds of the same calibre and class, engaged in the same inductive track, {hat yielded in the first instance to the astronomical evidence regarding the earth's motion, and, in the second, to the geological evidence regarding the earth's age.* * The chapter in which this passage occurs originally appeared, with several of the others, in the Witness newspaper, in a series of articles, entitled Rambles of a Geologist," and drew forth the following letter from a correspondent of the Scottish Press, the organ of a powerful and thoroughly respectable section of the old Dissenters of Scotland. I present it to the reader merely to show, that if, according to the author of the "Vestiges," geologists as- sailed the development hypothesis in the fond hope of " purchase 25 290 THE DEVELOPMENT HYPOTHESIS But how very different the nature and history of the de- velopment hypothesis, and the character of the intellects with whom it originated, or by whom it has beer, since ing impunity for themselves," they would succeed in securing only disappointment for their pains : "THE PRE-ADAMITE EARTH. " To the Editor of the Scottish Press. " SIR, I occasionally observe articles in your neighbor and contemporary the Witness, characteristically headed ' Rambles of a Geologist,' wherein the writer with great zeal once more ' slays the slain ' heresies of the ' Vestiges of Creation.' This writer (of the 'Rambles,' I mean) nevertheless, and at the same time, an nounces his own tenets to be much of the same sort, as applied ti mere dead matter, that those of the ' Vestiges ' are with regard to living organisms. He maintains that the world, during the last million of years, has been of itself rising or developing, without the interposition of a miracle, from chaos into its present state ; and, of course, as it is still, as a world, confessedly far below the acme of physical perfection, that it must be just now on its pas- sage, self-progressing, towards that point, -which terminus it may reach in another million of years hence. [! ! ! ] The author of the ' Vestiges,' as quoted by the author of the Rambles,' in the last number of the Witness, complains that the latter and his allies are not at all so liberal to him as, from their present circumstances and position, he had a right to expect. He (the author of the 1 Vestiges ') reminds his opponents that they have themselves only lately emerged from the antiquated scriptural notions that our world was the direct and almost immediate construction of its Creator, as much so, in fact, as any of its organized tenants, and that it was then created in a state of physical excellence, the highest possible, to render it a suitable habitation for these ten- ants, and all this only about six or seven thousand years ago, to the new light of their present physico-Lamarckian views ; and he asks, and certainly not without reason, why should these men, so circumstanced, be so anxious to stop him in his attempt to move one step further forward in the very direction they them- selves have made the last move ? that is, in his endeavor to ex- OLDER THAN ITS ALLEGED FOUNDATIONS. 291 adopted ! In the first place, it existed as a wild dream ere Geology had any being as a science. It was an antecedent, not a consequent, a starting assumption, not a result. No tend their own principles of self-development from mere matter to living creatures. Now, Sir, I confess myself to be one of those (and possibly you may have more readers similarly constituted) who not only cannot see any great difference between merely physi- cal and organic development, [! !] but who would be inclined to allow the latter, absurd as it is, the advantage in point of likelihood. [ ! ! ! ] The author of the Rambles,' however, in the face of this, assures us that his views of physical self-development and long chronology belong to the inductive sciences. Now, I could at this stage of his rambles have wished very much that, instead of merely say- ing so, he had given his demonstration. He refers, indeed, to several great men, who, he says, are of his opinion. Most that these men have written on the question at issue I have seen, but it appeared far from demonstrative, and some of them, I know, had not fully made up their mind on the point. [! ! !] Perhaps the author of the Rambles ' could favor us with the inductive pro- cess that converted himself; and, as the attainment of truth, and not victory, is my object, I promise either to acquiesce in or ration- ally refute it.[r] Till then I hold by my antiquated tenets, that our world, nay, the whole material universe, was created about six or seven thousand years ago, and that in a state of physical excellence of which we have in our present fallen world only the 'vestiges of creation.' I conclude by mentioning that this view I have held now for nearly thirty years, and, amidst all the vicissi- tudes of the philosophical world during that period, I have never seen cause to change it.. Of course, with this view I was, during the interval referred to, a constant opponent of the once famous, though now exploded, nebular hypothesis of La Place ; and I yet expect to see physical development and long chronology wither also on this earth, now that THEIII ROOT (the said hypothesis) has been eradicated from the SKY.[! ! !] I am, Sir, your most obedient ser- vant, "PHILALETHES." I am afraid there is little hope of converting a man who has held so stoutly by his notions " for nearly thirty years ; " especial- ly as, during that period, he has been acquainting himself with 292 THE DEVELOPMENT HYPOTHESIS. one will contend that Maillet was a geologist. Geology ha no place among the sciences in the age in which he lived, and even no name. And yet there is a translation of his what writers such as Drs. Chalmers, Buckland, and Pye Smith have written on the other side. But for the demonstration which he asks, as / have conducted it, I beg leave to refer him to the seventeenth chapter of my little work, " First Impressions of England arid its People." I am, however, inclined to suspect that he is one of a class whose objections are destined to be re- moved rather by the operation of the laws of matter than of those of mind. For it is a comfortable consideration, that in this controversy the geologists have the laws of matter on their side ; " the stars in their courses fight against Sisera." Their opponents now, like the opponents of the astronomer in the ages gone by, are, in most instances, men who have been studying the matter " foi nearly thirty years." When they study it for a few years longei they disappear ; and the men of the same cast and calibre who suc- ceed them are exactly the men who throw themselves most con- fidently into the arms of the enemy, and look down upon their poor silent predecessors with the loftiest commiseration. It is, however, not uninstructive to remark how thoroughly, in some instances, the weaker friends and the wilier enemies of Revelation are at one in their conclusions respecting natural phenomena. The corre- spondent of the Scottish Press merely regards the views of the author of the "Vestiges" as possessing "the advantage, in point of likeli- hood," over those of the geologists his antagonists : his ally the Dean of York goes greatly further, and stands up as stoutly for the transmutation of species as Lamarck himself. Descanting, in his New System of Geology, on the various forms of trilobites, ammo- nites, belemnites, &c. Dean Cockburn says, " These creatures appear to have possessed the power of secreting from the stone beneath them a limy covering for their backs, and, perhaps, fed partly on the same solid material. Supposing, now, that the first trilobites were destroyed by the Llandoilo Slates, some spawn of these creatures would arise above these flags, and, after a time, would be warmed into existence. These molluscs, [! !] then, having a better material from which to extract their food and covering, would probably expand in a slightly different form, and with a more extensive mantle than wlut belonged to the OLDER THAN ITS ALLEGED FOUNDATIONS. 293 Tilliamed now lying before me, bearing date 1750, in which I find very nearly the same account given of the origin of parent species. The same would be still more the case with a new generation, fed upon a new deposit from some deeper volcano, such, as the Caradoc or Wenlock Limestone, in which lime more and more predominates. Now, if any one will examine the various prints of trilobites in Sir R. Murchison's valuable work, he will find but very trifling differences in any of them, [! !] and those differences only in the stony covering of their backs. I knew two brothers once much alike : the one became a curate with a large family ; the other a London alderman. If the skins of these two pachydermata had been preserved in a fossil state, there would have been less resemblance between them than between an Asaphus tyranmis and an Asaphus caudatus. * * * A careful and laborious investi- gation has discovered, as in the trilobites, a difference in the am- monites of different strata ; but such differences, as in the former case, e'sist only in the form of the external shell, and may be ex- plained in the same manner. [! !] * * * As to the scaphites, baculites, belemnites, and all the other ites which learned ingenu- ity has so named, you find them in various strata the same in all important particulars, but also differing slightly in their outward coverings, as might be expected from the different circumstances in which each variety was placed. [! !] The sheep in the warm val- leys of Andalusia have a fine covering like to hair ; but remove them to a northern climate, and in a few generations the back is covered with shaggy wool. The animal is the same, the covering only is changed. * * * The learned have classed those shells under the names of terebratula, orthis, atrypa, pecten, &c. They are all much alike. [! ! !] It requires an experienced eye to distin- guish them one from another : what little differences have been pointed out may readily be ascribed, as before, to difference of Situation." [! ! !] The author of the " Vestiges," with this, the fundamental por- tion of his case, granted to him by the Dean, will have exceedingly little difficulty in making out the rest for himself. The passage is, however, not without its value, as illustrative of the darkness, in matters of physical science, " even darkness which may be felt," that is suffered to linger, in this the most scientific of ages, in tie Church of Buckland, Sedgwick, and Conybeare. 25* 294 THE DEVELOPMENT HYPOTHESIS animals an 3 plants as that in the " Vestiges," and in which the sea is described as that great and fruitful womb of na- ture in which organization and life first began. Lamarck, at the time when Maillet wrote, was a boy in his sixth year. He became, comparatively early in life, a skilful bota- nist and conchologist ; but not until turned of fifty did he set himself to study general zoology ; and his greater work on the invertebrate animals, on which his fame as a naturalist chiefly rests, did not begin to appear for it was published serially until the year 1815. But his development hypothe- sis, identical with that of the " Vestiges," was given to the world long before, in 1802 ; at a time when it had not been ascertained that there existed placoids during the Silurian period, or ganoids during the Old Red Sandstone period, or enaliosaurs during the Oolitic period ; and when, though Smith had constructed his " Tabular View of the British Strata," his map had not yet appeared, and there was little more known regarding the laws of superposition among the stratified rocks than was to be found in the writings of Werner. And if the presumption be strong, in the circum- stances, that Lamarck originated his development hypothe- sis ere he became in any very great degree skilful as a zoolo- gist, it is no mere presumption, but a demonstrable truth, that he originated it ere he became a geologist ; for a geolo- gist he never became. In common with Maillet and BufTon, he held by Leibnitz's theory of a universal ocean ; and such, as we have already seen, was his ignorance of fossils, that he erected dermal fragments of the Russian Asterolepis into a new genus of Polyparia, an error into which the merest tyro in palaeontology could not now fall. Such, in relation to these sciences, was the man who perfected the dream of development. Nor has the most distinguished of its continen- OLDER THAN ITS ALLEGED FOUNDATIONS. 295 tal assertors now living, Professor Oken, any higher claim to be regarded as a disciple of the inductive school of Geology than Lamarck. In the preface to the recently pub- lished translation of his " Physio-Philosophy," we find the following curious confession : " I wrote the first edition of 1810 in a kind of inspiration, and on that account it was not so well arranged as a systematic work ought to be. Now, though this may appear to have been-amended in the second and third edition, yet still it was not possible for me to completely attain the object held in view. The book has therefore re- mained essentially the same as regards its fundamental prin- ciples. It is only the empirical arrangement into series of plants and animals that has been modified from time to time, in accordance with the scientific elevation of their several de- partments, or just as discoveries and anatomical investigations have increased, and rendered some other position of the objects a matter of necessity." An interesting piece of evidence this ; but certainly rather simple as a confession. It will be found that while whatever gives value to the " Physio-Philoso- phy" of the German Professor (a work which, if divested of all the inspired bits, would be really a good one) was acquired either before or since its first appearance in the ordinary way, its development hypothesis came direct from the god. Fur- ther, as I have already had occasion to state, Oken holds, like Lamarck and Maillet, by the universal ocean of Leibnitz ; he holds, also, that the globe is a vast crystal, just a little flawed in the facets; and that the three granitic components quartz, feldspar, and mica are simply the hail-drops of heavy stone showers that shot athwart the original ocean, and accumulated into rock at the bottom, as snow or hail shoots athwar: the upper atmosphere, and accumulates, in the form of ice on the summits of high hills, or in the arctic or antarc- 296 APPEAL FROM SCIENCE tic regions. Such, in the present day, are the geological no- tions of Oken ! They were doubtless all promulgated in what is modestly enough termed "a kind of inspiration;" and there are few now so ignorant of Geology as not to know that the possessing agent in the case for inspiration is not quite the proper word must have been at least of kin to that ingenious personage who volunteered of old to be a lying spirit in the mouths of the four hundred prophets. And the well-known fact, that the most popular contemporary ex- pounder of Oken's hypothesis the author of the " Vestiges" has in every edition of his work been correcting, modify- ing, or altogether withdrawing his statements regarding both geological and zoological phenomena, and thai his gradual development as a geologist and zoologist, from the sufficiently low type of acquirement to which his first edition bore witness, may be traced, in consequence, with a distinctness and cer- tainty which we in vain seek in the cases of presumed devel- opment which he would so fain establish, has in its bearing exactly the same effect. His development hypothesis was complete at a time when his geology and zoology were rudi- mental and imperfect. Give me your facts, said the French- man, that I may accommodate them to my theory. And no one can look at the progress of the Lamarckian hypothesis, with reference to the dates when, and the men by whom, it was pro- mulgated, without recognizing in it one of perhaps the most striking embodiments of the Frenchman's principle which the world ever saw. It is not the illiberal religionist, that rejects and casts it off, it is the inductive philosopher. Science addresses its assertors in the language of the possessed to the sons of Sceva the Jew ; " The astronomer I know, and the geologist 1 know ; but who are ye ? " One of the strangest passages in the " Sequel to the TO THE WANT OP IT. 297 Vestiges," ,s that in which its author carries his appeal from the tribunal of science to " another tribunal," indicated but not named, before which " this new philosophy " [remarkable chiefly for being neither philosophy nor new] " is to be truly and righteously judged." The principle is obvious, on which, were his opponents mere theologians, wholly unable, though they saw the mischievous character and tendency of his con- clusions, to disprove them scientifically, he might appeal from theology to science : " it is with scientific truth," he might urge, " not with moral consequences, that I have aught to do." But on what allowable principle, professing, as he does, to found his theory on scientific fact, can he appeal from science to the want of it ? " After discussing," he says, " the whole arguments on both sides in so ample a manner, it may be hardly necessary to advert to the objection arising from the mere fact, that nearly all the scientific men are opposed to the theory of the ' Vestiges.' As this objection, however, is like- ly to be of some avail with many minds, it ought not to be entirely passed over. If I did not think there were reasons, independent of judgment, for the scientific class coming so generally to this conclusion, I might feel the more embar- rassed in presenting myself in direct opposition to so many men possessing talents and information. As the case really stands, the ability of this class to give at the present a true response upon such a subject appears extremely challengeable. It is no discredit to them that they are, almost without exception, engaged each in his own little department of science, and able to give little or no attention to other parts of that vast field. From year to year, and from age to age, we see them at work, adding, no doubt, mu^h to the known, and advanc- ing many important interests, but at the same time doing little for the establishment of comprehensive views of nature. 