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et  de  haut  en  bas,  en  prenant  le  nombre 
d'images  nAcessaire.  Les  diagrammes  suivants 
iilustrent  la  mAthode. 


1  2  3 


1 

2 

3 

4 

5 

6 

By  the  same  Author. 


COLIN  CLOUT'S  CALENDAR.  Crown  8vo.  cloth 
extra,  6i-.     (London  :  C'hatto  &  Windls.) 

VIGNETTES  FROM  NATURE.  Crown  8vo.  cloth 
extra,  6^.     (London:  Chattu  &  Windls.) 

PHYSIOLOGICAL  /liSTHETICS  :  a  Scientific 
Theory  of  Beauty.    (London  :  C.  Khcan  Paul  &  Co.) 

THE  COLOUR-SENSE  :  its  Origin  and  Development. 
An  Essa*'  on  Comparative  Psychology,  (London  :  TrI'bner 
S:  Co. 


^ 


THE 


EVOLUTIONIST    AT    LARGE 


I,ONDO\   :      PRINTED      BY 

SIOTTISWOODK     AND     CO.,      NEW-STREET     SQUARE 

AND     PARLIAiMENT      STREET 


i 


THE 


EVOLUTIONIST    AT    LARGE 


BY 


GRANT     ALLEN 


SECOND    EDITION,    REVISED 


X'onbon 

CHATTO    &    VVLNDUS,    PICCADILLY 

1884 


[--///    rights     reserved^ 


IT 


f^ 


1 1 


/ 


SEP  6  -  1944 


O 


Oerto 


PREFACE. 


These   Essays  originally  appeared    in    the 
columns  of  the  'St.  James's  Gazette,'  and  I 
have  to  thank  the  courtesy  of  the  Editor  for 
kind  permission  to  republish  them  here.     My 
object   in  writing   them    was    to   make   the 
general  principles  and  methods  of  Evolution- 
ists  a   litde    more    familiar    to    unscientific 
readers.     Biologists  usually  deal  with  those 
underlying  points  of  structure  which  are  most 
really  important,  and  on  which  all  technical 
discussion  must  necessarily  be  based.    But  or- 
dinary people  care  litde  for  such  minute  ana- 
tomical and  physiological  details.     They  can- 
not be  expected  to  interest  themselves  in  the 


fr 


Vtll 


PREFACE. 


'1 


\.\ 


flexor  poinds  long  us  y  or  the  hippocanipiis 
major  about  whose  very  existence  they  are 
ignorant,  and  whose  names  suggest  to  them 
nothing  but  unpleasant  ideas.  What  they 
want  to  find  out  is  how  the  outward  and 
visible  forms  of  plants  and  animals  were  pro- 
duced. They  would  much  rather  learn  why 
birds  have  feathers  than  why  they  have  a 
keeled  sternum  ;  and  they  think  the  origin 
of  bri!2:ht  flowers  far  more  attractive  than  the 
origin  of  monocotyledonous  seeds  or  exo- 
genous stems.  It  is  with  these  surface  ques- 
tions of  obvious  outward  appearance  that  I 
have  attempted  to  deal  in  this  little  series. 
My  plan  is  to  take  a  simple  and  well-known 
natural  object,  and  give  such  an  explanation 
as  evolutionary  principles  afford  of  its  most 
striking  external  features.  A  strawberry,  a 
snail-shell,  a  tadpole,  a  bird,  a  wayside  flower 
— these  are  the  sort  of  things  which  I  have 
tried  to  explain.      If  I  have  not  gone  very 


PREFACE. 


ix 


deep,  I  hope  at  least  that  I  have  suggested  in 
simple  language  the  right  way  to  go  to  work. 

I  must  make  an  apology  for  the  form  in 
which  the  essays  are  cast,  so  far  as  regards 
the  apparent  egotism  of  the  first  person. 
When  they  appeared  anonymously  in  the 
columns  of  a  daily  paper,  this  air  of  person- 
ality was  not  so  obtrusive  :  now  that  they 
reappear  under  my  own  name,  I  fear  it  may 
prove  somewhat  too  marked.  Nevertheless, 
to  cut  out  the  personal  pronoun  would  be  to 
destroy  the  whole  machinery  of  the  work  :  so 
I  have  reluctandy  decided  to  retain  it,  only 
begging  the  reader  to  bear  in  mind  that  the 
/  of  the  essays  is  not  a  real  personage,  but 
the  singular  number  of  the  editorial  we. 

I  have  made  a  few  alterations  and  cor- 
rections in  some  of  the  papers,  so  as  to  bring 
the  statements  into  closer  accordance  with 
scientific  accuracy.  At  the  same  time,  I 
should  like  to  add  that  I  have  intentionally 


PREFACE, 


1 


^1 


I- 


simplified  the  scientific  facts  as  far  as  possible. 
Thus,  instead  of  saying  that  the  groundsel  is 
a  composite,  I  have  said  that  it  is  a  daisy  by 
family ;  and  instead  of  saying  that  the  ascidian 
larva  belongs  to  the  sub-kingdom  Chordata,  I 
have  said  that  it  is  a  first-cousin  of  the  tadpole. 
For  these  simplifications,  I  hope  technical 
biologists  will  pardon  me.  After  all,  if  you 
wish  to  be  understood,  it  is  best  to  speak  to 
people  in  words  whose  meanings  they  know. 
Definite  and  accurate  terminology  is  neces- 
sary to  express  definite  and  accurate  know- 
ledge ;  but  one  may  use  vague  expressions 
where  the  definite  ones  would  convey  no 
ideas. 

I  have  to  thank  the  kindness  of  my 
friend  the  Rev.  E.  Purcell,  of  Lincoln 
College,  Oxford,  for  the  clever  and  appro- 
priate design  which  appears  upon  the  cover. 


G.  A. 


CONTENTS. 


A  Ballade  of  Evolution 
I.  Microscopic  Brains  . 
II.  A  Wayside  Berry  . 
ni.  In  Summer  Fields     . 

■  '  • 

IV.  A  Sprig  of  Water  Crowfoot 

V.  Slugs  and  Snails 

VI.  A  Study  of  Bones  . 

VII.  Blue  Mud    . 

'        •        •        « 

VIII.  Cuckoo-Pint 

IX.  Berries  and  Berries 

X.  Distant  Relations 

XI.  Among  the  Heather 

XII.  Speckled  Trout     . 

•       •        • 

XIII.  Dodder  and  Broomrape  . 

XIV.  Dog's  Mercury  and  Plantain 


PAfJK 
I 

3 

i6 

25 
36 
48 

59 
67 
77 
87 
96 

105 
114 

124 

^3 


T- 


i 


V 


xii  CONTENTS, 

XV.  Butterfly  Psychology 
XVI.  Butterfly  Esthetics     . 
XVII.  The  Origin  of  Walnuts    . 


PAGS 
.       142 

.     161 


XVIII.  A  Pretty  Land-Shell 172 

XIX.  Dogs  and  Masters i8i 


XX.  Blackcock 


XXI.  Bindweed 
XXII.  On  Cornish  Cliffs  . 


•        • 


.  189 
.  198 
207 


v^ 


A   BALLADE  OF  EVOLUTION. 

In  the  mud  of  the  Cambrian  main 

Did  our  eariiest  ancestor  dive  : 
From  a  shapeless  albuminous  grain 

We  mortals  our  being  derive. 
He  could  split  himself  up  into  five, 

Or  roll  himself  round  like  a  ball  ; 
For  the  fittest  will  always  survive, 

While  the  weakliest  go  to  the  wall. 

As  an  active  ascidian  again 

Fresh  forms  he  began  to  contrive. 
Till  he  grew  to  a  fish  with  a  brain, 

And  brought  forth  a  mammal  alive. 
With  his  rivals  he  next  had  to  strive. 

To  woo  him  a  mate  and  a  thr'  11 ; 
So  the  handsomest  managed  to  wive. 

While  the  ugliest  went  to  the  wall. 

At  length  as  an  ape  he  was  fain 

The  nuts  of  the  forest  to  rive  ; 
Till  he  took  to  the  low-lying  plain, 

And  proceeded  his  fellow  to  knive. 
Thus  did  cannibal  men  first  arrive, 

One  another  to  swallow  and  maul ; 
And  the  strongest  continued  to  thrive, 

While  the  weakliest  went  to  the  wall. 


Envoy. 

Prince,  in  our  civihsed  hive, 
Now  money's  the  measure  of  ail ; 

And  the  wealthy  in  coaches  can  drive. 
While  the  needier  go  to  the  wall. 


B 


m 


1 

i 


n 


THE 


EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


I. 


MICROSCOPIC  BRAINS, 


Sitting  on  this  little  rounded  boss  of  gneiss 
beside  the  path  which  cuts  obliquely  through 
the  meadow,  I  am  engaged  in  watching  a 
brigade  of  ants  out  on  foraging  duty,  and 
intent  on  securing  for  the  nest  three  whole 
segments  of  a  deceased  earthworm.  They 
look  for  all  the  world  like  those  busy  com- 
panies one  sees  in  the  Egyptian  wall-paintings, 
dragging  home  a  hug^  granite  colossus  by 
sheer  force  of  bone  and  sinew.  Every  muscle 
in  their  tiny  bodies  is  strained  to  the  utmost 
as  they  prise  themselves  laboriously  against 


B  2 


t'.l 


4  THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 

the  great  boulders  which  strew  the  path,  and 
which  are  known  to  our  Brobdingnagian  in- 
telligence as  grains  of  sand.  Besides  the 
workers  themselves,  a  whole  battalion  of 
stragglers  runs  to  and  fro  upon  the  broad 
line  which  leads  to  the  head-quarters  of  the 
community.  The  province  of  these  stragglers, 
who  seem  so  busy  doing  nothing,  probably 
consists  in  keeping  communications  open,  and 
encouraging  the  sturdy  pullers  by  occasional 
relays  of  fresh  workmen.  I  often  wish  that 
I  could  for  a  while  get  inside  those  tiny  brains, 
and  see,  or  rather  smell,  the  world  as  ants  do. 
For  there  can  be  little  doubt  that  to  these 
brave  little  carnivores  here  the  universe  is 
chiefly  known  as  a  collective  bundle  of 
odours,  simultaneous  or  consecutive.  As 
our  world  is  mainly  a  world  of  visible  ob- 
jects, theirs,  I  believe,  is  mainly  a  world  of 
olfactible  things. 

In  the  head  of  every  one  of  tii>ese  little 
creatures  is  something  that  we  may  fairly  call 
a  brain.     Of  course  most  insects  have  no  real 


MICROSCOPIC  BRAINS. 


brains ;   the  nerve-substance  in   their  heads 
is  a  mere  collection   of  ill-arranged  ganglia, 
directly  connected  with  their  organs  of  sense. 
Whatever  man  may  be,  an  earwig  at  least 
is   a  conscious,  or  rather   a   semi-conscious, 
automaton.      He    has  just  a  few  knots   of 
nerve-cells  in  his  little  pate,  each  of  which 
leads  straight  from  his  dim  eye  or  his  vague 
ear  or  his  indefinite  organs  of  taste  ;  and  his 
muscles    obey   the   promptings   of    external 
sensations  without  possibility  of  hesitation  or 
consideration,   as  mechanically  as  the  valve 
of  a  steam-engine  obeys  the  governor-balls. 
You  may  say  of  him  truly,  '  Nihil  est  in  in- 
tellectu  quod  non  fuerit  in  sensu ; '  and  you 
need  not  even  add  the    Leibnitzian  saving 
clause,   *  nisi  ipse  intellectus  ; '  for  the  poor 
soul's  intellect   is   wholly  deficient,  and   the 
senses  alone  make  up  all  that  there  is  of  him, 
subjectively  considered.     But  it  is  not  so  with 
the  highest  insects.     They  ha^^^'e  something 
which  truly  answers  to  the  real  brain  of  men, 
apes,  and  dogs,  to  the  cerebral  hemispheres 


m 


*\ 


6  THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 

and  the  cerebellum  which  are  superadded  in 
us  mammals  upon  the  simple  sense-centres 
of  lower  creatures.  Besides  the  eye,  with  its 
optic  nerve  and  optic  perceptive  organs — be- 
sides the  ear»  with  its  similar  mechanism — we 
mammalian  lords  of  creation  have  a  hio^her 
and  more  genuine  brain,  which  collects  and 
compares  the  information  given  to  the  senses, 
and  sends  down  the  appropriate  messages  to 
the  muscles  accordingly.  Now,  bees  and  flies 
and  ants  have  got  much  the  same  sort  of 
arrangement,  on  a  smaller  scale,  within  their 
tiny  heads.  On  top  of  the  little  knots  which 
do  duty  as  nerve-centres  for  their  eyes  and 
mouths,  stand  two  stalked  bits  of  nervous 
matter,  whose  duty  is  analogous  to  that  of 
our  own  brains.  And  that  is  why  these 
three  sorts  of  insects  think  and  reason 
so  much  more  intellectually  than  beetles  or 
butterflies,  and  why  the  larger  part  of  them 
have  organised  their  domestic  arrangements 
on  such  an  excellent  co-operative  plan. 

We    know  well   enough  what  forms  the 


MICROSCOPIC  BRAINS.  f 

main  material  of  thought  with  bees  and  flies, 
and  that  is  visible  objects.  For  you  must 
think  about  something  if  you  think  at  all ; 
and  you  can  hardly  imagine  a  contemplative 
blow-fly  setting  himself  down  to  reflect,  like 
a  Hindu  devotee,  on  the  syllable  Om,  or  on 
the  oneness  of  existence.  Abstract  ideas 
are  not  likely  to  play  a  large  part  in  apian 
^consciousness.  A  bee  has  a  very  perfect  eye, 
and  with  tliis  eye  it  can  see  not  only  form, 
but  also  colour,  as  Sir  John  Lubbock's  ex- 
periments have  shown  us.  The  information 
which  it  gets  through  its  eye,  coupled  with 
other  ideas  derived  from  touch,  smell,  and 
taste,  no  doubt  makes  up  the  main  thinkable 
and  knowable  universe  as  it  reveals  itself  to 
the  apian  intelligence.  To  ourselves  and  to 
bees  alike  the  world  is,  on  the  whole,  a 
coloured  picture,  with  the  notions  of  distance 
and  solidity  thrown  in  by  touch  and  muscular 
^flbrt ;  but  sight  undoubtedly  plays  the  first 
part  in  forming  our  totd  conception  of  things 
generally. 


\ 


8  THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 

What,  however,  forms  the  thinkable  uni- 
verse of  these  little  ants  running  to  and  fro 
so  eagerly  at  my  feet  ?  That  is  a  question 
which  used  long  to  puzzle  me  in  my  afternoon 
walks.  The  ant  has  a  brain  and  an  intelligence, 
but  that  brain  and  that  intelligence  must  have 
been  developed  out  of  something.  Ex  nihilo 
nihil  fit.  You  cannot  think  and  know  if  you 
have  nothing  to  think  about.  The  intelli- 
gence of  the  bee  and  the  fly  was  evolved  in 
the  course  of  their  flying  about  and  looking 
at  things :  the  more  they  flew,  and  the  more 
they  saw,  the  more  they  knew  ;  and  the  more 
brain  they  got  to  think  with.  But  the  ant 
does  not  generally  fly,  and,  as  with  most 
comparatively  unlocomotive  animals,  its  sight 
is  bad.  True,  the  winged  males  and  females 
have  retained  in  part  the  usual  sharp  eyes  of 
their  class — for  they  are  first  cousins  to  the 
bees — and  they  also  possess  three  little  eye- 
lets or  ocelliy  which  are  wanting  to  the  wing- 
less neuters.  Without  these  they  would  never 
have  found  one  another  in  their  courtship,  and 


MICROSCOPIC  BRAINS. 


they  would  have  run  their  heads  against  the 
nearest  tree,  or  rushed  down  the  gaping  throat 
of  the  first  expectant  swallow,  and  so  effec- 
tually extinguished  their  race.  Flying  animals 
cannot  do  without  eyes,  and  they  always 
possess  the  most  highly  developed  vision  of 
any  living  creatures.  But  the  wingless  neuters 
are  almost  blind — in  ome  species  quite  so  ; 
and  Sir  John  Lubbock  has  shown  that  their 
appreciation  of  colour  is  mostly  confined  to 
an  aversion  to  red  light,  and  a  comparative 
endurance  of  blue.  Moreover,  they  are  ap- 
parently deaf,  and  most  of  their  other  senses 
seem  little  developed.  What  can  be  the  raw 
material,  then,  on  which  that  pin's  head  of  a 
brain  sets  itself  working  ?  For,  small  as  it  is, 
it  is  a  wonderful  organ  of  intellect ;  and 
though  Sir  John  Lubbock  has  shown  us  all 
too  decisively  that  the  originality  and  invent- 
ive genius  of  ants  have  been  sadly  overrated 
by  Solomon  and  others,  yet  Darwin  is  prob- 
ably right  none  the  less  in  saying  that  no 
more  marvellous  atom  of  matter  exists  in  the 


S9 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


universe  than  this  same  wee  lump  of  micro- 
scopic nerve  substance. 

My  dog  Grip,  running  about  on  the  path 
there,  with  his  nose  to  the  ground,  and  sniffing 
at  every  stick  and  stone  he  meets  on  his  way, 
gives  us  the  clue  to  solve  the  problem.  Grip, 
as  Professor  Croom  Robertson  suggests, 
seems  capable  of  extracting  a  separate  and 
distinguishable  smell  from  everything.  I 
have  only  to  shy  a  stone  on  the  beach  among 
a  thousand  other  stones,  and  my  dog,  like  a 
well-bred  retriever  as  he  is,  selects  and  brings 
back  to  me  that  individual  stone  from  all  the 
stones  around,  by  exercise  of  his  nose  alone. 
It  is  plain  that  Grip's  world  is  not  merely  a 
world  cf  sights,  but  a  world  of  smells  as  well. 
He  not  only  smells  smells,  but  he  remembers 
smells,  he  thinks  smells,  he  even  dreams 
smells,  as  you  may  see  by  his  sniffing  and 
growling  in  his  sleep.  Now,  if  I  were  to  cut 
open  Grip's  head  (which  heaven  forefend),  I 
should  find  in  it  a  correspondingly  big  smell- 
nerve  and  smell-centre — an  olfactory  lobe,  as 
the  anatomists  say.    All  the  accumulated  nasal 


MICROSCOPIC  BRAINS, 


II 


experiences  of  his  ancestors  Iiave  made  that 
lobe  enormously  developed.  But  in  a  man's 
head  you  would  find  a  very  large  and  fine 
optic  centre,  and  only  a  mere  shrivelled  relic 
to  represent  the  olfactory  lobes.  You  and  I 
and  our  ancestors  have  had  but  little  occasion 
for  sniffing  and  scenting  ;  our  sight  and  our 
touch  have  done  duty  as  chief  intelligencers 
from  the  outer  world  ;  and  the  nerves  of  smell, 
with  their  connected  centres,  have  withered 
away  to  the  degenerate  condition  in  which 
they  now  are.  Consequently,  smell  plays  but 
a  small  part  in  our  thought  and  our  memories. 
The  world  that  we  know  is  chiefly  a  world 
of  sights  and  touches.  Bui  in  the  brain  of 
dog,  or  deer,  or  antelope,  smell  is  a  prevail- 
ing faculty ;  it  colours  all  their  ideas,  and  it 
has  innumerable  nervous  connections  with 
every  part  of  their  brain.  The  big  olfac- 
torv  lobes  are  in  direct  communication 
with  a  thousand  other  nerves ;  odours  rouse 
trains  of  thought  or  powerful  emotions  in 
their  minds  just  as  visible  objects  do  in  our 
own. 


i 


'•  ( 


13 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


ID  ^ 


Now,  in  the  dog  or  the  horse  sight  and 
smell  are  equally  developed  ;  so  that  they 
probably  think  of  most  things  about  equally 
in  terms  of  each.  In  ourselves,  sight  is  highly 
developed,  and  smell  is  a  mere  relic  ;  so  that 
we  think  of  most  things  in  terms  of  sight 
alone,  and  only  rarely,  as  with  a  rose  or  a 
lily,  in  terms  of  both.  But  in  ants,  on  the 
contrary,  smell  is  highly  developed  and  sight 
a  mere  relic  ;  so  that  they  probably  think  of 
most  things  as  smellable  only,  and  very  little 
as  visible  in  form  or  colour.  Dr.  Bastian  has 
shown  that  bees  and  butterflies  are  largely 
guided  by  scent ;  and  though  he  is  certainly 
wrong  in  supposing  that  sight  has  little  to  do 
with  leading  them  to  flowers  (for  if  you  cut 
ofl"  the  bright-coloured  corolla  they  will  never 
discover  the  mutilated  blossoms,  even  when 
they  visit  others  on  the  same  plant),  yet  the 
mere  fact  that  so  many  flowers  are  scented  is 
by  itself  enough  to  show  that  perfume  has  a 
great  deal  to  do  with  the  matter.  In  wing- 
less  ants,   while  the   eyes  have  undergone 


I  Mr 


i; 


MICROSCOPIC  BRAINS, 


II 


degeneration,  this  high  sense  of  smell  has  been 
continued  and  further  developed,  till  it  has 
become  their  principal  sense-endowment,  and 
the  chief  raw  material  of  their  intelligence. 
Their  active  little  brains  are  almost  wholly  en- 
gaged in  correlating  and  co-ordinating  smells 
with  actions.  Their  olfactory  nerves  give 
them  nearly  all  the  information  they  can  gain 
about  the  external  world,  and  their  brains 
take  in  this  information  and  work  out  the 
proper  movements  which  it  indicates.  By 
smell  they  find  their  way  about  and  carry  on 
the  business  of  their  lives.  Just  as  you  and 
I  know  the  road  from  Regent's  Circus  to 
Pall  Mall  by  visible  signs  of  the  street-corners 
and  the  Duke  of  York's  Column,  so  these 
little  ants  know  the  way  from  the  nest  to  the 
corpse  of  the  dismembered  worm  by  observ- 
ing and  remembering  the  smells  which  they 
met  with  on  their  way.  See :  I  obliterate 
the  track  for  an  inch  or  two  with  my  stick, 
and  the  little  creatures  go  beside  themselves 
with  astonishment  and  dismay.     They  rush 


f 


14 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


{{(I 


\i 


i  \ 


I! 

\  ; 


about  wildly,  inquiring  of  one  another  with 
their  antennae  whether  this  is  really  Dooms- 
day, and  whether  the  whole  course  of  nature 
has  been  suddenly  revolutionised.  Then, 
after  a  short  consultation,  they  determine 
upon  action ;  and  every  ant  starts  off  in  a 
different  direction  to  hunt  the  lost  track,  head 
to  the  ground,  exactly  as  a  pointer  hunts  the 
missing  trail  of  a  bird  or  hare.  Each  ventures 
an  inch  or  so  off,  and  then  runs  back  to  find 
the  rest,  for  fear  he  rhould  get  isolated  alto- 
gether. At  last,  after  many  failures,  one 
lucky  fellow  hits  upon  the  well-remembered 
train  of  scents,  and  rushes  back,  leaving  smell- 
tracks  no  doubt  upon  the  soil  behind  him.  The 
message  goes  quickly  round  from  post  to  post, 
each  sentry  making  passes  with  his  antennae 
to  the  next  picket,  and  so  sending  on  the 
news  to  the  main  body  in  the  rear.  Within 
five  minutes  communications  are  re-esta- 
blished, and  the  precious  bit  of  worm-meat 
continues  triumphantly  on  its  way  along  the 
recovered  path.     An  ingenious  writer  would 


MICROSCOPIC  BRAINS, 


n 


even  have  us  believe  that  ants  possess  a 
scent-language  of  their  own,  and  emit  various 
odours  from  their  antennae  which  the  other 
ants  perceive  with  theirs,  and  recognise  as 
distinct  in  meaning.  Be  this  as  it  may,  you 
cannot  doubt,  if  you  watch  them  long,  that 
scents  and  scents  alone  form  the  chief  means 
by  which  they  recollect  and  know  one  an- 
other, or  the  external  objects  with  which  they 
come  in  contact.  The  whole  universe  is 
clearly  to  them  a  complicated  picture  made 
up  entirely  of  infinite  interfusing  smells. 


i6 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


11 


W>. 


ill 


II. 


A    WAYSIDE  BERRY. 


I 


Half-hidden  in  the  luxuriant  growth  of 
leaves  and  flowers  that  drape  the  deep  side 
of  this  green  lane,  I  have  just  espied  a  little 
picture  in  miniature,  a  tall  wild  strawberry- 
stalk  with  three  full  red  berries  standing  out 
on  its  graceful  branchlets.  There  are  glossy 
hart's- tongues  on  the  matted  bank,  and  yellow 
hawk  weeds,  and  bright  bunches  of  red  cam- 
pion ;  but  somehow,  amid  all  that  wealth  of 
shape  and  colour,  my  eye  falls  and  rests 
instinctively  upon  the  three  little  ruddy  berries, 
and  upon  nothing  else.  I  pick  the  single  stalk 
from  the  bank  and  hold  it  here  in  my  hands. 
The  origin  and  development  of  these  pretty 
bits  of  red  pulp  is  one  of  the  many  curious 


A    WAYSIDE  BERRY. 


17 


questions  upon  which  modern  theories  of  life 
have  cast  such  a  sudden  and  unexpected 
flood  of  light.  What  makes  the  strawberry 
stalk  grow  out  into  this  odd  and  brightly 
coloured  lump,  bearing  its  small  fruits  em- 
bedded on  its  swollen  surface  ?  Clearly  the 
agency  of  those  same  small  birds  who  have 
been  mainly  instrumental  in  dressing  the 
haw  in  its  scarlet  coat,  and  clothing  the 
spindle-berries  with  their  twofold  covering  of 
crimson  doublet  and  orange  cloak. 

In  common  language  we  speak  of  each 
single  strawberry  as  a  fruit.  But  it  is  in 
reality  a  collection  of  separate  fruits,  the  tiny 
yellow-brown  grains  which  stud  its  sides 
being  each  of  them  an  individual  little  nut  ; 
while  the  sweet  pulp  is,  in  fact,  no  part  of  the 
true  fruit  it  all,  but  merely  a  swollen  stalk. 
There  is  a  white  potentilla  so  like  a  straw- 
berry blossom  that  even  a  botanist  must  look 
closely  at  the  plant  before  he  can  be  sure  of 
its  identity.  While  they  are  in  flower  the 
two  heads  remain  almost   indistinguishable ; 


^1 


i8 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


but  when  the  seed  begins  to  set,  the  potentilla 
develops  only  a  collection  of  dry  fruitlets, 
seated  upon  a  green  receptacle,  the  bed  or 
soft  expansion  which  hangs  on  to  the  *  hull ' 
or  calyx.  Each  fruitlet  consists  of  a  thin 
covering,  enclosing  a  solitary  seed.  You  may 
compare  one  of  them  separately  to  a  plum, 
with  its  single  kernel,  only  that  in  the  plum 
the  covering  is  thick  and  juicy,  while  in  the 
potentilla  and  the  fruitlets  of  the  strawberry 
it  is  thin  and  dry.  An  almond  comes  still 
nearer  to  the  mark.  Now  the  potentilla 
shows  us,  as  it  were,  the  primitive  form  of 
the  strawberry.  But  in  the  developed  ripe 
strawberry  as  we  now  find  it  the  fruitlets  are 
not  crowded  upon  a  green  receptacle.  After 
flowering,  the  strawberry  receptacle  lengthens 
and  broadens,  so  as  to  form  a  roundish  mass 
of  succulent  pulp  ;  and  as  the  fruitlets  ap- 
proach maturity  this  sour  green  pulp  becomes 
soft,  sweet,  and  red.  The  little  seed-like 
fruits,  which  are  the  important  organs,  stand 
out  upon  its  surface  like  mere  specks ;  while 


{  ! 


A    WAYSIDE  BERRY. 


19 


the  comparatively  unimportant  receptacle  is  all 
that  we  usually  think  of  when  we  talk  about 
strawberries.  After  our  usual  Protagorean 
fashion  we  regard  man  as  the  measure  of  all 
things,  and  pay  little  heed  to  any  part  of  the 
compound  fruit-cluster  save  that  which  minis- 
ters directly  to  our  own  tastes. 

But  why  does  the  strawberry  develop  this 
large  mass  of  apparently  useless  matter  ? 
Simply  in  order  the  better  to  ensure  the  dis- 
persion of  its  small  brown  fruitlets.  Birds 
are  always  hunting  for  seeds  and  insects  along 
the  hedge-rows,  and  devouring  such  among 
them  as  contain  any  available  foodstuff.  In 
most  cases  they  crush  the  seeds  to  pieces  with 
their  gizzards,  and  digest  and  assimilate  their 
contents.  Seeds  of  this  class  are  generally 
enclosed  in  green  or  brown  capsules;  which 
often  escape  the  notice  of  the  birds,  and  so 
succeed  in  perpetuating  their  species.  But 
there  is  another  class  of  plants  whose  mem- 
bers possess  hard  and  indigestible  seeds,  and 
so  turn   the   greedy   birds   from   dangerous 


02 


9.0 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


I 


if : 


enemies  into  useful  allies.  Supposing  there 
was  by  chance,  ages  ago,  one  of  these  primitive 
ancestral  strawberries,  whose  receptacle  was 
a  little  more  pulpy  than  usual,  and  contained 
a  small  quantity  of  sugary  matter,  such  as  is 
often  found  in  various  parts  of  plants;  then 
it  might  happen  to  attract  the  attention  of 
some  hungry  bird,  which,  by  eating  the  soft 
pulp,  would  help  in  dispersing  the  indigestible 
fruitlets.  As  these  fruitlets  sprang  up  into 
healthy  young  plants,  they  would  tend  to  re- 
produce the  peculiarity  in  the  structure  of  the 
receptacle  which  marked  the  parent  stock,  and 
some  of  them  would  probably  display  it  in  a 
more  marked  degree.  These  would  be  sure 
to  get  eaten  in  their  turn,  and  so  to  become 
the  originators  of  a  still  more  pronounced 
strawberry  type.  As  time  went  on,  the 
largest  and  sweetest  berries  would  constantly 
be  chosen  by  the  birds,  till  the  whole  species 
began  to  assume  its  existing  character.  The 
receptacle  would  become  softer  and  sweeter, 
and  the  fruits  themselves  harder  and  more 


A    WAYSIDE  BERRY. 