298 APPEAL FROM SCIENCE Experiments in however narrow a walk, facts of whatever minuteness, make reputations in scientific societies ; all beyond is regarded with suspicion and distrust. The consequence is, that philosophy, as it exists amongst us, does nothing to raise its votaries above the common ideas of their time. There can therefore be nothing more conclusive against our hy- pothesis in the disfavor of the scientific class, than in that of any other section of educated men." This is surely a very strange statement. Waiving alto- gether the general fact, that great original discoverers in any department of knowledge are never men of one science or one faculty, but possess, on the contrary, breadth of mind and multiplicity of acquirement ; waiving, too, the particu- lar fact, that the more distinguished original discoverers of the present day rank among at once its most philosophic, most elegant, and most extensively informed writers ; grant- ing, for the argument's sake, that our scientific men are men of narrow acquirement, and " exclusively engaged, each in his own little department of science ; " it is surely rational to hold, notwithstanding, that in at least these little depart- ments they have a better right to be heard than any other class of persons whatever. We must surely not refuse to the man of science what we at once grant to the common me- chanic. A cotton-weaver or calico-printer may be a very narrow man, " exclusnely engaged in his own little depart- ment;" and yet certain it is that, in a question of cotton-weav- ing or calico-printing, his evidence is justly deemed mere conclusive in courts of law than that of any other man, however mn;h his superior in general breadth and intelli- gence. And had the author of the " Vestiges " founded his hypothesis on certain facts pertaining to the arts of cotton- weaving and calico-printing, the cotton-weaver and calico- TO THE WANT OF IT. 299 printer would have an indisputable right to be heard on the question of their general correctness. Are we to regard the case as different because it is on facts pertaining to science, not to cotton-weaving or calico-printing, that he professes to found ? His hypothesis, unless supported by scientific evi- dence, is a mere dream, a fiction as baseless and wild as any in the " Fairy Tales" or the " Arabian Nights." And, fully sensible of the fact, he calls in as witnesses the physical sciences, and professes to take down their evidence. He calls into court Astronomy, Geology, Phytology, and Zoology. " Hold ! " exclaims the astronomer, as the examination goes on ; " you are taking the evidence of my special science most unfairly ; I challenge a right of cross-examining the witness." " Hold ! " cries the geologist ; " you are putting my science to the question, and extorting from it, in its agony, a wholg series of fictions : I claim the right of examining it fairly and softly, and getting from it just the sober truth, and nothing more." And the phytologist and zoologist urge exactly sim- ilar Ciaims. " No, gentlemen," replies the author of the " Vestiges," " you are narrow men, confined each of you to his own little department, and so I will not permit you to cross-examine the witnesses." " What ! " rejoin the men of science, " not permit us to examine our own witnesses ! re- fuse to us what you would at once concede to the cotton- weaver or the calico-printer, were the question one of cotton- weaving or of calico-printing! We are surely not much narrower men than the man of cotton or the man of calico It is but in our own little departments that we ask to be heard." " But you shall not be heard, gentlemen," says the author of the " Vestiges ; " " at all events, I shall not care one farthing for anything you say. For observe, gentlemen, my hypothe- sis is nothing without the evidence of your sciences ; and you 300 HUME VERSTTS all unite, I see, in taking that evidence from me ; and so 1 confidently raise my appeal in this matter to people who know nothing about either you or your sciences. It must be before another tribunal that the new philosophy is to be truly and righteously judged." Alas ! what can this mean ? or where are we to seek for that tribunal of last resort to which this ingenious man refers with such confidence the consider- ation of his case ? Can it mean, that he appeals from the only class of persons qualified to judge of his facts, to a class ignorant of these, but disposed by habits of previous scepti- cism to acquiesce in his conclusions, and take his premises for granted; that he appeals from astronomers and geologists to low-minded materialists and shallow phrenologers, from phytologists and zoologists to mesmerists and phreno-mesmer- ists ? I remember being much-struck, several years ago, by a re- mark dropped in conversation by the late Rev. Mr. Stewart of Cromarty, one of the most original-minded men I ever knew. " In reading in my Greek New Testament this morn- ing," he said, " I was curiously impressed by a thought which, simple as it may seem, never occurred to me before. The portion which I perused was in the First Epistle of Peter; arid as I passed from the thinking of the passage to the lan- guage in which it is expressed, 'This Greek of the un taught Galilean fisherman,' I said, ' so admired by scholars and critics for its unaffected dignity and force, was not ac- quired, as that of Paul may have been, in the ordinary way, but formed a portion of the Pentecostal gift ! Here, then, immediately under my eye, on these pages, are there em- bodied, not, as in many other parts of the Scriptures, the mere details of a miracle, but the direct results of a miracle. How strange ! Had the old tables of stone been placed be- THE STONY SCIENCE. 301 v fore me, with what an awe-struck feeling would I have looked on the characters traced upon them by God's own finger ! How is it that I have failed to remember that, in the language of these Epistles, miraculously impressed by the Divine power upon the mind, I possessed as significant and suggest- ive a relic as that which the inscription miraculously impressed by the Divine power upon the stone could possibly have fur- nished ? " It was a striking thought ; and in the course of our walk, which led us over richly fossiliferous beds of tfie Old Red Sandstone, to a deposit of the Eathie Lias, largely charged with the characteristic remains of that formation, I ventured to connect it with another. " In either case," I re- marked, as we seated ourselves beside a sea-cliff, sculptured over with the impressions of extinct plants and shells, " your relics, whether of the Pentecostal Greek or of the characters inscribed on the old tables of stone, could address themselves to but previously existing belief. The sceptic would see in the Sinaitic characters, were they placed before him, merely the work of an ordinary tool ; and in the Greek of Peter and John, a well-known language, acquired, he would hold, in the common way. But what say you to the relics that stand out in such bold relief from the rocks beside us, in their char- acter as the results of miracle ? The perished tribes and races which they represent all began to exist. There is no truth which science can more conclusively demonstrate than that they had all a beginning. The infidel who, in this late age of the world, would attempt falling back on the fiction of an ' infinite series,' would be laughed to scorn. They all be- gan to be. But how ? No true geologist holds by the devel- opment hypothesis; it has been resigned to sciolists and smatterers ; and there is but one other alternative. They began to be, through the miracle of creation. From the evi- 26 302 HUME VERSUS THE STONY SCIENCE. dence furnished by these rocks we are shut down either tc the belief in miracle, or to the belief .n something else in- finitely harder of reception, and as thoroughly unsupported by testimony as it is contrary to experience. Hume is at length answered by the severe truths of the stony science. He was not, according to Job, ' in league w'th the stones of the field,' and they have risen in irresistible warfare against him in the Creator's behalf." FINAL CAUSES. FINAL CAUSES. THEIR BEARING ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY. CONCLUSION. " NATURAL History has a principle on which to reason," says Cuvier, " which is peculiar to it, and which it employs advantageously on many occasions: it is that of the con- ditions of existence, commonly termed^naZ causes." In Geology, which is Natural History extended over all ages, this principle has a still wider scope, embracing not merely the characteristics and conditions of the beings which now exist, but of all, so far as we can learn regarding them, which have ever existed, and involving the consideration of not merely their peculiarities as races placed before us without relation to time, but also of the history of their rise, increase, decline, and extinction. In studying the biography, if I may so express myself, of an individual animal, we have to acquaint ourselves with the circumstances in which nature has placed it, its adaptation to these, both in structure and instinct, the points of resemblance which it presents to the individuals of other races and families, and the laws which determine its terms of development, vigoro 1 s existence, and decay. And all Natural History, when restricted to the pass- 304 BEARING OF FINAL CAUSES ing now of the world's annals, is simply a congeries of biog. raphies. It is when we extend our view into the geologica, field that it passes from biography into history proper, and that we have to rise from the consideration of the birth and death of individuals, which, in all mere biographies, form the great terminal events that constitute beginning and end, to a survey of the birth and death of races, and the elevation or degradation of dynasties and sub-kingdoms. We learn from human history that nations are as certainly mortal as men. They enjoy a greatly longer term of exist- ence, but they die at last : Rollin's History of Ancient Na- tions is a history of the dead. And we are taught by geologi- cal history, in like manner, that species are as mortal as indi- viduals and nations, and that even genera and families become extinct. There is no man upon earth at the present moment whose age greatly exceeds an hundred years ; there is no nation now upon earth (if we perhaps except the long-lived Chinese) that also flourished three thousand years ago ; there is no species now living upon earth that dates beyond the times of the Tertiary deposits. All bear the stamp of death, individuals, nations, species ; and we may scarce less safely predicate, looking upon the past, that it is appointed for nations and species to die, than that it " is appointed for man once to die." Even our own species, as now constituted, with instincts that conform to the original injunction, " increase and multiply," and that, in consequence, " marry and are given in marriage," shall one day cease to exist : a fact not less in accordance with beliefs inseparable from the faith of the Christian, than with the widely-founded experience of the geologist. Now, it is scarce possible for the human mind to become acqua'nted with the fact, that at certain periods species began to exist and then, after the lapse of untold ages, ceased ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY. 305 to be, without inquiring whether, from the " conditions of ex- istence, commonly termed final causes," we cannot deduce a reason for their rise or decline, or why their term of being should have been included rather in one certain period of time than another. The same faculty which finds employment in tracing to their causes the rise and fall of nations, and which it is the merit of the philosophic historian judiciously to exer- cise, will to a certainty seek employment in this department of history a" so ; and that there will be an appetency for such speculations in the public mind, we may infer from the suc- cess, as a literary undertaking, of the " Vestiges of Creation," a work that bears the same sort of relation, in this special field to sober inquiry, founded on the true conditions of things, that the legends of the old chroniclers bore to authentic his- tory. The progressive state of geologic science has hitherto militated against the formation of theory of the soberer char- acter. Its facts still merely in the forming are neces- sarily imperfect in their classification, and limited in their amount ; and thus the essential data continues incomplete. Besides, the men best acquainted with the basis of fact which already exists, have quite enough to engage them in adding to it. But there are limits to the field of palaBontological dis- covery, in its relation to what may be termed the chronology of organized existence, which, judging from the progress of the science in the past, may be well nigh reached in favored localities, such as the British islands, in about a quarter of a century from the present time ; and then, I doubt not, geologi- cal history, in legitimate conformity with the laws of mind, and from the existence of the pregnant principle peculiar, ac cording to Cuvier, to that science of which Geology is simply an extension, will assume a very extraordinary form We cannot yet aspire " to the height of this great argument : " 26* 306 BEARING OF FINAL CAUSES our foundations are in parts still unconsolidated and incom- plete, and unfitted to sustain the perfect superstructure which shall one day assuredly rise upon them ; but from the little which we can now see, " as if in a glass darkly," enough ap- pears from which to " Assert eternal Providence, And justify the \vays of God to men." Trie history of the four great monarchies of the world was typified, in the prophetic dream of the ancient Babylonish king, by a colossal image, " terrible in its form and bright- ness," of which the " head was pure gold," the " breast and arms of silver," the " belly and thighs of brass," and the legs and feet " of iron, and of iron mingled with clay." The vision in which it formed the central object was appropriately that of a puissant monarch; and the image itself typified the merely human monarchies of the earth. It would require a widely different figure to symbolize the great monarchies of creation. And yet Revelation does furnish such a figure. It is that which was witnessed by the captive prophet beside "the river Chebar," when " the heavens were opened, and he saw visions of God." In that chariot of Deity, glowing in fire and amber, with its complex wheels " so high that they were dreadful," set round about with eyes, there were living creatures, of whose four faces three were brute and one human ; and high over all sat the Son of Man. It would almost seem as if, in this sublime vision, in which, with features distinct enough to impress the imagination, there mingle the elements of an awful incomprehensibility, and which even the genius of RafTaelle has failed adequately to portray, the history of all the past and of all the future had been symbolized. In the order of Providence intimated in the geologic record, the brute faces, as in the vision, outnumber ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY. 307 ihe human ; the human dynasty is one, and the dynasties of tie inferior animals are three ; and yet who can doubt that they all equally compose parts of a well-ordered and perfect whole, as the four faces formed but one cherubim ; that they have been moving onward to a definite goal, in the unity of one grand harmonious design, now " lifted up high " over the comprehension of earth, now let down to its humble level ; and that the Creator of all has been ever seated over them on the throne of his providence, a "likeness in the appearance of a man," embodying the perfection of his nature in his workings, and determining the end from the be- ginning? There is geologic evidence, as has been shown, that in the course of creation the higher orders succeeded the lower. We have no good reason to believe that the mollusc and crus- tacean preceded the fish, seeing that discovery, in its slow course, has already traced the vertebrata in the ichthyic form, down to deposits which only a few years ago were regarded as representatives of the first beginnings of organized exist- ence on our planet, and that it has at the same time failed to add a lower system to that in which their remains occur. But the fish seems most certainly to have preceded the rep- tile and the bird ; the reptile and the bird to have preceded the mammiferous quadruped ; and the mammiferous quadru- ped to have preceded man, rational, accountable man, whom God created in his own image, the much-loved Ben- jamin of the family, last-born of all creatures. It is of itself an extraordinary fact, without reference to other considera tions, that the order adopted by Cuvier, in his animal kingdom, as that in which the four great classes of vertebrate animals, when marshalled according to their rank and standing, natu- -ally range should be also that in which they occur in order of 308 BEARING OF FINAL CAUSES time. The brain which bears an average proportion to the Kpinal cord of not more than two to one, came first, it is the brain of the fish ; that which bears to the spinal cord an av- erage proportion of two and a half to one succeeded it, it is the brain of the reptile ; then came the brain averaging as three to one, it is that of the bird ; next in succession came the brain that averages as four to one, it is that of the mam- mal ; and last of all there appeared a brain that averages as twenty-three to one, reasoning, calculating man had come upon the scene. All the facts of geological science are hos- tile to the Lamarckian conclusion, that the lower brains were developed into the higher. As if with the express intention of preventing so gross a mis-reading of the record, we find, in at least two classes of animals, fishes and reptiles, the higher races placed at the beginning : the slope of the inclined plane is laid, if one may so speak, in the reverse way, and, instead of rising towards the level of the succeeding class, inclines downwards, with at least the effect, if not the design, of making the break where they meet exceedingly well marked and conspicuous. And yet the record does seem to speak of development and progression ; not, however, in the province of organized existence, but in that of insensate matter, subject to the purely chemical laws. It is in the style and character of the dwelling-place that gradual improvement seems to have taken place ; not in the functions or the rank of any class of its inhabitants ; and it is with special reference to this gradual improvement in our common mansion-house the earth, in its bearing on the " conditions of existence," that not a few of our reasonings regarding the introduction and extinction of species and genera must proceed. That definite period at which man was introduced upon the scene seems to have been specially determined by the ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY. 309 conditions of correspondence which the phenomena of his habitation had at length come to assume with the predes- tined constitution of his mind. The large reasoning brain would have been wholly out of place in the earlier ages. It is indubitably the nature of man to base the conclusions which regulate all his actions on fixed phenomena ; he rea- sons from cause to effect, or from effect to cause ; and when placed in circumstances in which, from some lack of the necessary basis, he cannot so reason, he becomes a wretched, timid, superstitious creature, greatly more helpless and ab- ject than even the inferior animals This unhappy state is strikingly exemplified by that deep and peculiar impression made on the mind by a severe earthquake, which Hum- boldt, from his own experience, so powerfully describes. " This impression," he says, " is not, in my opinion, the re- sult of a recollection of those fearful pictures of devasta- tion presented to our imagination by the historical narra- tives of the past, but is rather due to the sudden revelation of the delusive nature of the inherent faith by which we had clung to a belief in the immobility of the solid parts of the earth. We are accustomed from early childhood to draw a contrast between the mobility of water and the immobility of the soil on which we tread ; and this feeling is confirmed by the evidence of our senses. When, therefore, wo sud- denly feel the ground move beneath us, a mysterious force, with which we were previously unacquainted, is revealed to us as an active disturber of stability. A moment de- stroys the illusion of a whole life ; our deceptive faith in the repose of nature vanishes ; and we feel transported into a realm of unkrown destructive forces Every sound the faintest motion of the air arrests our attention, and we no longer trust the ground or. which we stand. There is an 310 BEARING OF FINAL CAUSES idea conveyed to the mind, of some universal and unlimited danger. We may flee from the crater of a volcano in active eruption, or from the dwelling whose destruction is threat- ened by the approach of the lava stream ; but in an earth- quake, direct our flight whithersoever we will, we still feel a? if we trod upon the very focus of destruction." Not less striking is the testimony of Dr. Tschudi, in his " Travels in Peru," regarding this singular eflect of earthquakes on the human mind. " No familiarity with the phenomenon can," he remarks, " blunt the feeling. The inhabitant of Lima, who from childhood has frequently witnessed these convulsions of nature, is roused from his sleep by the shock, and rushes from his apartment with the cry of i Misericordia ! ' The foreigner from the north of Europe, who knows nothing of earthquakes but by description, waits with impatience to feel the movements of the earth, and longs to hear with his own ear the subterranean sounds, which he has hitherto con- sidered fabulous. With levity he treats the apprehen- sion of a coming convulsion, and laughs at the fears of the natives ; but as soon as his wish is gratified, he is terror- stricken, and is involuntarily prompted to seek safety in flight." Now, a partially consolidated planet, tempested by fre- quent earthquakes of such terrible potency, that those of the historic ages would be but mere ripples of the earth's sur- face in comparison, could be no proper home for a creature so constituted. The fish or reptile, animals of a limited range of instinct, exceedingly tenacious of life in most of their varieties, oviparous, prolific, and whose young immediately on theii jscape from the egg can provide for themselves, might enjoy existence in such circumstances, to the full ex- ient of their narrow capacities ; and when sudden death fell ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY. 311 upon them, though their remains, scattered over wide areas, continue to exhibit that distortion of posture incident to vio- lent dissolution, which seems to speak of terror and suffering, we may safely conclude there was but little real suffering in the case : they were