21 


indigestible :  because,  on  the  one  hand,  all 
sour  or  hard  berries  would  stand  a  poorer 
chance  of  getting  dispersed  in  good  situations 
for  their  growth,  while,  on  the  other  hand,  all 
soft-shelled  fruitlets  would  be  ground  up  and 
digested  by  the  bird,  and  thus  effectually  pre- 
vented from  ever  growing  into  future  plants. 
Just  in  like  manner,  many  tropical  nuts  have 
extravagantly  hard  shells,  as  only  those  sur- 
vive which  can  successfully  defy  the  teeth 
and  hands  of  the  clever  and  persistent 
monkey. 

This  accounts  for  the  strawberry  being 
sweet  and  pulpy,  but  not  for  its  being  red. 
Here,  however,  a  similar  reason  comes  into 
play.  All  ripening  fruits  and  opening  flowers 
have  a  natural  tendency  to  grow  bright  red, 
or  purple,  or  blue,  though  in  many  of  them 
the  tendency  is  repressed  by  the  dangers 
attending  brilliant  displays  of  colour.  This 
natural  habit  depends  upon  the  oxidation  of 
their  tissues,  and  is  exactly  analogous  to  the 
assumption  of  autumn  tints  by  leaves.     If  a 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


i 


■\ 


plant,  or  part  of  a  plant,  is  injured  by  such  a 
change  of  colour,  through  being  rendered 
more  conspicuous  to  its  foes,  it  soon  loses  the 
tendency  under  the  influence  of  natural  selec- 
tion ;  in  other  words,  those  individuals  which 
most  display  it  get  killed  out,  while  those 
which  least  display  it  survive  and  thrive.  On 
the  other  hand,  if  conspicuousness  is  an  ad- 
vantage to  the  plant,  the  exact  opposite  hap- 
pens, and  the  tendency  becomes  developed 
into  a  confirmed  habit.  This  is  the  case  with 
the  strawberry,  as  with  many  other  fruits. 
The  more  bright-coloured  the  berry  is,  the 
better  its  chance  of  getting  its  fruitlets  dis- 
persed. Birds  have  quick  eyes  for  colour, 
especially  for  red  and  white ;  and  therefore 
almost  all  edible  berries  have  assumed  one  or 
other  of  these  two  hues.  So  long  as  the 
fruitlets  remain  unripe,  and  would  therefore 
be  injured  by  being  eaten,  the  pulp  remains 
sour,  green,  and  hard ;  but  as  soon  as  they^ 
have  become  fit  for  dispersion  it  grows  soft, 
fills  with  sugary  juice,  and  acquires  its  ruddy 


I 


A    IVAYSWE  BERRY. 


23 


outer  flesh.     Then  the  birds  see  and  recog 
nise   it   as   edible,   and    govern   themselves 
accordingly. 

But  if  this  is  the  genesis  of  the  straw- 
berry, asks  somebody,  why  have  not  all  the 
potentillas  and  the  whole  strawberry  tribe 
also  become  berries  of  the  same  type  ?  Why 
are  there  still  potentilla  fruit-clusters  which 
consist  of  groups  of  dry  seed-like  nuts  ?  Ay, 
there's  the  rub.  Science  cannot  answer  as 
yet.  After  all,  these  questions  are  still  in 
their  infancy,  and  we  can  scarcely  yet  do  more 
than  discover  a  single  stray  interpretation 
here  and  there.  In  the  present  case  a  botanist 
can  only  suggest  either  that  the  potentilla 
finds  its  own  mode  of  dispersion  equally  well 
adapted  to  its  own  peculiar  circumstances,  or 
else  that  the  lucky  accident,  the  casual  com- 
bination of  circumstances,  which  produced  the 
first  elongation  of  the  receptacle  in  the  straw- 
berry has  never  happened  to  befall  its  more 
modest  kinsfolk.  For  on  such  occasional 
freaks  of  nature  the  whole  evolution  of  new 


24 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


\ 


varieties  entirely  depends.  A  gardener  may 
raise  a  thousand  seedlings,  and  only  one  or 
none  among  them  may  present  a  single  new 
and  important  feature.  So  a  species  may 
wait  for  a  thousand  years,  or  for  ever,  before 
its  circumstances  happen  to  produce  the  first 
step  towards  some  desirable  improvement. 
One  extra  petal  may  be  invaluable  to  a  five- 
rayed  flower  as  effecting  some  immense  saving 
of  pollen  in  its  fertilisation ;  and  yet  the 
*  sport '  which  sha^ll  give  it  this  sixth  ray  may 
never  occur,  or  may  be  trodden  down  in  the 
mire  and  destroyed  by  a  passing  cow.  , 


/ 


>. . .1 


■>'  -^ 


IN  SUMMER  FIELDS. 


III. 


IN  SUMMER  FIELDS, 

Grip  and  I  have  come  out  for  a  morning 
stroll  among  the  close-cropped  pastures  be- 
side the  beck,  in  the  very  centre  of  our  green 
little  dingle.  Here  I  can  sit,  as  is  my  wont, 
on  a  dry  knoll,  and  watch  the  birds,  beasts, 
insects,  and  herbs  of  the  field,  while  Grip 
scours  the  place  in  every  direction,  intent,  no 
doubt,  upon  those  more  practiv':al  objects — 
mostly  rats,  I  fancy — which  possess  a  con- 
genial interest  for  the  canine  intelligence. 
From  my  coign  of  vantage  on  the  knoll  I 
can  take  care  that  he  inflicts  no  grievous 
bodily  injury  upon  the  sheep,  and  that  he 
receives  none  from  the  quick-tempered  cow 
with  the  brass-knobbed  horns.  For  a  kind 
of  ancestral  feud  seems  to  smoulder  for  ever 


26 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


\ 


between  Grip  and  the  whole  race  of  kine, 
breaking  out  every  now  and  then  Into  open 
warfare,  which  calls  for  my  prompt  interfer- 
ence, in  an  attitude  of  armed  but  benevolent 
neutrality,  merely  for  the  friendly  purpose  of 
keeping  the  peace. 

This  ancient  feud,  I  imagine,  is  really 
ancestral,  and  dates  many  ages  further  back 
in  time  than  Grip's  individual  experiences. 
Cows  hate  dogs  instinctively,  from  their 
earliest  calf  hood  upward.  I  used  to  doubt 
once  upon  a  time  whether  the  hatred  was  not 
of  artificial  origin  and  wholly  induced  by  the 
inveterate  human  habit  of  egging  on  every 
dog  to  worry  every  other  animal  that  comes 
in  its  way.  But  I  tried  a  mild  experiment 
one  day  by  putting  a  half-grown  town-bred 
puppy  into  a  small  enclosure  with  some 
hitherto  unworried  calves,  and  they  all  turned 
to  make  a  common  headway  against  the 
intruder  with  the  same  striking  unanimity 
as  the  most  ancient  and  experienced  cows. 
Hence   I   am   inclined  to  suspect  that  the 


IN  SUMMER  FIELDS. 


ty 


antipathy  does  actually  result  from  a  vaguely 
inherited  instinct  derived  from  the  days  when 
the  ancestor  of  our  kine  was  a  wild  bull,  and 
the  ancestor  of  our  dogs  a  wolf,  on  the  wide 
forest-clad  plains  of  Central  Europe.  When 
a  cow  puts  up  its  tail  at  sight  of  a  dog  enter- 
ing its  paddock  at  the  present  day,  it  has 
probably  some  dim  instinctive  consciousness 
that  it  stands  in  the  presence  of  a  dangerous 
hereditary  foe  ;  and  as  the  wolves  could  only 
seize  with  safety  a  single  isolated  wild  bull, 
so  the  cows  now  usually  make  common  cause 
against  the  intruding  dog,  turning  their  heads 
in  one  direction  with  very  unwonted  una- 
nimity, till  his  tail  finally  disappears  under 
the  opposite  gate.  Such  inherited  antipathies 
seem  common  and  natural  enough.  Every 
species  knows  and  dreads  the  ordinary  ene- 
mies of  its  race.  Mice  scamper  away  from 
the  very  smell  of  a  cat.  Young  chickens  run 
to  the  shelter  of  their  mother's  wings  when 
the  shadow  of  a  hawk  passes  over  their  heads. 
Mr.  Darwin  put  a  small  snake  into  a  paper 


28 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


I  I'. 


bag,  which  he  gave  to  the  monkeys  at  the 
Zoo  ;  and  one  nr^nkey  after  another  opened 
the  bag,  looked  in  upon  the  deadly  foe  of  the 
quadrumanous  kind,  and  promptly  dropped 
the  whole  package  with  every  gesture  of 
horror  and  dismay.  Even  man  himself— 
though  his  instincts  have  all  weakened  so 
greatly  with  the  growth  of  his  more  plastic 
intelligence,  adapted  to  a  wider  and  more 
modifiable  set  of  external  circumstances — 
seems  to  retain  a  vague  and  original  terror  of 
the  serpentine  form. 

If  we  think  of  parallel  cases,  it  is  not 
curious  that  animals  should  thus  instinctively 
recognise  their  natural  enemies.  We  are  not 
surprised  that  they  recognise  their  own 
fellows :  and  yet  they  must  do  so  by  means 
of  some  equally  strange  automatic  and  in- 
herited mechanism  in  their  nervous  system. 
One  butterfly  can  tell  its  mates  at  once  from 
a  thousand  other  species,  though  it  may  differ 
from  some  of  them  only  by  a  single  spot  or 
line,  which  would  escape  the  notice  of  all  but 


> 


IN  SUMMER  FIELDS. 


W 


the  most  attentive  observers.  Must  we  not 
conclude  that  there  are  elements  in  the  butter- 
fly's feeble  brain  exactly  answering  to  the 
blank  picture  of  its  specific  type  ?  So,  too, 
must  we  not  suppose  that  in  every  race  of 
animals  there  arises  a  perceptive  structure 
specially  adapted  to  the  recognition  of  its 
own  kind  ?  Babies  notice  human  faces  long 
before  they  notice  any  other  living  thing. 
In  like  manner  we  know  that  most  creatures 
can  judge  instinctively  of  their  proper  food. 
One  young  bird  just  fledged  naturally  pecks 
at  red  berries  ;  another  exhibits  an  untaught 
desire  to  chase  down  grasshoppers ;  a  third,, 
which  happens  to  be  born  an  owl,  turns  at 
once  to  the  congenial  pursuit  of  small  spar- 
rows, mice,  and  frogs.  Each  species  seems 
to  have  certain  faculties  so  arranged  that  the 
sight  of  certain  external  objects,  frequently 
connected  with  food  in  their  ancestral  experi- 
ence, immediately  arouses  in  them  the  appro- 
priate actions  for  its  capture.  Mr.  Douglas 
Spalding  found  that  newly-hatched  chickens 


7 


30 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


HI 


f 


II; 


: 


darted  rapidly  and  accurately  at  flies  on  the 
wing.  When  we  recollect  that  even  so  late 
an  acquisition  as  articulate  speech  in  human 
beings  has  its  special  physical  seat  in  the 
brain,  it  is  not  astonishing  that  complicated 
mechanisms  should  have  arisen  among  ani- 
mals for  the  due  perception  of  mates,  food, 
and  foes  respectively.  Thus,  doubtless,  the 
serpent  form  has  imprinted  itself  indelibly  on 
the  senses  of  monkeys,  and  the  wolf  or  dog 
form  on  those  of  cows :  so  that  even  with  a 
young  ape  or  calf  the  sight  of  these  their 
ancestral  enemies  at  once  calls  up  uneasy  or 
terrified  feelings  in  their  half-developed  minds. 
Our  own  infants  in  arms  have  no  personal 
experience  of  the  real  meaning  to  be  attached 
to  angry  tones,  yet  they  shrink  from  the 
sound  of  a  gruff  voice  even  before  they 
have  learned  to  distinguish  their  nurse's 
face. 

V^hen  Grip  gets  among  the  sheep,  their 
hereditary  traits  come  out  in  a  very  different 
manner.     They  are  by  nature  and  descent 


IN  SUMMER  FIELDS 


$» 


timid  mountain  animals,  and  they  have  never 
been  accustomed  to  face  a  foe,  as  cows  and 
buffaloes  are  wont  to  do,  especially  when  in 
a  herd  together.  You  cannot  see  many  traces 
of  the  original  mountain  life  among  sheep, 
and  yet  there  are  still  a  few  remaining  to 
marV  their  real  pedigree.  Mr.  Herbert 
Spencer  has  noticed  the  fondness  of  lambs 
for  frisking  on  a  hillock,  however  small  ;  and 
when  I  come  to  my  little  knoll  here,  I  gene- 
rally find  it  occupied  by  a  couple,  who  rush 
away  on  my  approach,  but  take  their  stand 
instead  on  the  merest  ant-hill  which  they  can 
find  in  the  field.  I  once  knew  three  young 
goats,  kids  of  a  mountain  breed,  and  the  only 
elevated  object  in  the  paddock  where  they 
were  kept  was  a  single  old  elm  stump.  For 
the  possession  of  this  stump  the  goats  fought 
incessantly ;  and  the  victor  would  proudly 
perch  himself  on  the  top,  with  all  four  legs 
inclined  inward  (for  the  whole  diameter  of  the 
tree  was  but  some  fifteen  inches),  maintaining 
himself  in  his  place  with  the  greatest  diffi- 


32 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


\ 


:i  J 


culty,  and  butting  at  his  two  brothers  until  at 
last  he  lost  his  balance  and  fell.  This  one 
old  stump  was  the  sole  representative  in  their 
limited  experience  of  the  rocky  pinnacle 
upon  which  their  forefathers  kept  watch  like 
sentinels;  and  their  instinctive  yearnings 
prompted  them  to  perch  themselves  upon 
the  only  available  memento  of  their  native 
haunts.  Thus,  too,  but  in  a  dimmer  and 
vaguer  way,  the  sheep,  -especially  during  his 
younger  days,  loves  to  revert,  so  far  as  his 
small  opportunities  permit  him,  to  the  un- 
consciously remembered  habits  of  his  race. 
But  in  mountain  countries,  every  one  must 
have  noticed  how  the  sheep  at  once  becomes 
a  different  being.  On  the  Welsh  hills  he 
casts  away  all  the  dull  and  heavy  serenity  of 
his  brethren  on  the  South  Downs,  and  dis- 
plays once  more  the  freedom,  and  even  the 
comparative  boldness,  of  a  mountain  breed. 
A  Merionethshire  ewe  thinks  nothing  of  run- 
ning up  one  side  of  a  low-roofed  barn  and 
down  the  other,  or  of  clearing  a  stone  wall 


ii 


IN  SUMMER  FIELDS. 


yi 


which  a  Leicestershire  farmer  would  consider 
extravagantly  high. 

Another  mountain  trait  in  the  stereotyped 
character  of  sheep  is  their  well-known  sequa- 
ciousness.  When  Grip  runs  after  them  they 
all  run  away  together  :  if  one  goes  through  a 
certain  gap  in  the  hedge,  every  other  follows ; 
and  if  the  leader  jumps  the  beck  at  a  certain 
spot,  every  lamb  in  the  flock  jumps  in  the 
self- same  place.  It  is  said  that  if  you  hold  a 
stick  for  the  first  sheep  to  leap  over,  and  then 
withdraw  it,  all  the  succeeding  sheep  will 
leap  with  mathematical  accuracy  at  the  corre- 
sponding point ;  and  this  habit  is  usually  held 
up  to  ridicule  as  proving  the  utter  stupidity 
of  the  whole  race.  It  really  proves  nothing 
but  the  goodness  of  their  ancestral  instincts. 
For  mountain  animals,  accustomed  to  follow 
a  leader,  that  leader  being  the  bravest  and 
strongest  ram  of  the  flock,  must  necessarily 
follow  him  with  the  most  implicit  obedience. 
He  alone  can  see  what  obstacles  come  in  the 
way ;  and  each  of  the  succeeding  train  must 

D 


t. 


mm^mm 


wm 


1 1' 


ii. 


34 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


watch  and  imitate  the  actions  of  their  prede- 
cessors. Otherwise,  if  the  flock  happens  to 
come  to  a  chasm,  running  as  they  often  must 
with  some  speed,  any  individual  which  stopped 
to  look  and  decide  for  itself  before  leaping 
would  inevitably  be  pushed  over  the  edge  by 
those  behind  it,  and  so  would  lose  all  chance 
of  handing  down  its  cautious  and  sceptical 
spirit  to  any  possible  descendants.  On  the 
other  hand,  those  uninquiring  and  blindly 
obedient  animals  which  simply  did  as  they 
saw  others  do  would  both  survive  them- 
selves and  become  the  parents  of  future  and 
similar  generations.  Thus  there  would  be 
handed  down  from  dam  to  lamb  a  general 
tendency  to  sequaciousness — a  fo!low-my- 
leader  spirit,  which  was  really  the  best  safe- 
guard for  the  race  against  the  evils  of  insub- 
ordination, still  so  fatal  to  Alpine  climbers^ 
And  now  that  our  sheep  have  settled  down 
to  a  tame  and  monotonous  existence  on  the 
downs  of  Sussex  or  the  levels  of  the  Mid- 
lands, the  old  instinct  clings  to  them  still,  and 


IN  SUMMER  FIELDS. 


35 


Speaks  out  plainly  for  their  mountain  origin. 
There  are  few  things  in  nature  more  inte- 
resting to  notice  than  these  constant  survivals 
of  instinctive  habits  in  altered  circumstances. 
They  are  to  the  mental  life  what  rudimentary 
organs  are  to  the  bodily  structure  :  they 
remind  us  of  an  older  order  of  things,  just  as 
the  abortive  legs  of  the  blind-worm  show  us 
that  he  was  once  a  lizard,  and  the  hidden 
shell  of  the  slug  that  he  was  once  a  snail. 


> 


D  2 


36 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


IV. 


A   SPRIG  OF  WATER  CROWFOOT, 


The  little  streamlet  whose  tiny  ranges  and 
stickles  form  the  middle  thread  of  this  green 
combe  in  the  Dorset  downs  is  just  at  present 
richly  clad  with  varied  foliage.  Tall  spikes 
of  the  yellow  flag  rise  above  the  slow-flowing 
pools,  while  purple  loose-strife  overhangs  the 
bank,  and  bunches  of  the  arrowhead  stand 
high  out  of  their  watery  home,  just  unfolding 
their  pretty  waxen  white  flowers  to  the  air. 
In  the  rapids,  on  the  other  hand,  I  find  the 
curious  water  crowfoot,  a  spray  of  which  I 
have  this  moment  pulled  out  of  the  stream 
and  am  now  holding  in  my  hand  as  I  sit  on 
the  little  stone  bridge,  with  my  legs  dangling 


> « 


« \ 


A  SPRIG  OF   WATER  CROWFOOT. 


37 


over  the  pool  below,  known  to  me  as  the 
undoubted  residence  of  a  pair  of  trout.  It  is 
a  queer  plant,  this  crowfoot,  with  its  two 
distinct  types  of  leaves,  much  cleft  below  and 
broad  above  ;  and  I  often  wonder  why  so 
strange  a  phenomenon  has  attracted  such 
very  scant  attention.  But  then  we  knew  so 
little  of  life  in  any  form  till  the  day  before 
yesterday  that  perhaps  it  is  not  surprising  we 
should  still  have  left  so  many  odd  problems 
quite  untouched. 

This  problem  of  the  shape  of  leaves 
certainly  seems  to  me  a  most  important  one  ; 
and  yet  it  has  hardly  been  even  recognised 
by  our  scientific  pastors  and  masters.  At 
best,  Mr.  Herbert  Spencer  devotes  to  it  a 
passing  short  chapter,  or  Mr.  Darwin  a  stray 
sentence.  The  practice  of  classifying  plants 
mainly  by  means  cf  their  flowers  has  given 
the  flower  a  wholly  factitious  and  over- 
wrought importance.  Besides,  flowers  are 
so  pretty,  and  we  cultivate  them  so  largely, 
with  little  regard  to  the   leaves,   that  they 


38 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


■  » 

i 


i 


have  come  to  usurp  almost  the  entire  interest 
of  botanists  and  horticulturists  alike.  Dar- 
winism itself  has  only  heightened  this  exclu- 
sive interest  by  calling  attention  to  the 
reciprocal  relations  which  exist  between  the 
honey-bearing  blossom  and  the  fertilisino^ 
insect,  the  bright-coloured  petals  and  the 
myriad  facets  of  the  butterfly's  eye.  Yet 
the  leaf  is  after  all  the  real  plant,  and  the 
flower  is  but  a  sort  of  afterthought,  an 
embryo  colony  set  apart  for  the  propagation 
of  like  plants  in  future.  Each  leaf  is  in  truth 
a  separate  individual  organism,  united  with 
many  others  into  a  compound  community, 
but  possessing  in  full  its  own  mouths  and 
digestive  organs,  and  carrying  on  its  own  life 
to  a  great  extent  independently  of  the  rest. 
It  may  die  without  detriment  to  them;  it 
may  be  lopped  off  with  a  few  others  as  a 
cutting,  and  it  continues  its  life-cycle  quite 
unconcerned.  An  oak  tree  in  full  foliage  is 
a  magnificent  group  of  such  separate  indi- 
viduals— a  whole  nation  in  miniature  :  it  may 


i 


J 


A   SPRIG  OF   WATER  CROIVFOOJ. 


39 


be  compared  to  a  branched  coral  polypedom 
covered  with  a  thousand  Httle  insect  workers, 
while  each  leaf  answers  rather  to  the  separate 
polypes  themselves.  The  leaves  are  even 
capable  of  producing  new  individuals  by 
what  they  contribute  to  the  buds  on  every 
branch  ;  and  the  seeds  which  the  tree  as  a 
whole  produces  are  to  be  looked  upon  rather 
as  the  founders  of  fresh  colonies,  like  the 
swarms  of  bees,  than  as  fresh  individuals 
alone.  Every  plant  community,  in  short, 
both  adds  new  members  to  its  own  common- 
wealth, and  sends  off  totally  distinct  germs 
to  form  new  commonwealths  elsewhere. 
Thus  the  leaf  is,  in  truth,  the  central  reality 
of  the  whole  plant,  while  the  flower  exists 
only  for  the  sake  of  sending  out  a  ship- 
load of  young  emigrants  every  now  and 
then  to  try  their  fortunes  in  some  unknown 
soil. 

The  whole  life-business  of  a  leaf  is,  of 
course,  to  eat  and  grow,  just  as  these  same 
functions  form  .the  whole  life-busintss   of  a 


ir^ 


! 


40 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


caterpillar  or  a  tadpole.  But  the  way  a  plant 
eats,  we  all  know,  is  by  taking  carbon  and 
hydrogen  from  air  and  water  under  the 
influence  of  sunlight,  and  building  them  up 
into  appropriate  compounds  in  its  own  body. 
Certain  little  green  worms  or  convoluta  have 
the  same  habit,  and  live  for  the  most  part 
cheaply  of  sunlight,  making  starch  out  of 
carbonic  acid  and  water  by  means  of  their 
enclosed  chlorophyll,  exactly  as  if  they  were 
leaves.  Now  as  this  is  what  a  leaf  has  to  do, 
its  form  will  almost  entirely  depend  upon  the 
way  it  is  affected  by  sunlight  and  the  ^  - 
ments  around  it — except,  indeed,  in  so  far  as 
it  may  be  called  upon  to  perform  other 
functions,  such  as  those  of  defence  or  de- 
fiance. This  crowfoot  is  a  good  example  of 
the  results  produced  by  such  agents.  Its 
lower  leaves,  which  grow  under  water,  are 
minutely  subdivided  into  little  branching  hair- 
like segments  ;  while  its  upper  ones,  which 
raise  their  heads  above  the  surface,  are  broad 
and  united,  like  the  common*  crowfoot  type. 


A   SPRIG  OF  WATER  CROWFOOT, 


41 


How  am  I  to  account  for  these  peculiarities  ? 
I  fancy  somehow  thus  : — 

Plants  which  live  habitually  under  water 
almost  always  have  thin,  long-pointed  leaves^ 
often  thread-like  or  mere  waving  filaments. 
The  reason  for  this  is  plain  enough.  Gases 
are  not  very  abundant  in  water,  as  it  only 
holds  in  solution  a  limited  quantity  of 
oxygen  and  carbonic  acid.  Both  of  these 
the  plant  needs,  though  in  varying  quanti- 
ties :  the  carbon  to  build  up  its  starch,  and 
the  oxygen  to  use  up  in  its  growth.  Accord- 
ingly, broad  and  large  leaves  would  starve 
under  water  :  there  is  not  material  enough 
diffused  through  it  for  them  to  make  a  living 
from.  But  small,  long,  waving  leaves  which 
can  move  up  and  down  in  the  stream  would 
manage  to  catch  almost  every  passing  particle 
of  gaseous  matter,  and  to  utilize  it  under  the 
influence  of  sunlight.  Hence  all  plants  which 
live  in  fresh  water,  and  especially  all  plants 
of  higher  rank,  have  necessarily  acquired 
such  a  type  of  leaf.     It  is  the  only  form  in 


42 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


i 


which  growth  can  possibly  take  place  under 
their  circumstances.  Of  course,  however,  the 
particular  pattern  of  leaf  depends  largely 
upon  the  ancestral  form.  Thus  this  crowfoot, 
€ven  in  its  submerged  leaves,  preserves  the 
general  arrangement  of  ribs  and  leaflets 
common  to  the  whole  buttercup  tribe.  For 
the  crowfoot  family  is  a  large  and  eminently 
adaptable  race.  Some  of  them  are  larkspurs 
and  similar  queerly-shaped  blossoms  ;  others 
are  columbines  which  hang  their  complicated 
bells  on  dry  and  rocky  hillsides ;  but  the 
larger  part  are  buttercups  or  marsh  mari- 
golds which  have  simple  cup-shaped  flowers, 
and  mostly  frequent  low  and  marshy  ground. 
One  of  these  typical  crowfoots  under  stress 
of  circumstances — inundation,  or  the  like — 
took  once  upon  a  time  to  living  pretty  perma- 
nently in  the  water.  As  its  native  meadows 
g^rew  deeper  and  deeper  in  flood  it  managed 
from  year  to  year  to  assume  a  more  nautical 
life.  So,  while  its  leaf  necessarily  remained 
in  general  structure  a  true  crowfoot  leaf,  it 


I 


A  SPRIG  OF  WATER  CROWFOOT. 


43 


was  naturally  compelled  to  split  itself  up  intc 
thinner  and  narrower  segments,  each  of  which 
grew  out  in  the  direction  where  it  could  find 
most  stray  carbon  atoms,  and  most  sunlight, 
without  interference  from  its  neighbours. 
This,  I  take  it,  was  the  origin  of  the  much- 
divided  lower  leaves, 

But  a  crowfoot  could  never  live  perma- 
nently under  water.  Seaweeds  and  their 
nke,  which  propagate  by  a  kind  of  spores,  may 
remain  below  the  surface  for  ever ;  but 
flowering  plants  for  the  most  part  must  come 
up  to  the  open  air  to  blossom.  The  sea- weeds 
are  in  the  same  position  as  fish,  originally 
developed  in  the  water  and  wholly  adapted 
to  it,  whereas  flowering  plants  are  rather 
analogous  to  seals  and  whales,  air-breathing 
creatures,  whose  ancestors  lived  on  land,  and 
who  can  themselves  manage  an  aquatic  exist- 
ence only  by  frequent  visits  to  the  surface. 
So  some  flowering  water-plants  actually 
detach  their  male  blossoms  altogether,  and 
let  them  float  loose  on  the  top  of  the  water; 


wmmmmm 


mm 


44 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


I 


while  the]/  send  up  their  female  flowers  by 
means  of  a  spiral  coil,  and  draw  them  down 
again'as  soon  as  the  wind  or  the  fertilising 
insects  have  carried  the  pollen  to  its  proper 
receptacle,  so  as  to  ripen  their  seeds  at  leisure 
beneath  the  pond.  Similarly,  you  may  see 
the  arrowhead  and  the  water-lilies  sending  up 
their  buds  to  open  freely  in  the  air,  or  loll  at 
ease  upon  the  surface  of  the  stream.  Thus 
the  crowfoot,  too,  cannot  blossom  to  any 
purpose  below  the  water ;  and  as  such  ariiong 
its  ancestors  as  at  first  tried  to  do  so  must  of 
course  have  failed  in  producing  any  seed, 
they  and  their  kind  have  died  out  for  ever  ; 
while  only  those  lucky  individuals  whose 
chance  lot  it  was  to  grow  a  little  taller  and 
weedier  than  the  rest,  and  so  overtop  the 
stream,  have  handed  down  their  race  to  our 
own  time. 

But  as  soon  as  the  crowfoot  finds  itself 
above  the  level  of  the  river,  all  the  causes 
which  made  its  leaf  like  those  of  other 
aquatic  plants  have  ceased  to  operate.     The 


A  SPRIG  OF  WATER  CROWFOOT. 


45 


new  leaves  which  sprout  in  the  air  meet  with 
abundance  of  carbon  and  sunlight  on  every 
side ;  and  we  know  that  plants  grow  fast 
just  in  proportion  to  the  supply  of  carbon. 
They  have  pushed  their  way  into  an  unoc- 
cupied field,  and  they  may  thrive  apace 
without  let  or  hindrance.  So,  instead  of 
splitting  up  into  little  lance-like  leaflets,  they 
loll  on  the  surface,  and  spread  out  broader 
and  fuller,  like  the  rest  of  their  race.  The 
leaf  becomes  at  once  a  broad  type  of  crow- 
foot leaf.  Even  the  ends  of  the  submerged 
leaves,  when  any  fall  of  the  water  in  time  of 
drought  raises  them  above  the  level,  have  a 
tendency  (as  I  have  often  noticed)  to  grow 
broader  and  fatter,  with  increased  facilities  for 
food ;  but  when  the  whole  leaf  rises  from  the 
first  to  the  top  the  inherited  family  instinct 
finds  full  play  for  its  genius,  and  the  blades 
fill  out  as  naturally  as  well-bred  pigs.  The 
two  types  of  leaf  remind  one  much  of  gills 
and  lungs  respectively. 

But  above  water,  as  below  it,  the  crow- 


«« 


MR 


46 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


1  > 


foot  remains  in  principle  a  crowfoot  still.  The 
traditions  of  its  race,  acquired  in  damp  marshy 
meadows,  not  actually  under  water,  cling  to  it 
yet  in  spite  of  every  change.  Born  river  and 
pond  plants  which  rise  to  the  surface,  like  the 
water-lily  or  the  duck-weed,  have  broad  float- 
ing leaves  that  contrast  strongly  with  the 
waving  filaments  of  wholly  submerged  species. 
They  can  find  plenty  of  food  everywhere,  and 
as  the  sunlight  falls  flat  upon  them,  they  may 
as  well  spread  out  flat  to  catch  the  sunlight. 
No  other  elbowing  plants  overtop  them  and 
appropriate  the  rays,  so  compelling  them  to 
run  up  a  useless  waste  of  stem  in  order  to 
pocket  their  fair  share  of  the  golden  flood. 
Moreover,  they  thus  save  the  needless  ex- 
pense of  a  stout  leaf-stalk,  as  the  water 
supports  their  lolling  leaves  and  blossoms ; 
while  the  broad  shade  which  they  cast  on  the 
bottom  below  prevents  the  undue  competition 
of  other  species.  But  the  crowfoot,  being  by 
descent  a  kind  of  buttercup,  has  taken  to  the 
water  for  a  few   hundred  generations  only, 


: 


} 


A   SPRIG  OF  WATER  CROWFOOT.  47 

while  the  water-lily's  ancestors  have  been  to 
the  manner  born  for  millions  of  years  ;  and 
therefore  it  happens  that  the  crowfoot  is  at 
heart  but  a  meadow  buttercup  still.  One 
glance  at  its  simple  little  flower  will  show 
you  that  in  a  moment. 


iPMi 


48 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


».. 


V. 


SLUGS  AND  SNAILS. 

Hoeing  among  the  flower-beds  on  my  lawn 
this  morning — for  I  am  a  bit  of  a  gardener 
in  my  way — I  have  had  the  ill-luck  to  maim 
a  poor  yellow  slug,  who  had  hidden  himself 
among  the  encroaching  grass  on  the  edge  of 
my  little  parterre  of  sky-blue  lobelias.  This 
unavoidable  wounding  and  hacking  of  worms 
and  insects,  despite  all  one's  care,  is  no  small 
drawback  to  the  pleasures  of  gardening  in 
propria  persond.  Vivisection  for  genuine 
scientific  nurposes  in  responsible  hands,  one 
can  understand  and  tolerate,  even  though 
lacking  the  heart  for  it  oneself  ;  but  the  use- 
less and  causeless  vivisection  which  cannot 
be  prevented  in  every  ordinary  piece  of  farm- 


SLUGS  AND  SNAILS. 


49 


&> 


work  seems  a  gratuitous  blot  upon  the  face 
of  beneficent  nature.  My  only  consolation 
lies  in  the  half-formed  belief  that  feeling 
among  these  lower  creatures  is  indefinite,  and 
that  pain  appears  to  affect  them  far  less 
acutely  than  it  affects  warm-blooded  animals. 
Their  nerves  are  so  rudely  distributed  in 
loose  knots  all  over  the  body  instead  of 
being  closely  bound  together  into  a  single 
central  system  as  with  ourselves,  that  they 
can  scarcely  possess  a  consciousness  of  pain 
at  all  analogous  to  our  own.  A  wasp  whose 
head  has  been  severed  from  its  body  and 
stuck  upon  a  pin,  will  still  greedily  suck  up 
honey  with  its  throatless  mouth  ;  while  an 
Italian  mantis,  similarly  treated,  will  calmly 
continue  to  hunt  and  dart  at  midges  with  its 
decapitated  trunk  and  limbs,  quite  forgetful 
of  the  fact  that  it  has  got  no  mandibles  left 
to  eat  them  with.  These  peculiarities  lead 
one  to  hope  that  insects  may  feel  pain  less 
than  we  fear.  Yet  I  dare  scarcely  utter  the 
hope,   lest   it   should   lead   any   thoughtless 


E 


mmmmmmmmmm 


t 


|0  THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 

hearer  to  act  upon  the  very  questionable 
belief,  as  they  say  even  the  amiable  enthu- 
siasts of  Port  Royal  acted  upon  the  doctrine 
that  animals  were  mere  unconscious  automata, 
by  pushing  their  theory  to  the  too  practical 
length  of  active  cruelty.  Let  us  at  least  give 
the  slugs  and  beetles  the  benefit  of  the  doubt. 
People  often  say  that  science  makes  men 
unfeeling :  for  my  own  part,  I  fancy  it  makes 
them  only  the  more  humane,  since  they  are 
the  better  able  dimly  to  figure  to  themselves 
the  pleasures  and  pains  of  humbler  beings  as 
they  really  are.  The  man  of  science  perhaps 
realises  more  vividly  than  all  other  men  the 
inner  life  and  vague  rights  even  of  crawling 
worms  and  ugly  earwigs. 

I  will  take  up  this  poor  slug  whose  mishap 
has  set  me  preaching,  and  put  him  out  of 
his  misery  at  once,  if  misery  it  be.  My  hoe 
has  cut  through  the  soft  flesh  of  the  mantle 

lie   little   embedded   shell. 


and 


igamst 


Very  few  people  know  that  a  slug  has  a  shell, 
but  it  has,  though  quite  hidden  Arom  view  ; 


SLUGS  AND  SNAILS. 


5» 


at  least,  in  this  yellow  kind — for  there  are 
other  sorts  which  have  got  rid  of  it  alto- 
gether. I  am  not  sure  that  I  have  wounded 
the  poor  thing  very  seriously ;  for  the  shell 
protects  the  heart  and  vital  organs,  and  the 
hoe  has  glanced  off  on  striking  it,  so  that 
the  mantle  alone  is  injured,  and  that  by  no 
means  irrecoverably.  Snail  flesh  heals  fast, 
and  on  the  whole  I  shall  be  justified,  I  think, 
in  letting  him  go.  But  it  is  a  very  curious 
thing  that  this  slug  should  have  a  shell  at 
all !  Of  course  it  is  by  descent  a  snail,  and, 
indeed,  there  are  very  few  differences  between 
the  two  races  except  in  the  presence  or  ab- 
sence of  a  house.  You  may  trace  a  curiously 
4'omplete  set  of  gradations  between  the  per- 
fect snail  and  the  perfect  slug  in  this  respect ; 
for  all  the  intermediate  forms  still  survive 
with  only  an  almost  imperceptible  gap  between 
€ach  species  and  the  next.  Some  kinds, 
like  the  common  brown  garden  snail,  have 
comparatively  small  bodies  and  big  shells,  so 
that  they  can  retire  comfortably  within  them 


E  2 


52 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


when  attacked  ;  and  if  they  only  had  a  lid  or 
door  to  their  houses  they  could  shut  them- 
selves up  hermetically,  as  periwinkles  and 
similar  mollusks  actually  do.  Other  kinds^ 
like  the  pretty  golden  amber-snails  which 
frequent  marshy  places,  have  a  body  much 
too  big  for  its  house,  so  that  they  cannot 
possibly  retire  within  their  shells  completely. 
Then  come  a  number  of  intermediate  species, 
each  with  progressively  smaller  and  thinner 
shells,  till  at  length  we  reach  the  testacella, 
which  has  only  a  sort  of  limpet-shaped  shield 
on  his  tail,  so  that  he  is  generally  recognised 
as  being  the  first  of  the  slugs  rather  than  the 
last  of  the  snails.  You  will  not  find  a  testa- 
cella unless  you  particularly  look  for  him,^ 
for  he  seldom  comes  above  ground,  being  a 
most  bloodthirsty  subterraneous  carnivore 
who  follows  the  burrows  of  earthworms  as 
savagely  as  a  ferret  tracks  those  of  rabbits  ; 
but  in  all  the  southern  and  western  counties 
you  may  light  upon  stray  specimens  if  you 
search  carefully  in  damp  places  under  fallen 


SLUGS  AND  SNAILS. 


53 


J 


I' 


t 


leaves.  Even  in  testacellse,  however,  the 
small  shell  is  still  external.  In  this  yellow 
slug  here,  on  the  contrary,  it  does  not  show 
itself  at  all,  but  is  buried  under  the  closely 
wrinkled  skin  of  the  glossy  mantle.  It  has 
become  a  mere  saucer,  with  no  more  sym- 
metry or  regularity  than  an  oyster-shell. 
Among  the  various  kinds  of  slugs,  you  may 
watch  this  relic  or  rudiment  gradually  dwind- 
ling further  and  further  towards  annihilation  ; 
till  finally,  in  the  great  fat  black  slugs  which 
appear  so  plentifully  on  the  roads  after 
summer  showers,  it  is  represented  only  by  a 
few  rough  calcareous  grains,  scattered  up  and 
down  through  the  mantle;  and  sometimes 
even  these  are  wanting.  The^organs  which 
used  to  secrete  the  shell  in  their  remote 
ancestors  have  either  ceased  to  work  alto- 
gether or  are  reduced  to  performing  a  useless 
office  by  mere  organic  routine. 

The  reason  why  some  mollusks  have  thus 
lost  their  shells  is  clear  enough.  Shells  are 
of  two  kinds,  calcareous  and  horny.      Both 


54 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


of  them  require  more  or  less  lime  or  other 
mineral  matters,  though  in  varying  propor- 
tions. Now,  the  snails  which  thrive  best  on 
the  bare  chalk  downs  behind  my  little  combe 
belong  to  that  pretty  banded  black-and-white 
sort  which  everybody  must  have  noticed 
feeding  in  abundance  on  all  chalk  soils.  In- 
deed, Sussex  farmers  will  tell  you  that  South 
Down  mutton  owes  its  excellence  to  these 
fat  little  mollusks,  not  to  the  scanty  herb- 
age of  their  thin  pasture-lands.  The  pretty 
banded  shells  in  question  are  almost  wholly 
composed  of  lime,  which  the  snails  can,  of 
course,  obtain  in  any  required  quantity  from 
the  chalk.  In  most  limestone  districts  you 
will  similarly  find  that  snails  with  calcareous 
shells  predominate.  But  if  you  go  into  a 
granite  or  sandstone  tract  you  will  see  that 
horny  shells  have  it  all  their  own  way.  Now, 
some  snails  with  such  houses  took  to  living 
in  very  damp  and  marshy  places,  which  they 
were  naturally  apt  to  do — as  indeed  the  land- 
snails  in  a  body  are  merely  pond-snails  which 


SLUGS  AND  SNAILS. 


s> 


% 


have  taken  to  crawling  up  the  leaves  of 
marsh-plants,  and  have  thus  gradually  accli- 
matised themselves  to  a  terrestrial  existence. 
We  can  trace  a  perfectly  regular  series  from 
the  most  aquatic  to  the  most  land-loving 
species,  just  as  I  have  tried  to  trace  a  regular 
series  from  the  shell-bearing  snails  to  the 
shell-less  slugs.  Well,  when  the  earliest 
common  ancestor  of  both  these  last-named 
races  first  took  to  living  above  water,  he 
possessed  a  horny  shell  (like  that  of  the 
amber-snail),  which  his  progenitors  used  to 
manufacture  from  the  mineral  matters  dis- 
solved in  their  native  streams.  Some  of  the 
younger  branches  descended  from  this  pri- 
maeval land-snail  took  to  living  on  very  dry 
^and,  and  when  they  reached  chalky  districts 
manufactured  their  shells,  on  an  easy  and 
improved  principle,  almost  entirely  out  of 
lime.  But  others  took  to  living  in  moist 
and  boggy  places,  where  mineral  matter  was 
rare,  and  where  the  soil  consisted  for  the 
most    part    of   decaying    vegetable    mould. 


mm 


im 


'v^ 


tmm 


^tmv* 


7 


56 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


\ 


Here  they  could  get  little  or  no  lime,  and  so 
their  shells  grew  smaller  and  sm^aller,  in 
proportion  as  their  habits  became  more  de- 
cidedly terrestrial.  But  to  the  last,  as  long 
as  any  shell  at  all  remained,  it  generally 
covered  their  hearts  and  other  important 
organs  ;  because  it  would  there  act  as  a  spe- 
cial protection,  even  after  it  had  ceased  to  be 
of  any  use  for  the  defence  of  the  animal's 
body  as  a  whole.  Exactly  in  the  same  way 
men  specially  protected  their  heads  and 
breasts  with  helmets  and  cuirasses,  before 
armour  was  used  for  the  whole  body,  because 
these  were  the  places  where  a  wound  would 
be  most  dangerous ;  and  they  continued  to 
cover  these  vulnerable  spots  in  the  same  man- 
ner even  when  the  use  of  armour  had  Ijeen 
generally  abandoned.  My  poor  mutilated 
slug,  who  is  just  now  crawling  off  contentedly 
enough  towards  the  hedge,  would  have  been 
cut  in  two  outright  by  my  hoe  had  it  not  been 
for  that  solid  calcareous  plate  of  his,  which 
saved  his  life  as  surely  as  any  coat  of  mail. 


«■♦ 


SLUGS  AND  SNAILS. 


ff 


'  How  does  it  come,  though,  that  slugs  and 
snails  now  live  together  in  the  self-same  dis- 
tricts ?  Why,  because  they  each  live  in  their 
own  way.  Slugs  belong  by  origin  to  very 
damp  and  marshy  spots  ;  but  in  the  fierce 
competition  of  modern  life  they  spread  them- 
selves over  comparatively  dry  places,  pro- 
vided there  is  long  grass  to  hide  in,  or  stones 
under  which  to  creep,  or  juicy  herbs  like 
lettuce,  among  whose  leaves  are  nice  moist 
nooks  wherein  t  j  lurk  during  the  heat  of  the 
day.  Moreover,  some  kinds  of  slugs  are 
quite  as  well  protected  from  birds  (such  as 
ducks)  by  their  nauseous  taste  as  snails  are 
by  their  shells.  Thus  it  happens  that  at  pre- 
sent both  races  may  be  discovered  in  many 
hedges  and  thickets  side  by  side.  But  the 
real  home  of  each  is  quite  different.  The 
truest  and  most  sna'1-like  snails  are  found  in 
greatest  abundance:  upon  high  chalk-downs, 
heathy  limestone  hills,  and  other  compara- 
tively dry  places  ;  while  the  truest  and  most 
slug-like  slugs  are  found  in  greatest  abund- 


58 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


ance  among  low  water-logged  meadows,  or 
under  the  damp  fallen  leaves  of  moist  copses. 
The  intermediate  kinds  inhabit  the  inter- 
mediate places.  Yet  to  the  last  even  the 
most  thorough-going  snails  retain  a  final  trace 
of  their  original  water-haunting  life,  in  their 
universal  habit  of  seeking  out  the  coolest 
and  moistest  spots  of  their  respective  habitats. 
The  soft-fleshed  mollusks  are  all  by  nature 
aquatic  animals,  and  nothing  can  induce  them 
wholly  to  forget  the  old  tradition  of  their 
marine  or  fresh-water  existence. 


A  STUDY  OF  BONES, 


5^ 


A  STUDY  OF  BONES. 


On  the  top  of  this  bleak  chilk  down,  where 
I  am  wandering  on  a  dull  afternoon,  I  light 
upon  the  blanched  skeleton  of  a  crow,  which 
I  need  rot  fear  to  handle,  as  its  bones  have 
been  first  picked  clean  by  carrion  birds,  and 
then  finally  purified  by  hungry  ants,  time, 
and  stormy  weather.  I  pick  a  piece  of  it 
up  in  my  hands,  and  find  that  I  have  got 
hold  of  its  clumped  tail-bone.  A  strange 
fragment  truly,  with  a  strange  history,  which 
I  may  well  spell  out  as  I  sit  to  rest  a  minute 
upon  the  neighbouring  stile.  For  this  dry 
tail -bone  consists,  as  I  can  see  at  a  glance, 
of    several    separate    vertebrae,    all    firmly 


6o 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


welded  together  into  a  single  piece.  They 
must  once  upon  a  time  have  been  real  dis- 
connected jointed  vertebrae,  like  those  of  the 
•dog's  or  lizard's  tail ;  and  the  way  in  which 
they  have  become  fixed  fast  into  a  solid 
mass  sheds  a  world  of  light  upon  the  true 
nature  and  origir.  of  birds,  as  well  as  upon 
many  analogous  cases  elsewhere. 

When  I  say  that  these  bones  were  once 
separate,  I  am  indulging  in  no  mere  hypothe- 
tical Darwinian  speculation  I  refer,  not  to 
the  race,  but  to  the  particular  crow  in  person. 
These  very  pieces  themselves,  in  their  em- 
bryonic condition,  were  as  distinct  as  the  indi- 
vidual bones  of  the  bird's  neck  or  of  our  own 
spines.  If  you  were  to  examine  the  chick 
in  the  ^%g  you  would  find  them  quite  di- 
vided. But  as  the  young  crow  grows  more 
and  more  into  the  typical  bird-pattern,  this 
lizard-like  peculiarity  fades  away,  and  the 
separate  pieces  unite  by  'anastomosis*  into 
a  single  '  coccygean  bone,'  as  the  osteologists 
<:all  it.     In  all  our  modern  birds,  as  in  this 


A   STUDY  OF  BONES. 


6i 


crow,  the  vertebrae  composing  the  tail-bone 
are  few  in  number,  and  are  soldered  together 
immovably  in  the  adult  form.  It  was  not 
always  so,  however,  with  ancestral  birds. 
The  earliest  known  member  of  the  class — 
the  famous  fossil  bird  of  the  Solenhofen  litho- 
graphic stone — retained  throughout  its  whole 
life  a  long  flexible  tail,  composed  of  twenty 
unwelded  vertebrae,  each  of  which  bore  a 
single  pair  of  quill-feathers,  the  predecessors 
of  our  modern  pigeon's  train.  There  are 
many  other  marked  reptilian  peculiarities  in 
this  primitive  oolitic  bird ;  and  it  apparently 
possessed  true  teeth  in  its  jaws,  as  its  later 
cretaceous  kinsmen  discovered  by  Professor 
Marsh  undoubtedly  did.  When  we  compare 
side  by  side  those  real  flying  dragons,  the 
Pterodactyls,  together  with  the  very  bird- 
like J3einosaurians,  on  the  one  hand,  and 
these  early  toothed  and  lizard-tailed  birds  on 
the  other,  we  can  have  no  reasonable  doubt 
in  deciding  that  our  own  sparrows  and  swal- 
lows are  the  remote  feathered  descendants 


I 


•62 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


of  an  original  reptilian  or  half-reptilian  an- 
cestor. 

Why  modern  birds  have  lost  their  long 
flexible  tails  it  is  not  difficult  to  see.  The  tail 
descends  to  all  higher  vertebrates  as  an  heir- 
loom from  the  fishes,  the  amphibia,  and  their 
other  aquatic  predecessors.  With  these  it  is 
a  necessary  organ  of  locomotion  in  swim- 
ming, and  it  remains  almost  equally  useful  to 
the  lithe  and  gliding  lizard  on  land.  Indeed 
the  snake  is  but  a  lizard  who  has  substituted 
this  wriggling  motion  for  the  use  of  legs 
altogether ;  and  we  can  trace  a  gradual  suc- 
cession from  the  four-legged  true  lizards, 
through  snake-like  forms  with  two  legs  and 
wholly  rudimentary  legs,  to  the  absolutely 
limbless  serpents  themselves.  But  to  flying 
birds,  on  the  contrary,  a  long  bony  tail  is 
only  an  inconvenience.  All  that  they  need 
is  a  little  muscular  knob  for  the  support  of 
the  tail-feathers,  which  they  employ  as  a 
rudder  in  guiding  their  flight  upward  or 
downward,  to  right  or  left.     The  elongated 


•Ml**  mm 


A  STUDY  OF  BONES. 


63 


waving  tail  of  the  Solenhofen  bird,  with  its 
single  pairs  of  quills,  must  have  been  a  com- 
paratively ineffectual  and  clumsy  piece  of 
mechanism  for  steering  an  aerial  creature 
through  its  novel  domain.  Accordingly,  the 
bones  soon  grew  fewer  in  number  and  shorter 
in  length,  while  the  feathers  simultaneously 
arranged  themselves  side  by  side  upon  the 
terminal  hump.  As  early  as  the  time  when 
our  chalk  was  deposited,  the  bird's  tail  had 
become  what  it  is  at  the  present  day*— 
a  single  united  bone,  consisting  of  a  few 
scarcely  distinguishable  crowded  rings.  This 
is  the  form  it  assumes  in  the  toothed  fossil 
birds  of  Western  America.  But,  as  if  to 
preserve  the  memory  of  their  reptilian  origin, 
birds  in  their  embryo  stage  still  go  on  pro- 
ducing separate  caudal  vertebras,  only  to 
unite  them  together  at  a  later  point  of  their 
development  into  the  typical  coccygean  bone. 
Much  the  same  sort  of  process  has  taken 
place  in  the  higher  apes,  and,  as  Mr.  Darwin 
would  assure  us,  in  man  himself.     There  the 


Mi 


mmm 


64 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


1  5 


long  prehensile  tail  of  the  monkeys  has 
grown  gradually  shorter,  and,  being  at  last 
coiled  up  under  the  haunches,  has  finally  de- 
generated into  an  insignificant  and  wholly 
embedded  terminal  joint.  But,  indeed,  we  can 
find  traces  of  a  similar  adaptation  to  circum- 
stances everywhere.  Take,  for  instance,  the 
common  English  amphibians.  The  newt 
passes  all  its  life  in  the  water,  and  therefore 
always  retains  its  serviceable  tail  as  a  swim- 
ming organ.  The  frog  in  its  tadpole  state  is 
also  aquatic,  and  it  swims  wholly  by  means  of 
its  broad  and  flat  rudder-like  appendage.  But 
as  its  legs  bud  out,  and  it  begins  to  fit  itself 
for  a  terrestrial  existence,  the  tail  undergoes 
a  rapid  atrophy,  and  finally  fades  away  alto- 
gether. To  a  hopping  frog  on  land,  such  a 
long  train  would  be  a  useless  drag,  while  in 
the  water  its  webbed  feet  and  muscular  legs 
make  a  satisfactory  substitute  for  the  lost 
organ.  Last  of  all,  the  tree-frog,  leading  a 
specially  terrestrial  life,  has  no  tadpole  at  all, 
but  emerges  from  the  t.g%  in  the  full  frog- 


•  * 


A   STUDY  OF  BONES. 


6S 


like  shape.     As  he  never  lives  in  the  water, 
he  never  feels  the  need  of  a  tail.  . 

The  edible  crab  and  lobster  show  us  an 
exactly  parallel  case  amongst  crustaceans. 
Everybody  has  noticed  that  a  crab's  body  is 
practically  identical  with  a  lobster's,  only  that 
in  the  crab  the  body-segments  are  broad  and 
compact,  while  the  tail,  so  conspicuous  in  its 
kinsman,  is  here  relatively  small  and  tucked 
away  unobtrusively  behind  the  legs.  This 
difference  in  construction  depends  entirely 
upon  the  habits  and  manners  of  the  two 
races.  The  lobster  lives  among  rocks  and 
ledges ;  he  uses  his  small  legs  but  little  for 
locomotion,  but  he  springs  surprisingly  fast 
and  far  through  the  water  by  a  single  effort 
of  his  powerful  muscular  tail.  As  to  his  big 
fore-claws,  those,  we  all  know,  are  organs  of 
prehension  and  weapons  of  offence,  not 
pieces  of  locomotive  mechanism.  Hence  the 
edible  and  muscular  part  of  a  lobster  is 
chiefly  to  be  found  in  the  claws  [and  tail, 
the  latter  having  naturally  the  firmest  and 


I 

1 


I  1 


I 

if 


46  THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 

Strongest    flesh.      The   crab,    on   the   other 
hand,  lives  on  the  sandy  bottom,  and  walks 
about  on  its  lesser  legs,  instead  of  swimming 
or  darting  through  the  water  by  blows  of  its 
tail,  like  the  lobster  or  the  still  more  active 
prawn  and  shrimp.      Hence   the  crabs  tail 
has   dwindled  away  to  a  mere  useless  his- 
torical relic,  while  the  most  important  muscles 
in  its  body  are  those  seated  in  the  network 
of  shell  just  above  its  locomotive  legs.     In 
this  case,  again,  it  is  clear  that  the  appendage 
has  disappeared  because  the  owner  had  no 
further  use    for   it.       .ndeed,    if    one  looks 
through  all  nature,   one  will  find  the  philo- 
sophy of  tails  eminently   simple    and    utili- 
tarian.      Those    animals    that    need    them 
evolve  them  ;  those  animals  that  do  not  need 
them  never  develop  them  ;  and  those  animals 
that  have  once  had  them,  but  no  longer  use 
them  for   practical    purposes,  retain  a  mere 
shrivelled  rudiment   as  a  lingering  reminis- 
cence of  their  original  habits. 


BLUE  MUD. 


VII. 


BLUE  MUD. 


After  last  night's  rain,  the  cliffs  that  bound 
the  bay  have  come  out  in  all  their  most  bril- 
liant colours  ;  so  this  morning  I  am  turning 
my  steps  seaward,  and  wandering  along  the 
great  ridge  of  pebbles  which  here  breaks  the 
force  of  the  Channel  waves  as  they  beat 
against  the  long  line  of  the  Dorset  downs. 
Our  cliffs  just  at  this  point  are  composed  of 
blue  lias  beneath,  with  a  capping  of  yellow 
sandstone  on  their  summits,  above  which  in 
a  few  places  the  layer  of  chalk  that  once 
topped  the  whole  country-side  has  still 
resisted  the  slow  wear  and  tear  of  unnum- 
bered centuries.  These  three  elements  give 
a  variety  to  the  bold  and  broken  bluffs  which 


F2 


•*-  -^ 


>• 


M  THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 

is  rare  along  the  monotonous  southern 
escarpment  of  the  English  coast.  After  rain, 
especially,  the  changes  of  colour  on  their  sides 
are  often  quite  startling  in  their  vividness  and 
intensity.  To-day,  for  example,  the  yellow 
sandstone  is  tinged  in  parts  with  a  deep  russet 
red,  contrasting  admirably  with  the  bright 
green  of  the  fields  above  and  the  sombre 
steel-blue  of  the  lias  belt  below.  Besides,  we 
have  had  so  many  landslips  along  this  bit  of 
shore,  that  the  various  layers  of  rock  have 
in  more  than  one  place  got  mixed  up  with 
one  another  into  inextricable  confusion.  The 
little  town  nestling  in  the  hollow  behind  me 
has  long  been  famous  as  the  head-quarters 
of  early  geologists  ;  and  not  a  small  propor- 
tion of  the  people  earn  their  livelihood  to  the 
present  day  by  'goin*  a  fossiling.'  Every 
child  about  the  place  recognises  ammonites 
as  *  snake-stones  ; '  while  even  the  rarer  ver- 
tebree  of  extinct  saiirians  have  acquired  a 
local  designation  as  '  verterberries.'  So, 
whether  in  search  of  science  or  the   pictur- 


liLUE  MUD. 


69 


esque,  I  often  clamber  clown  in  this  direction 
for  my  daily  stroll,  particularly  when,  as  is 
the  case  to-day,  the  rain  has  had  time  to 
trickle  through  the  yellow  rock,  and  the  sun 
then  shines  full  against  its  face,  to  light  it  up 
with  a  rich  flood  of  golden  splendour. 

The  base  of  the  cliffs  consists  entirely  of 
a  very  soft  and  plastic  blue  lias  mud  This 
mud  contains  large  numbers  of  fossils,  chiefly 
chambered  shells,  but  mixed  with  not  a  few 
relics  of  the  great  swimming  and  flying 
lizards  that  swarmed  among  the  shallow  flats 
or  low  islands  of  the  lias  sea.  When  the  blue 
mud  was  slowly  accumulating  in  the  hollows 
of  the  ancient  bottom,  these  huge  saurians 
formed  practically  the  highest  race  of  animals 
then  existing  upon  earth.  There  were,  it  is 
true,  a  few  primaeval  kangaroo-mice  and  wom- 
bats among  the  rank  brushwood  of  the  main- 
land ;  and  there  may  even  have  been  a  species 
or  two  of  reptilian  birds,  with  murderous- 
looking  teeth  and  long  lizard-like  tails — 
descendants  of  those  problematical  creatures 


■PMH 


! 