happy up to a certain point, and un- conscious forever after. Fishes and reptiles were the proper inhabitants of our planet during the ages of the earth-tem- pests ; and when, under the operation of the chemical ] .iws, these had brcome less frequent and terrible, the higher mammals were introduced. That prolonged ages of these tempests did exist, and that they gradually settled down, un- til the state of things became at length comparatively fixed and stable, few geologists will be disposed to deny. The evi- dence which supports tkis special theory of the development of our planet in its capabilities as a scene of organized and sentient being, seems palpable at every step. Look first a these Grauwacke rocks ; and, after marking how in one place the strata have been upturned on their edges for miles together, and how in another the Plutonic rock has risen molten from below, pass on to the Old Red Sandstone, and examine its significant platforms of violent death, its faults, displace- ments, and dislocations ; see, next, in the Coal Measures, those evidences of sinking and ever-sinking strata, for thousands of feet together; mark in the Oolite those vast overlying masses of trap, stretching athwart the landscape, far as the eye can reach ; observe carefully how the signs of convulsion and catastrophe gradualfy lessen as we descend to the times of the Tertiary, though even in these ages of the mammiferoua quadruped the earth must have had its oft-recurring ague fits of frightful intensity ; and then, on closing the survey, consider how exceedingly partial and unfrequent these earth- tempests have become in the recent periods. Yes ; we find 312 BEARING OF FINAL CAUSES every where marks of at once progression and identity, of progress made, and yet identity maintained ; but it is ir the habitation that we find them, not in the inhabitants. There is a tract of country in Hindustan that contains nearly as many square miles as all Great Britain, cov- ered to the depth of hundreds of feet by one vast overflow of trap ; a track similarly overflown, which exceeds in area all England, occurs in Southern Africa. The earth's sur- face is roughened with such, mottled as thickly by the Plutonic masses as the skin of the leopard by its spots. The trap district which surrounds our Scottish metropolis, and imparts so imposing a character to its scenery, is too inconsid- erable to be marked on geological maps of the world, that we yet see streaked and speckled with similar memorials, though on an immensely vaster scale, of the eruption and overflow which took place in the earthquake ages. What could man have done on the globe at a time when such outbursts were comparatively common occurrences ? What could he have done where Edinburgh now stands during that overflow of trap porphyry of which the Pentland range forms but a fragment, or that outburst of greenstone of which but a portion remains in the dark ponderous coping of Salisbury Craigs, or when the thick floor of rock on which the city stands was broken up, like the ice of an arctic sea during a tempest in spring, and laid on edge from where it leans against the Castle Hill to beyond the quarries at Joppa ? The reasoning brain would have been wholly at fault in a scene of things in which it could neither foresee the exterminating calamity while yet distant, nor con- trol it when it had come ; and so the reasoning brain was not produced until the scene had undergone a slow but thorough process of change, during which, at each progressive stage, it had furnished a platform for higher and still higher life. ON GEOLOGIC H. STOEY. 313 When the coniferse could flourish on the land, and fishes subsis' in the seas, fishes and cone-bearing plants were cre- ated ; when the earth became a fit habitat for reptiles and birds, rept'les and birds were produced ; with the dawn of a more stable and mature state of things the sagacious quad- ruped was ushered in ; and, last of all, when man's house was fully prepared for him, when the data on which it is his nature to reason and calculate had become fixed and certain, the reasoning, calculating brain was moulded by the creative finger, and man became a living soul. Such seems to be the true reading of the wondrous inscription chiselled deep in the rocks. It furnishes us with no clue by which to unravel the unapproachable mysteries of cre- ation ; these mysteries belong to the wondrous Creator, and to Him only. We attempt to theorize upon them, and to reduce them to law, and all nature rises up against us in our presumptuous rebellion. A stray splinter of cone- bearing wood, a fish's skull or tooth, the vertebra of a reptile, the humerus of a bird, the jaw of a quadruped, all, any of these things, weak and insignificant as they may seem, become in such a quarrel too strong for us and our theory : the puny fragment, in the grasp of truth, forms as irresistible a weapon as the dry bone did in that of Samson of old ; and our slaughtered sophisms lie piled up, " heaps upon heaps," before it. There is no geological fact nor revealed doctrine with which this special scheme of development does not agree. To every truth, too, really such, from which the antagonist scheme derives its shadowy analogies, it leaves its full value. It has no quarrel with the facts of even the " Vestiges," in their character as realities. There is certainly something very extraordinary in that foetal progress of the human brain on 27 314 BEARING OF FINAL CAT7SES which the assertors of the development hypothesis have foundt ti so much. Nature, in constructing this curious organ, first lays down a grooved cord, as the carpenter lays down the keel of his vessel ; and on this narrow base the perfect brain, as month after month passes by, is gradually built up, like the vessel from the keel. First it grows up into a brain closely resembling that of a fish ; a few additions more convert it into a brain undistinguishable from that of a reptile ; a few additions more impart to it the perfect appearance of the brain of a bird ; it then developes into a brain exceedingly like thdt of a mammiferous quadruped; and, finally, expand- ing atop, and spreading out its deeply corrugated lobes, till they project widely over the base, it assumes its unique char- acter as a human brain. Radically such from the first, it passes towards its full development, through all the inferior forms, from that of the fish upwards, thus comprising, dur- ing its foetal progress, an epitome of geologic history, as if each man were in himself, not the microcosm of the old fan- ciful philosopher, but something greatly more wonderful, a compendium of all animated nature, and of kin to every creature that lives. Hence the remark, that man is the sum total of all animals, "the animal equivalent," says Oken, " to the whole animal kingdom." We are perhaps too much in the habit of setting aside real facts, when they have been first seized upon by the infidel, and appropriated to the purposes of unbelief, as if they had suffered contamination in his hands. We forget, like the brother " weak in the faith," instanced by the Apostle, that they are in themselves "crea- tures of God ; " and too readily reject the lesson which they teach, simply because they have been offered in sacrifice to an idol. And this strange fact of the progress of the human brain is assuredly a fact none the less worth looking at from the Oft GEOLOGIC HISTORY. 31.) circumstance tha infidelity has looked at it first. On no princi pie recognizable n right reason can it be urged in support of the development hypothesis; it is a fact of fatal develop- ment, and of that only. But it would be well should it lead our metaphysicians to inquire whether they have not been rendering their science too insulated and exclusive ; and whether the mind that works by a brain thus " fearfully and wonderfully made," ought not to be viewed rather in connec- tion with all animated nature, especially as we find nature exemplified in the various vertebral forms, than as a thing fundamentally abstract and distinct. The brain built up ol all the types of brain, may be the organ of a mind com- pounded, if I may so express myself, of all the varieties of mind. It would be perhaps over fanciful to urge that it is the creature who has made himself free of all the elements, whose brain has been thus in succession that of all their proper denizens ; and that there is no animal instinct, the function of which cannot be illustrated by some art mastered by man : but there can be nothing over fanciful in the suggestion, founded on this fact of foetal development, that possibly some of the more obscure signs impressed upon the human character may be best read through the spectacles of physical science. The successive phases of the foetal brain give at least fair warning that, in tracing to its first principles the moral and intellectual nature of man, what is properly his " natural history " should not be overlooked. Oken, after describing the human creature in one passage as " equivalent to the whole animal kingdom," designates him in another as " God wholly mani- fested," and as " God become man ; " a style of expression at which the English reader may start, as that of the " big mouth speaking blasphemy," but which has become exceed- ingly common among the -itionalists of the Continent. The 316 BEARING OF FINAL CAUSES irreverent naturalist ought surely to have remembered, that the sum total of all the animals cannot be different in its nature from the various sums of which it is an aggregate, seeing that no summation ever differs in quality from the items summed up, which compose it, and that, though it may amount in this case to man the animal, to man, as he may be weighed, and measured, and subjected to the dissecting knife, it cannot possibly amount to God. Is God merely a sum total of birds and beasts, reptiles and fishes ; a mere Egyptian deity, composed of fantastic hieroglyphics derived from the forms of the brute creation ? The impieties of the transcendentalist may, however, serve to illustrate that mode of seizing on terms which, as the most sacred in the message of revelation, have been long coupled in the popular mind with saving truths, and forcibly compelling them to bear some visionary and illusive meaning, wholly foreign to that with which they were originally invested, which has become so remarkable a part of the policy of modern infidelity. Ra- tionalism has learned to sacrifice to Deity with a certain measure of conformity to the required pattern ; but it is a conformity in appearance only, not in reality : the sacri- fice always resembles that of Prometheus of old, who pre- sented to Jupiter what, though it seemed to be an ox with- out blemish, was merely an ox-skin stuffed full of bones and garbage. There is another very remarkable class of facts in geologi3al history, which appear to fall as legitimately within the scope of argument founded on final causes, as those which bear on the appearance of man at his proper era. The period of the mammiferous quadrupeds seems, likr the succeeding human period, to have been determined, as 1 have said, by the earth's fitness at the time as i place of habitation for creatures so ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY. 317 formed. And the bulk to which, in the more extreme cases, they attained, appears to have been regulated, as in the high- er mammals now, with reference to the force of gravity at the earth's surface. The Megatherium and the Mastodon, the Dinotherium and the extinct elephant, increased in bulk, in obedience to the laws of the specific constitution imparted to them at their creation ; and these laws bore reference, in turn, to another law, that law of gravity which determines that no creature which moves in air and treads the surface of the eirth should exceed a certain weight or size. To very neai the limits assigned by this law some of the ancient quadru- peds arose. It is even doubtful whether the Dinotherium, the most gigantic of mammals, may not have been, like the exist- ing sea-lions and morses, mainly an aquatic quadruped ; an inference grounded on the circumstance that, in at least portions of its framework, it seems to have risen beyond these limits. Now, it does not seern wonderful that, with apparent reference to the point at which the gravity of bodies at the earth's surface bisects the conditions of texture and mat- ter necessary to existence among the sub-aerial vertebrata, the reptiles of the Secondary periods should have grown up in some of their species and genera to the extreme size. A world of frogs, newts, and lizards would have borne stamped upon it the impress of a tame and miserable mediocrity, that would have harmonized ill with the extent of the earth's capabilities for supporting life on a large scale. There would be no principle of adaptation or rule of proportion maintained between an animal kingdom composed of so contemptible a group of beings, and either the dynamic laws under which matter exists on our planet, or the luxuriant vege- tation which it bore during the Secondary ages. And such was not the character of th group which composed the 27* 318 BEARING OF FINAL CAUSES reptile dynasty. The Iguanodon must have been quite as tall as the elephant, greatly longer, and, it wouli seem, at least as bulky. The Megalosaurus must have at least equalled the rhinoceros ; the Hylaeosaurus would have outweighed the hippopotamus. And when reptiles that rivalled in size our hugest mammals inhabited the land, other reptiles, Ichthyosaurs, Plesiosaurs, and Cetiosaurs, scarce less bulky than the cetacea themselves, possessed the sea. Not only was the platform of being occupied in all its breadth, but also in all its height ; and it is according to our simpler and more obvious ideas of adaptation simple and obvious be- cause gleaned from the very surface of the universe of life that such should have been the case. But it does appear strange, because under the regulation, it would seem, of a principle of adaptation more occult, and, if I may so speak, more Providential, that no sooner are the huge mammals in- troduced as a group, than, with but a few exceptions, the rep- tiles appear in greatly diminished proportions. They no long- er occupy the platform to its full extent of height. Even in tropical countries, in which certain families of mammals still attain to the maximum size, the reptiles, if we except the croco- dilean family, a few harmless turtles, and the degraded boas and pythons, are a small and comparatively unimportant race. Nay, the existing giants of the class the crocodiles and boas hardly equal in bulk the third-rate reptiles of the ages of the Oolite and the Wealden. So far as can be seen, there is no reason deduceable from the nature of things, why the cou itry that sustains a mammal bulky as the elephant, should not also support a reptile huge as the Iguanodon ; or why the Megalosaurus, Hylseosaurus, and Dicynodon, might not have been contemporary with the lion, tiger, and rhinoce ros. The change which took place in the reptile group im- ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY. 319 mediately on their dethronement at the close of the Second- ary period, seems scarce less strange than that sung by Mil- ton : "Behold a wonder ! They but now who seemed In bigness to surpass earth's giant sons, Now less than smallest dwarfs, in narrow room Thronged numberless ; like that pygmean race Bey Dnd the Indian mount ; or fairy elves, "Whose midnight revels, by a forest side Or fountain, some belated peasant sees, Or dreams he sees, while, overhead, the moon Sits arbitress, and nearer to the earth Wheels her pale course." But though we cannot assign a cause for this general re- duction of the reptile class, save simply the will of the all- wise Creator, the reason why it should have taken place seems easily assignable. It was a bold saying of the old philosophic heathen, that " God is the soul of brutes;" but writers on instinct in even our own times have said less warrantable things. God does seem to do for many of the inferior animals of the lower divisions, which, though devoid of brain and vertebral column, are yet skilful chemists and accomplished architects and mathematicians, what he en- ables man, through the exercise of the reasoning faculty, to do for himself; and the ancient philosopher meant no more. And in clearing away the giants of the reptile dynasty, when their kingdom had passed away, and then re-introducing the class as much shrunken in their proportions as restricted in their domains, the Creator seems to have been doing for the mammals what man, in the character of a " mighty hunter before the Lord," does for himself. There is in nature very little of what can be called war. The cities of this country cannot be said to be in a state of war, though their cattle- 820 BEARING OF FINAL CAUSES markets are thronged every week with animals for slaughter and the butcher and fishmonger find their places of business thronged with customers. And such, in the main, is the con- dition of the animal world ; it consists of its two classes, animals of prey, and the animals upon which they prey: its wars are simply those of the butcher and fisher, lightened by a dash of the enjoyments of the sportsman. " The creatures see of flood and field, And those that travel on the wind, With them no strife can last ; they live In peace and peace of mind." Generally speaking, the carnivorous mammalia respect one another : lion does not war with tiger, nor the leopard con- tend with the hyena. But the carnivorous reptiles manifest no such respect for the carnivorous mammals. There are fierce contests in their native jungles, on the banks of the Ganges, between the gavial and the tiger ; and in the steam jng forests of South America, the boa-constrictor casts his terrible coil scarce less readily round the puma than the an- telope. A world which, after it had become a home of the higher herbivorous and more powerful carnivorous mammals, continued to retain the gigantic reptiles of its earlier ages, would be a world of horrid, exterminating war, and alto- gether rather a place of torment than a scene of interme- diate character, in which, though it sometimes reechoes the groans of suffering nature, life is, in the main, enjoyment. And so, save in a few exceptional cases, that, while they establish the rule as a fact, serve also as a key to unlock that principle of the Divine government on which it ap- pears to rest, no sooner was the reptile removed from his place in the fore-front of creation, and creatures of a higher order introduced into tl 5 consolidating and fast-ripening ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY. 321 planet of which he had been so long the monarch, than his bulk shrank and his strength lessened, and he assumed a hu- mility of form and aspect at once in keeping with his reduced circumstances, and compatible with the general welfare. But though the reason of the reduction appears obvious, I know not that it can be referred to any other cause than simply the will of the All- Wise Creator. There hangs a mystery greatly more profound over the fact of the degradation than over that of the reduction and diminution of classes. We can assign what at least seems to be a sufficient reason why, when reptiles formed as a class the highest representatives of the venebrata, they should be of imposing bulk and strength, and altogether worthy of that post of precedence which they then occupied among the ani- mals. We can also assign a reason for the strange reduction which took place among them in strength and bulk imme- diately on their removal from the first to the second place. But why not only reduction, but also degradation 1 Why, as division started up in advance of division, first the reptiles in front of the fishes, then the quadrupedal mammals m front of the reptiles, and, last of all, man in front of the quadru- pedal mammals, should the supplanted classes, two of them at least, fishes and reptiles, for there seem to have been no additions made to the mammals since man entered upon the scene, why should they have become the receptacles of orders and families of a degraded character, which had no place among them in their monarchical state ? The fishes removed beyond all analogy with the higher vertebrata, by their homo- cereal tails, 1 the fishes (Acanthopterygii and Sub-brachiati) with their four limbs slung in a belt round their necks, the flat fishes, (Pleuronectida,) that, in addition to this deformity, are so twisted to a side, that whiie the one eye occupies a single 322 BEARING OF FINAL CAUSES orbit in the middle of the skull, the other is thrust out to its edge, the irregular fishes generally (sun-fishes, frog-fishes, nippocam^K, &c.) were not introduced into the ichthyic di- vision untt after the full development of the reptile dynasty ; aor did the hand that makes no slips in its working " form '.he crooked serpent," footless, grovelling, venom-bearing, he authorized type of a fallen and degraded creature, until after the introduction of the mammals. What can this fact of degradation mean ? Species and genera seem to be greatly more numerous in the present age of the world than in any of the geologic ages. Is it not possible that the extension of the chain of being which has thus taken place not only, as we find, through the addition of the higher divis- ions of animals to its upper end, but also through the interpo- lations of lower links into the previously existing divisions may have borne reference to some predetermined scheme of well-proportioned gradation, or, according to the poet, " Of general ORDER since the whole began ? " May not, in short, what we term degradation be merely one of the modes resorted to for filling up the voids in creation, and thereby perfecting a scale which must have been origi- nally not merely a scale of narrow compass, but also of innu- merable breaks and blanks, hiatuses and chasms ? Such, certainly, would be the reading of the enigma which a Soame Jenyns or a Bolingbroke would suggest ; but the geologist has learned from his science, that the completion of a chain of at least contemporary being, perfect in its gradations, cannot possibly have formed the design of Providence. Almost ever since God united vitality to matter, the links in this chain of animated rature, as if composed of a material too brittle to near their own weight when stretched across the geologic ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY. 323 ages, Lave l>oen ^Lopping one after one f om his hand, and sinking, fractured and broken, into the rocks below. L *s urged by Pope, that were " we to press on superior powers," and rise from our own assigned place to the place immediately above it, we would, in consequence of the transposition, " In the full creation leave a void, Where, one step broken, the great scale '& destroyed. From nature's chain whatever link we strike, Tenth or ten thousandth, breaks the chain alike."' The poet could scarce have anticipated that there was a sci- ence then sleeping in its cradle, and dreaming the dreams of Whiston, Leibnitz, and Burnet, which was one day to rise and demonstrate that both the tenth and the ten thousandth link in the chain had been already broken and laid by, with all the thousands of links between ; and that man might lauda- bly " press on superior powers," and attain to a " new na- ture," without in the least affecting the symmetry of creation by the void which his elevation would necessarily create ; that, in fine, voids and blanks in the scale are exceedingly common things ; and that, if men could, by rising into an- gels, make one blank more, they might do so with perfect impunity. Further, even were the graduated chain of Boling- broke a reality, and not what Johnson well designates it, an " absurd hypothesis," and were what I have termed the inter- polation of links necessary to its completion, the mere filling *up of the original blanks and chasms would not necessarily involve the fact of degradation, seeing that each blank could be filled up, if I may so expre&s myself, from its lower end. Each could be as certainly occupied to the full by an eleva- tion of lower forms, as by a humiliation of the higher. We might receive the hypothesis of Bolingbroke, and yet 324 BSARING OF FINAL CAUSES find the mysterious fact of degradation remain an unsolved riddle in our hands. But though I can assign neither reason nor cause for the fact, I cannot avoid the conclusion, that it is associated with certain other great facts in the moral government of the uni- verse, by those threads of analogical connection which run through the entire tissue of Creation and Providence, and impart to it that character of unity which speaks of the single producing Mind. The first idea of every religion on earth which has arisen out of what may be termed the spiritual in- stincts of man's nature, is that of a Future State ; the second idea is, that in this state men shall exist in two separate classes, the one in advance of their present condition, the other far in the rear of it. It is on these two great beliefs that con- science every where finds the fulcrum from which it acts upon the conduct ; and it is, we find, wholly inoperative as a force without them. And in that one religion among men that, instead of retiring, like the pale ghosts of the others, before the light of civilization, brightens and expands in its beams, and in favor of whose claim as a revelation from God the highest philosophy has declared, we find these two master ideas occupying a still more prominent place than in any of those merely indigenous religions that spring up in the human mind of themselves. The special lesson which the Adorable Saviour, during his ministry on earth, oftenest enforced, and to which all the others bore reference, was the lesson of a final separation of mankind into two great divisions, a divis- ion of God-like men, of whose high standing and full-orbed happiness man, in the present scene of things, can form no adequate conception ; and a division of men finally lost, and doomed to unutterable misery and hopeless degradation. ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY. 325 There is not in all Revelation a single doctrine which we find oftener or more clearly enforced than that there shall continue to exist, throughout the endless cycles of the future, a race of degraded men and of degraded angels. Now, it is truly wonderful how thoroughly, in its general scope, the revealed pieces on to the geologic record. We know, as geologists, that the dynasty of the fish was suc- ceeded by that of the reptile, that the dynasty of the rep- tile was succeeded by that of the mammiferous quadruped, and that the dynasty of the mammiferous quadruped was suc- ceeded by that of man as man now exists, a creature of mixed character, and subject, in all conditions, to wide alter- nations of enjoyment and suffering. We know, further, so far at least as we have yet succeeded in deciphering the record, that the several dynasties were introduced, not in their lower, but in their higher forms ; that, in short, in the imposing programme of creation it was arranged, as a general rule, that in each of the great divisions of the procession the magnates should walk first. We recognize yet further the fact of degradation specially exemplified in the fish and the reptile. And then, passing on to the revealed record, we learn that the dynasty of man in the mixed state and character is not the final one, but that there is to be yet another creation, or, more properly, re-creation, known theologically as the Resurrec- tion, which shall be connected in its physical components, by bonds of mysterious paternity, with the dynasty which now reigns, and be bound to it mentally by the chain of identity, conscious and actual ; but which, in all that constitutes supe- riority, shall be as vastly its superior as the dynasty of responsible man is superior to even the lowest of the pre- liminary dynasties. We are further taught, that at the com- mencement of this last of the dynasties, there will be a re 28 326 BEARING OF FINAL CAUSES creation of not only elevated, but also of degraded beirgs, a re-creation of the lost. We are taught yet fuither, that though the present dynasty be that of a lapsed race, which at their first introduction were placed on higher ground than that on which they now stand, and sank by their own act, it was yet part of the original design, from the beginning of ah things, that they should occupy the existing platform ; and that Redemption is thus no after-thought, rendered necessary by the fall, but, on the contrary, part of a general scheme, for which provision had been made from the beginning ; so that the Divine Man, through whom the work of restoration has been effected, was in reality, in reference to the purposes of the Eternal, what he is designated in the remarkable text, " the Lamb slain from the foundations of the world." Slain from the foundations of the world ! Could the assertors of (he stony science ask for language more express ? By piecing the two records together, that revealed in Scripture and that revealed in the rocks, records which, however widely geologists may mistake the one, or commentators misunder- stand the other, have emanated from the same great Author we learn that in slow and solemn majesty has period suc^ ceeded period, each in succession ushering in a higher and yei higher scene of existence, that fish, reptiles, mammiferous quadrupeds, have reigned in turn, that responsible man, " made in the image of God," and with dominion ever all creatures, ultimately entered into a world ripened for his re- ception ; but, further, that this passing scene, in which he forms ths prominent figure, is not the final one in the long series, but merely the last of the preliminary scenes ; and that that period to which the bygone ages, incalculable in amount, with all their well-proportioned gradations of being, form the imposing vesti- bule, shall have perfection for its occupant, and eternity for its ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY. 327 duration. I know not how it may appear to others ; but for my own part, I cannot avoid thinking that there would be a !ack of proportion in the series of being, were the period of perfect and glorified humanity abruptly connected, without the introduction of an intermediate creation of responsible im- perfection, with that of the dying irresponsible brute. That scene of things in which God became Man, and suffered, seems, as it no doubt is, a necessary link in the chain. I am aware that I stand on the confines of a mystery which man, since the first introduction of sin into the world till now, has " vainly aspired to comprehend." But I have no new reading of the enigma to offer. I know not why it is that moral evil exists in the universe of the All- Wise and the All-Powerful ; nor through what occult law of Deity it is that " perfection should come through suffering." The question, like that satellite, ever attendant upon our planet, which presents both its sides to the sun, but invariably the same side to the earth, hides one of its faces from man, and turns it to but the Eye from which all light emanates. And it is in that God-ward phase of the question that the mys- tery dwells. We can map and measure every protuberance and hollow which roughens the nether disk of the moon, as, during the shades of night, it looks down upon our path to cheer and enlighten ; but what can we know of the other ? It would, however, seem, that even in this field of mystery the extent of the inexplicable and the unknown is capable of reduction, and that the human understanding is vested in an ability of progressing towards the central point of that dark field throughout all time, mayhap all eternity, as the asymp- tote progresses upon its curve. Even though the essence of the question should forever remain a mystery, it may yet, in its reduced and defined state, sirve as a key for the 328 BEARING OF FINAL CAUSES laying of other mysteries open. The philosophers are still as ignorant as ever respecting the intrinsic nature of gravi- tation ; bu: regarded simply as a force, how many enigmas has it not served to unlock ! And that moral gravitation towards evil, manifested by the only two classes of respon- sible beings of which there is aught known to man, and of which a degradation linked by mysterious analogy with a class of facts singularly prominent in geologic history is the result, occupies apparently a similar place, as a force, in the moral dynamics of the universe, and seems suited to perform a similar part. Inexplicable itself, it is yet a key to the so- lution of all the minor inexplicabilities in the scheme of Providence. In a matter of such extreme niceness and difficulty, shall I dare venture on an illustrative example ? So far as both the geologic and the Scriptural evidence extends, no species or family of existences seems to have been introduced by creation into the present scene of being since the appearance of man. In Scripture the formation of the human race is described as the terminal act of a series, " good " in all its previous stages, but which became " very good " then ; and geologists, judging from the modicum of evidence which they have hitherto succeeded in collecting on the subject, evidence still meagre, but, so far as it goes, in- dependent and distinct, pronounce " post-Adamic crea- tions " at least " improbable." The naturalist finds certain animal and vegetable species restricted to certain circles, and that in certain foci in these circles they attain to their fullest development and their maximum number. And these foci he regards as the original centres of creation, whence, in each instance in the process of increase and multiplica- tion, the plant or creature propagated itself outwards in cir- ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY. 329 cular wavelets of life, that sank at each stage as they widened, till at length, at the circumference of the area, they wholly ceased. Now we find it argued by Professor Edward Forbes, that " since man's appearance, certain geological areas, both of land and water, have been formed, presenting such physi- cal conditions as to entitle us to expect within their bounds one, or in some instances more than one, centre of creation, or point of maximum of a zoological or botanical province. But a critical examination renders evident," the Professor adds, " that instead of showing distinct foci of creation, they have been in all instances peopled by colonization, i. e. by migration of species from pre-existing, and in every case pre- Adainic, provinces. Among the terrestrial areas the British isles may serve as an example ; among marine, the Baltic, Mediterranean, and Black Seas. The British islands have been colonized from various centres of creation in (now) continental Europe ; the Baltic Sea from the Celtic region, although it runs itself into the conditions of the Boreal one ; and the Mediterranean, as it now appears, from the fauna and flora of the more ancient Lusitanian province." Professor Forbes, it is stated further, in the report of his paper to which I owe these details, a paper read at the Royal Institution in March last, "exhibited, in support of the same view, a map, showing the relation which the centres of creation of the air-breathing molluscs in Europe bear to the geological his- tory of the respective areas, and proving that the whole snail population of its northern and central extent (the portion of the Continent of newest and probably post-Adamic origin) had been derived from foci of creation seated in pre-Adamic lands. And these remarkable facts have induced the Profes- sor," it was addec^. " to maintain the improbability of post- Adamic creations ' 28* 330 BEAKING OF FINAL CAUSES With the introduction of man into the scene of existence, creation, I repeat, seems to have ceased. What is it that now takes its place, and performs its work ? During the previous dynasties, all elevation in the scale was an efFec simply of creation. Nature lay dead in a waste theatre of rock, vapor, and sea, in which the insensate laws, chemical, mechanical, and electric, carried on their blind, unintelli- gent processes: tne creative fiat went forth; and, amid waters that straightway teemed with life in its lower forms, vege- table and animal, the dynasty of the fish was introduced. Many ages passed, during which there took place no further elevation : on the contrary, in not a few of the newly intro- duced species of the reigning class there occurred for the first time examples of an asymmetrical misplacement of parts, and, in at least one family of fishes, instances of defect of parts : there was the manifestation of a downward tendency towards the degradation of monstrosity, when the elevatory fiat again went forth, and, through an act of creation, the dynasty of the reptile began. Again many ages passed by, marked, apparently, by the introduction of a warm- blooded oviparous animal, the bird, and of a few marsupial quadrupeds, but in which the prevailing class reigned un- deposed, though at least unelevated. Yet again, however, the elevatory fiat went forth, and through an act of creation the dynasty of the mammiferous quadruped began. And after the further lapse of ages, the elevatory fiat went forth yet once" more in an act. of creation ; and with the human, heaven- aspiring dynasty, the moral government of God, in its con- nection with at least the world which we inhabit, " took be- ginning." And then creation ceased. Why? Simply be- cause God's moral government had begun, because in ne- cessary conformity with the institution of that government, there ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY. 331 was to oe a thorough identity maintained between the glori- fied and immortal beings of the terminal dynasty., and the dying magnates of the dynasty which now is ; and because, in consequence of the maintenance of this identity as an essential condition of this moral government, mere acts of creation could no longer carry on the elevatory process. The work analogous in its end and object to those acts of creation which gave to our planet its successive dynas- ties of higher and yet higher existences, is the work of REDEMPTION. It is the elevatory process of the present time, the only possible provision for that final act of re-crea- tion " to everlasting life," which shall usher in the terminal dynasty. 1 cannot avoid thinking that many of our theologians attach a too narrow meaning to the remarkable reason " an- nexed to the Fourth Commandment" by the Divine Law- giver. " God rested on the seventh day," says the text, " from all his work which He had created and made ; and God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it." And such is the reason given in the Decalogue why man should also rest on the seventh day. God rested on the Sabbath, and sanctified it ; and therefore man ought also to rest on the Sabbath, and keep it holy. But I know not where we shall find grounds for the belief that that Sabbath-day during which God rested was merely commensurate in its duration with one of the Sabbaths of short-lived man, a brief period, measured by a single revolution of the earth on its axis. We have not, as has been shown, a shadow of evidence that He resumed his work of creation on the morrow : the geologist finds no trace of post-Adamic creation, the theologian can tell us of none. God's Sabbath of rest may still exist ; the work of REDEMPTION may be the work of his Sabbath day. That 332 BEARING OF FINAL CAUSES elevatory process through successive acts of creation which engaged Him during myriads of ages, was of an ordinary week-day character; but Mhen the term of his moral gov- ernment began, the elevatory process proper to it assumed the Divine character of the Sabbath. This special view ap- pears to lend peculiar emphasis to the reason embodied in the commandment. The collation of the passage with the geologic record seems, as if by a species of re-translation, to make it enunciate as ils injunction, " Keep this day, not merely as a day of memorial related to a past fact, but also as a day of cooperation with God in the work of elevation in relation both to a present fact and a future purpose. God keeps his Sabbath," it says, " in order that He may save ; keep yours also, in order that ye may be saved." It serves, besides, to throw light on the prominence of the Sabbatical command, in a digest of law of which no part or tittle can pass away until the fulfilment of all things. During the pres- ent dynasty of probation and trial, that special work of both God and man on which the character of the future dynasty depends, is the Sabbath-day work of saving and being saved.* * The common objection to that special view which regards the days of creation as immensely protracted periods of time, furnishes a specimen, if not of reasoning in a circle, at least of reasoning from a mere assumption. It first takes for granted, that the Sabbath day during which God rested was a day of but twenty-four hours ; and then argues, from the supposition, that in order to keep up the propor- tion between the six previous working days and the seventh day of rest, which the reason annexed to the fourth commandment demands, these previous Jays must also have been days of twenty-four hours each. It would, I have begun to suspect, square better with the ascertained fa:ts, and be at least equally in accordance with Scripture,, to reverse t'^e process, and argue that, because God's working day? ON GEOLOGIC HISTOEV. 