70  THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 

which  printed  their  footmarks  on  the  Ameri- 
can trias,  and  ancestors  of  the  later  toothed 
bird  whose  tail-feathers  have  been  naturally 
lithographed  for  us  on  the  Solenhofen  slate. 
But  in  spite  of  such  rare  precursors  of  higher 
modern  types,  the  saurian  was  in  fact  the  real 
lord  of  earth  in  the  lias  ocean. 

For  h'ra  did  his  high  sun  flame,  and  his  river  billowing  ran, 
And  he  felt  himself  in  his  pride  to  be  nature's  crowning  race. 

We  have  adopted  an  easy  and  slovenly 
way  of  dividing  all  rocks  into  primary,  secon- 
dary, and  tertiary,  which  veils  from  us  the 
real  chronological  relations  of  evolving  life  in 
the  different  periods.  The  lias  is  ranked  by 
geologists  among  the  earliest  secondary  for- 
mations :  but  if  we  were  to  distribute  all  the 
sedimentary  rocks  into  ten  great  epochs,  each 
representing  about  equal  duration  m  time,  the 
lias  would  really  fall  in  the  tenth  and  latest 
of  all.  So  very  misleading  to  the  ordinary 
mind  is  our  accepted  geological  nomenclature. 
Nay,  even  commonplace  geologists  themselves 


■.*t  ib-T^ier  ^  \- 


BLUE  MUD. 


71 


often   overlook  the  real  implications  of  many 
facts  and  figures  which  they  have  learned  to 
^juote  glibly  enough  in  a  certain  off-hand  way 
1  :t  mejustbriefly  reconstruct  the  chief  features 
of  this  scarcely  recognised  world's  chronology 
as  I  sit  on  this  piece  of  fallen  chalk  at  the  foot 
of  the  mouldering  cliff,  where  the  stream  from 
the  meadow  above  brought  down  the  newest 
landslip  durino^  che  hard  frosts  of  last  Decem- 
ber.    First  of  all,  there  is  the  vast  lapse  of 
time  represented  by  the  Laurentian  rocks  of 
Canada.     These  Laurentian  rocks,  the  oldest 
in  the  world,  are  at  least  30,000  feet  in  thick- 
ness, and  it  must  be  allowed  that  it  takes  a 
reasonable  number  of  years   to   accumulate 
such   a    mass  of  solid  limestone  or  clay  as 
that  at  the  bottom  of  even  the  widest  pri- 
maeval ocean.     In  these  rocks  there  are  no 
fossils,  except  a  single  very  doubtful  member 
of  the  very  lowest  animal  type.     But  there 
are   indirect   traces   of  life   in   the   shape  of 
limestone  probably  derived  from  shells,  and  of 
black  lead  probably  derived  from  plants.    All 


^J. 


72 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


I  !> 


these  early  deposits  have  been  terribly  twisted 
and  contorted  by  subsequent  convulsions  of 
the  earth,  and  most  of  them  have  been  melted 
down  by  volcanic  action ;  so  that  we  can  tell 
very  little  about  their  original  state.  Thus 
the  history  of  life  opens  for  us,  like  most 
other  histories,  with  a  period  oi  uncertainty  : 
its  origin  is  lost  in  the  distant  vistas  of  time* 
Still,  we  know  that  there  was  such  an  early 
period ;  and  from  the  thickness  of  the  rocks 
which  represent  it  we  may  conjecture  that  it 
spread  over  three  out  of  the  ten  great  aeons 
into  which  I  have  roughly  divided  geological 
time.  Next  comes  the  period  known  as  the 
Cambrian,  and  to  it  we  may  similarly  assign 
about  two  and  a  half  aeons  on  like  grounds. 
The  Cambrian  epoch  begins  with  a  fair 
sprinkling  of  the  lower  animals  and  plants, 
presumably  developed  during  the  preceding 
age ;  but  it  shows  no  remains  of  fish  or  any 
other  vertebrates.  To  the  Silurian,  Devo* 
nian,  and  Carboniferous  periods  we  may 
roughly  alio  w  an  aeon  and  a  fraction  each ; 


c^ 


BLUE  MUD. 


75 


while  to  the  whole  group  of  secondary  and 
tertiary  strata,  comprising  almost  all  the  best- 
known  English  formations — red  marl,  lias, 
oolite,  greensand,  chalk,  eocene,  miocene, 
pliocene,  and  drift — we  can  only  give  a  single 
aeon  to  be  divided  between  them.  Such  facts 
will  sufficiently  suggest  how  comparatively 
modern  are  all  these  rocks  when  viewed  by 
the  light  of  an  -absolute  chronology.  Now, 
the  first  fishes  do  not  occur  till  the  Silurian — 
that  is  to  say,  in  or  about  the  seventh  aeon 
after  the  beginning  of  geological  time.  The 
first  mammals  are  found  in  the  trias,  at  the 
beginning  of  the  tenth  eeon.  And  the  first 
known  bird  only  makes  its  appearance  in  the 
oolite,  about  half-way  through  that  latest 
period.  This  will  show  that  there  was  plenty 
of  time  for  their  development  in  the  earlier 
ages.  True,  we  must  reckon  the  interval 
between  ourselves  and  the  date  of  this  blue 
mud  at  many  millions  of  years  ;  but  then  we 
must  reckon  the  interval  between  the  lias  and 
the  earliest  Cambrian  strata  at  some  six  times 


I 


\ ; 


mm 


, 


I!  > 


ft 


i    •! 


74 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


as  much,  and  between  the  lias  and  the  lowest 
Laurentian  beds  at  nearly  ten  times  as  much. 
Just  the  same  sort  of  lessening  perspective 
exists  in  geology  as  in  ordinary  history. 
Most  people  look  upon  the  age  before  the 
Norman  Conquest  as  a  mere  brief  episode  of 
the  English  annals ;  yet  six  whole  centuries 
elapsed  between  the  landing  of  the  real  or 
mythical  Hengst  at  Ebbsfieet  and  the  land- 
ing of  William  the  Conqueror  at  Hastings  ; 
while  under  eight  centuries  elapsed  between 
the  time  of  William  the  Conqueror  and  the  ac- 
cession of  Queen  Victoria.  But,  just  as  most 
English  histories  give  far  more  space  to  the 
three  centuries  since  Elizabeth  than  to  the 
eleven  centuries  which  preceded  them,  so 
most  books  on  geology  give  far  more  space 
to  the  single  seon  (embracing  the  secondary 
and  tertiary  periods)  which  comes  nearest  our 
own  time,  than  to  the  nine  aeons  which  spread 
from  the  Laurentian  to  the  Carboniferous 
epoch.  In  the  earliest  period,  records  either 
geological  or  historical  are  wholly  wanting ; 


■' 


BLUE  MUD. 


75 


in  the  later  periods  they  become  both  more 
numerous  and  more  varied  in  proportion  as 
they  approach  nearer  and  nearer  to  our  own 
time. 

So  too,  in  the  days  when  Mr.  Darwin  first 
took  away  the  breath  of  scientific  Europe  by 
his  startling  theories,  it  used  confidently  to  be 
said  that  geology  had  shown  us  no  interme- 
diate form  between  species  and  species.  Even 
at  the  time  when  this  assertion  was  originally 
made  it  was  quite  untenable.  All  early  geo- 
logical forms,  of  whatever  race,  belong  to 
what  we  foolishly  call  '  generalised  '  types  : 
that  is  to  say,  they  present  a  mixture  of  fea- 
tures now  found  separately  in  several  different 
animals.  In  other  words,  they  represent 
early  ancestors  of  all  the  modern  forms,  with 
peculiarities  intermediate  between  those  of 
their  more  highly  differentiated  descendants  ; 
and  hence  we  ought  to  call  them  *  unspe- 
cialised*  rather  than  'generalised'  types.  For 
example,  the  earliest  ancestral  horse  is  partly 
a  horse  and  partly  a  tapir :  we  may  regard 


I 


! 


76 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


him  as  a  tertium  quid^  a  middle  term,  from 
which  the  horse  has  varied  in  or  direction 
and  the  tapir  in  another,  each  of  them  exag- 
gerating certain  special  peculiarities  of  the 
common  ancestor  and  losing  others,  in  accord- 
ance with  the  circumstances  in  which  they 
have  been  placed.  Science  is  now  perpetu- 
ally discovering  intermediate  forms,  many  of 
which  compose  an  unbroken  series  between 
the  unspecialised  ancestral  type  and  the 
familiar  modern  creatures.  Thus,  in  this 
very  case  of  the  horse,  Professor  Marsh  has 
unearthed  a  long  line  of  ibssil  animals  which 
lead  in  direct  descent  from  the  extremely  un- 
horse-like eocene  type  to  the  developed  Arab 
of  our  own  times.  Similarly  with  birds, 
Professor  Huxley  has  shown  that  there  is 
hardly  any  gap  between  the  very  bird-like 
lizards  of  the  lias  and  the  very  lizard-like  birds 
of  the  oolite.  Such  links,  discovered  afresh 
every  day,  are  perpetual  denials  to  the  old 
parrot-like  cry  of  *  No  geological  evidence  for 
evolution.' 


CUCKOO'PINT. 


77 


VIII. 

CUCKOO-PINT. 

In  the  bank  which  supports  the  hedge,  beside 
this  Htde  hanger  on  the  flank  of  Black  Down, 
the  glossy  arrow-headed  leaves  of  the  com- 
mon arum  form  at  this  moment  beautiful 
masses  of  vivid  green  foliage.  '  Cuckoo- 
pint  '  is  the  pretty  poetical  old  English  name 
for  the  plant ;  but  village  children  know  it 
better  by  the  equally  quaint  and  fanciful  tide 
of  '  lords  and  ladies.'  The  arum  is  not  now 
in  flower  :  it  blossomed  much  earlier  in  the 
season,  and  its  queer  clustered  fruits  are  just 
at  present  swelling  out  into  rather  shapeless 
litde  light-green  bulbs,  preparatory  to  assum- 
ing the  bright  coral-red  hue  which  makes 
them  so  conspicuous  among  the  hedgerows 


7« 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


during  the  autumn  months.  A  cut-and-dry 
technical  botanist  would  therefore  have  little 
to  say  to  it  in  its  present  stage,  because  he 
cares  only  for  the  flowers  and  seeds  which 
help  him  in  his  dreary  classifications,  and  give 
him  so  splendid  an  opportunity  for  displaying 
the  treasures  of  his  Latinised  terminology. 
But  to  me  the  plant  itself  is  the  central  point 
of  interest,  not  the  names  (mostly  in  bad 
Greek)  by  which  this  or  that  local  orchid- 
hunter  has  endeavoured  to  earn  immortality. 
This  arum,  for  example,  grows  first  from 
a  small  hard  seed  with  a  single  lobe  or  seed- 
leaf  In  the  seed  there  is  a  little  store  of 
starch  and  albumen  laid  up  by  the  mother- 
plant,  on  which  the  young  arum  feeds,  just  as 
truly  as  the  growing  chick  feeds  on  the  white 
which  surrounds  its  nativj  yolk,  or  as  you 
and  I  feed  on  the  similar  starches  and  albu- 
mens laid  by  for  the  use  of  the  young  plant 
in  the  grain  of  wheat,  or  for  the  young  fowl 
in  the  ^^^.  Full-grown  plants  live  by  taking 
in  food-stuffs  from  the  air  under  the  influence 


CUCKOO-PINT. 


79 


of  sunl'-^ht ;  but   a  young  seedling  can    no 
more  feed  itself  than  a  human  baby  can  ;  and 
so  food  is  stored  up  for  it  beforehand  by  the 
parent  stock.     As  the  kernel  swells  with  heat 
and  moisture,  its  starches  and  albumens  get 
oxidised   and   produce   the  motions  and  re- 
arrangements of  particles  that  result  in  the 
growth  of  a  new  plant.     First  a  little  head 
rises  towards  the  sunlijk;ht  and  .i   little  root 
pushes    downward    towards   thi     moist    soil 
beneath.     The   business   of  the   root   is   to 
collt»ct  water  for  the  circulating  medium — the 
sap  or  blood  of  the  plant — as  well  as  a  few 
mineral  matters   required   for   its  stem  and 
cells  ;  but  the  business  of  the  head  is  to  spread 
out  into  leaves,  which  are  the  real    mouths 
and   stomachs   of  the   compound  organism. 
For   we    must  never   forget    that   all  plants 
mainly  grow,  not,  as  most   people  suppose, 
from  the  earth,  but  from  the  air.     They  are 
for   the   most  part  mere  masses  of  carbon- 
compounds,  and  the  carbon  in  them  comes 
from  the  carbonic  acid  diffused  through  the 


^O 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


1'! 


!' 


<  I  < 


atmosphere  around,  and  is  separated  by  the 
sunlight  acting  in  the  leaves.  There  it  mixes 
with  small  quantities  of  hydrogen  and  nitro- 
gen brought  by  the  roots  from  soil  and  water ; 
and  the  starches  or  other  bodies  thus  formed 
are  then  conveyed  by  the  sap  to  the  places 
where  they  will  be  required  in  the  economy 
of  the  plant  system.  That  is  the  all-import- 
ant fact  in  vegetable  physiology,  just  as  the 
digestion  and  assimilation  of  food  and  the 
circulation  of  the  blood  are  in  our  own  bodies. 
The  arum,  like  the  grain  of  wheat,  has 
only  a  single  seed-leaf;  whereas  the  pea,  as 
we  all  know,  has  two.  This  is  the  most  fun- 
damental difference  among  flowering  plants, 
as  it  points  back  to  an  early  and  deep-seated 
mode  of  growth,  about  which  they  must  have 
split  off  from  one  another  millions  of  years 
ago.  All  the  one-lobed  plants  grow  with 
stems  like  grasses,  or  bamboos,  formed  by 
single  leaves  enclosing  another ;  all  the 
double-lobed  plants  grow  with  stems  like  an 
oak,  formed  of  concentric  layers  from  within 


CUCKOO-PINT. 


Il 


outward.  As  soon  as  the  arum,  with  its 
sprouting  head,  has  raised  its  first  leaves  far 
enough  above  the  ground  to  reach  the  sun- 
light, it  begins  to  form  fresh  starches  and  new 
leaves  for  itself,  and  ceases  to  be  dependent 
upon  the  store  laid  up  in  its  buried  lobe. 
Most  seeds  accordingly  contain  just  enough 
material  to  support  the  young  seedling  till  it 
is  in  a  position  to  shift  for  itself ;  and  this,  of 
course,  varies  greatly  with  the  habits  and 
manners  of  the  particular  species.  Some 
phnts,  too,  such  as  the  potato,  find  their 
seeds  insufficient  to  keep  up  the  race  by 
themselves,  and  so  lay  by  abundant  starches 
in  underground  branches  or  tubers,  for  the 
use  of  new  shoots  ;  and  these  rich  starch  re- 
ceptacles we  ourselves  generally  utilise  as 
food-stuffs,  to  the  manifest  detriment  of  the 
young  potato-plants,  for  whose  benefit  they 
were  originally  intended.  Well,  the  arum 
has  no  such  valuable  reserve  as  that ;  it  is 
early  cast  upon  its  own  resources,  and  so  it 
shifts   for   itself  with    resolution.     Its    big, 

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SMAGE  EVALUATION 
TEST  TARGET  (MT-3) 


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11.25 


M    12.0 


12.2 


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U    11.6 


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Photographic 

Sciences 

Corporation 


23  WIST  MAIN  STMIT 

WeBSTM.N.Y.  14S80 

(716)  S72-4503 


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32 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


glossy  leaves  grow  apace,  and  soon  fill  out, 
not  only  with  green  chlorophyll,  but  also  with 
a  sharp  and  pungent   essence  which  makes 
them  burn  the  mouth  like  cayenne  pepper. 
This  acrid  juice  has  been   acquired   by  the 
plant  as  a  defence  against  its  enemies.    Some 
early  ancestor  of  the  arums  must  have  been 
liable  to  constant  attacks  from  rabbits,  goats, 
or   other   herbivorous   animals,    and    it   has 
adopted   this   means   of  repelling   their   ad- 
vances.    In  other  words,  those  arums  which 
were  most  palatable  to  the  rabbits  got  eaten 
up   and  destroyed,  while   those  which  were 
nastiest  survived,  and  handed  down  their  pun- 
gency to  future  generations.     Just  in  the  same 
way  nettles   have   acquired   their   sting  and 
thistles  their  prickles,  which  efificiently  protect 
them  against  all  herbivores  except  the  patient, 
hungry  donkey,  who  gratefully  accepts  them  as 
a  sort  of  sauce  piquante  to  the  succulent  stems. 
Ana  now  the  arum  begins  its  great  prepa- 
rations for  the  act  of  flowering.     Everybody 
knows  the  general  shape  of  the  arum  blossom 


I 


^ 


mmmmm- 


wmmm 


CUCKOO-PINT. 


83 


— if  not  in  our  own  purple  cuckoo-pint,  at 
least  in  the  big  white  '^Ethiopian  lilies,'  which 
form  such  frequent  ornaments  of  cottage 
windows.  Clearly,  this  is  a  flower  which  the 
plant  cannot  produce  without  laying  up  a 
good  stock  of  material  beforehand.  So  it 
sets  to  work  accumulating  starch  in  its  root. 
This  starch  it  manufactures  in  its  leaves,  and 
then  buries  deep  underground  in  a  tuber,  by 
means  of  the  sap,  so  as  to  secure  it  from  the 
attacks  of  rodents,  who  too  frequently  appro- 
priate to  themselves  the  food  intended  by 
plants  for  other  purposes.  If  you  examine 
the  tuber  before  the  arum  has  blossomed,  ycu 
will  find  it  large  and  solid  ;  but  if  you  dig 
it  up  after  the  seeds  have  ripened,  you  will 
see  that  it  is  flaccid  and  drained  ;  all  its 
starches  and  other  contents  have  gone  to 
make  up  the  fk)wer,  the  fruit,  and  the  stalk 
which  bore  them.  But  the  tuber  has  a 
further  protection  against  enemies  besides  its 
deep  underground  position.  It  contains  an 
acrid  juice  like  that  of  the  leaves,   which 


G  2 


( 


84 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


sufficiently  guards  it  against  four-footed  de- 
predators. Man,  however,  that  most  per- 
sistent of  persecutors,  has  found  out  a  way  to 
separate  the  juice  from  the  starch  ;  and  in  St, 
Helena  the  big  white  arum  is  cultivated  as  a 
food-plant,  and  yields  the  meal  in  common 
use  among  the  inhabitants. 

When  the  arum  has  laid  by  enough  starch 
to  make  a  flower  it  begins  to  send  up  a  tall 
stalk,  on  the  top  of  which  grows  the  curious 
hooded  blossom.  But  now  its  object  is  to 
attract,  not  to  repel,  the  animal  world ;  for  it 
is  an  insect-fertilised  flower,  and  it  requires 
the  aid  of  small  flies  to  carry  the  pollen  from 
blossom  to  blossom.  For  this  purpose  it  has 
a  purple  sheath  around  its  head  of  flowers 
and  a  tall  spike  on  which  they  are  arranged 
in  two  clusters,  the  male  blossoms  above  and 
the  female  below.  The  fertilisation  is  one  of 
the  most  interesting  episodes  in  all  nature, 
but  it  would  take  too  long  to  describe  here  in 
full.  The  dies  go  from  one  arum  to  another, 
attracted  by  the  colour,  in  search  of  pollen  ; 


CUCKOO-PINT. 


8: 


•1 


and  the  pistils,  or  female  flowers,  ripen  first. 
Then  the  pollen  falls  from  the  stamens  or 
male  flowers  on  the  bodies  of  the  flies,  and 
dusts  them  all  over  with  yellow  powder. 
The  insects,  when  once  they  have  entered, 
are  imprisoned  until  the  pollen  is  ready  to 
drop,  by  means  of  several  little  hairs,  pointing 
downwards,  and  preventing  their  exit  on  the 
principle  of  an  eel-trap  or  lobster-pot.  But 
as  soon  as  the  pollen  is  discharged  the  hairs 
wither  away,  and  then  the  flies  are  free  to 
visit  a  second  arum.  Here  they  carry  the 
fertilising  dust  with  which  they  are  covered 
to  the  ripe  pistils,  and  so  enable  them  to  set 
their  seed  ;  but,  instead  of  getting  away 
again  as  soon  as  they  have  eaten  their  fill, 
they  are  once  more  imprisoned  by  the  lobster- 
pot  hairs,  and  dusted  with  a  second  dose  of 
pollen,  which  they  carry  away  in  turn  to  a 
third  blossom. 

As  soon  as  the  pistils  have  been  impreg- 
nated, the  fruits  begin  to  set.  Here  they  are, 
on  their  tall  spike,  whose  enclosing  sheath 


1 


86 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


\ 


i     ' 


has  now  withered  away,  while  the  top  is  at 
this  moment  slowly  dwindling,  so  that  only 
the  cluster  of  berries  at  its  base  will  finally 
remain.  The  berries  will  swell  and  grow 
soft,  till  in  autumn  they  become  a  beautiful 
scarlet  cluster  of  living  coral.  Then  once 
more  their  object  will  be  to  attract  the  animal 
world,  this  time  in  the  shape  of  field-mice, 
squirrels,  and  small  birds ;  but  with  a  more 
treacherous  intent.  For  though  the  berries 
are  beautiful  and  palatable  enough  they  are 
deadly  poison.  The  robins  or  small  rodents 
which  eat  them,  attracted  by  their  bright 
colours  and  pleasant  taste,  not  only  aid  in 
dispersing  them,  but  also  die  after  swallowing 
them,  and  become  huge  manure  heaps  for  the 
growth  of  the  young  plant.  So  the  whole 
cycle  of  arum  existence  begins  afresh,  and 
there  is  hardly  a  plant  in  the  field  around  me 
which  has  not  a  history  as  strange  as  this 
one. 


\ 


' 


BERRIES  A\'D  BERRIES. 


87 


IX. 

BERRIES  AND  BERRIES. 

This  little  chine,  opening  towards  the  sea 
through  the  blue  lias  cliffs,  has  been  worn  to 
its  present  pretty  gorge-like  depth  by  the 
slow  action  of  its  tiny  stream— a  mere  thread 
of  water  in  fine  weather,  that  trickles  down 
its  centre  in  a  series  of  mossy  cascades  to 
the  shingly  beach  below.  Its  sides  are  over- 
grown by  brambles  and  other  prickly  brush- 
wood, which  form  in  places  a  matted  and  im- 
penetrable mass  :  for  it  is  the  habit  of  all 
plants  protected  by  the  defensive  armour  of 
spines  or  thorns  to  cluster  together  in  serried 
ranks,  through  which  cattle  or  other  intrusive 
animals  cannot  break.  Amongst  them,  near  the 
down  above,  I  have  just  lighted  upon  a  rare 


88 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


plant  for  Southern  Britain — a  wild  raspberry- 
bush  in  full  fruit.  Raspberries  are  common 
enough  in  Scotland  among  heaps  of  stones 
on  the  windiest  hillsides  ;  but  the  south  of 
England  is  too  warm  and  sickly  for  their 
robust  tastes,  and  they  can  only  be  found  here 
in  a  few  bleak  spots  like  the  stony  edges  of 
this  weather-beaten  down  above  the  chine. 
The  fruit  itself  is  quite  as  good  as  the  garden 
variety,  for  cultivation  has  added  little  to  the 
native  virtues  of  the  raspberry.  Good  old 
Izaac  Walton  is  not  ashamed  to  quote  a  cer- 
tain quaint  saying  of  one  Dr.  Boteler  con- 
cerning strawberries,  and  so  I  suppose  I  need 
not  be  afraid  to  quote  it  after  him.  *  Doubt- 
less,' said  the  Doctor,  *God  could  have 
made  a  better  berry,  but  doubtless  also  God 
never  did.'  Nevertheless,  if  you  try  the 
raspberry,  picked  fresh,  with  plenty  of  good 
country  cream,  you  must  allow  that  it  runs  its 
sister  fruit  a  neck-and-neck  race. 

To  compare  the  structure  of  a  raspberry 
with  that  of  a  strawberry  is  a  very  instructive 


\ 


BERRIES  AND  BERRIES. 


89 


botanical  study.  It  shows  how  similar  causes 
may  produce  the  same  gross  result  in  singu- 
larly different  ways.  Both  are  roses  by 
family,  and  both  have  flowers  essentially 
similar  to  that  of  the  common  dog-rose.  But 
even  in  plants  where  the  flowers  are  alike,  the 
fruits  often  differ  conspicuously,  because  fresh 
principles  come  into  play  for  the  dispersion 
and  safe  germination  of  the  seed.  This  makes 
the  study  of  fruits  the  most  complicated  part 
in  the  unravelling  of  plant  life.  After  the 
strawberry  has  blossomed,  the  pulpy  recep- 
tacle on  w^hich  it  bore  its  green  fruitlets  begins 
to  swell  and  redden,  till  at  length  it  grows 
into  an  edible  berry,  dotted  with  little  yellow 
nuts,  containing  each  a  single  seed.  But  in 
the  raspberry  it  is  the  separate  fruitlets  them- 
selves which  grow  soft  and  bright-coloured, 
while  the  receptacle  remains  white  and  taste- 
less, forming  the  'hull*  which  we  pull  off 
from  the  berry  when  we  are  going  to  eat  it. 
Thus  the  part  of  the  raspberry  which  we 
throw  away  answers  to  the  part  of  the  straw- 


90 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


'! 


!    ! 


h 


berry  which  we  eat.  Only,  in  the  raspberry 
the  separate  fruitlets  are  all  crowded  close 
together  into  a  single  united  mass,  while  in 
the  strawberry  they  are  scattered  about 
loosely,  and  embedded  in  the  soft  flesh  of  the 
receptacle.  The  blackberry  is  another  close 
relative  ;  but  in  its  fruit  the  little  pulpy  fruit- 
lets  cling  to  the  receptacle,  so  that  we  pick 
and  eat  them  both  together ;  whereas  in  the 
raspberry  the  receptacle  pulls  out  easily,  and 
leaves  a  thimble-shaped  hollow  in  the  middle 
of  the  berry.  Each  of  these  little  peculiarities 
has  a  special  meaning  of  its  own  in  the  history 
of  the  different  plants. 

Yet  the  main  object  attained  by  all  is  in 
the  end  precisely  similar.  Strawberries,  rasp- 
berries, and  blackberries  all  belong  to  the 
class  of  attractive  fruits.  They  survive  in 
virtue  of  the  attention  paid  to  them  by  birds 
and  small  animals.  Just  as  the  wild  straw- 
berry which  I  picked  in  the  hedgerow  the 
other  day  procures  the  dispersion  of  its  hard 
and  indigestible   fruitlets    by   getting   them 


BERRIES  AND  BERRIES, 


91 


eaten  together  with  the  pulpy  receptacle,  so 
does  the  raspberry  procure  the  dispersion  of 
its  soft  and  sugary  fruitlets  by  getting  them 
eaten  all  by  themselves.  While  the  straw- 
berry fruitlets  retain  throughout  their  dry 
outer  coating,  in  those  of  the  raspberry  the 
external  covering  becomes  fleshy  and  red, 
but  the  inner  seed  has,  notwithstanding,  a 
still  harder  shell  than  the  tiny  nuts  of  the 
strawberry.  Now,  this  is  the  secret  of  nine 
fruits  out  of  ten.  They  are  really  nuts, 
which  clothe  themselves  in  an  outer  tunic  of 
sweet  and  beautifully  coloured  pulp.  The 
pulp,  as  it  were,  the  plant  gives  in,  as  an  in- 
ducement to  the  friendly  bird  to  swallow  its 
seed  ;  but  the  seed  itself  it  protects  by  a  hard 
stone  or  shell,  and  often  by  poisonous  or 
bitter  juices  within.  We  see  this  arrange- 
ment very  conspicuously  in  a  plum,  or  still 
better  in  a  mango ;  though  it  is  really  just  as 
evident  in  the  raspberry,  where  the  smaller 
size  renders  it  less  conspicuous  to  human 
sight. 


1 


\i 


92 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


% 


' 


It  is  a  curious  fact  about  the  rose  family 
that  they  have  a  very  marked  tendency  to 
produce  such  fleshy  fruits,  instead  of  the 
mere  dry  seed-vessels  of  ordinary  plants, 
Avhich  are  named  fruits  only  by  botanical 
courtesy.  For  example,  we  owe  to  this  single 
family  the  peach,  plum,  apricot,  cherry,  dam- 
son, pear,  apple,  medlar,  and  quince,  all  of 
them  cultivated  in  gardens  or  orchards  for 
their  fruits.  The  minor  group  known  by 
the  poetical  name  of  Dryads,  alone  supplies 
us  with  the  strawberry,  raspberry,  blackberry, 
and  dewberry.  Even  the  wilder  kinds,  refused 
as  food  by  man,  produce  berries  well  known 
to  our  winter  birds — the  haw,  rose-hip,  sloe, 
bird-cherry,  and  rowan.  On  the  other  hand, 
the  whole  tribe  numbers  but  a  single  thorough- 
going nut — the  almond ;  and  even  this  nut, 
always  somewhat  soft-shelled  and  inclined  to 
pulpiness,  has  probably  produced  by  a  *  sport  * 
the  wholly  fruit-like  nectarine.  The  odd  thing 
about  the  rose  tribe,  however,  is  this  :  that 
the  pulpy  tendency  shows  itself  in  very  dif- 


i«i; 
\\\. 


BERRIES  AND  BERRIES. 


9> 


ferent  parts  among  the  various  species.  In 
the  plum  it  is  the  outer  covering  of  the  true 
fruit  which  grows  soft  and  coloured  :  in  the 
apple  it  is  a  swollen  mass  of  the  fruit-stalk 
surrounding  the  ovules  :  in  the  rose-hip  it  is- 
the  hollowed  receptacle  :  and  in  the  straw- 
berry it  is  the  same  receptacle,  bulging  out  in 
the  opposite  direction.  Such  a  general  ten- 
dency to  display  colour  and  collect  sugary 
juices  in  so  many  diverse  parts  may  be  com- 
pared to  the  general  bulbous  tendency  of  the 
tiger-lily  or  the  onion,  and  to  the  general 
succulent  tendency  of  the  cactus  or  the  house- 
leek.  In  each  case,  the  plant  benefits  by  it 
in  one  form  or  another ;  and  whichever  form 
happens  to  get  the  start  in  any  particular 
instance  is  increased  and  developed  by  natural 
selection,  just  as  favourable  varieties  of  fruits 
or  flowers  are  increased  and  developed  ia 
cultivated  species  by  our  own  gardeners. 

Sweet  juices  and  bright  colours,  however, 
could  be  of  no  use  to  a  plant  till  there  were 
eyes  to  see  and  tongues  to  taste  them.     A 


mmmm 


U 


$4 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


I 


!   I 


Mi 


f  1 1 


pulpy  fruit  is  in  itself  a  mere  waste  of  produc- 
tive energy  to  its  mother,  unless  the  pulpiness 
aids  in  the  dispersion  and  promotes  the  wel- 
fare of  the  young  seedlings.  Accordingly,  we 
might  naturally  expect  that  there  would  be 
no  fruit-bearers  on  the  earth  until  the  time 
when  fruit-eaters,  actual  or  potential,  arrived 
upon  the  scene  :  or,  to  put  it  more  correctly, 
both  must  inevitably  have  developed  simul- 
taneously and  in  mutual  dependence  upon 
one  another.  So  we  find  no  traces  of  succu- 
lent fruits  even  in  so  late  a  formation  as  that 
of  these  lias  or  cretaceous  cliffs.  The  birds 
of  that  day  were  fierce- toothed  carnivores, 
devouring  the  lizards  and  saurians  of  the 
rank  low-lying  sea-marshes :  the  mammals 
were  mostly  prim2eval  kangaroos  or  low  an- 
cestral wombats,  gentle  herbivores,  or  savage 
marsupial  wolves,  like  the  Tasmanian  devil 
of  our  own  times.  It  is  only  in  the  very 
modern  tertiary  period,  whose  soft  muddy 
deposits  have  not  yet  had  time  to  harden 
under    superincumbent    pressure   into    solid 


^mifmmm 


BERRIES  AND  BERRIES. 


95 


Stone,  that  we  find  the  earliest  traces  of  the 
rose  family,  the  greatest  fruit-bearing  tribe  of 
our  present  world.  And  side  by  side  with 
them  we  find  their  clever  arboreal  allies,  the 
ancestral  monkeys  and  squirrels,  the  primi- 
tive robins,  and  the  yet  shadowy  forefathers 
of  our  modern  fruit-eating  parrots.  Just  as 
bees  and  butterflies  necessarily  trace  back 
their  geological  history  only  to  the  time  of 
the  first  honey-bearing  flowers,  and  just  as 
the  honey-bearing  flowers  in  turn  trace  back 
their  pedigree  only  to  the  date  of  the  rudest 
and  most  unspecialised  honey-sucking  insects, 
so  are  fruits  and  fruit-eaters  linked  together  in 
origin  by  the  inevitable  bond  of  a  mutual 
dependence.  No  bee,  no  honey;  and  no 
honey,  no  bee  :  so,  too,  no  fruit,  no  fruit-bird  ; 
and  no  fruit-bird,  no  fruit. 


i1 


f 


wmmm 


0 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


wmm 


X. 


Hi   .' 


ill 


DISTANT  RELATIONS. 

Behind  the  old  mill,  whose  overshot  wheel, 
backed  by  a  wall    thickly  covered  with  the 
young    creeping     fronds     of    hart's-tongue 
ferns,  forms   such  a  picturesque   foreground 
for  the  view  of  our  little  valley,   the  mill- 
stream  expands  into  a  small   shallow  pond, 
overhung  at   its   edges  by   thick-set  hazel- 
bushes   and    clambering    honeysuckle.      Of 
course  it  is   only   dammed   back  by  a  mud 
wall,   with   sluices    for    the    miller's   water- 
power  ;  but  it  has  a  certain  rustic  simplicity 
of  its  own,  which  makes  it  beautiful  to  our 
eyes    for  all  that,  in  spite  of  its  utilitarian 
origin.     At  the  bottom  of  this  shallow  pond 
you    may   now   see  a  miracle   daily  taking 


DISTANT  RELATIONS. 


97 


place,  which  but  for  its  commonness  we 
should  regard  as  an  almost  incredible 
marvel.  You  may  there  behold  evolu- 
tion actually  illustrating  the  transformation 
of  life  under  your  very  eyes :  you  may 
watch  a  low  type  of  gill-breathing  gristly* 
boned  fish  developing  into  the  highest  form 
of  lung-breathing  terrestrial  amphibian.  Nay, 
more — you  may  almost  discover  the  earliest 
known  ancestor  of  the  whole  vertebrate  kind, 
the  first  cousin  of  that  once  famous  ascidian 
larva,  passing  through  all  the  upward  stages 
of  existence  which  finally  lead  it  to  assume 
the  shape  of  a  relatively  perfect  four-legged 
animal.  For  the  pond  is  swarming  with  fat 
black  tadpoles,  which  are  jiist  at  this  moment 
losing  their  tails  and  developing  their  legs, 
on  the  way  to  becoming  fully  formed  frogs.. 

The  tadpole  and  the  ascidian  larva  divide 
between  them  the  honour  of  preserving  for 
us  in  all  its  native  simplicity  the  primitive 
aspect  of  the  vertebrate  type.  Beasts,  birds, 
reptiles,  and  fishes  have  all  descended  from 

H 


n«i 


98 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


an   animal  whose  shape    closely  resembled 
that  of  these  wriggling  little  black  creatures 
which  dart  up  and  down  like  imps  through 
the  clear  water,  and   raise  a  cloud   of  mud 
above  their  heads  each  time  that  they  bury 
themselves   comfortably  in  the  soft  mud  of 
the  bottom.     But  while  the  birds  and  beasts, 
on^  the  one  hand,   have  gone  on  bettering 
themselves  out  of  all  knowledge,  and  while 
the  ascidian,  on  the  other  hand,  in  his  adult 
form  has  dropped   back  into  an  obscure  and 
sedentary  life — sans  eyes,   sans   teeth,  sans 
taste,  sans  everything — the  tadpole  alone,  at 
least  during  its  early  days,  remains  true  to  the 
ancestral  traditions  of  the  vertebrate  family. 
When  first  it  emerges  from  its  ^gg  it  repre- 
sents the  very  most  rudimentary  animal  with 
a  backbone  known  to  our  scientific  teachers. 
It  has  a  big  hammer-looking  head,  and  a  set 
of  branching  outside  gills,  and  a  short  distinct 
body,  and  a  long  semi-transparent  tail.     Its 
backbone  is  a  mere  gristly  channel,  in  which 
lies  its  spinal  cord.    As  it  grows,  it  resembles 


H^"^^ 


I 


ii 


DISTANT  RELATIONS. 


99 


'■it 


in   every  particular  the  ascid-an  larva,  with 
which,  indeed,    Kowalewsky  and    Professor 
Ray  Lankester  have  demonstrated  its  essen- 
tial identity.     But  since  a  great  many  people 
seem    wrongly    to    imagine   that   Professor 
Lankester's  opinion  on  this  matter  is  in  some 
way   at   variance    with    Mr.    Darwin's  and 
Dr.    Haeckel's,   it  may  be  well  to  consider 
what   the  degeneracy  of  the  ascidian  really 
means.     The  fact  is,  both  larval  forms — that 
of  the  frog  and   that   of  the  ascidian — com- 
pletely agree  in  the  position  of  their  brains, 
their  gill-slits,  their  very  rudimentary  back- 
bones, and  their  spinal  cords.     Moreover,  we 
ourselves   and  the   tadpole    agree   with   the 
ascidian   in  a  further  most  important  point, 
which  no  invertebrate  animal  shares  with  us  ; 
and  that  is   that  our  eyes  grow  out  of  our 
brains,  instead  of  being  part  of  our  skin,  as  in 
insects  and  cuttle-fish.     This  would  seem  a 
priori  a  most  inconvenient  place  for  an  eye 
— inside   the  brain  ;    but   then,  as  Professor 
Lankester    cleverly   suggests,   our    common 


H  2 


too 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


original  ancestor,  the  very  earliest  vertebrate 
of  all,  must  have  been  a  transparent  creature, 
and  therefore  comparatively  indifferent  as  to 
the  part  of  his  body  in  which  his  eye  hap- 
pened to  be  placed.  In  after  ages,  however, 
as  vertebrates  generally  got  to  have  thicker 
skulls  and  tougher  skins,  the  eye-bearing  part 
of  the  brain  had  to  grow  outward,  and  so 
reach  the  light  on  the  surface  of  the  body  :  a 
thing  which  actually  happens  to  all  birds, 
beasts,  and  reptiles  in  the  course  of  their 
embryonic  development.  So  that  in  this 
respect  the  ascidian  larva  is  nearer  to  the 
original  type  than  the  tadpole  or  any  other 
existing  animal.  •  . 

The  ascidian,  however,  in  mature  life,  has 
grown  degraded  and  fallen  from  his  high 
estate,  owing  to  his  bad  habit  of  rooting 
himself  to  a  rock  and  there  settlinof  down 
into  a  mere  sedentary  swallower  of  passing 
morsels — a  blind,  handless,  footless  and 
degenerate  thing.  In  his  later  shape  he  is 
but  a  sack  fixed  to  a  stone,  and  with  all  his 


'g 


IS 

is 


DISTANT  RELATIONS, 


loi 


\ 


limbs  and  higher  sense-organs  so  completely 
atrophied  that  only  his  earlier  history  allows 
us  to  recognise  him  as  a  vertebrate  by  descent 
at  all.  He  is  in  fact  a  representative  of 
retrogressive  development.  The  tadpole,  on 
the  contrary,  goes  on  swimming  about  freely, 
and  keeping  the  use  of  its  eyes,  till  at  last  a 
pair  of  hind  legs  and  then  a  pair  of  fore  legs 
begin  to  bud  out  from  its  side,  and  its  tail  fades 
away,  and  its  gills  disappear,  and  air-breathing 
lungs  take  their  place,  and  it  boldly  hops  on 
shore  a  fully  evolved  tailless  amphibian. 

There  is,  however,  one  interesting  question 
about  these  two  larvae  which  I  should  much 
like  to  solve.  The  ascidian  has  only  one  eye 
inside  its  useless  brain,  while  the  tadpole  and 
all  other  vertebrates  have  two  from  the  very 
first.  Now  which  of  us  most  nearly  repre- 
sents the  old  mud-loving  vertebrate  ancestor 
in  this  respect  ?  Have  two  original  organs 
coalesced  in  the  young  ascidian,  or  has  one 
organ  split  up  into  a  couple  with  the  rest  of 
the  class }     I   think    the   latter  is  the  true 


mmmmm 


l\ 


\'t 


I 


t6i 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


supposition,  and  for  this  reason :  In  our 
heads,  and  those  of  all  vertebrates,  there  is  a 
curious  cross-connection  between  the  eyes 
and  the  brain,  so  that  the  right  optic  nerve 
goes  to  the  left  side  of  the  brain  and  the  left 
optic  nerve  goes  to  the  right  side.  In  higher 
animals,  this  *  decussation,'  as  anatomists  call 
it,  affects  all  the  sense-organs  except  those  of 
smell  ;  but  in  fishes  it  only  affects  the  eyes. 
Now,  as  the  young  ascidian  has  retained  the 
ancestral  position  of  his  almost  useless  eye  so 
steadily,  it  is  reasonable  to  suppose  that  he 
has  retained  its  other  peculiarities  as  well. 
May  we  not  conclude,  therefore,  that  the 
primitive  vertebrate  had  only  one  brain-eye ; 
but  that  afterwards,  as  this  brain-eye  grew 
outward  to  the  surface,  it  split  up  into  two, 
because  of  the  elongated  and  flattenedjorm  of 
the  head  in  swimming  animals,  while  its  two 
halves  still  kept  up  a  memory  of  their  former 
union  in  the  cross-connection  with  the  oppo- 
site halves  of  the  brain  ?  If  this  be  so,  then 
we  might  suppose    that  the    other  organs 


wmmmm 


DISTANT  RELATIONS, 


103 


followed  suit,  so  as  to  prevent  confusion  in 
the  brain  between  the  two  sides  of  the  body ; 
while  the  nose,  which  stands  in  the  centre  of 
the  face,  was  under  no  liability  to  such  error, 
and  therefore  still  keeps  up  its  primitive 
direct  arrangement. 

It  is  worth  noting,  too,  that  these  tad- 
poles, like  ah  other  very  low  vertebrates,  are 
mud-haunters  ;  and  the  most  primitive  among 
adult  vertebrates  are  still  cartilaginous  mud- 
fish. Not  much  is  known  geologically  about 
the  predecessors  of  frogs  ;  the  tailless  am- 
phibians are  late  arrivals  upon  earth,  and  it 
may  seem  curious,  therefore,  that  they  should 
recall  in  so  many  ways  the  earliest  ancestral 
type.  The  reason  doubtless  is  because  they 
are  so  much  given  to  larval  development. 
Some  ancestors  of  theirs — primaeval  newts  or 
salamanders — must  have  gone  on  for  count- 
less centuries  improving  themselves  in  their 
adult  shape  from  age  to  age,  yet  bringing  all 
their  young  into  the  world  from  the  t.^^y  as 
mere  mud-fish  still,  in  much  the  same  state 


■   ) 

i 


M>' 


I:  :i 


!  3 


104 


T//E  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


as  their  unimproved  forefathers  had  done 
millions  of  aeons  before.  Similarly,  cater- 
pillars are  still  all  but  exact  patterns  of  the 
primaeval  insect,  while  butterflies  are  totally 
different  and  far  higher  creatures.  Thus,  in 
spite  of  adult  degeneracy  in  tl.  3  ascidian  and 
adult  progress  in  the  frog,  both  tadpoles 
preserve  for  us  very  nearly  the  original  form 
of  their  earliest  backboned  ancestor.  Each 
individual  recapitulates  in  its  own  person  the 
whole  history  of  evolution  in  its  race.  This 
is  a  very  lucky  thing  for  biology ;  since 
without  these  recapitulatory  phases  we  could 
never  have  traced  the  true  lines  of  descent  in 
many  cases.  It  would  be  a  real  misfortune 
for  science  if  every  frog  had  been  born  a 
typical  amphibian,  as  some  tree-toads  actually 
are,  and  if  every  insect  had  emerged  a  fully 
formed  adult,  as  some  aphides  very  nearly  do. 
Larvae  and  embryos  show  us  the  original 
types  of  each  race  ;  adults  show  us  the  total 
amount  of  chang.e  produced  by  progressive 
or  retrogressive  development. 


AMONG   THE  HEATHER, 


105 


XL 


AMONG   THE  HEATHER, 

This  is  the  worst  year  for  butterflies  that  I 
can  remember.  Entomologists  all  over  Eng- 
land are  in  despair  at  the  total  failure  of  the 
insect  crop,  and  have  taken  to  botanising, 
^angling,  and  other  bad  habits,  in  default  of 
means  for  pursuing  their  natural  avocation 
as  beetle-stickers.  Last  year's  heavy  rains 
killed  all  the  mothers  as  they  emerged  from 
the  chrysalis ;  and  so  only  a  few  stray  eggs 
have  survived  till  this  summer,  when  the 
butterflies  they  produce  will  all  be  needed  to 
keep  up  next  season's  supply.  Nevertheless, 
I  have  climbed  the  highest  down  in  this  part 
of  the  country  to-day,  and  come  out  for  an 
airing  among  the  heather,  in  the  vague  hope 


lit 


I   I 


h 


i. 


io6 


T//E  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


that  I  may  be  lucky  enough  to  catch  a  glimpse 
of  one  or  two  old  lepidopterous  favourites. 
I  am  not  a  butterfly-hunter  myself.  I  have 
not  the  heart  to  drive  pins  through  the  pretty 
creatures*  downy  bodies,  or  to  stifle  them 
with  reeking  chemicals ;  though  I  recognise 
the  necessity  for  a  hardened  class  who  will 
perform  that  useful  office  on  behalf  of  science 
and  society,  just  as  I  recognise  the  necessity 
for  slaughtermen  and  knackers.  But  I  prefer 
personally  to  lie  on  the  ground  at  my  ease 
and  learn  as  much  about  the  insect  nature  as 
I  can  discover  from  simple  inspection  of  the 
living  subject  as  it  flits  airily  from  bunch  to 
bunch  of  bright-coloured  flowers. 

I  suppose  even  that  apocryphal  person, 
the  general  reader,  would  be  insulted  at  being 
told  at  this  hour  of  the  day  that  all  bright- 
coloured  flowers  are  fertilised  by  the  visits  of 
insects,  whose  attentions  they  are  specially 
designed  to  solicit.  Everybody  has  heard 
over  and  over  again  that  roses,  orchids,  and 
columbines   have    acquired   their  honey  to 


AMONG   THE  IIEATIIER. 


107 


allure  the  friendly  bee,  their  gaudy  petals  to 
advertise  the  honey,  and  their  divers  shapes 
to  ensure  the  proper  fertilisation  by  the  cor- 
rect type  of  insect.  But  everybody  docs  not 
know  how  specifically  certain  blossoms  have 
laid  themselves  out  for  a  particular  species 
of  fly,  beetle,  or  tiny  moth.  Here  on  the 
higher  downs,  for  instance,  most  flowers  are 
exceptionally  large  and  brilliant ;  while  all 
Alpine  climbers  must  have  noticed  that  the 
most  gorgeous  masses  of  bloom  in  Switzer- 
land occur  just  below  the  snow-line.  The 
reason  is,  that  such  blossoms  must  be  fer- 
tilised by  butterflies  alone.  Bees,  their  great 
rivals  in  honey-sucking,  frequent  only  the 
lower  meadows  and  slopes,  where  flowers 
are  many  and  small :  they  seldom  venture 
far  from  the  hive  or  the  nest  among  the  high 
peaks  and  chilly  nooks  where  we  find  those 
great  patches  of  blue  gentian  or  purple  ane- 
mone, which  hang  like  monstrous  breadths 
of  tapestry  upon  the  mountain  sides.  This 
heather  here,  now  fully  opening  in  the  warmer 


1! 


II 


\  E;i 


1  n 

III 


).  i 


■  ^  i 


io8 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


sun  of  the  southern  counties — it  is  still  but 
in  the  bud  among  the  Scotch  hills,  I  doubt 
not — specially  lays  itself  out  for  the  humble- 
bee,  and  its  masses  form  about  his  highest 
pasture-grounds  ;  but  the  butterflies — insect 
vagrants  that  they  are — have  no  fixed  home, 
and  they  therefore  stray  far  above  the  level 
at  which  bee-blossoms  altogether  cease  to 
grow.  Now,  the  butterfly  differs  greatly 
from  the  bee  in  his  mode  of  honey-hunting ; 
he  does  not  bustle  about  in  a  business-like 
manner  from  one  buttercup  or  dead-nettle  to 
its  nearest  fellow ;  but  he  flits  joyously,  like 
a  sauntering  straggler  that  he  is,  from  a  great 
patch  of  colour  here  to  another  great  patch 
at  a  distance,  whose  gleam  happens  to  strike 
his  roving  eye  by  its  size  and  brilliancy. 
Hence,  as  that  indefatigable  observer.  Dr. 
Hermann  Muller,  has  noticed,  all  Alpine  or 
hill-top  flowers  have  very  large  and  con- 
spicuous blossoms,  generally  grouped  to- 
gether in  big  clusters  so  as  to  catch  a  passing 
glance  of  the  butterfly's  eye.     As  soon  as  the 


\ 


AMONG   THE  HEATHER. 


109 


insect  spies  such  a  cluster,  the  colour  seems 
to  act  as  a  stimulant  to  his  broad  wings,  just 
as  the  candle-light  does  to  those  of  his  cousin 
the   moth.     Off  he   sails  at   once,  as  if  by 
automatic  action,  towards  the  distant  patch, 
and  there  both  robs  the  plant  of  its  honey 
and  at  the  same  time  carries  to  it  on  his  lesjs 
and  head  fertilising  pollen  from  the  last  of  its 
congeners  which  he   favoured   with   a   call. 
For  of  course  both  bees  and  butterflies  stick 
on  the  whole  to  a  single  species  at  a  time  ; 
or  else  the  flowers  would  only  get  uselessly 
hybridised  instead  of  being  impregnated  with 
pollen  from  other  plants  of  their  own  kind. 
For  this  purpose  it  is  that  most  plants  lay 
themselves  out  to  secure  the  attention  of  only 
two   or   three   varieties   among   their  insect 
allies,  while  they  make  their  nectaries  either 
too  deep  or  too  shallow  for  the  convenience 
of  all   other   kinds.     Nature,  though   eager 
for  cross-fertilisation,  abhors  '  miscegenation ' 
with  all  the  bitterness  of  an  American  poli- 
tician. 


•'^W.i^T'' 


nm  w    l^'PVi  III' 


no 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


I  SI 


1  >l 
'1 

I  h 


1^  1 
1 


Insects,  however,  differ  much  from  one 
another  in  their  aesthetic  tastes,  and  flowers 
are  adapted  accordingly  to  the  varying  fancies 
of  the  different  kinds.  Here,  for  example, 
is  a  spray  of  common  white  galium,  which 
attracts  and  is  fertilised  by  small  flies,  who 
generally  frequent  white  blossoms.  But  here, 
again,  not  far  off,  I  find  a  luxuriant  mass  of 
the  yellow  species,  known  by  the  quaint 
name  of  *  lady's  bedstraw ' — a  legacy  from  the 
old  legend  which  represents  it  as  having 
formed  Our  Lady's  bed  in  the  manger  at 
Bethlehem.  Now  why  has  this  kind  of 
galium  yellow  flowers,  while  its  near  kinsman 
yonder  ha:,  them  snowy  white  ?  The  reason 
is  that  lady's  bedstraw  is  fertilised  by  small 
beetles ;  and  beetles  are  known  to  be  one 
among  the  most  colour-loving  races  of  insects. 
You  may  often  find  one  of  their  number,  the 
lovely  bronze  and  golden-mailed  rose-chafer, 
buried  deeply  in  the  very  centre  of  a  red 
garden  rose,  and  reeling  about  when  touched 
as  if  drunk  with  pollen  and  honey.     Almost 


it. 


m 


pniMi 


mim^mm 


AMONG   THE  HEATHER. 


Ill 


all  the  flowers  which  beetles  frequent  are 
consequently  brightly  decked  in  scarlet  or 
yellow.  On  the  other  hand,  ihe  whole  family 
of  the  umbellates,  those  tall  plants  with  level 
bunches  of  tiny  blossoms,  like  the  fool's 
parsley,  have  all  but  universally  white  petals ; 
and  M  tiller,  the  most  statistical  of  naturalists, 
took  the  trouble  to  count  the  number  of  in- 
sects which  paid  them  a  visit.  He  found 
that  only  14  per  cent,  were  bees,  while  the 
remainder  consisted  mainly  of  miscellaneous 
small  flies  and  other  arthropodous  riff-rafl*; 
whereas  in  the  brilliant  class  of  composites, 
including  the  asters,  sunflowers,  daisies,  dan- 
delions, and  thistles,  nearly  75  per  cent,  of 
the  visitors  were  steady,  industrious  bees. 
Certain  dingy  blossoms  which  lay  themselves 
out  to  attract  wasps  are  obviously  adapted, 
as  Miiller  quaintly  remarks,  *  to  a  less  aesthe- 
tically cultivated  circle  of  visitors.'  But 
the  most  brilliant  among  all  insect-fertilised 
flowers  are  those  which  specially  aflect  the 
society  of  butterflies  ;  and  they  are  only  sur- 


I 


•r««i>jirr^  ■ 


I , 


!!  M 


.:    } 


i     , 


I; 


112 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


passed  in  this  respect  throughout  all  nature 
by  the  still  larger  and  more  magnificent 
tropical  species  which  owe  their  fertilisation 
to  humming-birds  and  brush-tongued  lories. 

Is  it  riot  a  curious,  yet  a  comprehensible 
circumstance,  that  the  tastes  which  thus  show 
themselves  in  the  development,  by  natural 
selection,  of  lovely  flowers,  should  also  show 
themselves  in  the  marked  preference  for 
beautiful  mates  ?  Poised  on  yonder  sprig  of 
harebell  stands  a  little  purple-winged  butter- 
fly, one  of  the  most  exquisite  among  our 
British  kinds.  That  little  butterfly  owes  its 
own  rich  and  delicately  shaded  tints  to  the 
long  selective  action  of  a  million  generations 
among  its  ancestors.  So  we  find  throughout 
that  the  most  beautifully  coloured  birds  and 
insects  are  always  those  which  have  had  most 
to  do  with  the  production  of  bright-coloured 
fruits  and  flowers.  The  butterflies  and  rose- 
beetles  are  the  most  gorgeous  among  insects : 
the  humming-birds  and  parrots  are  the  most 
gorgeous  among  birds.     Nay  more,  exactly 


lu 


AMONG   THE  HEATHER. 


"3 


like  effects  have  been  produced  in  two  hemi- 
spheres on  different  tribes  by  the  same  causes. 
The  plain  brown  swifts  of  the  North  have 
developed  among  tropical  West  Indian  and 
South  American  orchids  the  metallic  gorgets 
and  crimson  crests  of  the  humming-bird  : 
while  a  totally  unlike  group  of  Asiatic  birds 
have  developed  among  the  rich  flora  of 
India  and  the  Malay  Archipelago  the  exactly 
similar  plumage  of  the  exquisite  sun-birds. 
Just  as  bees  depend  upon  flowers,  and 
flowers  upon  bees,  so  the  colour-sense  of 
animals  has  created  the  bright  petals  of 
blossoms  ;  and  the  bright  petals  have  reacted 
upon  the  tastes  of  the  animals  themselves, 
and  through  their  tastes  upon  their  own 
appearance. 


fT  /         '"U'W^-^iw '■  iiwnypy 


114 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


XII. 


SPECKLED  TROUT. 


in 


It  is  a  piece  of  the  common  vanity  of  anglers 
to  suppose  that  they  know  something  about 
speckled  trout.  A  fox  might  almost  as  well 
pretend  that  he  was  intimately  acquainted 
with  the  domestic  habits  of  poultry,  or  an 
Iroquois  describe  the  customs  of  the  Algon- 
quins  from  observations  made  upon  the  speci- 
mens who  had  come  under  his  scalping-knife. 
I  will  allow  that  anglers  are  well  versed  in 
the  necessity  for  fishing  up-stream  rather  than 
in  the  opposite  direction;  and  I  grant  that 
they  have  attained  an  empirical  knowledge  of 
the  aesthetic  preferences  of  trout  in  the  matter 
of  blue  duns  and  red  palmers  ;  but  that  as  a 
body  they  are  familiar  with  the  speckled  trout 


SPECKLED   TROUT, 


11% 


at  home  I  deny.  If  you  wish  to  learn  all 
about  the  race  in  its  own  life  you  must  abjure 
rod  and  line,  and  creep  quietly  to  the  side  of 
the  pools  in  an  unfished  brooklet,  like  this  on 
whose  bank  I  am  now  seated  ;  and  then,  if 
you  have  taken  care  not  to  let  your  shadow 
fall  upon  the  water,  you  may  sit  and  watch 
the  live  fish  themselves  for  an  hour  together, 
as  they  bask  lazily  in  the  sunlight,  or  rise  now 
and  then  at  cloudy  moments  with  a  sudden 
dart  at  a  May-fly  who  is  trying  in  vain  to  lay 
her  eggs  unmolested  on  the  surface  of  the 
stream.  The  trout  in  my  little  beck  are  for- 
tunately too  small  even  for  poachers  to  care 
for  tickling  them  :  so  I  am  able  entirely  to 
preserve  them  as  objects  for  philosophical 
contemplation,  without  any  danger  of  their 
being  scared  away  from  their  accustomed 
haunts  by  intrusive  anglers. 

Trout  always  have  a  recognised  home  of 
their  own,  inhabited  by  a  pretty  fixed  number 
of  individuals.     But  if  you  catch  the  two  sole 

denizens  of  a  particular  scour,  you  will  find 

It 


r 


i>i*4SS3CUSU 


'■         f: 
I 


jl 


ri 


ii6 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


another    pair    installed    in   their    place    to- 
morrow.    Young  fry  seem  always  ready  to 
fill  up  the  vacancies  caused  by  the  involun- 
tary retirement  of  their  elders.     Their  size 
depends    almost    entirely    upon    the    quan- 
tity of  food  they  can  get;  for  an  adult  fish 
may  weigh  anything  at  any  time  of  his  life, 
and  there   is   no   limit    to    the    dimensions 
they  may  theoretically  attain.     Mr.  Herbert 
Spencer,   who   is   an   angler   as    well    as  a 
philosopher,  well   observes   that    where  the 
trout  are  many  they  are  generally  small ;  and 
where  they  are  large  they  are  generally  few. 
In   the   mill-scream    down   the   valley   they 
measure  only  six  inches,  though  you  may  fill 
a  basket  easily  enough  on  a  cloudy  day  ;  but 
in  the  canal  reservoir,  where  there  are  only 
half-a-dozen    fish   altogether,   a   magnificent 
eight-pounder    has   been    taken   more   than 
once.      In    this    way    we    can    understand 
the   origin   of  the  great   lake   trout,    which 
weigh   sometimes   forty  pounds.     They  are 
common  trout  which   have  taken   to  living 


»■ 


SPECKLED   TROUT. 