333 It is in tais dynasty of the future that man's moral and intellectual faculties will receive their full development. The expectation of any very great advance in the present were immensely protracted periods, hts Sabbath must also be an im- mensely protracted period. The reason attached to the law of the Sabbath seems to be simply a reason of proportion ; the objection to which I refer is an objection palpably founded on considerations of proportion. And certainly, were the reason to be divested of pro- portion, it would be divested also of its distinctive character as a reason. Were it to run as follows, it could not be at all understood : " Six days shalt thou labor, &c., but on the seventh day shalt thou do no labor, &c. ; for in six immensely protracted periods of many thousand years each did the Lord make the heavens and earth, &c., and then rested during a brief day of twenty-four hours ; therefore the Lord blessed the brief day of twenty-four hours, and hallowed it." This, I repeat, would not be reason. All, however, that seems necessary to the integrity of the reason, in its character as such, is, that the proportion of six parts to seven should be maintained. God's periods may be periods expressed algebraically by letters symbolical of unknown quantity, and man's periods by letters symbolical of quantities well known ; but if God's Sabbath be equal to one of his six working days, and man's Sabbath equal to one of his six working days, the integrity of proportion is maintained. When I see the pal- pable absurdity of such a reading of the reason as the one given above, I can see no absurdity whatever in the reading which I sub- join : " Six periods (a=a=aa=a=a) shalt thou labor, &c., hut on the seventh period (6=a) shalt thou do no labor, &c. ; for in six oeri- ods (x=x=x=x=x=x} the Lord made heaven and earth, &c., and rested the seventh period, (y=x ;) therefore the Lord blessed the seventh period, and hallowed it." The reason, in its character as a reason of proportion, survives here in all its integrity. Man, when in his unfallen estate, bore the image of God, but it must have been a miniature image at best ; the proportion of man's week to that of his Maker may, for aught that appears, be mathematically just in its proportions, and yet be a miniature image too, the mere scale of a map, on which inches represent geographical degrees. All those week days and Sabbath days of man which have come and gone since 334 CONCLUSION. scene of things great, at least, when measured by man's large capacity of conceiving of the good and fair seems to be, like all human hope when restricted to time, an expec- tation doomed to disappointment. There are certain limits within which the race improves; civilization is better than the want of it, and the taught superior to the untaught man. There is a change, too, effected in the moral nature, through that Spirit which, by working belief in the heart, brings its aspirations into harmony with the realities of the unseen world, that, in aHeast its relation to the future state, cannot be esti- mated too highly. But conception can travel very far beyond even its best effects in their merely secular bearing ; nay, it is peculiarly its nature to show the men most truly the sub- jects of it, how miserably they fall short of the high standard of conduct and feeling which it erects, and to teach them, more emphatically than by words, that their degree of happi- ness must of necessity be as low as their moral attainments are humble. Further, man, though he has been increasing in knowledge ever since his appearance on earth, has not been improving in faculty ; a shrewd fact, which they who expect most from the future of this world would do well to consider. The ancient masters of mind were in no respect inferior in calibre to their predecessors. We have not yet shot ahead of the old Greeks in either the perception of the beautiful, or in the ability of producing it ; there has been no improvement in the inventive faculty since the Iliad was written, some three thousand years ago ; nor has taste become man first entered upon this scene of being, with all which shall yet come and go, until the resurrection of the dead terminates the work of Redemption, may be included, and probably are included, in the one Sabbath day of God. CONCLUSION. 335 more exquisite, or the perception of tie narmony of numbers more nice, since the age of the ^Eneid. Science is cumu- lative in its character ; and so its votaries in modern times stand on a higher pedestal than their predecessors. But though nature produced a Newton some two centuries ago, as she produced a Goliath of Gath at an earlier period, the modern philosophers, as a class, do not exceed in actval stat- ure the worse informed ancients, the Euclids, Archimedeses, vnd Aristotles. We would be without excuse if, with the Ba- con, Milton, and Shakspeare of these latter ages of the world full before us, we recurred to the obsolete belief that the hu- man race is deteriorating ; but then, on the other hand, we have certain evidence, that since genius first began uncon- sciously to register in its works its own bulk and proportions, there has been no increase in the mass or improvement in the quality of individual mind. As for the dream that there is to be some extraordinary elevation of the general platform of the race achieved by means of education, it is simply the hallucination of the age, the world's present alchemical expedient for converting farthings into guineas, sheerly by dint of scouring. Not but that education is good ; it exercises, and, in the ordinary mind, developes, faculty. But it will not anticipate the terminal dynasty. Yet further, man's aver- age capacity of happiness seems to be as limited and as inca- pable of increase as his average reach of intellect : it is a mediocre capacity at best ; nor is it greater by a shade now, in these days of power-looms and portable manures, than :j the times of the old patriarchs. So long, too, as the law of increase continues, man must be subject to the law of death, with its stern attendants, suffering and sorrow ; for the two laws go necessarily together ; and so long as death reigns, human creatures, in even the best of times, will continue, to 336 CONCLUSION. quit this scene of being without professing much satisfactioii at what they have found either in it or themselves. It will no doubt be a less miserable world than it is now, when the good come, as there is reason to hope they one day shall, to be a majority ; but it will be felt to be an inferior sort of world even then, and be even fuller than now of wishes and long- ings for a better. Let it improve as it may, it will be a scene of probation and trial till the end. And so Faith, undeceived by the mirage of the midway desert, whatever form or name, political or religious, the phantasmagoria may bear, must con- tinue to look beyond its unsolid and tremulous glitter, its bare rocks exaggerated by the vapor into air-drawn castles, and its stunted bushes magnified into goodly trees, and, fixing her gaze upon the re-creation yet future, the terminal dy- nasty yet unbegun, she must be content to enter upon her final rest for she will not enter upon it earlier "at return " " Of Him, the Woman's Seed, Last in the clouds, from heaven to be revealed In glory of the Father, to dissolve Satan with his perverted world, then raise From the conflagrant mass, purged and refined, New heavens, new earth, ages of endless date, Founded in righteousness, and peace, and love, To bring forth fruits, joy and eternal bliss." But it may be judged that I am trespassing on a field into which I have no right to enter. Save, however, for its close proximity with that in which the geologist expatiates as prop- erly his own, this little volume would never have been writ- ten. It is the fact that man must believingly cooperate with God in the work of preparation for the final dynasty, or exist throughout its never-ending cycles as a lost and degraded creature, that alone renders the development hypothesis CONCLUSION. 337 formidable. But inculcating that the elevatory process is one of the natural law, not of moral endeavor, by teaching, in- ferentially at least, that in the better state of things which is coming there is to be an identity of race with that of the ex- isting dynasty, but no identity of individual consciousness, that, on the contrary, the life after death which we are to inherit is to be merely a horrid life of wriggling impurities, originated in the putrefactive mucus, and that thus the men who now live possess no real stake in the kingdom of the future, it is its direct tendency, so far as its influence ex- tends, to render the required cooperation with God an impos- sibility. For that cooperation cannot exist without belief as its basis. The hypothesis involves a misreading of the geologic record, which not merely affects its meaning in relation to the mind, and thus, in a question of science, substitutes error for truth, but which also threatens to affect the record itself, in relation to the destiny of every individual perverted and led astray. It threatens to write down among the degraded and the lost, men who, under the influence of an unshaken faith, might have risen at the dawn of the terminal period, to enjoy the fulness of eternity among the glorified and th* good. IMPORTANT LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC WORKS PUBLISHED BY GOULD AND LINCOLN, 59 WASHINGTON STREET, BOSTON, ANNUAL OF SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERY; r, Year Book of Facts in Science and Art, exhibiting the most important Discoveries and Improvements in Mechanics, Useful Arts, Natural Philosophy, Chemistry, Astronomy, Meteorology, Zoology, Botany, Mineralogy, Geology, Geography, Antiquities, etc. ; together with a list of recent Scientific Publications, a classified list of Patents, Obituaries of eminent Scien- tific .Men, an Index of important Papers in Scientific Journals, Reports, &x. Edited by DAVID A WELLS, A.M. 12mo, cloth, 1,25 Tliis work, commenced in the year 1850, and issued on the first of March annually, contains all impo: tuTit facts discovered or announced during the year. Each volume is distinct in itself, and con- tains eiitinlii new matter, with a fine portrait of some distinguished scientific man. As it is not in- tended exclusively for scientific men, but to meet the wants of the general reader, it has been the aim of the editor that the articles should be brief, and intelligible to all. The editor has received the appro- bation, counsel, and personal contributions of the prominent scientific men throughout the country. THE FOOTPRINTS OF THE CREATOR ; or, The Asterolepis of Stnmiiipss. With numerous Illustrations. By HUGH MILLER, author of " The Old Red Sandstone," &c. From the third London Edition. With a Memoir of the Author, by Louis AGASSIZ. 12mo, cloth, 1,00. Dr. BITKLAXD, at a meeting of the British Association, said he had never been so much aston- ished ir his life, by the powers of any mm, as he had been by the geological descriptions of Mr. Miller. Tli it wonderful man described these objects with a facility which made him ashamed of the com- parative meajrrei'ess and poverty of his own descriptions in the " Bridgewater Treatise," which had cost him hours and days of labor. He would give his left han'l to possess such potters of description as tliix man : and if it pleased Providence to spare his useful life, he, if any one, would certainly ren- der science attractive and popular, and do equal service to theology and geology. Mr. Miller's style is remarkably pleasing; his mode of popularizing geological knowledge unsur* passed, perhaps unequalled: and the deep reverence for divine revelation pervading all adds inter, cst and value to the volume. A'. I'. Com. Advertiser. The publishers have again covered themselves with honor, by giving to the American public, with Hi-! author's permission, an elegant reprint of a foreign work of science. We earnestly hespeak foi, this work a wide and free circulation among all who love science much and religion more. Puri-, tun Uecorder. THE OLD RED SANDSTONE; or. New Walks in an Old Field. B> HUGH MILLER. Illustrated with Plates and Geological Sections. 12mo, cloth, 1,00. Mr. Miller's exeeedindv interesttns book on this formation is just the sort of work to render aiy subject popular. It is written in a remarkably pleasing style, and contains a wonderful amount of information Westminster Kei-imc. It is, withal, one of the most beautiful specimens of English composition to be found, cor.ve.ving Information on a most difficult and profound science, in a style at once novel, pleasing, and e'.crant. It contains the results of twenty years' close observation and experiment, resulting in an accumulation of facts wh ; ch not only dissipate some dark and knotty old theories with regard to ancient formations but establish the great truths of geology in more perfect and harmonious consistency with the grent truths of revelation. Albany Sjjectater. A. VALUABLE SCIENTIFIC WORKS. A TREATISE ON THE COMPARATIVE ANATOMY OF THE Animal Kingdom. By Profs. C. TH. VON SIEBOLD and H. STANNIUS. Translated from the German, with Notes, Additions, &c., Dy WALDO J. BURNETT, M. U., Boston. Oiie volume octavo, cloth. 3,00. This is unquestionably the best and most complete work of its class yet published ; nnd its appear- ance in an English dress, with the corrections, improvements, additions, etc., of the American Editor, will no doubt be welcomed by the men of science in this country and in Europe, from whence or- ders for supplies of the work have been received. THE POETRY OF SCIENCE ; or. the Physical Phenomena of Nature. By ROBERT HUNT, Author of" Panthea,"" Researches of Light, " &c. 12nio, cloth, 1,25. \Ye are heartily glad to see this interesting work republishcd in America. It is a book that it * book. Scientific American. It is one of the most readable, interesting, and instructive works of the kind that we have ever seen. PhiL Christian Observer. THE NATURAL HISTORY OF THE SPECIES : its Typical Forms and Primeval Distribution. By CHARLES HAMILTON SMITH. With an Introduction, containing an Abstract of the Views of Blumenbach, Prichard, Bnchman, Agassiz, and other writers of repute. By SAMUEL KNEELAND, JR., M. D. With elegant lllustra^ tions. 12mo, cloth, 1,25. The history of the species is thoroughly considered by Colonel Smith, with regard to its origin, typical forms, distribution, filiations, &c. The marks of practical good sense, careful observation, and ilcep research are displayed in every page. An introductory essay of some seventy or eighty pages form? a valuable addition to the work. It comprises an abstract of the opinions advocated by the mo't eminent writers on the subject The statements are made with strict impartiality, and, without a comment, left to the judgment of the reader. Sartain's Magazine. This work exhibits great research, as well as an evident taste and talent, on the part of the author, f".r the study of the history of man, upon zoological principles. It is a book of learning, nnd full of interest, and may be regarded as among the comparatively few real contributions to science, (hat serve to redeem, in, some measure, the mass of useless stuff under which the press groans. Chris. Witness. This book is characterized by more curious and interesting research than any one that has recently come under our examination. Albany Journal and Register. It contains a learned and thorough treatment of an important subject, always interesting, and of late attracting more than usual attention. Ch. Register. The volume before us is one of the best of the publishers' scries of publications, replete with rar* and valuable information, presented in a style at once clear and entertaining, illustrated in the most copious manner with plates of all the various forms of the human race, tracing with tlie most minute precision analogies and resemblances, and hence origin. The more it is read, the more widely opens tliis field of research before the mind, again and asain to be returned to, with fresh zest and satisfac- ' Won. It is the result of the researches, collections, and labors of a long and valuable lifetime, present- ed in the most popular form imaginable. Albany Spectator. LAKE SUPERIOR: its Physical Character, Vegetation, and Animals, compared with those of other and similar resions. By L. AGASSIZ, and Contributions from other eminent Scientific Gentlemen. With a Narrative of the Expedition, and Illustrations. By J. E. CABOT. One volume, octavo, elegantly illustrated. Clt.th, 3,50. The illustrations, seventeen in number, are in the finest style of the art. by Snnrel: embracing lake and landscape scenery, fishes, and other objects of natural history, with an outline map of Lake Superior. This work is one of the most valuable scientific works that has appeared in this country. Embody- ing the researches of our best scientific men relating to a hitherto comparatively unknowp region, it will be found to contain a great amount of scientific information. H GUYOT'S WORKS. THE EARTH AND MAN: Lectures on COMPARATIVE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY, in its relation to the Flistory of Mankind. By Prof. ARNOLD GUYOT. Translated from the French, by Prof. C C. FELTON, with numerous Illustrations. Eighth thousand. 12ino, cloth, 1,25. From Prof Loms Agnssiz, of Harvard University. It wil! not only render the study of Geography more attractive, !jut actually snow it in its true light, namely, as the science of the relations which exist between nature and mm throughout history ; of the contrasts observed between the different parts of the globe; of the laws of horizontal and vertical forms of the dry land, in its contact with the sea; of climate, &c. It would be highly serviceable. It eeius to me. for the benefit of schools and teachers, that you should induce Mr. Guyot to write a se- ries of graduated text books oi geography, from the first elements up to a scientific treatise. It would give new life to these studies in Uus country, aud be the best preparation for sound statistical investi- gations. From George S. Flillard. Esq., of Boston. Professor Gcyot's Lectures are marked by learning, ability, and taste. His bold and comprehen- sive generalizations rest upon a careful foundation of facts. The essential value of his statements a enhanced by his luminous arrangement, and by a vein of philosophical reflection which gives life and dignity to dry details. To teachers of youth it will be especially important. They may learn from it how to make Geography, which I recall as the least interesting of studies, one of the most attractive ; aud I earnestly commend it to their careful consideration. Those who have been accustomed to regard Geography as a merely descriptive branch of learn- ing, drier than the remainder biscuit after a voyage, will be delighted to find this hitherto unattractive pursuit converted into a science, the principles of which, are definite and the results conclusive. Sorth American Jtevtew. The grand idea of the work is happily expressed by the nut ior, where he calls it the geoyraphical march of history. Faith, science, learning, poetry, taste, in a word, genius, have liberally contributed to the production of the work under review Sometimes we feel as if we were studying a treatise on the exact sciences : at others, it strikes the ear like an epic poem. Now it reads like history, and now it sounds like prophecy. It will find readers in whatever language it may be published. Cltrututn xuminer. Tho work is one of high merit, exhibiting a wide range of knowledge, great research, and a philo- sophical spirit of investigation. Its perusal will well repay the most learned in such subjects, and five new views to all of man's relation to the globe he inhabits. Sillunau'a Journal. COMPARATIVE PHYSICAL AND HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY; or. the Study of the Eartli and its Inhabitants. A series of graduated courses for the use of Schools. By ARNOLD GUYOT, author of " Earth and Man," etc. The series hereby announced will consist of three courses, adapted to the cnpncity of three different ages and periods of study. The first is intended for primary schools and for children of from seven to ten years. The second is adapted for higher schools, and for young persons of from ten to fifteen. year-. The third is to be used as a scientific manual in Academies and Colleges. Each course will be divided into two parts, one on purely Physical Geography, the other for Eth- nograpliy. Statistics, Political and Historical Geography. Each part will be illustrated by a colored Physical and Political Atlas, prepared expressly for this purpose, delineating, with the greatest care, the configuration of the surface, and the other physical phenomena alluded to in the corresponding work, the distribution of the races of men, and the political divisions into states, c., &c. The two parts of the first or preparatory course are now in a forward state of preparation, and witt be issued at an early day. GUYOT'S MURAL MAPS : a Series of elegant Colored Maps, projected on a large scale, fur the Recitation Room, consisting of a Map of the World, North and South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, &x., exhibiting the Physical Phenomena of the Globe, etc. By Prof. ARNOLD GUYOT. Price, mounted, 10,00 each. MAP OF THE WORLD,- Now ready. MAP OF NORTH AMERICA, -Now ready. MAP OF SOUTH AMERICA, Nearly ready. MAP OF GEOGRAPHICAL ELEMENTS, -Now ready. {f*f- Other Maps of the Series art in preparation. O VALUABLE SCIENTIFIC WORKS. PRINCIPLES OF ZOOLOGY: touching the Structure, Development, Distribution, and Natural Arrangement of the Races of Annuals, living and extinct. With numerous Illustrations. For the Use of Schools and Colleges. Part I., COMPARA- TIVE PHI-SIOLOGV. By Louis AGASSIZ and AUGUSTUS A. GOULD. Revised Edition. 