117 


in  broader  waters,  where  large  food  is  far 
more  abundant,  but  where  shoals  of  small 
fish  would  starve.  The  peculiarities  thus 
impressed  upon  them  have  been  handed 
down  to  their  descendants,  till  at  length 
they  have  become  sufficiently  marked  to 
justify  us  in  regarding  them  as  a  separate 
species.  But  it  is  difficult  to  say  what  makes 
a  species  in  animals  so  very  variable  as  fish. 
There  are,  in  fact,  no  less  than  twelve  kinds 
of  trout  wholly  peculiar  to  the  British  Islands, 
and  some  of  these  are  found  in  very  restricted 
areas.  Thus,  the  Loch  Stennis  trout  inhabits 
only  the  tarns  of  Orkney;  the  Galway  sea 
trout  lives  nowhere  but  along  the  west  coast 
of  Ireland  ;  the  gillaroo  never  strays  out  of 
the  Irish  loughs  ;  the  Killin  charr  is  confined 
to  a  single  sheet  of  water  in  Mayo  ;  and  other 
species  belong  exclusively  to  the  Llanberis 
lakes,  to  Lough  Melvin,  or  to  a  few  mountain 
pools  of  Wales  and  Scotland.  So  great  is 
the  variety  that  may  be  produced  by  small 
changes   of  food   and  habitat.      Even    the 


f 


'^ . ^.-    mm  my  '  i 


^sssss 


11 


ii8         THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 

salmon  himself  is  only  a  river  trout  who  has 
acquired  the  habit  of  going  down  to  the  sea, 
where  he  gets  immensely  increased  quantities 
of  food  (for  all  the  trout  kind  are  almost 
omnivorous),  and  grows  big  in  proportion.  But 
he  still  retains  many  marks  of  his  early  exist- 
ence as  a  river  fish.  In  the  first  place,  every 
salmon  is  hatched  from  the  egg  in  fresh  water, 
and  grows  up  a  mere  trout.  The  young  parr, 
as  the  salmon  is  called  in  this  stage  of  its 
growth,  is  actually  (as  far  as  physiology  goes) 
a  mature  fish,  and  is  capable  of  producing 
milt,  or  male  spawn,  which  long  caused  it  to 
be  looked  upon  as  a  separate  species.  It 
really  represents,  however,  the  early  form  of 
the  salmon,  before  he  took  to  his  annual  ex- 
cursion to  the  sea.  The  ancestral  fish,  only 
a  hundredth  fraction  in  weight  of  his  huge 
descendant,  must  have  somehow  acquired  the 
habit  of  going  seaward — possibly  from  a  dry- 
ing up  of  his  native  stream  in  seasons  of 
drought.  In  the  sea,  he  found  himself  sud- 
denly supplied  with  an  unwonted  store  of 


■b 


^WHIPP 


BB 


SPECKLED   TROUT. 


119 


food,  and  grew,  like  all  his  kind  under  similar 
circumstances,  to  an  extraordinary  size.  Thus 
he  attains,  as  it  were,  to  a  second  and  final 
maturity.  But  salmon  cannot  lay  their  eggs 
in  the  sea  ;  or  at  least,  if  they  did,  the  young 
parr  would  starve  for  want  of  their  proper 
food,  or  else  be  choked  by  the  salt  water,  to 
which  the  old  fish  have  acclimatised  them- 
selves. Accordingly,  with  the  return  of  the 
spawning  season  there  comes  back  an  in- 
stinctive desire  to  seek  once  more  the  native 
fresh  water.  So  the  salmon  return  up  stream 
to  spawn,  and  the  young  are  hatched  in  the 
kind  of  surroundings  which  best  suit  their 
tender  gills.  This  instinctive  longing  for  the 
old  home  may  probably  have  arisen  during 
an  intermediate  stage,  when  the  developing 
species  still  haunted  only  the  brackish  water 
near  the  river  mouths  ;  and  as  those  fish  alone 
which  returned  to  the  head  waters  could  pre- 
serve their  race,  it  would  soon  grow  hardened 
into  a  habit  engrained  in  the  nervous  system, 
like  the  migration  of  birds  or  the  clustering 


lao 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


(  s 


J  5 


of  swarming  bees  around  their  queen.  In 
like  manner  the  Jamaican  land-crabs,  which 
themselves  live  on  the  mountain-tops,  come 
down  every  year  to  lay  their  eggs  in  the 
Caribbean ;  because,  like  all  other  crabs, 
they  pass  their  first  larval  stage  as  swimming 
tadpoles,  and  afterwards  take  instinctively  to 
the  mountains,  as  the  salmon  takes  to  the  sea. 
Such  a  habit  could  only  have  arisen  by  one 
generation  after  another  venturing  further 
and  further  inland,  while  always  returning  at 
the  proper  season  to  the  native  element  for 
the  deposition  of  the  eggs. 

These  trout  here,  however,  differ  from  the 
salmon  in  one  important  particular  beside 
their  relative  size,  and  that  is  that  they  are 
beautifully  speckled  in  their  mature  form,  in- 
stead of  being  merely  silvery  like  the  larger 
species.  The  origin  of  the  pretty  speckles  is 
probably  to  be  found  in  the  constant  selection 
by  the  fish  of  the  most  beautiful  among  their 
number  as  mates.  Just  as  singing-birds  are 
in  their  fullest  and  clearest  song  at  the  nest- 


mm 


mmm 


SPECKLED   TROUT. 


121 


ing  period,  and  just  as  many  brilliant  species 
only  possess  their  gorgeous  plumage  while 
they  are  going  through  their  courtship,  and 
lose  the  decoration  after  the  young  brood  is 
hatched,  so  the  trout  are  most  brightly 
coloured  at  spawning  time,  and  become  lank 
and  dingy  after  the  eggs  have  been  safely 
deposited.  The  parent  fish  ascend  to  the 
head-waters  of  their  native  river  during  the 
autumn  season  to  spawn,  and  then,  their  glory 
dimmed,  they  return  down-stream  to  the  deep 
pools,  where  they  pass  the  winter  sulkily,  as 
if  ashamed  to  show  themselves  in  their  dull 
and  dusky  suits.  But  when  spring  comes 
round  once  more,  and  flies  again  become 
abundant,  the  trout  begin  to  move  up-stream 
afresh,  and  soon  fatten  out  to  their  customary 
size  and  brilliant  colours.  It  might  seem 
at  first  sight  that  creatures  so  humble  as 
these  little  fish  could  hardly  have  suffi- 
ciently developed  aesthetic  tastes  to  prefer 
one  mate  above  another  on  the  score  of 
beauty.     But  we  must  remember  that  every 


■.'^tfrnvvrntf    --'   i."u<fi(i|.uwi,»5Hi 


I 


;»t! 


i 

II 


122 


THE  EVOLU'nONIST  AT  LARGE, 


species  is  very  sensitive  to  small  points  of 
detail  in  Hs  own  kind,  and  that  the  choice 
would  only  be  exerted  between  mates  gene- 
rally very  like  one  another,  so  that  extremely 
minute  differences  must  necessarily  turn  the 
scale  in  favour  of  one  particular  suitor  rather 
than  his  rivals.  Anglers  know  that  trout  are 
attracted  by  bright  colours,  that  they  can 
distinguish  the  different  flies  upon  which  they 
feed,  and  that  artificial  flies  must  accordingly 
be  made  at  least  into  a  rough  semblance 
of  the  original  insects.  Some  scientific 
fishermen  even  insist  that  it  is  no  use  offer- 
ing them  a  brown  drake  at  the  time  of  year 
or  the  hour  of  day  when  they  are  naturally 
expecting  a  red  spinner.  Of  course  their 
sight  is  by  no  means  so  perfect  as  our  own, 
but  it  probably  includes  a  fair  idea  of  form, 
and  an  acute  perception  of  colour,  while 
there  is  every  reason  to  believe  that  all  the 
trout  family  have  a  decided  love  of  metallic 
glitter,  such  as  that  of  silver  or  of  the  sal- 
mon's scales.    Mr.  Darwin  has  shown  that  the 


■Ill  JipJWfll#l*-iJi' 


■^am 


^^p^^^^iw^p 


«v< 


SPECKLED   TROUT, 


123 


little  stickleback  goes  through  an  elaborate 
courtship,  and  I  have  myself  watched  trout 
which  seemed  to  me  as  obviously  love- 
making  as  any  pair  of  turtle-doves  I  ever 
saw.  In  their  early  life  salmon  fry  and 
young  trout  are  almost  quite  indistinguish- 
able, being  both  marked  with  blue  patches 
(known  as  'finger-marks')  on  their  sides, 
which  are  remnants  of  the  ancestral  colour- 
ing once  common  to  the  whole  race.  But 
as  they  grow  up,  their  later-acquired  tastes 
begin  to  produce  a  divergence,  due  originally 
to  this  selective  preference  of  certain  beauti- 
ful mates  ;  and  the  adult  salmon  clothes  him- 
self from  head  to  tail  in  sheeny  silver,  while 
the  full-grown  trout  decks  his  sides  with  the 
beautiful  speckles  which  have  earned  him 
his  popular  name.  Countless  generations  of 
slight  differences,  selected  from  time  to  time 
by  the  strongest  and  handsomest  fish,  have 
sufficed  at  length  to  bring  about  these  conspi- 
cuous variations  from  the  primitive  type, 
which  the  young  of  both  races  still  preserve. 


m 


I  < 


^^mmmm 


immr^i^^—^ 


124  TNE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


i 


\\\ 


I'     / 

I 


(/ 


( 


XIII. 

DODDER  AND  BROOMRAPE. 

This  afternoon,  strolling  through  the  under- 
cliff,  I  have  come  across  two  quaint  and  rather 
uncommon  flowers  among  the  straggling 
brushwood.  One  of  them  is  growLig  uke  a 
creeper  around  the  branches  of  this  over- 
blown gorse-bush.  It  is  the  lesser  dodder, 
a  pretty  clustering  mass  of  tiny  pale  pink 
convolvulus  blossoms.  The  stem  consists  of 
a  long  red  thread,  twining  round  and  round 
the  gorse,  and  bursting  out  here  and  there 
into  thick  bundles  of  beautiful  bell-shaped 
flowers.  But  where  are  the  leaves?  Yon 
may  trace  the  red  threads  through  their 
labyrinthine  windings  up  and  down  the  sup- 
porting gorse-branches  all  in  vain  :  there  is 
not  a  leaf  to  be.  seen.     As  a  matter  of  fact, 


n^P 


tm^K"^"^ 


.     DODDER  AND  BROOMRAPE.  i%l 

the  dodder  has  none.  It  is  one  of  the  most 
thorough-going  parasites  in  all  nature.  Or- 
dinary green-leaved  plants  live  by  making 
starches  for  themselves  out  of  the  carbonic 
acid  in  the  air,  under  the  influence  of  sun- 
light ;  but  the  dodder  simply  fastens  itself 
on  to  another  plant,  sends  down  rootlets  or 
suckers  into  its  veins,  and  drinks  up  sap 
stored  with  ready-made  starches  or  other  food- 
stuffs, originally  destined  by  its  host  for  the 
supply  of  its  own  growing  leaves,  branches, 
and  blossoms.  It  lives  upon  the  gorse  just 
as  parasitically  as  the  little  green  aphides 
live  upon  our  rose-bushes.  The  material 
which  it  uses  up  in  pushing  forth  its  long 
thread-like  stem  and  clustered  bells  is  so 
much  dead  loss  to  the  unfortunate  plant  on 
which  it  has.  fixed  itself. 

Old-fashioned  books  tell  us  that  the  mis- 
tletoe is  a  perfect  parasite,  while  the  dodder 
is  an  imperfect  one ;  and  I  believe  almost 
all  botanists  will  still  repeat  the  foolish  say- 
ing to  the  present  day.     But  it  really  shows 


""^iWi"Bi 


II.  itmn    •"•"^^wmfmif 


mmp 


^•^f 


MM 


ji 
1 


I  I 


126 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


considerable  haziness  as  to  what  a  true 
parasite  is.  The  mistletoe  is  a  plant  which 
has  taken,  it  is  true,  to  growing  upon  other 
trees.  Its  very  viscid  berries  are  useful  for 
attaching  the  seeds  to  the  trunk  of  the  oak 
or  the  apple ;  and  there  it  roots  itself  into 
the  body  of  its  host.  But  it  soon  produces 
real  green  leaves  of  its  own,  which  contain 
the  ordinary  chlorophyll  found  in  other 
leaves,  and  help  it  to  manufacture  starch, 
under  the  influence  of  sunlight,  on  its  own 
account.  It  is  not,  the:efore,  a  complete 
drag  upon  the  tree  which  it  infests ;  for 
though  it  takes  sap  and  mineral  food  from 
the  host,  it  supplies  itself  with  carbon,  which 
is  after  all  the  important  thing  for  plant-life. 
Dodder,  however,  is  a  parasite  pure  and 
simple.  Its  seeds  fall  originally  upon  the 
ground,  and  there  root  themselves  at  first 
like  those  of  any  other  plant.  But,  as  it 
grows,  its  long  twining  stem  begins  to  curl 
for  support  round  some  other  and  stouter 
stalk.     If  it  stopped  there,  and  then  produced 


m^mm^ 


mjip'i* 


■HP 


DODDER  AND  BROOMRAPE. 


127 


leaves  of  its  own,  like  the  honeysuckle  and 
the  clematis,  there  would  be  no  great  harm 
done  :  and  the  dodder  would  be  but  another 
climbing  plant  the  more  in  our  flora.  How- 
ever, it  soon  insidiously  repays  the  support 
given  it  by  sending  down  little  bud-like 
suckers,  through  which  it  draws  up  nourish- 
ment from  the  gorse  or  clover  on  which  it 
lives.  Thus  it  has  no  need  to  develop  leaves 
of  its  own  ;  and  it  accordingly  employs  all 
its  stolen  material  in  sending  forth  matted 
thread-like  stems  and  bunch  after  bunch  of 
bright  flowers.  As  these  increase  and  mul- 
tiply, they  at  last  succeed  in  drawing  away 
all  the  nutriment  from  the  supporting  plant, 
which  finally  dies  under  the  constant  drain, 
just  as  a  horse  might  die  under  the  attacks 
of  a  host  of  leeches.  But  this  matters  little 
to  the  dodder,  which  has  had  time  to  be 
visited  and  fertilised  by  insects,  and  to  set 
and  ripen  its  numerous  seeds.  One  species, 
the  greater  dodder,  is  thus  parasitic  upon 
hops   and    nettles ;    a   second    kind    twines 


r 


^^mmmm 


■PPIHPifPiiPIIP 


'B< 


I  ( 


128 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


round  flax  ;  and  the  third,  which  I  have  here 
under  my  eyes,  mainly  confines  its  dangerous 
attentions  to  gorse,  clover,  and  thyme.  All 
of  them  are,  of  course,  deadly  enemies  to  the 
plants  they  infest. 

How  the  dodder  acquired  this  curious 
mode  of  life  it  is  not  difficult  to  see.  By 
descent  it  is  a  bind-weed,  or  wild  convol- 
vulus, and  its  blossoms  are  in  the  main 
miniature  convolvulus  blossoms  still.  Now, 
all  bind-weeds,  as  everybody  knows,  are 
climbing  plants,  which  twine  themselves 
round  stouter  stems  for  mere  physical  sup- 
port. This  is  in  itself  a  half-parasitic  habit, 
because  it  enables  the  plant  to  dispense  with 
the  trouble  of  making  a  thick  and  solid  stem 
for  its  own  use.  But  just  suppose  that  any 
bind-weed,  instead  of  merely  twining,  were 
to  put  forth  here  and  there  little  tendrils, 
something  like  those  of  the  ivy,  which 
managed  somehow  to  grow  into  the  bark  of 
the  host,  and  so  naturally  graft  themselves 
to  its  tissues.     In  that  case  the  plant  would 


II 


DODDER  AND  BROOMRAPE. 


129 


derive  nutriment  from  the  stouter  stem  with 
no  expense  to  itself,  and  it  might  naturally 
be  expected  to  grow  strong  and  healthy,  and 
hand  down  its  peculiarities  to  its  descend- 
ants. As  the  leaves  would  thus  be  rendered 
needless,  they  would  first  become  very  much 
reduced  in  size,  and  would  finally  disappear 
altogether,  according  to  the  universal  custom 
or  unnecessary  organs.  So  we  should  get 
at  length  a  leafless  plant,  with  numerous 
flowers  and  seeds,  just  like  the  dodder 
Parasit  .s,  in  fact,  whether  animal  or  veget- 
able, always  end  by  becoming  mere  repro- 
ductive sacs,  mechanisms  for  the  simple 
elaboration  of  eggs  or  seeds.  This  is  just 
what  has  happened  to  the  dodder  before  me 
The  other  queer  plant  here  is  a  broom- 
rape.  It  consists  of  a  tall,  somewhat  faded- 
looking  stem,  upright  instead  of  climbing, 
and  covered  with  brown  or  purplish  scales 
in  the  place  of  leaves.  Its  flowers  resemble 
the  scales  in  colour,  and  the  yellow-rattle 
in   shape.     It   is,  in   fact,  most  probably   a 


H^ 


i 


«  1 


f 


1!| 


130 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


parasitic  yellow-rattle,  a  trifle  less  degenerate 
as  yet  than  the  dodder.  This  broomrape 
has  acquired  somewhat  the  same  habits  as 
the  other  plant,  only  that  it  fixes  itself  on 
the  roots  of  clover  or  broom,  from  which  it 
sucks  nutriment  by  its  own  root,  as  the 
dodder  does  by  its  stem-suckers.  Of  course 
it  still  retains  in  most  particulars  its  original 
characteristics  as  a  yellow-rattle  ;  it  grows 
with  their  upright  stem  and  their  curiously 
shaped  flowers,  so  specially  adapted  for  fer- 
tilisation by  insect  visitors.  But  it  has 
naturally  lost  its  leaves,  for  which  it  has  no 
further  use,  and  it  possesses  no  chlorophyll, 
as  the  mistletoe  does.  Yet  it  has  not  pro- 
bably been  parasitic  for  as  long  a  time  as  the 
dodder,  since  it  still  retains  a  dwindling  trace 
of  its  leaves  in  the  shape  of  dry  purply 
scales,  something  like  those  of  young  as- 
paragus shoots.  These  leaves  are  now,  in  all 
likelihood,  actually  undergoing  a  gradual 
atrophy,  and  we  may  fairly  expect  that  in 
the  course  of  a  few  thousand  years  they  will 


DODDER  AND  BROOMRAPE. 


»3' 


disappear  altogether.  At  present,  however, 
they  remain  very  conspicuous  by  their  colour, 
which  is  not  green,  owing  to  the  absence  of 
chlorophyll,  but  is  due  to  the  same  pigment 
as  that  of  the  blossoms.  This  generally 
happens  with  parasites,  or  with  that  other 
curious  sort  of  plants  known  as  saprophytes, 
which  live  upon  decaying  living  matter  in 
the  mould  of  forests.  As  they  need  no 
green  leaves,  but  have  often  inherited  leafy 
structures  of  some  sort,  in  a  more  or  less 
degenerate  condition,  from  their  self-support- 
ing ancestors,  they  usually  display  most 
beautiful  colours  in  their  stems  and  scales, 
and  several  of  them  more  than  rival  our 
handsomest  hot-house  plants.  Even  the 
dodder  has  red  stalks.  Their  only  work  in 
life  being  to  elaborate  the  materials  stolen 
from  their  host  into  the  brilliant  pigments 
used  in  the  petals  for  attracting  insect  fer- 
tilisers, they  pour  this  same  dye  into  the 
stems  and  scales,  which  thus  render  them 
still  more  conspicuous  to   the   insects'  eyes. 


K  2 


' 


M 


lyi 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


Moreover,  as  they  use  their  whole  material 
in  producing  flowers,  many  of  these  are  very 
large  and  handsome ;  one  huge  Sumatran 
species  has  a  blossom  which  measures  three 
feet  across.  On  the  other  hand,  their  seeds 
are  usually  small  and  very  numerous.  Thou- 
sands of  seeds  must  fall  on  unsuitable  places, 
spring  up,  and  waste  all  their  tiny  store  of 
nourishment,  find  no  host  at  hand  on  which 
to  fasten  themselves,  and  so  die  down  for 
want  of  food.  It  is  only  by  producing  a  few 
thousand  young  plants  for  every  one  destined 
ultimately  to  survive  that  dodders  and  broom- 
rapes  manage  to  preserve  their  types  at  all. 


DOG'S  MERCURY  AND  PLANTAIN.        133 


XIV. 


DOG'S  MERCURY  AND  PLANTAIN. 


The  hedge  and  bank  in  Haye  Lane  are  now 
a  perfect  tangled  mass  of  creeping  plants, 
among  which  I  have  just  picked  out  a  queer 
little  three-cornered  flower,  hardly  known 
even  to  village  children,  but  christened  by 
our  old  herbalists  *  dog's  mercury.*  It  is  an 
ancient  trick  of  language  to  call  coarser  or 
larger  plants  by  the  specific  title  of  some 
smaller  or  cultivated  kind,  with  the  addition 
of  an  animal's  name.  Thus  we  have  radish 
and  horse-radish,  chestnut  and  horse-chestnut, 
rose  and  dog-rose,  parsnip  and  cow-parsnip, 
thistle  and  sow-thistle.  On  the  same  prin- 
ciple, a  somewhat  similar  plant  being  known 
as  mercury,  this  perennial  weed  becomes 
dog's  mercury.     Both,  of  course,  go  back  to 


■p 


/    ! 


1! 


»34 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


some  imaginary  medicinal  virtue  in  the  herb 
which  made  it  resemble  the  metal  in  the  eyes 
of  old-fashioned  practitioners. 

Dogs  mercury  is  one  of  the  oddest 
English  flowers  I  know.  Each  blossom  has 
three  small  green  sepals,  and  either  several 
stamens,  or  else  a  pistil,  in  the  centre. 
There  is  nothing  particularly  remarkable  in 
the  flower  being  green,  for  thousands  of 
other  flowers  are  green  and  we  never  notice 
them  as  in  any  way  unusual.  In  fact,  we 
never  as  a  rule  notice  green  blossoms  at  all. 
Yet  anybody  who  picked  a  piec«  ^  dog's 
mercury  could  not  fail  to  be  struck  by  its 
curious  appearance.  It  does  not  in  the  least 
resemble  the  inconspicuous  green  flowers  of 
the  stinging-nettle,  or  of  most  forest  trees : 
it  has  a  very  distinct  set  of  sepals  which  at 
once  impress  one  with  the  idea  that  they  ought 
to  be  coloured.  And  so  indeed  they  ought : 
for  dog's  mercury  is  a  degenerate  plant 
which  once  possessed  a  brilliant  corolla  and 
was  fertilised  by  insects,  but  which  has  now 


V'. 


DOGS  MERCURY  AND  PLAXTAIX. 


•35 


fallen  from  its  high  estate  and  reverted  to 
the  less  advanced  mode  of  fertilisation  by 
the  intermediation  of  the  wind.  For  some 
unknown  reason  or  other  this  species  and  all 
its  relations  have  discovered  that  they  get  on 

better  by  the  latter  and  usually  more  wasteful 
plan  than  by  the  former  and  usually  more 
economical  one.  Hence  they  have  given  up 
producing  large  bright  petals,  because  they 
no  longer  need  to  attract  the  eyes  of  insects  ; 
and  they  have  also  given  up  the  manufacture 
of  honey,  which  under  their  new  circum- 
stances would  be  a  mere  waste  of  substance 
to  them.  But  the  dog's  mercury  still  retains 
a  distinct  mark  of  its  earlier  insect-attracting 
habits  in  these  three  diminutive  sepals. 
Others  of  its  relations  have  lost  even  these, 
so  that  the  original  floral  form  is  almost 
completely  obscured  in  their  case.  The 
spurges  are  familiar  English  roadside  ex- 
amples, and  their  flowers  are  so  completely 
degraded  that  even  botanists  for  a  long  time 
mistook  their  nature  and  analogies. 


IP 


mm 


.  ;t 


ii 


ii 


136 


T//£  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


The  male  and  female  flowers  of  dog's 
mercury  have  taken  to  living  upon  separate 
plants.  Why  is  this  ?  Well,  there  was  na 
doubt  a  time  when  every  blossom  had  both  sta- 
mens and  pistil,  as  dog-roses  and  buttercups 
always  have.  But  when  the  plant  took  ta 
wind  fertilisation  it  underwent  a  change  of 
structure.  The  stamens  on  some  blossoms- 
became  aborted,  while  the  pistil  became 
aborted  on  others.  This  was  necessary  in 
order  to  prevent  self-fertilisation  ;  for  other- 
wise the  pollen  of  each  blossom,  hanging  out 
as  it  does  to  the  wind,  would  have  been  very 
liable  to  fall  upon  its  own  pistil.  But  the 
present  arrangement  obviates  any  such  con- 
tingency, by  making  one  plant  bear  all  the 
male  flowers  and  another  plant  all  the  female 
ones.  Why,  again,  are  the  sepals  green  1 
I  think  because  dog's  mercury  would  be  posi- 
tively injured  by  the  visits  of  insects.  It  has 
no  honey  to  offer  them,  and  if  they  came  to 
it  at  all,  they  would  only  eat  up  the  pollen 
itself.     Hence   I  suspect  that  those  flowers 


DOG'S  MERCURY  AND  PLANTAIN.        13/ 

among  the  mercuries  which  showed  any  ten- 
dency to  retain  the  original  coloured  petals 
would  soon  get  weeded  out,  because  insects 
would  eat  up  all  their  pollen,  thus  preventing 
them  from  fertilising  others ;  while  those 
which  had  green  sepals  only  would  never  be 
noticed  and  so  would  be  permitted  to  fertilise 
one  another  after  their  new  fashion.  In  fact, 
when  a  blossom  which  has  once  depended 
upon  insects  for  its  fertilisation  is  driven  by 
circumstances  to  depend  upon  the  wind,  it 
seems  to  derive  a  positive  advantage  from 
losing  all  those  attractive  features  by  which 
its  ancestors  formerly  allured  the  eyes  of 
bees  or  beetles. 

Here,  again,  on  the  roadside  is  a  bit  of 
plantain.  Everybody  knows  its  fiat  rosette 
of  green  leaves  and  its  tall  spike  of  grass-like 
blossom,  with  long  stamens  hanging  out  to 
catch  the  breeze.  Now  plantain  is  a  case 
exactly  analogous  to  dog's  mercury.  It  is  an 
example  of  a  degraded  blossom.  Once  upon 
a  time  it  was  a  sort  of  distant  cousin  to  the 


"^ 


•wmmif^ 


138 


TI/E  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


veronica,  that  pretty  sky-blue  speedwell  which 
abounds  among  the  meadows  In  June  and 
July.  But  these  particular  very  degenerate 
speedwells  gave  up  devoting  themselves  to 
insects  and  became  adapted  for  fertilisation 
by  the  wind  instead.  So  you  must  look  close 
at  them  to  see  at  all  that  the  flowering  spike 
is  made  up  of  a  hundred  separate  little  four- 
rayed  blossoms,  whose  pale  and  faded  petals 
are  tucked  away  out  of  sight  flat  against 
the  stem.  Yet  their  shape  and  arrangement 
distinctly  recall  the  beautiful  veronica,  and 
leave  one  in  little  doubt  as  to  the  origin  of 
the  plant.  At  the  same  time  a  curious 
device  has  sprung  up  which  answers  just  the 
same  purpose  as  the  separation  of  the  male 
and  female  flowers  on  the  dog's  mercury. 
Each  plantain  blossom  has  both  stamens  and 
pistils,  but  the  pistils  come  to  maturity  first, 
and  are  fertilised  by  pollen  blown  to  them 
from  some  neighbouring  spike.  Their  fea- 
thery plumes  are  admirably  adapted  for 
catching  and  utilising  any  stray  golden  grain 


DOG'S  MERCURY  AND  PLANTAIN.        139 

which  happens  to  pass  that  way.  After  the 
pistils  have  faded,  the  stamens  ripen,  and 
hang  out  at  the  end  uf  long  waving  filaments, 
so  as  to  discharge  all  their  pollen  with 
effect.  On  each  spike  of  blossoms'the  lower 
flowerets  open  first ;  and  so,  if  you  pick  a 
half-blown  spike,  you  will  see  that  all  the 
stamens  are  ripe  below,  and  all  the  pistils 
above.  Were  the  opposite  arrangement-  to 
occur,  the  pollen  would  fall  from  the  stamens 
to  the  lower  flowers  of  the  same  stalk  ;  but 
as  the  pistils  below  have  always  been  fer- 
tilised and  withered  before  the  stamens  ripen, 
there  is  no  chance  of  any  such  accident  and 
its  consequent  evil  results.  Thus  one  can 
see  clearly  that  the  plantain  has  become 
wholly  adapted  to  wind-fertilisation,  and  as  a 
natural  effect  has  ail  but  lost  its  bright- 
coloured  corolla.  * 

Common  groundsel  is  also  a  case  of  the 
same  kind  ;  but  here  the  degradation  has  not 
gone  nearly  so  far.  I  venture  to  conjecture, 
therefore,  that  groundsel  has  been  embarked 


( 


140 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


for  a  shorter  time  upon  its  downward  course^ 
For  evolution  is  not,  as  most  people  seem  to 
fancy,  a  thing  which  used  once  to  take  place ; 
it  is  a  process  taking  place  around  us  every- 
day, and  it  must  necessarily  continue  to  take 
place  to  the  end  of  all  time.  By  family  the 
groundsel  is  a  daisy ;  but  it  has  acquired  the 
strange  and  somewhat  Abnormal  habit  of 
self-fertilisation,  which  in  all  probability  will 
ultimately  lead  to  its  total  extinction.  Hence 
it  does  not  need  the  assistance  of  insects ; 
and  it  has  accordingly  got  rid  of  the  bright 
outer  ray-florets  which  once  attracted  them* 
Its  tiny  bell-shaped  blossoms  still  retain  their 
dwarf  yellow  corollas ;  but  they  are  almost 
hidden  by  the  green  cup-like  investment  of 
the  flower-head,  and  they  are  not  conspicuous 
enough  to  arrest  the  attention  of  the  passing  ' 
flies.  Here,  then,  we  have  an  example  of  a 
plant  just  beginning  to  start  on  the  retrograde 
path  already  traversed  by  the  plantain  and 
the  spurges.  If  we  could  meet  prophetically 
with    a    groundsel   of   some   remote  future 


wmm. 