12mo, cloth, 1,00. This work places us in possession of information half n. century in advance of all our elementary works on this subject. . . No work of the same dimensions hns ever apptvired in the English lan- -guage containing so much new aud valuable information on the subject of which it treats. - PUOF. JAUES HALL. A work emanating from so high a source hardly requires commendation to give it currency. The Tolumu is prepared for the student in zoological science; it is simple and elementary in its style, full in its illustrations, comprehensive in its range, yet well condensed, and brought into the narrow com- pass requisite for the purpose intended. Sillunau's Journal. The work may safely be recommended as the best book of the kind in our language. Christian Examiner. It a not a mere book, hut a work - a real work, in the fhrm of a book. Zoology is an interesting science, and is here treated with a masterly hand. The history, anatomical structure, the nature and habits of numberless animals, are described in clear and plum language, and illustrated with innumer- able engravings. It is a work adapted to colleges and schools, and no young man should bu without it Scientific American. PRINCIPLES OF ZOOLOGY, PART II. Systematic Zoolopy, in which the Principles of Classification are applied, and the principal Groups of Animals are 1, nelly characterized. With numerous Illustrations. 12mo, in preparation. THE ELEMENTS OF GEOLOGY; adapted to Schools and Colleges, will) numerous Illustrations. ByJ R. LoOMIS, late Professor of Chemistry and Geology in Waterville College. 12mo, cloth, 75. After a thorough examination of the work, we feel convinced that in all the requirements of a text book of natural science, it is surpassed by no work before the American public. In this opinion we believe the great body of experienced teachers will concur. The work will be found equally well adapted to the wants of those who have given littla or no attention to the science in early life, und are desirous to become acquainted with its terms and principles, with the least consumption of time and labor. We hope that every teacher among our readers will examine the work and put the justness of our remarks to the test of his judgment and experience. - M. B. AJSUEJJSON, I'rcs. qf Hockeiter University, This is just such a work ns is needed for our schools. It contains a systematic statement of the principles of Geolosry, without entering into the minuteness of detail, which, though interesting to the mature student, confuses the learner. It very wisely, also, avoids those controverted points which mingle geology with questions of biblical criticism. We see no reason why it should not take iti place as a text book in all the schools in the land. N. Y. Oaseit-er. This volume merits the attention of teachers, who. if we mistake not, will find it better adapted to Bifir purpose than any other similar work of which we have knowledge. It embodies a statement c! the principles of Geology sufficiently full for the ordinary purposes of instruction, with the leading 1 facts from which they are deduced. It embraces the latest results of the science, and indicates the debatable points of theoretical geology. The plan of the work is dmple and clear, and the style in which it is written is both compact and lucid. We have special pleasure in welcoming its appearance. Watchman and Reflector. This volume seems to be just the book now required on ecology. It will acquire rapidly a circula- tion, and will do much to popularize and universally diffuse a knowledge of geological truths. Al- bany Journal. II gives a clear and scientific, yet simple, analysis of the main features of the science. It seems, in language and illustration, admirably adapted for use as a text book in common schools and academics) while it is vastly better than any thing which was used in college in our time. In all these capacitie* We particularly and cordially recommend it. Conpregationaiist, Boston. D CHAMBERS'S WORKS. CHAMBERS'S CYCLOPEDIA OF ENGLISH LITERATURE. A Selection of the choicest productions of English Authors, from the earliest to the present time. Connected by a Critical and Biographical History. Forming two large imperial octavo volumes of 141)0 pages, double column letter-press ; with upwards of 300 elegant Illustrations. Edited by ROBERT CHAMBERS, embossed cloth, 5,00. This work embraces about one thousand authors, chronologically arranged and classed as Poets, Historians, Dramatist*, Puilosophcrs, Metaphysicians, Divines, etc., with choice selections from their writings, connected by a Biographical, Historical, and Critical Narrative ; thus presenting a complete view of English literature from the earliest to the present time. .Let the reader open where he will, 'he cannot tail to find matter for profit and delight. The selections are gems infinite riches in a little room: in the language of another, "A WHOLE ENGLISH LIBRARY FUSED cows INTO OSB CHEAP IJOOK. " FKOJI W. LL PKESCOTT. AUTHOR OF " FERDINAND AND ISABELLA." The plan of the work is Tory judicious. It will put the reader in a proper point of view for surveying the whole ground over which he is travelling. . . . Such readers cannot fail to profit largely by the labors of the critic who has the talent and taste to separate what is really beautiful and worthy of their study from what is superfluous. I concur in the foregoing opinion of Mr. Prescott. EDWARD EVERETT. A popular work, indispensable to the library of a student of English literature. DR. WATLAND. We hail with peculiar pleasure the appearance of this work. Xorth American Review. It has been fitly described as ' a whole English library fused clown into one cheap book." The Bos- ton edition combines neatness with cheapness, engraved portraits being given, over and above the il- lustrations of the English copy. - iV. }'. Commercial Advertiser. Welcome more than welcome It was our good fortune some months ago to obtain a glance at this work and we have ever since looked with earnestness for its appearance in an American edition. Jf. Y. Recorder. t3- The American edition of this valuable work is enriched by the addition of fine steel and mezzo- tint engravings of the heads of SIIAKSI-EARE, ADDISON, BYROX ; a full length portrait of DR. JOHN- SON, and a beautiful scenic representation of OLIVER GOLDSMITH and DR. JOHNSON. These im- po.-tant and elegant additions, together with superior paper and binding, render the American far su- perior to the English edition. The circulation of this most valuable and popular work has been truly enormous, and its sale in this country still continues unabated. CHAMBERS'S MISCELLANY OF USEFUL AND ENTERTAIN- ING KNOWLEDGE. Edited by WILLIAM CHAMBERS. With Elegant Illustrative Engravings. Ten volumes, ICmo, cloth., 7,50 ; cloth, gilt back, 10.00. This work has been highly recommended by distinguished individuals, as admirably adapted to Family, Sabbath, and District School Libraries. It would be difficult to find nny miscellany superior or even equal to it : it richly deserves the epi- th"t3 " useful and entertaining," and I would recommend it very strongly as extremely well adapted to Conn parts of a library for the young, or of a social or circulating library in town or country. GEORGE B. EMERSON, ESQ., CHAIRMAN BOSTON SCHOOL BOOK COMMITTEE. I am gratified to have an opportunity to be instrumental in circulating " Chambers's Miscellany" among the schools for which I am superintendent. J. J. CI.UTE, Town. Sup. ofCastteton, jV. Y. I am fully satisfied that it is one of the best scries in our common school libraries now in circula- tion. - S. T. HAXCE, Town Sup. of Macedon, Wayne Co., Jf. Y. The trustees have examined the " Miscellany," and are well pleased with it I have engaged tho books to every district that has library money. MILES CHAFFEE, Town Sup. of Concord. jV. I'. I am not acquainted with any similar collection in the English language that can compare with it for purposes of instruction or amusement. I should rejoice to see that set of books in every house in ur country. REV. Jons O. CHOULES D. D. The information contained in this work is surprisingly great; and for the fireside, and the young, particularly, it cannot fail to prove a most valuable and entertaining companion. 3 T . I". Evangelist. It is an admirable compilation distinguished by the good taste which has been shown in all the pub-> lications of tli Messrs. Chambers. It unites the useful and entertaining. ^V. I". Com. Adv. E CHAMBERS'S WORKS. CIIAMBERS'S HOME BOOK AND POCKET MISCELLANY. Con- taining a Choice Selection of Interesting and Instructive Reading for the Old and the Young. Six vols. ]6nio, cloth, 3,00. This work is considered fully equal, if not superior, to cither of the Charabers's other -works in In- terest, and like them, contains a vast fund of valuable information. Following somewhat the plan of the " .Miscellany, ' it is admirably adapted to tlie school or the family library, furnishing ample va- riety tor every class of readers, both old and young. We do not know how it is possible to publish so much good reading matter at such a low price. \Ve speak a good word for the literary excellence of the stories in this work ; we hope our people will introduce it into all their families in order to drive away the miserable flashy-trashy stuff so ofteu found in the hands of our young people of both sexes. Scientific American. Both an entertaining and instructive work, as it is certainly a very cheap one. - - Puritan Recorder. It cannot but have an extensive circulation. Albany Express. Excellent stories from one of the best sources in the world. Of all the series of cheap books, this promises to be the best Eangor Jlcrcury. If any person wishes to read for amusement or profit, to kill time or improve it, get " Chambers'! Home Book." - Cliicayo Times. The Chambers nre confessedly the best caterers for popular and useful reading in the world. Willis's Home Journal. A very entertaining, instructive, and popular work. .V. 1". Commercial. The articles are of that attractive sort which suits us in moods of indolence, when we would linger half way between wakef'ulness and sleep. Tlicy require just thought and activity enough to keep our feet from the land of Nod, witnout forcing us to run, walk, or even stand. Eclectic, Portland. The reading contained in these books is of a miscellaneous character, calculated to have the very best effect upon the minds of young readers. While the contents are very far from being puerile, they arc not too heavy, but most admirably calculated for the object intended. Evening Gazette. Coming from the source they do, we need not say that the articles are of the highest literary excel* lence. We predict for the work a large sale and a host of admirers. East Boston Ledger. It is j ust the thing to amuse a leisure hour, and at the same time combines instruction with amuse- ment. Dover Inquirer. Messrs. Chambers, of Edinburgh, have become famous wherever the English language spoken and read, for their interesting and instructive publications. We have never yet met with any thing which bore the sanction of their names, whose moral tendency was in the least degree questionable. They combine instruction with amusement, and throughout they breathe a spirit of the purest moral- ity. C'hicaao Tribune. CHAMBERS'S REPOSITORY OF INSTRUCTIVE AND AMUSING PAPERS. With Illustrations. An entirely New Series, and containing Original Arti- cles. ICmo, cloth, per vol. 53 cents. The Messrs. Chambers have recently commenced the publication of this work, under the title of "CiiAMBKiis's REPOSITOKY OF INSTRUCTIVE AND AMUSING TRACTS," in the form of penny weekly sheets, similar in style, literary character, ic., to the " Miscellany," which has maintained an enormous circulation of more than eighty thousand copies in England, and has already reached nearly the same sale in this country. Arrangements have been made by the American publishers, by which they will issue the work simultaneously with the English edition, in two monthly, handsomely bound. IGmo. volumes, of 1100 pages each, to continue until the whole series is completed. Each volume complete in itself, and will be sold in sets or single volumes. t&- Commendatory Letters Reviews, Notices, &c.. of each of Chambers's works, sufficient to make * good sized duodecimo volume, have been received by the publishers, but room here will only allow giving a specimen of the vast multitude at hand. They are all popular, and contain valuable instruc- tive and entertaining reading such as should be found in every family, school, and college library. P I M P O RT AN T WORK. KITTO'S POPULAR CYCLOPAEDIA OF BIBLICAL LITERA. TUUE. Condensed Irom the larger work, fy the Author, JOHN KlTTO,D. D., Author ot'" I'icturial Bible,'- " History ot' Palestine," "Scripture Daily Heading.--,'' &c. Assisted by JAM c s TAYLOR, D. D., of Glasgow. With ocerjlce hundred Illustrations. One vol- ume octavo, 81-2 pp., cloth, 3,OJ. THE POITLAE BIBLICAL CVCLOP.EDIA OF LITERATURE la designed to furnish a DICTIOXAKT OF Tim BIBLE, embodying the products of the bcstand most recent researches in biblical literature, in which the scholars of Europe and America have been engaged. The work, the result of immense ulior and research, and enriched by the contributions of writers of distinguished eminence in the va- rious departments of sacred literature, has been, by universal consent, pronounced the best work of ; xtant, and the one best suited to the advanced knowledge of the present day in all the studies connected with theological scicm-e. It is not only intended for ministers and theological ftiulents, but i s also particularly adapted to iiarcnts, SablAsth school teachers. an RECORDS ; the Mosaic and the Geological. A Lecture delivered beforfi the Young Men's Christian Association, in Exeter Hall, London By HUGH MILLER. 16mo, cloth. 25 cents. (S~ No work by Hugh Miller needs commeniation to insure purchasers. NOAH AND IHS TIMES; embracing the consideration of various inquiries relative to the Ante-diluvian and earlier Post-diluvian Periods, with Discus- sl"ns of several of the leading questions of the present time. By Rev. J MUNSON OLMSTEAD, A. M. 12ino, cloth. $1.25. 4tg" This is not only a popular, but a very valuable, work for all Bible students. A PARISIAN PASTOR'S GLANCE AT AMERICA. By T. H. GRAND PIERRE, D. D., Pastor of the Reformed Church, and Director of the Mission- ary Institution in Paris. IGino, cloth. 50 cts. The author of this volume is one of the most emlnnt ministers now living of the Reforme Church of France. He is distinguished as a preacher and a writer ; as a man of large and lib eral views, of earnest piety, of untiring industry, and of commanding Influence, ills state mer.tf are characterised by great correctness as well as great candor. Puritan Recorder. THE CAMEL : His Organization, Habits and Uses, considered -with refer- ence to his Introduction into the United States. By GEORGE P. MARSH, late U. S. Minister at Constantinople. 12mo, cloth. 75 cts. This 1'ook treats of a subject of great interest, especially nt the present time. It furnishes a more complete and reliable account of the Camel than any other in the language ; indeed, it is believed that there is no other. It is the result of long study, extensive research, and much personal observa- tion on the part of the author ; and it has been prepared with specie! reference to the experiment of domesticating the Camel in this country, now going on under the auspices of the United States gov- ernment. It is written ill a style worthy of tlie distinguished author's reputation for great learning ail J Cue scholarship. (J) VALUABLE WORKS. THE HALLIG; OR, THE SHEEPFOLD ix THE WATERS. A Tale of Humble Life on the Coast of Schleswig. Translated from the German of Biernatz- ski, by Mrs. GEORGE P. MARSH. "\Vitha Biographical Sketch of the Author. 12mo, cloth. $1.00. The author of this work was the grandson of an exiled Polish nobleman. His own portrait is understood to be drawn in one cf the characters of the Tale, and indeed the whole work has a sub- stantial foundation in fact. In Germany it has passed through several editions, and is there regard- ed as the chef-d'oeuvre of the author. As a revelation of an entire new phase of human society, it will strongly remind the reader of Miss Bremer's tales. In originality and brilliancy of imagination, it is not inferior to those; its aim is far higher. The elegance of Mrs. Marsh's translation will at once arrest the attention of every competent judge. HON. ROBERT C. WINTHROF. "I have read it with deep interest. Mrs. Marsh has given us an admirable versio.1 of a most striking and powerful work." FEOM PROF. iT. D. HUNTING-TON, D. D.. IN THE RELIGIOUS MAGAZINE. "Wherever the work goes it fascinates the cultivated and the illiterate, the young and the old, the devout and the careless. Our own copy u in brisk circulation. The vivid and eloquent description of the strange scenery, the thrilling accounts of the mysterious action of the waters and vapors of the Schleswig coast, &c., all form a story of uncommon attractions and unmingled excellence." DR. SPRAGUS IN ALBANY SPECTATOR. "A rare and beautiful work. It is an interesting contribution to the physical geography of a part of Europe lying quite beyond the reach of ordi- nary observation, and as a genial and faithful sketch of human life under conditions which are hardly paralleled elsewhere." The tale is a novel one, containing thrilling scenes, as well as religious teachings. PRESBYTERIAN. A beautiful and exquisite natural tele. In novelty of life and customs, as well as in nicely drawn shades of local and personal character the Hallig, is equalled by very few works of fiction. BOSTON ATLAS. The story, which is deeply thrilling, is exclusively religious. CH. SECRETARY. Here we have another such book as makes the reading of it a luxury, even in hot summer weather. It takes us to an island home, in the chill regions of the North Sea, and introduces us to pastoral scenes as lively and as edifying as those of Oberlin, in the Ban de la Roche. SOUTHERN BAP. THE CAMEL : His Organization, Habits and Uses, considered with refer ence to his Introduction into the United States. BY GEORGE P. MARSH, late U S. Minister at Constantinople. 16mo, cloth. 75 cents. This book treats of a subject of great interest, especially at the present time. It furnishes the only complete and reliable account of the Camel in the language. It is the result of extensive research and personal observation, and it has been prepared with special reference to the experiment now being made by our Government, of domesticating the Camel in this country. A repository of interesting information respecting the Camel. The author collected the principal tointerials for his work during his residence and travels for some years in the East. He describes the species, size, color, temper, longevity, useful products, diet, powers, training and speed of the Camel, and treats of his introduction into the United States. PHIL. CHRISTIAN OBSERVER. This is a most interesting book, on several accounts. The subject is full of romance and informa- tion ; the treatment is able and thorough. TEXAS Cll. ADVOCATE. Our Government have taken measures for introducing the Camel into this country, and an appro- priation of $30,000 has been made by Congress. It becomes a matter of practical importance, there- fore, to obtain the fullest and most reliable information possible respecting the animal and his adapta- tion to this country. His advent among us will stimulate general curiosity, and raise a thousand questions respecting his character and habits of life, his powers of endurance, his food, his speed, his length of life, his fecundity, the methods of managing and using him, the cost of keeping him, the value of his carcass after death, &c. This work furnishes, in a small compass, all the desired Information. BOSTON ATLAS. A complete sketch of the habits and nature of the Camel is given, which has great interest. The Vaiue of tho camel as a beast of burden is abundantly confirmed. N. Y. EVANGELIST, (a) THESAURUS OF ENGLISH WORDS AND PHRASES. So Classified and Arranged as to Facilitate the Expression of Ideas, and Assist in Literary Composition. By PETER MARK ROGET, late Secretary of the Royal Society, and author of the " Bridge water Treatise," etc. Revised and En- larged; with a LIST OF FOREIGN WORDS AND EXPRESSIONS most frequently occurring in works of general Literature, Defined in English, by BARNAS SEAHS, D. D., Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education, assisted by several Literary Gentlemen. 12mo., cloth. $1.50. work of great merit, admirably adapted as a text-book for schools and colleges, and cf high importance to every American scholar. Among the numerous commendations re- ceived from the press, in all directions, the publishers would call attention to the following : We are glad to see the Thesaurus of English Words republished in this country. It is a most valuable work, giving the results of many years' labor, in an attempt to classify and arrange the words of the English tongue, so as to facilitate the practice of composition. The purpose of an ordinary dictionary is to explain the meaning of words, while the object of this Thesaurus is to collate all the words by which any given idea may be expressed. Putnam's Monthly. This volume offers the student of English composition the results of great labor in the form of a rich and copious vocabulary. We would commend the work to those who have charge of academies and high schools, and to all students. Christian Observer. This is a novel publication, and is the first and only one of the kind ever issued in which words and phrases of our language are classified, not according to the sound of their orthog- raphy, but strictly according to their signification. It will become an invaluable aid in the communication of our thoughts, whether spoken or written, and hence, as a means of improve- ment, we can recommend it as a work of rare and excellent qualities. Scientific American. A work of great utility. It will give a writer the word he wants, when that word is on the tip of his tongue, but altogether beyond his reach. N. Y. Times. It i.i more complete than the English work, which has attained a just celebrity. It is intended. to supply, with respect to the English language, a desideratum hitherto unsupplied in any language, namely, a collection of the words it contains, and of the idiomatic combinations peculiar to it : arranged, not in alphabetical order, as they are in a dictionary, but according to the ideas which they express. The purpose of a dictionary is simply to explain the meaning of words the word being given, to fiud its signification, or the idea it is intended to convey. The object aimed at here is exactly the converse of this : the idea being given, to find the word or words by which that idea may be mostly fitly and aptly expressed. For this purpose, the words and phrases of the language are here classed, not according to their sound or their orthography, but strictly according to their signification. New York Evening Mirror. An invaluable companion to persons engaged in literary labors. To persons who are not familiar with foreign tongues, the catalogue of foreign words and phrases most current in ' modern literature, which the American editor has appended, will be very useful. Presbyterian. It casts the whole English language into groups of words and terms, arranged in such a manner that the student of English composition, when embarrassed by the poverty of his vocabulary, may supply himself immediately, on consulting it, with the precise term for which he has occasion. New York Evening Post. This is a work not merely of extraordinary, but of peculiar value. We would gladly praise it, if any thing could add to the consideration held out by the title page. No one who speaks or writes for the public need be urged to study Roget's Thesaurus. Star of the West. Every writer and speaker ought to possess himself at once of this manual. It is far from being a mere dull, dead string of synonymes, but it is enlivened and vivified by the classifying and crystallizing power of genuine philosophy. We have put it on our table as a permanent fixture, as near our left hand as the Bible is to our right. Cungregationalist. This book is one of the most valuable we ever examined. It supplies a -want long acknowl- edged by tha best writers, and supplies it completely. Portland Advertiser. One of the most efficient aids to composition that research, industry, and scholarship have ever produced. Its object is to supply the writer or speaker with the most felicitous terms for expressing an idea that may be vaguely floating on his mind ; and, indeed, through the peculiar manner of arrangement, ideas themselves may be expanded or modified by reference to Mr. Roget's elucidations . Albion, N. T. (6) WORKS JUST ISSUED. VISITS TO EUROPEAN CELEBRITIES. By WILLIAM B. SPEAGPE, D D 12uio. C,jth. $1.00. Second Edition. THE first edition of this work was exhausted within a short time after its publica- tion. It consists of a series of Personal Sketches, drawn from life, of many of the most distinguished men and women of Europe, with whom the author became acquainted in the course of several European tours: Edward Irving, Rowland Hill, Wilburforce, Jay, Robert Hall, John Foster, Hannah More, Guizot, Louis 1'hilippe, SLsmondi, Tholuck, (jesenius,Neander, Humboldt, Encke, Rogers, Campbell, Joanna Baillie, John Pye Smitn, Amelia Opie, Dr. Pusey, Mrs. Sherwood, Maria Kdgeworth, John Gait, L)r Wardlaw, Dr. Chalmers, Sir David Brewster, Lord Jeifrey, Professor Wilson, (Kit North,) Southey, and others, are here portrayed as the author saw them in their own homes, and under the most advantageous circumstances. Accompany- ing the Sketches are the AUTOGRAPHS of each of the personages described Ihia unique feature of the work adds in no small degree to its attractions. For the social circle, for the traveller by railroad and steamboat, for all who desire to be refreshed and not woared by reading, the book will prove to be a most agreeable companion. The public press of all shades of opinion, North and South, have given it a most flat- tering reception. THE STORY OF THE CAMPAIGN. A Complete Narrative of the War in Southern Russia. Written in a Tent in the Crimea. By Major E. BKUCE HAM LEY, Author of "Lady Lee's Widowhood." 12mo. Thick. Printed Paper Covers. 37J Cents. Contents. The Rendezvous The Movement to the Crimea First Operations in tae Crimea Battle of the Alma The Battle-field The Katcha and the Balbek The Flank March Occupation of Balaklava The Position before Sebastopol Commencement of the Siege Attack on Balaklava First Action of Inkermann Battle of Inkermann Winter on the Plaius Circumspective The Hospitals on the Bosphorus Exculpatory Progress of the Siege The Burial Truce View of the Works THIS was first published in Elackwood^s Magazine, in which form it has attracted general attention. It is the only connected and continuous narrative of the War in Europe that has yet appeared. The author is an officer of rank in the British army, and has borne an active part in the campaign ; he has also won a brilliant reputation as the author of the fascinating story of " Lady Lee's Widowhood." By his profes- sion of arms, by his actual participation in the conflict, and by his literary abilities, he is qualified in a rare degree, for the task he has undertaken. The expectations thus raised will not be disappointed. To those who have been dependent on the Drief, fragmentary, interrupted, and irresponsible newspaper notices of the war, this book will furnish a full, complete, graphic, and perfectly reliable account from the beginning. Should the author's life be spared, his history of future operatious will follow, and will be issued by the publishers uniform with the present volume. ROGET'S THESAURUS OF ENGLISH WORDS. A New and Improved Edition. 12mo. Cloth. $1.50. THIS edition is based on the last London edition (just issued.) The first Ameiicau edition having been prepared by Dr. Sears, for strictly educational pur poses, those words and phrases, properly termed " vulgar," incorporated into th original work, were omitted. Regret having been expressed by critics and scholars, whose opinions are entitled to respect, at this omission, in the present new edition the expurgated portions have been restored, but by such an arrangement of matter as not to interfere with the educational purpose of the American editor Besides this, there will be important additions of words and phrases n:t in the Er.g llsh edition, making this, therefore, in all respects, more full and perfect than th Buthor's edition. '*) THE PLURALITY OP WORLDS. WITH AN INTRODUCTION by EDWARD HITCHCOCK, LL.D., President of Auiherst College. 12ino, cloth. $1.00. JK3~ This is a masterly production on a subject of great interest. The " Plurality of Worlds" is a work of great ability, and one that cannot fail to arrest the attention of the world of science. Its author takes the bold ground of contesting the generally adopted belief of the existence of other peopled worlds beside our own earth. A gentleman upon whose Judgment we place much reliance writes, in regard to Jt : " 'The Plurality of Worlds' plays t!te mischief with the grand speculation of Christian and othf-r astronomers. It is the most remorseless executioner of beautiful theories 1 have ever stumbled upon, and leaves the grand universe of existence barren as a vast Sahara. The author Is a stern logician, and some of the processes of argumentation are singularly fine. Many of the thoughts are original and very striking, and the whole conception of the volume is as novel as the results are unwelcome. I should think the work must attract attention from scientific men, from the very bold and well-sustained attempt to set aside entirely the scientific assump- tions of the age." Boston Atlas. This work has created a profound sensation in England. It is. in truth, a remarkable book, remarkable both fur the boldness of the theory advanced, and for the logical manner in which, the subject-matter is treated. Mercantile Journal. The new scientific book, Plurality of Worlds, recently published in this city, is awakening an unusual degree of interest in the literary and scientilic world, not only in tMs country, but in England. The London Literary Gazette, for April, contains an able review, occupying over nine columns, from which we make the following extract : " We venture vo say that no scien- tiUc man of any reputation will maintain the theory, without mixing up theological with phys- ical arguments. And it is in regard to the theological and moral aspect of the question, that we think the author urges considerations which most believers in the truths of Christianity will deem unanswerable." Evening Transcript. The " Plurality of Worlds " has created as great a sensation IP the reading world, as did the Vestiges of Creation. But this time the religious world is not ur in arms with anathemas on its lips. This is a book for it to " lick its ear " over. It is aimeii at the speculations of Fonte- nelle, or Dr. Chalmers, respecting the existence of life and spirit in the worlds that roll around us, and demonstrating the impossibility of such a thing. London Cor. of N. Y. Tribune. To the theologian, philosopher, and man of science, this is a most intensely interesting work, while to the ordinary thinker it will be found possessed of much valuable information. The wor* is evidently the production of a scholar, and of one earnest for the dissemination of truth in regard to what he considers, for theologians and scientific men, the greatest question of tho age. AlJany Transcript. The work is learned, eloquent, suggestive of profound reflection, solacing to human pride, and even to Christian humility , and points out the great lesson it illustrates, upon the diarram of the heavens, in language and tone elevated to the standard of the great theme. Huston Atlas. One of the most extraordinary books of the age. It is an attempt to show that the facts of science do not warrant the conclusion to which most scientilic minds so readily assent, that the planets are inhabited. The anonymous author is a genius, and will set hundreds of critics on the hunt to ferret him out ! Star of (lie West. GEOLOGICAL MAP OF THE UNITED STATES AND BRITISH PROV- INCES OF NORTH AMERICA. With an Explanatory Text, Geological Sections, and Plates of the Fossils which characterize the Formations. By JULES MARCOU. Two volumes. Octavo, cloth. $3.00. he Map is elegantly colored, and done up with linen cloth back, and folded in octavo form, with thick cluth covers. The most complete Geological Map of the United States which has yet appeared. The exe- cution of this Map is very neat and tasteful, and it Is issued in the best style. It is a work which all who take an interest in the geology of the United States would wish to possess, and we recommend it as extremely valuable, not only in a geological point of view, but as repre- senting very fully the coal and copper regions of the country. The explanatory text presents a rapid sketch of tne geological constilations of North America, and is rich in facts on the sub- lets. It is embellished with a number of beautiful plates of the fossils which characterize th formations, thus making, with the Map, a very complete, clear, and distinct outline c/ the geology efeur eountry, Mining Magazine, JV. T. -*\ AMOS LAWRENCE. DIARY AND CORRESPONDENCE OF THE LATE AMOS LAW- rence's Uaud-writiug, and a copious Index. Octavo edition, cloth, $1.50. Koyal duodecimo edition, $1.00. This work was first published in an elegant octavo volume, and sold at the unusu- ally low price of ij?1.50. At the solicitation of numerous benevolent individuals who were desirous of circulating the work so remarkably adapted to do good, especially to young men gratuitously, and of giving those of moderate means, ol every class, an opportunity of possessing it, the royal duodecimo, or ' cheap edition," was issued, varying from the other edition, only in a reduction in the size (allowing less margin), and the thickness of the paper. Within six months alter the first publication of this work, twenty-two thousand copies had been sold. This extraordinary sale is to be accounted for by the character of the man and the merits of the book. It is the memoir of a Boston merchant, who became distinguished for his great wealth, but more distinguished for the manner in which he used it. It is the memoir of a man, who, commencing business with only $20, gave away in public and private charities, during his lifetime more, probably, than any other person in America. It is substantially an autobiography, containing a full account of Mr. Lawrence's career as a merchant, of his various multiplied chari- ties, and of his domestic lite. " We have by us another we rk, the ' Life of Amos Lawrence." We heard it once said in the pulpit, ' There is no work of art like a noble life,' and for that reason he who has achieved one, takes rank with the great artists and becomes the world's property. WE AUE 1'ROL'D OF THIS BOOK. WE ARB WII.I.INO TO LET IT GO FOUTII TO OTI1EK LANDS AS A SPECIMEN OF WHAT AjtKRICA CAN PRODUCE. In the old world, reviewers have called Barnum TIIK characteristic American man. We are willing enough to admit- that he is A characteristic American man ; he is ONE fruit of our soil, but Amos Lawrence is another. Let our country have credit for him also. THE GOOD EFFECT WHICH THIS LIFE MAY HAVE IN DETERMINING THE COURSE OF YOUNG MEN 10 HONOR AND VIRTUE I , INCALCULABLE." illiS. SlOWE, IN N. Y. INDEPENDENT. " We are glad to know that our large business houses are purchasing copies of this work for each, of their numerous clerks. Its influence on young men cannot be otherwise than highly salutary. As a business man, Mr. Lawrence was a pattern for the young clerk." BOSTON TRAVELLER. " We are thankful for the volume before us. It carries us back to the farm-house of Mr. Law. rence's birth, and the village store of his first apprenticeship. It exhibits a charity noble and active, while the young merchant was still poor. And above all, it reveals to us a beautiful cluster of sister graces, a keen sense of honor, integrity which never knew the shadow of suspicion, candor in the estimate of character, filial piety, rigid fidelity in every domestic relation, and all these connected with and flowing from steadfast religious principle, profound sentiments of devotion, and a vivid realization of spiritual truth." NORTH: AMERICAN REVIEW. " We arc glad that American Biography has been enriched by such a contribution to its treasures. In all that composes the career of 'the good mm,' and the practical Christian, we have read few memoirs more full of instruction, or richer in lessons of wisdom and virtue. We cordially unite in the opinion that the publication of this memoir was a duty owed to society ."^NATIONAL INTEL- LIGENCER. " With the intention of placing it within the reach of a large number, the mere cost price is charged, and a more beautifully printed volume, or one calculated to do more good, has not been issued from the press of late years." EVENING GAZETTE. " This book, besides being of a different class from most biographies, has another peculiar charm. It shows the inside life of the man. You have, as it were, a peep behind the curtain, and see Mr. Lawrence as he went in and out among business men, as he appeared on 'change, as he received his friends, as he poured out, 'with liberal hand and generous heart,' his wealth for the benefit of others, as he received the greetings and salutations of children, and as he appeared in the bosom of his family at his own hearth stone." BRU Kb IVICK TELEGRAPH. "It is printed on new type, the best paper, and is illustrated by four beautiful plates. How It can be sold for the price named is a marvel." NORFOLK Co. JOURNAL. "It was first privitely printed, and a limited number of copies wore distributed among the relatives and near friends of the deceased. This volume was read with the deepest interest by those who were so favored as to obtain a copy, and it passed from friend to friend as rapidly as it could be read. Dr. Lawrence has yielded to. the general wish, and made public the volume. It will now be widely circulated, will certainly prove a standard work, and be read over and over aguin.'V-Bos- TON DAILY ADVERTISER. ft! VALUABLE WORKS. KNOWLEDGE IS POWER : A VIEW OF THE PRODUCTIVE FORCES OP MODERN SOCIETY, and the Result of Labor, Capital, and Skill. By CHARLES KNIGHT. American edition, with Additions, by DAVID A. WELLS, Editor of " Annual of Scientific Discovery," &c. With numerous Illustrations. 