DOG'S  MERCURY  AND  PLANTAIN.       141 

century,  I  have  little  doubt  we  should  find 
its  bell-shaped  petals  as  completely  degraded 
as  those  of  the  plantain  in  our  own  day. 

The  general  principle  which  these  cases 
illustrate  is  that  when  flowers  have  always 
been  fertilised  by  the  wind,  they  never  have 
brilliant  corollas  ;  when  they  acquire  the 
habit  of  impregnating  their  kind  by  the 
intervention  of  insects,  they  almost  always 
acquire  at  the  same  time  alluring  colours, 
perfumes,  and  honey ;  and  when  they  have 
once  been  so  impregnated,  and  then  revert 
once  more  to  wind-fertilisation,  or  become 
self-fertilisers,  they  generally  retain  some 
symptoms  of  their  earlier  ^labits,  in  the 
presence  of  dwarfed  and  useless  sepals  and 
petals,  sometimes  green,  or  if  not  green  at 
least  devoid  of  their  former  attractive  colour- 
ing. Thus  every  plant  bears  upon  its  very 
face  the  history  of  its  whole  previous  de- 
velopment. 


'''  '     .-miw^'>'^^i^^rmmmmiifmmmfmmmmm 


mmmmmmm 


I 


{ 


ill 


It' 

It  I '  • 


I 


142  THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE 


XV. 

B  UTTERFL  V  PS  YCHOLOG  Y 

A  SMALL  red-and-black  butterfly  poises  sta- 
tuesque above  the  purple  blossom  of  this  tall 
field-thistle.  With  its  long  sucker  it  probes 
industriously  floret  after  floret  of  the  crowded 
head,  and  extracts  from  each  its  wee  drop  of 
buried  nectar.  As  it  stands  just  at  present, 
the  dull  outer  sides  of  its  four  wings  are 
alone  displayed,  so  that  it  does  not  form  a 
conspicuous  mark  for  passing  birds  ;  but 
when  it  has  drunk  up  the  last  drop  of  honey 
from  the  thistle  flower,  and  flits  joyously 
away  to  seek  another  purple  mass  of  the 
same  sort,  it  will  open  its  red-spotted  vans  in 
the  sunlight,  and  will  then  show  itself  off  as 
one  among  the  prettiest  of  our  native  insects. 


A- 


BUTTERFLY  PSYCHOLOGY. 


143 


Each  thistle-head  consists  of  some  two  hun- 
dred separate  little  bell-shaped  blossoms, 
crowded  together  for  the  sake  of  conspicuous- 
ness  into  a  single  group,  just  as  the  blossoms 
of  the  lilac  or  the  syringa  are  crowded  into 
larger  though  less  dense  clusters ;  and,  as 
each  separate  floret  has  a  nectary  of  its 
own,  the  bee  or  butterfly  who  lights  upon 
the  compound  flower-group  can  busy  himself 
for  a  minute  or  two  in  getting  at  the  various 
drops  of  honey  without  the  necessity  Tor 
any  further  change  of  position  than  that  of 
revolving  upon  his  own  axis.  Hence  these 
composite  flowers  are  great  favourites  with 
all  insects  whose  suckers  are  long  enough  to 
reach  the  bottom  of  their  slender  tubes. 

The  butterfly's  view  of  life  is  doubtless 
on  the  whole  a  cheerful  one.  Yet  his  exist- 
ence must  be  something  so  nearly  mechanical 
that  we  probably  overrate  the  amount  of 
enjoyment  which  he  derives  from  flitting 
about  so  airily  among  the  flowers,  and  pass- 
ing his  days  in  the  unbroken  amusement  of 


u 


mmmmmm 


mmmmmmmmm 


li 


H 


hi 


n 


144 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


sucking  liquid  honey.     Subjectively  viewed, 
the  butterfly  is  not  a  high  order  of  insect ; 
his  nervous  system  does  not  chow  that  pro- 
vision for  comparatively  spontaneous  thought 
and  action  which  we  find  in  the  more  intelli- 
gent  orders,  like   the  flies,    bees,  ants,   and 
wasps.     His  nerves  are  all  frittered  away  in 
little  separate  ganglia  distributed  among  the 
various   segments-   of    his   body,    instead   of 
being   governed   by   a   single   great  central 
organ,  or  brain,  whose  business  it  always  is 
to  correlate  and  co-ordinate  complex  external 
impressions.     This  shows  that  the  butterfly's 
movements    are    almost    all    automatic,   or 
simply  dependent  upon   immediate  external 
stimulants  :  he  has  not  even  that  small  capa- 
city for  deliberation  and  spontaneous  initia- 
tive  which  belongs  to  his  relation  the  bee. 
The  freedom  of  the  will  is  nothing  to  him, 
or  extends  at  best  to  the  amount  claimed  on 
behalf  of  Buridan's  ass  :  he  can  just  choose 
which  of  two  equidistant  flowers  shall   first 
have  the  benefit  of  his  attention,  and  nothing 


BUTTERFLY  PSYCHOLOGY. 


»45 


>n 
jt 


else.  Whatever  view  we  take  on  the  ab- 
stract metaphysical  question,  it  is  at  least 
certain  that  the  higher  animals  can  do  much 
more  than  this.  Their  brain  is  able  to  cor- 
relate a  vast  number  of  external  impressions, 
and  to  bring  them  under  the  influence  of 
endless  ideas  or  experiences,  so  as  finally  to 
evolve  conduct  which  differs  very  widely 
with  different  circumstances  and  different 
characters.  Even  though  it  be  true,  as  de- 
terminists  believe  (and  I  reckon  myself 
among  them),  that  such  conduct  is  the  neces- 
sary result  of  a  given  character  and  given 
circumstances — or,  if  you  will,  of  a  particular 
set  of  nervous  structures  and  a  particular  set 
of  external  stimuli — yet  we  all  know  that  it 
is  capable  of  varying  so  indefinitely,  owing  to 
the  complexity  of  the  structures,  as  to  be 
practically  incalculable.  But  it  is  not  so 
with  the  butterfly.  His  whole  life  is  cut  out 
for  him  before  hand  ;  his  nervous  connections 
are  so  simple,  and  correspond  so  directly 
with   external    stimuli,    that  we   can   almost 


■^■r^i*^^^ 


■■■ 


146 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


!     i 


predict  with  certainty  what  line  of  action 
he  will  pursue  under  any  given  circum- 
stances. He  is,  as  it  were,  but  a  piece 
of  half-conscious  mechanism,  answering  im- 
mediately to  impulses  from  without,  just 
as  the  thermometer  answers  to  variations  of 
temperature,  and  as  the  telegraphic  indicator 
answers  to  each  making  and  breaking  of  the 
electric  current. 

In  early  life  the  future  butterfly  emerges 
from  the  &g^  as  a  caterpillar.  At  once  his 
many  legs  begin  to  move,  and  the  caterpillar 
moves  forward  by  their  motion.  But  the 
mechanism  which  set  them  moving  was  the 
nervous  system,  with  its  ganglia  working  the 
separate  legs  of  each  segment.  This  move- 
ment is  probably  quite  as  automatic  as  the 
act  of  sucking  in  the  new-born  infant.  The 
caterpillar  walks,  it  knows  not  why,  but 
simply  because  it  has  to  walk.  When  it 
reaches  a  fit  place  for  feeding,  which  differs 
according  to  the  nature  of  the  particular 
larva,  it  feeds  automatically.     Certain  special 


BUTTERFLY  PSYCHOLOGY. 


147 


:ial 


external  stimulants  of  sight,  smell,  or  touch 
set  up  the  appropriate  actions  in  the  man- 
dibles, just  as  contact  of  the  lips  with  an 
external  body  sets  up  sucking  in  the  infant. 
All  these  movements  depend  upon  what  we 
call  instinct — that  is  to  say,  organic  habits 
registered  in  the  nervous  system  of  the  race. 
They  have  arisen  by  natural  selection  alone, 
because  those  insects  which  duly  performed 
them  survived,  and  those  which  did  not  duly 
perform  them  died  out.  After  a  considerable 
span  of  life  spent  in  feeding  and  walking  about 
in  search  of  more  food,  the  caterpillar  one  day 
found  itself  compelled  by  an  inner  monitor 
to  alter  its  habits.  Why,  it  knew  not ;  but, 
just  as  a  tired  child  sinks  to  sleep,  the  gorged 
and  full-fed  caterpillar  sank  peacefully  into  a 
dormant  state.  Then  its  tissues  melted  one  by 
one  into  a  kind  of  organic  pap,  and  its  outer 
skin  hardened  into  a  chrysalis.  Within  that 
solid  case  new  limbs  and  organs  began  to 
grow  by  hereditary  impulses.  At  the  same 
time  the  form  of  the  nervous  system  altered, 


1. 2 


SERB 


S!Q! 


mmm 


mm 


i\ 


\ 


148 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


to  suit  the  higher  and  freer  life  for  which  the 
insect  was  unconsciously  preparing  itself. 
Fewer  and  smaller  ganglia  now  appeared  in 
the  tail  segments  (since  no  legs  would  any 
longer  be  needed  there),  while  more  import- 
ant ones  sprang  up  to  govern  the  motions  of 
the  four  wmgs.  But  it  was  in  the  head  that 
the  greatest  changes  took  place.  There,  a 
rudimentary  brain  made  its  appearance,  with 
large  optic  centres,  answering  to  the  far  more 
perfect  and  important  eyes  of  the  future 
butterfly.  For  the  flying  insect  will  have  to 
steer  its  way  through  open  spaces,  instead  of 
creeping  over  leaves  and  stones ;  and  it  will 
have  to  suck  the  honey  of  flowers,  as  well  as 
to  choose  its  fitting  mate,  all  of  which  de- 
mands from  it  higher  and  keener  senses  than 
those  of  the  purblind  caterpillar.  At  length 
one  day  the  chrysalis  bursts  asunder,  and  the 
insect  emerges  to  view  on  a  summer  morning 
as  a  full-fledged  and  beautiful  butterfly. 

For  a  minute  or  two  it  stands  and  waits 
till  the  air  it  breathes  has  filled  out  its  wings, 


BUTTERFLY  PSYCHOLOGY. 


t49 


and  till  the  warmth  and  sunlight  have  given 
it  strength.  For  the  wings  are  by  origin  a 
part  of  the  breathing  apparatus,  and  they 
require  to  be  plimmed  by  the  air  before  the 
insect  can  take  to  flight.  Then,  as  it  grows 
more  accustomed  to  its  new  life,  the  heredi- 
tary impulse  causes  it  to  spread  its  vans 
abroad,  and  it  flies.  Soon  a  flower  catches 
its  eye,  and  the  bright  mass  of  colour  attracts 
it  irresistibly,  as  the  candle-light  attracts  the 
eye  of  a  child  a  few  weeks  old.  It  sets  off 
towards  the  patch  of  red  or  yellow,  probably 
not  knowing  beforehand  that  this  is  the 
visible  symbol  of  food  for  it,  but  merely 
guided  by  the  blind  habit  of  its  race,  im- 
printed with  binding  force  in  the  very  con- 
stitution of  its  body.  Thus  the  moths,  which 
fly  by  night  and  visit  only  white  flowers 
whose  corollas  still  shine  out  in  the  twilight, 
are  so  irresistibly  led  on  by  the  external 
stimulus  of  light  from  a  candle  falling  upon 
their  eyes  that  they  cannot  choose  but 
move  their  wings  rapidly  in  that  direction ; 


150 


TNE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


and  though  singed  and  blinded  twice  or 
three  times  by  the  flame,  must  still  wheel 
and  eddy  into  it,  till  at  last  they  perish  in 
the  scorching  blaze.  Their  instincts,  or,  to 
put  it  more  clearly,  their  simple  nervous 
mechanism,  though  admirably  adapted  to 
their  natural  circumstances,  cannot  be  equa 'y 
adapted  to  such  artificial  objects  as  wax 
candles.  The  butterfly  in  like  manner  is 
attracted  automatically  by  the  colour  of  his 
proper  flowers,  and  settling  upon  them,  sucks 
up  their  honey  instinctively.  But  feeding  is 
not  now  his  only  object  in  life  :  he  has  to 
find  and  pair  with  a  suitable  mate.  That, 
indeed,  is  the  great  end  of  his  winged  exist- 
ence. Here,  again,  his  simple  n^^rvous  sys- 
tem stands  him  in  good  stead.  The  picture 
of  his  kind,  is,  as  it  were,  imprinted  on  his 
little  brain,  and  he  knows  his  own  mates  the 
moment  he  sees  them,  just  as  intuitively  as 
he  knows  the  flowers  upon  which  he  must 
feed.  Now  we  see  the  reason  for  the  butter- 
fly's large  optic  centres  :  they  have  to  guide 


asmm 


BUTTERFLY  PSYCHOLOGY. 


151 


it  in  all  its  movements.  In  like  manner,  and 
by  a  like  mechanism,  the  female  butterfly  or 
moth  selects  the  right  spot  for  laying  her 
eggs,  which  of  course  depends  entirely  upon 
the  nature  of  the  young  caterpillars'  proper 
food.  Each  great  group  of  insects  has  its 
own  habits  in  this  respect,  may-flies  laying 
their  eggs  on  the  water,  many  beetles  on 
wood,  flies  on  decaying  animal  matter,  and 
butterflies  mostly  on  special  plants.  Thus 
throughout  its  whole  life  the  butterfly's  ac- 
tivity is  entirely  governed  by  a  rigid  law, 
registered  and  fixed  for  ever  in  the  con- 
stitution of  its  ganglia  and  motor  nerves. 
Certain  definite  objects  outside  it  invariably 
produce  certain  definite  movements  on  the 
insect's  part.  No  doubt  it  is  vaguely  con- 
scious of  all  thit  it  does  ;  no  doubt  it  derives 
a  faint  pleasure  from  due  exercise  of  all  its 
vital  functions,  and  a  faint  pain  when  they 
are  injured  or  thwarted  ;  but  on  the  whole 
its  range  of  action  is  narrowed  and  bounded 
by  its  hereditary  instincts  and  their  nervous 


PPPPiV 


■WW 


■vnp^w" 


152 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


correlatives.  It  may  light  on  one  flower 
rather  than  another  ;  it  may  choose  a  fresher 
and  brighter  mate  rather  than  a  battered 
and  dingy  one ;  but  its  little  subjectivity  is 
a  mere  shadow  compared  with  ours,  and  it 
hardly  deserves  to  be  considered  as  more 
than  a  semi-conscious  automatic  machine. 


«i«i|i       ivi^pppiqpnwi 


'mrnmnmimB'^^'^^  'ijikhp  iP^.'.ww^niP'piMiniiiii^iiiilPMqil 


BUTTERFLY  ESTHETICS, 


153 


XVI. 

BUTTERFLY  ^ESTHETICS. 

The  other  day,  when  I  was  watching  that 
little  red-spotted  butterfly  whose  psychology 
I  found  so  interesting,  I  hardly  took  enough 
account,  perhaps,  of  the  insect's  own  subjec- 
tive feelings  of  pleasure  and  pain.  The  first 
great  point  to  understand  about  these  minute 

creatures  is  that  they  are,  after  all,  mainly 
pieces  of  automatic  mechanism  :  the  second 

great  point  is  to  understand   that  they  are 

proi  ably  something  more  than  that  as  well. 

To-day  I  have  found  another  exactly  similar 

butterfly,  and  I  am  going  to  work  out  with 

myself  the  other  half  of  the  problem  about 

him.     Granted    that   the    insect   is,   viewed 

intellectually,    a     cunning    bit     of    nervous 


ws9sefmm'»fa:i^Kn 


.  mtmM  iiai.  laiMi 


^1  ■lllflM^IR 


■'l^ll'*,». 


154 


7W:£:  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


machinery,  may  it  not  be  true  at  the  same 
time  that  he  is,  viewed  emotionally,  a  faint 
copy  of  ourselves  ? 

Here  he  stands  on  a  purple  thistle  again, 
true,  as  usual,  to  the  plant  on  which  I  last 
found  him.     There  can  be  no  doubt  that  he 
distinguishes  one  colour  from  another,  for  you 
can  artificially  attract  him  by  putting  a  piece 
of  purple  paper  on  a  green  leaf,  just  as  the 
flower  naturally  attracts  him  with  its  native 
hue.     Numerous    observations    and    experi- 
ments have  proved  with  all  but  absolute  cer- 
tainty  that   his   discrimination   of  colour  is 
essentially  identical  with  our  own  ;  and  I  think, 
if  we  run  our  eye  up  and  down  nature,  ob- 
serving how  universally  all  animals  are  at- 
tracted by  pure  and  bright  colours,  we  can 
hardly  doubt   that   he   appreciates   and   ad- 
mires colour  as  well  as  discriminates  it     Mr. 
Darwin  certainly  judges  that  butterflies  can 
show  an  aesthetic  preference  of  the  sort,  for 
he  sets  down  their  own   lovely  hues  to  the 
constant  sexual  selection  of  the  handsomest 


tmm 


mm" 


m'm 


mp 


BUTTERFLY  ^ESTHETICS. 


»5S 


mates.  We  must  not,  however  take  too 
human  a  measure  of  their  capacities  in  this 
respect.  It  is  sufficient  to  believe  that  the 
insect  derives  some  direct  enjoyment  from 
the  stimulation  of  pure  colour,  and  is  heredi- 
tarily attracted  by  it  wherever  it  may  show 
itself.  This  pleasure  draws  it  on,  on  the  one 
hand,  towards  the  gay  flowers  which  form  its 
natural  food  ;  and,  on  the  other  hand,  towards 
its  own  brilliant  mates.  Imprinted  on  its 
nervous  system  is  a  certain  blank  form 
answering  to  its  own  specific  type  ;  and  when 
the  object  corresponding  to  this  blank  form 
occurs  in  its  neighbourhood,  the  insect  blindly 
obeys  its  hereditary  instinct.  But  out  of  two 
or  three  such  possible  mates  it  naturally 
selects  that  which  is  most  brightly  spotted, 
and  in  other  ways  most  perfectly  fulfils  the 
specific  ideal.  We  need  not  suppose  that  the 
insect  is  conscious  of  making  a  selection  or 
of  the  reasons  which  guide  it  in  its  choice : 
it  is  enough  to  believe  that  it  follows  the 
strongest  stimulus,  just  as  the  child  picks  out 


1 


mt 


"»P"IHW" 


156 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


'. 


the  biggest  and  reddest  apple  from  a  row  of 
ten.  Yet  such  unconscious  selections,  made 
from  time  to  time  in  generation  after  gene- 
ration, have  sufficed  to  produce  at  last  all 
the  beautiful  spots  and  metallic  eyelets  of 
our  loveliest  English  or  tropical  butterflies. 
Insects  always  accustomed  to  exercising  their 
colour-sense  upon  flowers  and  mates,  may 
easily  acquire  a  high  standard  of  taste  in  that 
direction,  while  still  remaining  comparatively 
in  a  low  stage  as  regards  their  intellectual 
condition.  But  the  fact  I  wish  especially  to 
emphasise  is  this — that  the  flowers  produced 
by  the  colour-sense  of  butterflies  and  their 
allies  are  just  those  objects  which  we  our- 
selves consider  most  lovely  in  nature;  and 
that  the  marks  and  shades  upon  their  own 
wings,  produced  by  the  long  selective  action 
of  their  mates,  are  just  the  things  which  we 
oursielves  consider  most  beautiful  in  the  ani- 
mal world.  In  this  respect,  then,  there  seems 
to  be  a  close  community  of  taste  and  feeling 
between  the  butterfly  and  ourselves. 


^Wl 


BUTTERFLY  ^ESTHETICS. 


isr 


Let  me  note,  too,  just  in  passing,  that 
while  the  upper  half  of  the  butterfly's  wing  is 
generally  beautiful  in  colour,  so  as  to  attract 
his  fastidious  mate,  the  under  half,  displayed 
while  he  is  at  rest,  is  almost  always  dull,  and 
often  resembles  the  plant  upon  which  b^. 
habitually  alights.  The  first  set  of  colours  is 
obviously  due  to  sexual  selection,  and  has  for 
its  object  the  making  an  effective  courtship  ; 
but  the  second  set  is  obviously  due  to  natural 
selection,  and  has  been  produced  by  the  fact 
that  all  those  insects  whose  bright  colours 
show  through  too  vividly  when  they  are  at 
rest  fall  a  prey  to  birds  or  other  enemies, 
leaving  only  the  best  protected  to  continue 
the  life  of  the  species. 

But  sight  is  not  the  only  important  sense 
to  the  butterfly.  He  is  largely  moved  and 
guided  by  smell  as  well.  Both  bees  and 
butterflies  seem  largely  to  select  the  flowers 
they  visit  by  means  of  smell,  though  colour 
also  aids  them  greatly.  When  we  remember 
that  in  ants  scent  alopp  does  duty  instead  of 


mtf^ 


'm&W> 


••^•"^mmm 


immmmm 


mmmm 


158 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


eyes,  ears,  or  any  other  sense,  it  would  hardly 
be  possible  to  doubt  that  other  allied  insects 
possessed  the  same  faculty  in  a  high  degree  ; 
and,  as  Dr.  Bastian  says,  there  seems  good 
reason  for  believing  that  all  the  higher  insects 
are  guided  almost  as  much  by  smell  as  by 
sight.  Now  it  is  noteworthy  that  most  of 
those  flowers  which  lay  themselves  out  to  at- 
tract bees  and  butterflies  are  not  only  coloured 
but  sweetly  scented ;  and  it  is  to  this  cause 
that  we  owe  the  perfumes  of  the  rose,  the 
lily-of-the-valley,  the  heliotrope,  the  jasmine, 
the  violet,  and  the  stephanotis.  Night- 
flowering  plants,  which  depend  entirely  for 
their  fertilisation  upon  moths,  are  almost 
always  white,  and  have  usually  very  powerful 
perfumes.  Is  it  not  a  striking  fact  that  these 
various  scents  are  exactly  those  which  human 
beings  most  admire,  and  which  they  artificially 
extract  for  essences?  Here,  again,  we  see 
that  the  aesthetic  tastes  of  butterflies  and  men 
decidedly  agree  ;  and  that  the  thyme  or  laven- 
der whose  perfume  pleases  the  bee  is  the  very 


wmm 


BUTTERFLY  ESTHETICS. 


'59 


thing  which  we  ourselves  choose  to  sweeten 
our  rooms. 

Finally,  if  we  look  at  the  sense  of  taste, 
we  find  an  equally  curious  agreement  between 
men  and  insects ;  for  the  honey  which  is 
stored  by  the  flower  for  the  bee,  and  by  the 
bee  for  its  own  use,  is  stolen  and  eaten  up  by 
man  instead.  Hence,  when  I  consider  the 
general  continuity  of  nervous  structure 
throughout  the  whole  animal  race,  and  the 
exact  similarity  of  the  stimulus  in  each  in- 
stance, I  can  hardly  doubt  that  the  butterfly 
really  enjoys  life  somewhat  as  we  enjoy  it, 
though  far  less  vividly.  I  cannot  but  think 
that  he  finds  honey  sweet,  and  perfumes 
pleasant,  and  colour  attractive  ;  that  he  feels 
a  lightsome  gladness  as  he  flits  in  the  sun- 
shine from  flower  to  flower,  and  that  he 
knows  a  faint  thrill  of  pleasure  at  the  sight  of 
his  chosen  mate.  Still  more  is  this  belief 
forced  upon  me  when  I  recollect  that,  so  far  as 
I  can  judge,  throughout  the  whole  animal 
world,  save  only  in  a  few  aberrant  types,  sugar 


m 


mim^ 


tmrnm 


wmmm 


..—•»—• 


i6o 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


is  sweet  to  taste,  and  thyme  to  smell,  and  song- 
to  hear,  and  sunshine  to  bask  in.  Therefore, 
on  the  whole,  while  I  admit  that  the  butterfly 
is  mainly  an  animated  puppet,  I  must  qualify 
my  opinion  by  adding  that  it  is  a  puppet 
which,  after  its  vague  little  fashion,  thinks 
and  feels  very  much  as  we  do. 


li 


mmm 


THE  ORIGIN  OF  WALNUTS, 


i6i 


y 

:s 


XVII. 

THE  ORIGIN  OF   WALNUTS. 

Mr.  Darwin  has  devoted  no  small  nortion  of 
his  valuable  life  to  tracing,  in  two  bulky 
volumes,  the  Descent  of  Man.  Yet  I  sup- 
pose it  is  probable  that  in  our  narrow  anthro- 
pinism  we  should  have  refused  to  listen  to 
him  had  he  given  us  two  volumes  instead  on 
the  Descent  of  Walnuts.  Viewed  as  a  ques- 
tion merely  of  biological  science,  the  one 
subject  is  just  as  important  as  the  other. 
But  the  old  Greek  doctrine  that  '  man  is  the 
measure  of  all  things '  is  strong  in  us  still. 
We  form  for  ourselves  a  sort  of  pre-Coper- 
nican  universe,  in  which  the  world  occupies 
the  central  point  of  space,  and  man  occupies 
the  central  point  of  the  world.    What  touches 


mm 


I63 


r//E  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


man  interests  us  deeply :  what  concerns  him 
but  slightly  we  pass  over  as  of  no  conse- 
quence. Nevertheless,  even  the  origin  and 
development  of  walnuts  is  a  subject  upon 
which  we  may  profitably  reflect,  not  wholly 
without  gratification  and  interest. 

This  kiln-dried  Vvdnut  on  my  plate,  which 
has  suggested  such  abstract  cogitations  to 
my  mind,  is  shown  by  its  very  name  to  be  a 
foreign  production  ;  for  the  word  contains 
the  same  root  as  Wales  and  Welsh,  the  old 
Teutonic  name  for  men  of  a  different  race, 
which  the  Germans  still  apply  to  the  Italians, 
and  we  ourselves  to  the  last  relics  of  the  old 
Keltic  population  in  Southern  Britain.  It 
means  '  the  foreign  nut,*  and  it  comes  for  the 
most  part  from  the  south  of  Europe.  As  a 
nut,  it  represents  a  very  different  type  of  fruit 
from  the  strawberry  and  raspberry,  with 
their  bright  colours,  sweet  juices,  and  nutri- 
tious pulp.  Those  fruits  which  alone  bear 
the  name  in  common  parlance  are  attractive 
in  their  object ;  the  nuts  are  deterrent.     An 


THE  ORIGIN  OF  WALNUTS. 


163 


orange  or  a  plum  is  brightly  tinted  with  hues 
which  contrast  strongly  with  the  surrounding 
foliage  ;  its  pleasant  taste  and  soft  pulp  all 
advertise  it  for  the  notice  of  birds  or  mon- 
keys, as  a  means  for  assisting  in  the  disper- 
sion of  i.s  seed.  But  a  nut,  on  the  con- 
trary, is  a  fruit  whose  actual  seed  contains  an 
abundance  of  oils  and  other  pleasant  food- 
stuffs, which  must  be  carefully  guarded  against 
the  depredations  of  possible  foes.  In  the 
plum  or  the  orange  we  do  not  eat  the  seed 
itself:  we  only  eat  the  surrounding  pulp. 
But  in  the  walnut  the  part  which  we  utilise 
is  the  embryo  plant  itself ;  and  so  the  wal- 
nut's great  object  in  life  is  to  avoid  being 
eaten.  Accordingly,  that  part  of  the  fruit 
which  in  the  plum  is  stored  with  sweet  juices 
is,  in  the  walnut,  filled  with  a  bitter  and  very 
nauseous  essence.  We  seldom  see  this  bitter 
covering  in  our  over-civilised  life,  because  it  is, 
of  course,  removed  before  the  nuts  come  to 
table.  The  walnut  has  but  a  thin  shell,  and 
is  poorly  protected  in  comparison  with  some  of 


M  2 


i64 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


1  i 


Its  relations,  sych  as  the  American  butter- 
nut, which  can  only  be  cracked  by  a  sharp 
blow  from  a  hammer — or  even  the  hickory, 
whose  hard  covering  has  done;  more  to  de- 
stroy the  teeth  of  New  Englanders  than  all 
other  causes  put  together,  and  New  England 
teeth  are  universally  admitted  to  be  the  very 
worst  in  the  world.  Now,  all  nuts  have  to 
guard  against  squirrels  and  birds  ;  and  there- 
fore their  peculiarities  are  exactly  opposite 
tb  those  of  succulent  fruits.  Instead  of  at- 
tracting attention  by  l^eing  brightly  coloured, 
they  are  invariably  green  like  the  leaves 
while  they  remain  on  the  tree,  and  brown  or 
dusky  like  the  soil  when  they  fall  upon  the 
ground  beneath  ;  instead  of  being  enclosed  in 
sweet  coats,  they  are  provided  with  bitter, 
acrid,  or  stinging  husks ;  and,  instead  of  being 
soft  in  texture,  thty  are  surrounded  by  hard 
shells,  like  the  coco-nut,  or  have  a  perfectly 
solid  kernel,  like  the  vegetable  ivory. 