12mo, cloth. $1.25. This work is eminently entitled to be ranked in that class, styled," BOOKS FOR THE PEOPLE." The author is one of the most popular writers of the day. ' Knowledge is Power " treats of those things Which " come home to the business and bosoms " of every man. It is remarkable for its fullness and variety of information, and for the felicity and force with which the author applies his facts to his reasoning. The facts and illustrations are drawn from almost every branch of skilful industry. It is a work which the mechanic and artizan of every description will be sure to read with a RELISH. This is a work of rare merit, and touches many strings of importance with which society is linked together. No work we have ever seen is better calculated to inspire and awaken inventive genius in man than this. Almost every department of human labor is represented, and it contains a large fund of useful information, condensed in a volume, every chapter of which is worth the cost of the book. It would be an act of manifest injustice to the community for an v editor to feel an indifler- ence about commending this volume to a reading public. N. Y. Cii. HERALD. The style is admirable, and the book itself is as full of information as an egg is of meat. JOURNAL. As teachers we know no better remuneration, than for them FIRST to buy this book and diligently read it themselves; SECOND, to teach to their pupils the principles of industrial organization which it contains, and of the facts by which it is illustrated. It is one of the merits of this book that its facts will interest youthful minds and be retained to blossom hereafter into theories of which they are now incapable. THIRD, endeavor to have a copy procured for the district library, that the parents may read it, and the teachers reap fruit in the present generation. N. Y. TEACHEB. Contains a great amount of information, accompanied with numerous illustrations.'rendering it compendious history of the subjects upon which it treats. N. Y. COURIER AND INQUIRER. We commend the work as one of real value and profitable reading. ROCHESTER AMERICANS This work is a rich repository of valuable information on various subjects, having a bearing on the industrial and social interests of a community. PURITAN RECORDER. MY SCHOOLS AND SCHOOLMASTERS ; on, THE STOUT OF MY EDUCATION. By HUGH MiLLrn, author of "Old Red Sandstone," "Footprints of the Creator," " My First Impressions of England," etc. 12mo, cloth. $1-25. " This autobiography is quite worthy of the renowned author. His first attempts at literature, and his career until he stood forth ail acknowledged power among the philosophers and ecclesias- tical leaders of his native land, are given without egotism, with a power and vivacity which are equally truthful and delightsome." PRESBYTERIAN. " Hugh Miller is one of the most remarkable men of the age. Having risen from the humble walks of life, aud from the employment of a stoue-cutter, to the highest rank among scientific men, every- thing relating to his history possesses an interest which belongs to that of few living men. There is much even in his school-boy days which points to the man as he now is. The book has all the ease and graphic power which is characteristic of his writings." NEW YORK OBSERVER. " This volume is a book fo_- the ten thousand. It is embellished with an admirable likeness of Hugh Miller, the stone mason his coat off and his sleeves rolled up with the implements of labor in hand his form erect, and his eye bright and piercing. The biography of such a man will interest every reader. It is a living thing teaching a lesson of self-culture of immense value." PHILA- DELPHIA CHRISTIAN ODSEBVEE. " It is a portion of autobiography exquisitely told. He is a living proof that a single man may contain within himself something more than all the books in the world, some unuttcred word, if he will look within and read. This is one of the best books we have had of late, and must have a hearty welcome and alarge circulation in America." LONDON CORRESP. N. Y. TRIBUNE. " It is a work of rare interest ; at times having the facinntion of a romance, and again suggesting the profoundest views of education and of science. The ex-mason holds a graphic pen ; a quiet humor runs through his pages ; he tells a story well, and some of his pictures of home life might almost be classed with Wilson's." NEW YORK INDEPENDENT. " This autobiography is THE book for poor boys, and others who are struggling with poverty and limited advantages ; and perhaps it is not too much to predict that in a few years it will become one of the poor man's classics, filling a space on his scanty shelf next to the Autobiography of l"rank~ lin." NEW ENGLAND FARMER. " Lovers of the romantic should not neglect the book, as it contains a narrative of tender passion and happily reciprocated affection, which, will be read with subdued emotion and unfailing interest." -BOSTON TRWELLE-R. KI ; MODEEN ATHEISM. MODERN ATHEISM, unckr its Forms of Pantheism, Materialism, Secu. larism, Development, and Katural Laws. By JAMES BUCHANAN, D.D ,LL.D. 12mo, cloth, $1.25. The Author of this work is the successor of Dr. Chalrtiers in the Chair of Divinity in the New College, Edinburgh, and the intellectual leader of the Scottish Free Church. FROM HUGH MI-LLER, AUTHOR OF " OLD RED SANDSTONE," &c., &c. The work before us Is one of at once the most readable and solid which we have ever perused. FROM THE "NEWS OF THE CHURCHES." It is a work of which nothing less can be said, than that, both in spirit and substance, style and argument, it fixes irreversibly the name of the author as a leading classic in the Christian literature of Britain. FROM IIo\vARD MALCOM, D. D., PRESIDENT OF LEWISBUKO UNIVERSITY. No work has come into my hands, for a long time, so helpful to me as a teacher of metaphysics and morals. I know of nothing which will answer for a substitute. The public specially needs such a book at this time, when the covert atheism of Fichte, Wolfe, Hegel, Kant, Schelling, D'Holbach, Comte, Crousse, Atkinson, Martineau, Leroux, Mackay, llolyoake, and others, is being spread abroad with all earnestness, supported, at least in some places, both by church influence and university honors. I cannot but hope that a work so timely, scholarly, and complete, will do much good. It is one of the most solid and remarkable books in its department of literature; one of the most scholarly and profound productions of modern Christian literature. WORCESTER TRANSCRIPT. Dr. Buchanan has earned a high and well-deserved reputation as a classical writer and close logi- cal reasoncr. lie deals heavy, deadly blows on atheism in all its various forms ; and wherever the work is read it cannot fail to do good. CHRISTIAN SECRETARY. It is a work which places iis author at once in the highest rank of modern religious authors. His analyses of the doctrines held by the various schools of modern atheism are admirable, and his criticism original and profound ; while his arguments in defence of the Christian faith are powerful and convincing. It is an attractive as well as a solid book ; and he who peruses a few of its pages is, as it were, irresistibly drawn on to a thorough reading of the book. BOSTON PORTFOLIO. The style is very felicitous, and the reasoning clear and cogent. The opposing theories are fairly Btated and combated with remarkable ease and skill. Even when the argument frlls within the range of science, it is so happily stated that no intelligent reader can fail to understand ii. Such a profound, dispassionate work is particularly called for at the present time. BOSTON JOURNAL. It is justly described as "a great argument," " magnificent in its strength, order, and beauty," in defence of truth, and against the variant theories of atheism. It reviews the doctrines of the dif- ferent schools of modern Atheism, gives a fair statement of their theories, answers and refutes them, never evading, but meeting and crushing their arguments. PHILA. CHRISTIAN OBSERVER. Dr. Buchanan is candid and impartial, too, as so strong a man can anbrd to be, evades no argument, undertakes no opposing view, but meets his antagonists with the quiet and unswerving confidence of a locomotive on iron tracks, pretty sure to crush them. CHRISTIAN REGISTER. We hail this production of a master mind as a lucid, vigorous, discriminating, and satisfactory refutation of the various false philosophies which have appeared in modern times to allure ingenu- ous youth to their destruction. Dr. Buchanan has studied them thoroughly, weighed them dispas- sionately, and exposed their falsity and emptiness. His refutation is a clear stream of l.ght from, beginning to end. PHILA. PRESBYTERIAN. We recommend " Modern Atheism " as a book for the times, and as having special claims on theological students. UNIVERSALIST QUARTERLY. It is remarkable for the clearness with which it apprehends and the fairness with which it states, not less than for the ability with which it replies to, the schemes of unbelief in its various modern forms. It will be found easy to read though not light reading and very quickening to thought, while it clears away, one by one, the mists which the Devil has conjured around the great doctrines of our Faith, by the help of some of his ingenious modern coadjutors, and leaves the truth of God standing in its serene and pristine majesty, as if the breath of hatred never had been breathed forth against it. CONGKEGATIONALIST. Dr. Buchanan has here gone into the enemy's camp, and defeated him on his own ground. The work ii a masterly defence of faith against dogmatic unbelief on the one hand, and that uni- versal skepticism on the other, which neither affirms nor denies, on the ground of an assumed, deficiency of evidence as to the reality of God and religion. N. Y. CHRISTIAN CHRONICLE. It is a clear'.y and vigorously written book. It is particularly valuable for its clear statement and masterly refutation of the Pantheism of Spinoza and his School. CHRISTIAN HERALD. (T) IMPORTANT NEW WORKS. THE CHRISTIAN LIFS : Social and Individual. By PETER BAYNE. A. M 12mo. Cloth. $1.25. Contents. I'ART I. STATEMENT. I. The Individual Life. II. The Social Life. PART II. EXPOSITION AND ILLUSTRATION. Bouk I. Christianity the Basis of Social Life 1. First Principles. II. Howard; and the rise ol Philanthropy. III. Wilberforce; and the development of Philanthropy. IV. Uudgett; the Christian Freeman. V. The sl>cial problem of the age, and one or two hints towards its solution. Hook II. Christianity the Basis of Individual Character. I. Introductory: a few Word? on Modern Doubt. II. John Foster. III. Thomas Aruold. IV. Thomsw Chalmers. PART III. OUTLOOK. I. The Positive Philosophy. II. Pautheistie Spiritualism. 111. General Conclusion. PARTICULAR attention is invited to this work. In Scotland, its publication, during the last winter, produced a great sensation. Hugh Miller made it the subject of ae elaborate review in his paper, the Edinburgh Witness, and gave his readers to under- Stand that it was an extraordinary work. The " News of the Churches," the monthly organ of the Scottish Free Church, was equally emphatic in its praise, pronouncing it "the religious book of the season." Strikingly original in plan and brilliant in execution, it far surpasses the expectations raised by the somewhat familiar title. It is, in truth, a bold onslaught ( and the ti rst of the kind ) upon the Pantheism of Carly le, Fichte, etc., by an ardent admirer of Carlyle; and at the same time an exhibition of the Christian Life, in its inner principle, and as illustrated in the lives of Howard W libel-force, Kurtgett, Fo6ter.Clialmers.ete. The brilliancy and vigor of the author 8 style are remarkable PATRIARCHY; or, the Family, its Constitution and Proba By JOHS HAKKIS, D. D., President of " New College," London, and author of " The Great Teacher" " Mammon," " Pre-Adamite Earth," " Man Primeval," etc. 12mo. Cloth. $1.25. D^=" A new work of great interest. This is the third and last of a series, by the same author, entitled " Contributions to Theological Science." The plan of this series is higbly original, and lias been most successfully executed. Of the two first in the series, ' Pre-Adamite Earth" and " Man Primeval," we have already issued four and five editions, and the demand still continues. The immense sale of all Dr. Harris's works attest their intrinsic worth. This volume contains most important information and instruction touching the family its nature and order, parental instruction, parental authority and gov- ernment, parental responsibility, &c. It contains, in fact, such a fund of valuable information as no pastor, or head of a family, can afford to dispense with. GOD REVEALED IN NATURE AND IN CHRIST: Including a Refutation of the Development Theory contained in the " Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation." By the Author of " THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE PLAS OF SALT- VATION." 12mo. Cloth. $1.00. THK author of that remarkable oook, " The Philosophy of the Plan of Salvation,'' ha devoted seven^- years of incessant labor to the preparation of this work. Without being 8peciticall^b ntrover!iia '> its a ' m ' s to overthrow several of the popular errors of the day, by esnKffishing the antagonist truth upon an impregnable basis of reaso.n and logic. In opposition to the doctrine of a mere subjective revelation, now so plausibly inculcated by certain eminent writers, it demonstrates the necessity jl 411 external, objective revelation. Especially, it furnishes a new, and as it is conceived, a conclusive argument against the " development theory " go ingeniously maintained to the " Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation." As this author does not pub- lish except when he has something to say, there is good reason toanticipate that the work will -be one of unusual interest and value. His former book has met with tlia most signal success in ^oth hemispheres, having passed through numerous editions in England and Scotland, and been translated into four of the European langnaget besides It is also about to be translated into the Hiudoostauee tousue. tmi KTTTO'S CYCLOPEDIA OF BIBUCAL UTBRATUBfc From RfV. K. JV. K~irk, Pastor of Mount Vernon Congregational Church, Boston. The work is invalualile to the student of tlie Bilile. We have no other in this depa i t tn te rdiii|iareon the biography, geography, and history of the Old and .\ew Testa- ment develo|is in those inspired volumes new beauties, and inspires a higher admiration for that Hook of hooks, and a profounder reverence for it.s Divine Author. I wish there was a copy of it in every family in the land. From Jared Spnrks, LL. D., President of Harvard College. I am glad to possess the work ; and I enclose three dollars, which 1 understand to be the price of it. From Hon. Thfodm-e Frelinghuysen, LL. D., JWx> Brunswick, JV. J. I regard it as a very valuable help to the student of it." Ilible. It brings to the aid of the reading community, in an instructive ami condensed form, a rirh treasure of historical and biblical literature, prepared and arranged by some of the best niiiuls, and which cnuld otherwise be gained only by a laborious and patient research, that very few have the lei- sure to give to the subjeci. No family would, 1 think, ever regret the purchase of a book ao deserving of a household place. From Hon. John McLi-an, LI+. D., of Ohio. It is only necessary to look through this volume to appreciate its value. There is no work f have seen which contains so much biblical knowledge, alphabetically arranged under ap- propriate heads, ju so condensed a form, and which is sold so cheap, l.'nder a leading Word is to be found in this honk, whether it relate to natural science or scriptural illus- tration, enough to satisfy every impiirer. Next to the liible, this dictionary of it contains more interesting knowledge than any work of the same si/.e, and itshould be found in every iamily, iu our public schools as well as in all our academies and colleges. From Hon. Simon Oreenlcaf, LL. D. A book that will prove highly useful to all persons engaged in the study of the Bible, or in teaching its sacred truths to tlie young. 1 hope, therefore, that it will oe widely circulated. From Hon. Robert C. Winthrop, LL. D., Boston. I have examined with great pleasure your edition of Kifto's Popular Cyclopaedia of Bibli- cal literature. It seems to me a most convenient and valuable aid to the study of the t'l r.pti res, and I am glad that you have been able to publish it at so reasonable a price It can hardly fail to commend itself to- those who would teach, and to those who woul. J . learn, something more than the mere letter of the inspired volume. From Henry J. Rip ty. D.'D., jJiitiinr uf" JVbff. on the Scriptures," and Profcssot in JVtirtoa T tnloficiil institution. It would be invaluable to Pahhath-school teachers, and of great utility to preachers It 67rv where shows evidence of research, and is particular and accurate in its details II employs ap| rnpriate authorities, both less and m.ire modern, as to qtiesti.ini' of sacred criticism, ol history and sieugraphy, and gives the reader tlie results of recei.l learned in- T0slij>auoiii> II Uie pur^se of this book is gained, scriptural knowtedat tatU. be increased (cc) THE CRUISE OF THE NORTH STAR: A NARRATIVE OF THE EXCURSION MADE BY MR. VANDERBILT'S PARTY, IN THE STEAM YACHT, in her Voyage to England, Russia, Denmark, France, Spain, Italy, Malta, Turkey, Madeira, etc. By Rev. Jon^ OVEHTON CHOULES, D. D. With elegant Illustrations, and fine Likenesses of Commodore Vanderbilt and Capt. Eldridge. 12mo, cloth, gilt backs and sides. $1.50. The cruise of the North Star was an event of almost national concern, and was watched with universal interest. This volume is as different from ordinary books of travel as the cruise of the North Star was different from an ordinary trip to Europe. We need not bespeak for it many readers. Providence Journal. The American- people ought to be proud of, and grateful to, Cornelius Vanderbilt. This man has done more than a dozen presidents to give America a respected name in Europe. At first a poor boy, he has shown by his history what faculties American institutions have to bring out individual enterprise. Having, by his masterly enterprise, acquired a princely fortune, Mr. Vanderbilt, the past year, in a yacht of his own, built expressly for the purpose, took a family trip to the several Euigpean cities '. Such an idea never before occurred to mortal man. Every- where he went, his yacht enterprise was the theme of general comment. Everywhere the enterprise bears a national character. In the person of Cornelius Vanderbilt, American enter- prise told the people of Europe what it could do. The desire to get this curious narrative was so great that the whole of the first edition went off in two days ! Star of the West. Those who remember to have met with a very interesting work, published some two years ago, entitled " Young Americans Abroad," will be glad to learn that here is another book of travels from the same source. Do you say your shelves are all full of books of travel ? we reply, with Leigh Hunt, then put in another shelf, and place this one on it Metlwdist Protestant. The work is one of the most entertaining, and, in its way, vivid, portraitures of scenes in Wa Old World, that we have ever seen. Boston Transcript. This is a fitting memorial of the most remarkable trip of Its kind ever taken, and which ex- cited great interest both in this country and Europe. The book is in many respects as novel as the occasion which produced it was unique and memorable. Both the accomplished author and the publishers deserve the best thanks for so tasteful a record of a performance which has reflected so much credit abroad upon American enterprise. New York Courier & Enquirer. This work is interesting, not only as a memorial of the North Star, and her trip to Europe, an enterprise which, of a private nature in its undertaking, was almost national in its anticipa- tions and in its proud results, but also as a record of European travel, narrated in a lively manner, by a gentleman whose taste and attainments eminently qualify him for the task. New York Times. Never before did a private Individual make so magnificent an excursion as Mr. Vanderbilt. In a steam yacht of unsurpassed splendor, accompanied by a few select friends, whom he en- tertained, during the voyage, in the most luxurious manner, he crossed over to the Old World . viewed the curiosities of parts of three continents ; steamed from port to port, and then re turned, having spent four months in this most delightful manner. Dr. Choules, who was on' of his guests, has given to the world a charming account of this unique voyage, in a beautifull printed and illustrated volume. We commend it to our readers as a very entertaining, we! written book. Zion's Herald. The whole world has heard of Mr. Vanderbilt and his matchless yacht, his pleasure excu sion to Europe, its princely cost, and safe and happy execution. * * * The book will bo eagerly perused, as a record of one of the unique occurrences of the age ; is written with a kind of drawing-room, etiquette-like style, is mellow in sentiiv.ent, and is wholly destitute of that straining after the sublime, and stranding in the "high-fa', tin," that characterize the effusions of the tourist generally. Chicago Advertiser. This exceedingly clever volume Is the result and the record of one of the most stupendous and magnificent water excursions that ever was made. Norfolk Co. Democrat. This beautiful volume describes, in a chaste and readable manner, the fortunes of the widely- known excursion of the princely New York merchant and his family and guests. From the eclat of the voyage itself, and the pleasant way of Dr. Choules' account of It, we think the book Is destined to have what it deserves a very large sale. Congret/ationalist. (f ) \ 9 ' Bill"