The  origin  of  nuts  is   thus   exactly  the 
reverse  side  of  the  origin  of  fruits.     Certain 


THE  ORIGIN  OF   WALNUTS. 


165 


'  ■ 


seeds,  richly  stored  with  oils  and  starches  for 
aiding  the  growth  of  the  young  plant,  are 
exposed  to  the  attacks  of  squirrels,  monkeys, 
parrots,  and  other  arboreal  animals.  The 
greater  part  of  them  are  eaten  and  completely 
destroyed  by  these  their  enemies,  and  so 
never  hand  down  their  peculiarities  to  any 
descendants.  But  all  fruits  vary  a  litde  in 
sweetness  and  bitterness,  pulpy  or  stringy 
tendencies.  Thus  a  few  among  them  happen 
to  be  protected  from  destruction  by  their 
originally  accidental  possession  of  a  bitter 
husk,  a  hard  shell,  or  a  few  awkward  spines 
and  bristles.  These  the  monkeys  and  squir- 
rels reject ;  and  they  alone  survive  as  the 
parents  of  future  generations.  The  more  per- 
sistent and  the  hungrier  their  foes  become, 
the  less  will  a  small  degree  of  bitterness  or 
hardness  serve  to  protect  them.  Hence,  from 
generation  to  generation,  the  bitterness  and 
the  hardness  will  go  on  increasing,  because 
only  those  nuts  which  arc  the  nastiest  and 
the  most  difficult  to  crack  will  escape  destruc- 


i66 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


tion  from  the  teeth  or  bills  of  the  growing 
and  pressing  population  of  rodents  and  birds. 
The  nut  which  best  survives  on  the  average 
is  that  which  is  least  conspicuous  in  colour, 
has  a  rind  of  the  most  objectionable  taste, 
and  is  enclosed  in  the  most  solid  shell.  But 
the  extent  to  which  such  precautions  become 
necessary  will  depend  much  upon  the  par- 
ticular animals  to  whose  attacks  the  nuts  of 
each  country  are  exposed.  The  European 
waliiut  has  only  to  defy  a  few  small  wood- 
land animals,  who  are  sufficiently  deterred  by 
its  acrid  husk  ;  the  American  butter-nut  has 
to  withstand  the  long  teeth  of  much  more 
formidable  forestine  rodents,  whom  it  sets  at 
nought  with  its  stony  and  wrinkled  shell  ; 
und  the  tropical  cocos  and  Brazil  nuts  have 
to  escape  the  monkey,  who  pounds  them 
with  stones,  or  flings  them  with  all  his  might 
from  the  tree- top  so  as  to  smash  them  in 
their  fall  against  the  ground  below. 

O  ^r  own  hazel-nut  supplies  an  excellent 
illu':t:ration   of    the  general    tactics  adopted 


' 


■p- 


THE  ORIGIN  OF   WALNUTS. 


167 


1: 


by  the  nuts  at  large.  The  little  red  tufted 
blossoms  which  everybody  knows  so  well  in 
early  spring  are  each  surrounded  by  a  bunch 
of  three  bracts  ;  and  as  the  nut  grows  bigger, 
these  bracts  form  a  green  leaf-like  covering, 
which  causes  it  to  look  very  much  like  the 
ordinary  foliage  of  the  hazel-tree.  Besides, 
they  are  thickly  set  with  small  prickly  hairs, 
which  are  .xtremely  annoying  to  the  fingers, 
and  must  prove  far  more  unpleasant  to  the 
delicate  lips  and  noses  of  lower  animals. 
Just  at  present  the  nuts  have  reached  this 
stage  in  our  copses  ;  but  as  soon  as  autumn 
sets  in,  and  the  seeds  are  ripe,  they  will  turn 
brown,  fall  out  of  their  wichered  investment, 
and  easily  escape  notice  on  the  soil  beneath, 
where  the  dead  leaves  will  soon  cover  them 
up  in  a  mass  of  shrivelled  brown,  indistin- 
guishable in  shade  from  the  nuts  themselves. 
Take,  as  an  example  of  the  more  carefully 
protected  tropical  kinds,  the  coco-nut.  Grow- 
ing on  a  very  tall  palm-tree,  it  has  to  fall  a 
considerable  distance  toward  the  earth  ;  and 


i68 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


I 


! 


I 


1  i 


SO  it  is  wrapped  round  in  a  mass  of  loose 
knotted  fibre,  which  breaks  the  fall  just  as  a 
lot  of  soft  wool  would  do.  Then,  being  a 
large  nut,  fully  stored  with  an  abundance 
of  meat,  it  offers  special  attractions  to  ani- 
mals, and  consequently  requires  special  means 
of  defence.  Accordingly,  its  shell  is  ex- 
travagantly thick,  only  one  small  soft  spot 
being  left  at  the  blunter  end,  through  which 
the  young  plant  may  push  its  head.  Once 
upon  a  time,  to  be  sure,  the  coco-nut  con- 
tained three  kernels,  and  had  three  such  soft 
spots  or  holes ;  but  now  two  of  them  are 
aborted,  and  the  two  holes  remain  only  in 
the  form  of  hard  scars.  The  Brazil  nut  is 
even  a  better  illustration.  Probably  few 
people  know  that  the  irregular  angular  nuts 
which  appear  at  dessert  by  that  name  are 
originally  contained  inside  a  single  round 
shell,  where  they  fit  tightly  together,  and 
acquire  their  queer  indefinite  shapes  by 
mutual  pressure.  So  the  South  American 
monkey  has  first  to  crack  the  thick  external 


I 


THE  ORIGIN  OF  WALNUTS, 


169 


common  shell  against  a  stone  or  otherwise  ; 
and,  if  he  is  successful  in  this  process,  he 
must  afterwards  break  the  separate  sharp- 
edged  inner  nuts  with  his  teeth — a  perform- 
ance which  is  always  painful  and  often  in- 
efifectual. 

Yet  it  is  curious  that  nuts  and  fruits  are 
really  produced  by  the  very  slightest  varia- 
tions on  a  common  type,  so  much  so  that  the 
technical  botanist  does  not  recognise  the 
popular  distinction  between  them  at  all.  In 
his  eyes,  the  walnut  and  coco-nut  are  not 
nuts,  but  'drupaceous  fruits,'  just  like  the 
plum  and  the  cherry.  All  four  alike  contain 
a  kernel  within,  a  hard  shell  outside  it,  and  a 
fibrous  mass  outside  that  again,  bounded  by 
a  thin  external  layer.  Only,  while  in  the 
plum  and  cherry  this  fibrous  mass  becomes 
succulent  and  fills  with  sugary  juice,  in  the 
walnut  its  juice  is  bitter,  and  in  the  coco-nut 
it  has  no  juice  at  all,  but  remains  a  mere 
matted  layer  of  dry  fibres.  And  while  the 
thin   external   skin   becomes   purple    in   the 


■PT— F 


170 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


Si 


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1    f  11 

1  ^ 


plum  and  red  in  the  cher  y  as  the  fruits 
ripen,  it  remains  green  and  brown  in  the 
walnut  and  coco- nut  all  their  time.  Never- 
theless, Darwinism  shows  us  both  here  and 
elsewhere  that  the  popular  distinction  answers 
to  a  real  difference  of  origin  and  function. 
When  a  seed-vessel,  whatever  its  botanical 
structure,  survives  by  dint  of  attracting  ani- 
mals, it  always  acquires  a  bright-coloured 
envelope  and  a  sweet  pulp  ;  while  it  usually 
possesses  a  hard  seed-shell,  and  often  infuses 
bitter  essences  into  its  kernel.  On  the  other 
hand,  when  a  seed-vessel  survives  by  es- 
caping the  notice  of  animals,  it  generally  has 
a  sweet  and  pleasant  kernel,  which  it  pro- 
tects by  a  hard  shell  and  an  inconspicuous 
and  nauseous  envelope.  If  the  kernel  itself 
is  bitter,  as  with  the  horse-chestnut,  the  need 
for  disguise  .  p.d  external  protection  is  much 
lessened.  But  the  best  illustration  of  all  is 
seen  in  the  West  Indian  cashew-nut,  which 
is  what  Alice  in  Wonderland  would  have 
called  a  portmanteau  seed-vessel — a  fruit  and 


THE  ORIGIN  OF   WALNUTS. 


171 


a  nut  rolled  into  one.  In  this  curious  case, 
the  stalk  swells  out  into  a  bright- coloured 
and  juicy  mass,  looking  something  like  a 
pear,  but  of  course  containing  no  seeds  ; 
while  the  nut  grows  out  from  its  end,  secured 
from  intrusion  by  a  covering  with  a  pungent 
juice,  which  burns  and  blisters  the  skin  at  a 
touch.  No  animal  except  man  can  ever  suc- 
cessfully tackle  the  cashew-nut  itself ;  but  by 
eating  the  pear-like  stalk  other  animals  ulti- 
mately aid  in  distributing  the  seed.  The 
cashew  thus  vicariously  sacrifices  its  fruit- 
stem  for  the  sake  of  preserving  its  nut. 

All  nature  is  a  continuous  game  of  cross- 
purposes.  Animals  perpetually  outwit  plants, 
and  plants  in  return  once  more  outwit  ani- 
mals. Or,  to  drop  the  metaphor,  those  ani- 
mals alone  survive  which  manage  to  get  a 
living  in  spite  of  the  protections  adopted  by 
plants  ;  and  those  plants  alone  survive  whose 
peculiarities  happen  successfully  to  defy  the 
attack  of  animals.  There  you  have  the 
Darwinian  Iliad  in  a  nutshell. 


172 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


XVIII. 


A   PRETTY  LAND-SHELL. 


The  heavy  rains  which  have  done  so  much 
harm  to  the  standing  corn  have  at  least  had 
the  effect  of  making  the  country  look  greener 
and  lovelier  than  I  have  seen  it  look  for 
many  seasons.  There  is  now  r  fresh  verdure 
about  the  upland  pastures  and  pine  woods 
which  almost  reminds  one  of  the  deep  val- 
leys of  the  Bernese  Oberland  in  early  spring. 
Last  year's  continuous  wet  weather  gave  the 
trees  and  grass  a  miserable  draggled  appear- 
ance ;  but  this  summer's  rain,  coming  after  a 
dry  spring,  has  brought  out  all  the  foliage 
in  unwonted  luxuriance ;  and  everybody 
(except  the  British  farmer)  agrees  that  we 
have   never   seen    the    country   look    more 


A  PRETTY  LAND-SHELL. 


173 


Leautiful.  Though  the  year  is  now  so  far 
advanced,  the  trees  are  still  as  green  as  in 
springtide ;  and  the  meadows,  with  their  rich 
aftermath  springing  up  apace,  look  almost 
as  lush  and  fresh  as  they  did  in  early  June. 
Londoners  who  gnt  away  to  the  country  or 
the  seaside  this  month  will  enjoy  an  unex- 
pected treat  in  seeing  the  fields  as  they 
ought  to  he  seen  a  couple  of  months  sooner 
in  the  season. 

\  lere,  on  the  edge  of  the  down,  where  I 
have  come  up  to  get  a  good  blowing  from 
the  clear  south-west  breeze,  I  have  just  sat 
down  to  rest  myself  awhile  and  to  admire  the 
view,  and  have  reverted  for  a  moment  to  my 
old  habit  of  snail-hunting.  Years  ago,  when 
evolution  was  an  infant — an  infant  much 
troubled  by  the  complaints  inseparable  from 
infancy,  but  still  a  sturdy  and  vigorous  child, 
destined  to  outlive  and  outgrow  its  early 
attacks — I  used  to  collect  slugs  and  snails 
from  an  evolutionist  standpoint,  and  put  their 
remains  into   a  cabinet;  and  to  this   day  I 


174 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


W 


seldom  go  out  for  a  walk  without  a  few  pill- 
boxes in  my  pocket,  in  case  I  should  happen 
to  hit  upon  any  remarkable  specimen.  No'/ 
here  in  the  tall  moss  which  straggles  over  an 
old  heap  of  stones  I  have  this  moment 
lighted  upon  a  beautifully  marked  shell  of 
our  prettiest  English  snail.  How  beautiful 
It  is  I  could  hardly  make  you  believe,  unless 
I  had  you  here  and  could  show  it  to  you  ; 
for  most  people  only  know  the  two  or  three 
ugly  brown  or  banded  snails  that  prey  upon 
their  cabbages  and  lettuces,  and  have  no 
notion  of  the  lovely  shells  to  be  found  by 
hunting  among  English  copses  and  under 
the  dead  leaves  of  Scotch  hill-sides.  This 
cyclostoma,  however, — I  mtist  trouble  you 
with  a  Latin  name  for  once — is  so  remark- 
ably pretty,  with  its  graceful  elongated  spiral 
whorls,  and  its  delicately  chiselled  fretwork 
tracery,  that  even  naturalists  (who  have  per- 
haps, on  the  whole,  less  sense  of  beauty  than 
any  class  of  men  I  know)  have  recognised 
its  loveliness  by  giving  it  the  specific  epithet 


A   PRETTY  LAND-SHELL, 


»75 


o{  elegans.  It  is  big  enough  for  anybody  to 
notice  it,  being  about  the  size  of  a  peri- 
winkle ;  and  its  exquisite  stippled  chasing  is 
strongly  marked  enough  to  be  perfectly 
visible  to  the  naked  eye.  But  besides  its 
beauty,  the  cyclostoma  has  a  strong  claim 
upon  our  attention  because  of  its  curious 
history. 

Long  ago,  in  the  infantile  days  of  evo- 
lutionism, I  often  wondered  why  people  made 
collections  on  such  an  irrational  plan.  They 
always  try  to  get  what  they  call  the  most 
typical  specimens,  and  reject  all  those  which 
are  doubtful  or  intermediate.  Hence  the 
dogma  of  the  fixity  of  species  becomes  all  the 
more  firmly  settled  in  their  minds,  because 
they  never  attend  to  the  existing  links  which 
still  so  largely  bridge  over  the  artificial  gaps 
created  by  our  nomenclature  between  kind 
and  kind.  I  went  to  work  on  the  opposite 
plan,  collecting  all  those  aberrant  individuals 
which  most  diverged  from  the  specific  type. 
In  this  way  I  managed  to  make  some  scric^s 


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176 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


SO  continuous  that  one  might  pass  over  speci- 
mens of  three  or  four  different  kinds,  arranged 
in  rows,  without  ever  being  able  to  say  quite 
clearly,  by  the  eye  alone,  where  one  group 
ended  and  the  next  group  began.  Among 
the  snails  such  an  arrangement  is  peculiarly 
easy ;  for  some  of  the  species  are  very  indefi- 
nite, and  the  varieties  are  numerous  under 
each  species.  Nothing  can  give  one  so  good 
a  notion  of  the  plasticity  of  organic  forms  as 
such  a  method.  The  endless  varieties  and 
intermediate  links  which  exist  amongst  dogs  is 
the  nearest  example  to  it  with  which  ordinary 
observers  are  familiar. 

But  the  cyclostoma  is  a  snail  which  intro- 
duces one  to  still  deeper  questions.  It 
belongs  in  all  our  scientific  classifications  to 
the  group  of  lung-breathing  mollusks,  like 
the  common  garden  snail.  Yet  it  has  one 
remarkable  peculiarity  :  it  possesses  an  oper- 
culum, or  door  to  its  shell,  like  that  of 
the  periwinkle.  This  operculum  represents 
among  the  univalves  the  under-shell  of  the 


mmmmmm 


UPPPPP 


mmm 


A  PRETTY  LAND-SHELL. 


177 


oyster  or  other  bivalves ;  but  it  has  com- 
pletely disappeared  in  most  land  and  fresh- 
water snails,  as  well  as  among  many  marine 
species.  The  fact  of  its  occurrence  in  the 
cyclostoma  would  thus  be  quite  inexplic- 
able if  we  were  compelled  to  regard  it  as 
a  descendant  of  the  other  lung-breathing 
mollusks.  So  far  as  I  know,  all  naturalists 
have  till  lately  always  so  regarded  it;  but 
there  can  be  very  little  doubt,  with  the  new 
light  cast  upon  the  question  by  Darwinism, 
that  they  are  wrong.  There  exists  in  all  our 
ponds  and  rivers  another  snail,  not  breathmg 
by  means  of  lungs,  but  provided  with  gills, 
known  as  paludina.  This  paludina  has  a 
door  to  its  shell,  like  the  cyclostoma ;  and  so, 
indeed,  have  all  its  allies.  Now,  strange  as 
it  sounds  to  say  so,  it  is  pretty  certain  that 
we  must  really  class  this  lung-breathing 
cyclostoma  among  the  gill-breathers,  because 
of  its  close  resemblance  to  the  paludina.  It 
is,  in  fact,  one  of  those  gill-breathing  pond- 
snails  which  has  taken  to  living  on  dry  land, 

N 


178 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


%'- 


and  so  has  acquired  the  habit  of  producing 
lungs.  All  molluscan  lungs  are  very  simple ; 
they  consist  merely  of  a  small  sac  or  hollow 
behind  the  head,  lined  with  blood-vessels; 
and  every  now  and  then  the  snail  opens  this 
sac,  allowing  the  air  to  get  in  and  out  by 
natural  change,  exactly  as  when  we  air  a 
room  by  opening  the  windows.  So  primitive 
a  mechanism  as  this  could  be  easily  acquired 
by  any  soft-bodied  animal  like  a  snail.  Be- 
sides, we  have  many  intermediate  links 
between  the  pond- snails  and  my  cyclostoma 
here.  There  are  some  species  which  live  in 
moist  moss,  or  the  beds  of  trickling  streams. 
There  are  others  which  go  further  from  the 
water,  and  spend  their  days  in  damp  grass. 
And  there  are  yet  others  which  have  taken 
to  a  wholly  terrestrial  existence  in  woods  or 
meadows  and  under  heaps  of  stones.  All  of 
them  agree  with  the  pond- snails  in  having  an 
operculum,  and  so  differ  from  the  ordinary 
land  and  river-snails,  the  mouths  of  whose 
shells  are  quite   unprotected.     Thus    land- 


vpra 


A  PRETTY  LAND-SHELL. 


179 


snails  have  two  separate  origins — one  large 
group  (including  the  garden-snail)  being  de- 
rived from  the  common  fresh-water  mollusks, 
while  another  much  smaller  group  (including 
the  cyclostoma)  is  derived  from  the  opercu- 
lated  pond-snails. 

How  is  it,  then,  that  naturalists  had  so 
long  overlooked  this  distinction  ?  Simply 
because  their  artificial  classification  is  based 
entirely  upon  the  nature  of  the  breathing 
apparatus.  But,  as  Mr.  Wallace  has  well 
pointed  out,  obvious  and  important  functional 
differences  are  of  far  less  value  in  tracing  re- 
lationship than  insignificant  and  unimportant 
structural  details.  Any  water-snail  may  have 
to  take  to  a  terrestrial  life  if  the  ponds  in 
which  it  lives  are  liable  to  dry  up  during 
warm  weather.  Those  individuals  alone  will 
then  survive  which  display  a  tendency  to 
oxygenise  their  blood  by  some  rudimentary 
form  of  lung.  Hence  the  possession  of  lungs 
is  not  the  mark  of  a  real  genealogical  class, 
but  a  mere  necessary  result  of  a  terrestrial 


N  2 


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THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


existence.  On  the  other  hand,  the  possession 
of  an  operculum,  unimportant  as  it  may  be  to 
the  life  of  the  animal,  is  a  good  test  of  rela- 
tionship by  descent.  All  snails  which  take 
to  living  on  land,  whatever  their  original 
form,  will  acquire  lungs :  but  an  operculated 
snail  will  retain  its  operculum,  and  so  bear 
witness  to  its  ancestry ;  while  a  snail  which 
is  not  operculated  will  of  course  show  no 
tendency  to  develop  such  a  structure,  and  so 
will  equally  give  a  true  testimony  as  to  its 
origin.  In  short,  the  less  functionally  useful 
any  organ  is,  the  higher  is  its  value  as  a 
gauge  of  its  owner's  pedigree,  like  a  Bourbon 
nose  or  an  Austrian  lip. 


. 


' 


mmmmmmmmmmmsmm^. 


m^^mmmfmmmmmsm 


DOGS  AND  MASTERS. 


iZi 


XIX. 


DOGS  AND  MASTERS. 

Probably  the  most  forlorn  and  abject  creature 
to  be  seen  on  the  face  of  the  earth  is  a  mas- 
terless  dog.  Slouching  and  slinking  along, 
cringing  to  every  human  being  it  chances  to 
meet,  running  away  with  its  tail  between  its 
legs  from  smaller  dogs  whom  under  other 
circumstances  it  would  accost  with  a  gruff 
who-the-dickens-are-you  sort  of  growl, — it 
forms  the  very  picture  of  utter  humiliation 
and  self-abasement.  Grip  and  I  have  just 
come  across  such  a  lost  specimen  of  stray 
doghood,  trying  to  find  his  way  back  to  his 
home  across  the  fields— I  fancy  he  belongs  to 
a  travelling  show  which  left  the  village  yes- 
terday— and  it  is  quite  refreshing  to  watch 


■■■ 


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182 


r/^iE"  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


the  air  of  superior  wisdom  and  calm  but  mute 
compassionateness  with  which  Grip  casts  his 
eye  sidelong  upon  that  wretched  masterless 
vagrant,  and  passes  him  by  without  even  a 
nod.  He  looks  up  to  me  complacently  as  he 
trots  along  by  my  side,  and  seems  to  say 
with  his  eye,  *  Poor  fellow !  he's  lost  his  mas- 
ter, you  know — careless  dog  that  he  is ! '  I 
believe  the  lesson  has  had  a  good  moral  effect 
upon  Grip's  own  conduct,  too ;  for  he  has 
now  spent  ten  whole  minutes  well  within  my 
sight,  and  has  resisted  the  most  tempting 
solicitations  to  ratting  and  rabbiting  held  out 
by  half-a-dozen  holes  and  burrows  in  the 
hedge-wall  as  we  go  along. 

This  total  dependence  of  dogs  upon  a 
master  is  a  very  interesting  example  of  the 
growth  of  inherited  instincts.  The  original 
dog,  who  was  a  wolf  or  something  very  like 
it,  could  not  have  had  any  such  artificial  feel- 
ing. He  was  an  independent,  self-reliant 
animal,  quite  well  able  to  look  after  himself 
on  the  boundless  plains  of  Central  Europe  or 


DOGS  AND  MASTERS, 


183 


High  Asia.  But  at  least  as  early  as  the  clays 
of  the  Danish  shell-mounds,  perhaps  thou- 
sands of  years  earlier,  man  had  learned  to 
tame  the  dog  and  to  employ  him  as  a  friend 
or  servant  for  his  own  purposes.  Those  dogs 
which  best  served  the  ends  of  man  were  pre- 
served and  increased ;  those  which  followed 
too  much  their  own  original  instincts  were 
destroyed  or  at  least  discouraged.  The 
savage  hunter  would  be  very  apt  to  fling  his 
stone  axe  at  the  skull  of  a  hound  which  tried 
to  eat  the  game  he  had  brought  down  with 
his  flint-tipped  arrow,  instead  of  retrieving  it : 
he  would  be  most  likely  to  keep  carefully  and 
feed  well  on  the  refuse  of  his  own  meals  the 
hound  which  aided  him  most  in  surprising, 
killing,  and  securing  his  quarry.  Thus  there 
sprang  up  between  man  and  the  dog  a  mutual 
and  ever-increasing  sympathy  which  on  the 
part  of  the  dependent  creature  has  at  last  be- 
come organised  into  an  inherited  instinct.  If 
we  could  only  thread  the  labyrinth  of  a  dog's 
brain,  we  should  find  somewhere  in  it  a  group 


1 84 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


\\ 


of  correlated  nerve-connections  answering  to 
this  universal  habit  of  his  race ;  and  the 
group  in  question  would  be  quite  without  any 
analogous  mechanism  in  the  brain  of  the 
ancestral  wolf  As  truly  as  the  wing  of  the 
bird  is  adapted  to  its  congenital  instinct  of 
flying,  as  truly  as  the  nervous  system  of  the 
bee  is  adapted  to  its  congenital  instinct  of 
honeycomb  building,  just  so  truly  is  the  brain 
of  the  dog  adapted  to  its  now  congenital 
instinct  of  following  and  obeying  a  master. 
The  habit  of  attaching  itself  to  a  particular 
human  being  is  nowadays  engrained  in  the 
nerves  of  the  modern  dog  just  as  really, 
though  not  quite  so  deeply,  as  the  habit  of 
running  or  biting  is  engrained  in  its  bones 
and  muscles.  Every  dog  is  born  into  the 
world  with  a  certain  inherited  structure  of 
limbs,  sense-organs,  and  brain  :  and  this  in- 
herited structure  governs  all  its  future  actions, 
both  bodily  and  mental.  It  seeks  a  master 
because  it  is  endowed  with  master-seeking 
brain  organs  ;  it  is  dissatisfied  until  it  finds 


K 


DOGS  AND  MASTERS. 


185 


one,  because  iis  native  functions  can  have  free 
play  in  no  other  way.  Among  a  few  clogs, 
like  those  of  Constantinople,  the  instinct  may 
have  died  out  by  disuse,  as  the  eyes  of  cave 
animals  have  atrophied  for  want  of  light ;  but 
when  a  dog  has  once  been  brought  up  from 
puppyhood  under  a  master,  the  instinct  is 
fully  and  freely  developed,  and  the  masterless 
condition  is  thenceforth  for  him  a  thwarting 
and  disappointing  of  all  his  natural  feelings 
and  affections. 

Not  only  have  dogs  as  a  class  acquired  a 
special  instinct  with  regard  to  humanity  gene- 
rally, but  particular  breeds  of  dogs  have  ac- 
quired particular  instincts  with  regard  to  cer- 
tain individual  acts.  N  obody  doubts  that  the 
muscles  of  a  greyhound  are  specially  correlated 
to  the  acts  of  running  and  leaping  ;  or  that  the 
muscles  of  a  bull-dog  are  specially  correlated  to 
the  act  of  fighting.  The  whole  external  form 
of  these  creatures  has  been  modified  by  man's 
Felective  action  for  a  deliberate  purpose  :  we 
breed,  as  we  say,  from  the  dog  with  the  best 


ill 


i 


'4 


186 


T//£  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE, 


points.  But  besides  being  able  to  modify  the 
visible  and  outer  structure  of  the  animal,  we 
are  also  able  to  modify,  by  indirect  indica- 
tions, the  hidden  and  inner  structure  of  the 
brain.  We  choose  the  best  ratter  among  our 
terriers,  the  best  pointer,  retriever,  or  setter 
among  other  breclc-,  to  become  the  parents 
of  our  future  stock.  We  thus  half  uncon- 
sciously select  particular  types  of  nervous 
system  in  preference  to  others.  Once  upon 
a  time  we  used  even  to  rear  a  race  of  dogs 
with  a  strange  instinct  for  turning  the  spit  in 
our  kitchens  ;  and  to  this  day  the  Cubans 
rear  blood-hounds  with  a  natural  taste  for 
hunting  down  the  trail  of  runaway  negroes. 
Now,  everybody  knows  that  you  cannot  teach 
one  sort  of  dog  the  kind  of  tricks  which  come 
by  instinct  to  a  different  sort.  No  amount 
of  instruction  will  induce  a  well-bred  terrier 
to  retrieve  your  handkerchief :  he  insists  upon 
worrying  it  instead.  So  no  amount  of  instruc- 
tion will  induce  a  well-bred  retriever  to  worry 
a  rat :  he  brings  it  gingerly  to  your  feet,  as  if  it 


^Pl 


DOGS  AND  MASTERS. 


187 


was  a  dead  partridge.  The  reason  is  obvious, 
because  no  one  would  breed  from  a  retriever 
which  worried  or  from  a  terrier  which  treated 
its  natural  prey  as  if  it  were  a  stick.  Thus 
the  brain  of  each  kind  is  hereditarily  supplied 
with  certain  nervous  connections  wanting  in 
the  brain  of  other  kinds.  We  need  no  more 
doubt  the  reality  of  the  material  distinction  in 
the  brain  than  we  need  doubt  it  in  the  limbs 
and  jaws  of  the  greyhound  and  the  bull-dog. 
Those  who  have  watched  closely  the  different 
races  of  men  can  hardly  hesitate  to  believe 
that  something  analogous  exists  in  our  own 
case.  While  the  highest  types  are,  as  Mr. 
Herbert  Spencer  well  puts  it,  to  some  extent 
'  organically  moral '  and  structurally  intelligent, 
the  lowest  types  are  congenitally  deficient. 
A  European  child  learns  to  read  almost  by 
nature  (for  Dogberry  was  essentially  right 
after  all),  while  a  Negro  child  learns  to  read 
by  painful  personal  experience.  And  savages 
brought  to  Europe  and  *  civilised'  for  years 
often  return  at  last  with  joy  to  their  native 


■«ai 


?•<!  i 


1 88 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


home,  cast  off  their  clothes  and  their  outer 
veneering,  and  take  once  more  to  the  only- 
life  for  which  their  nervous  organisation 
naturally  fits  them.  'What  is  bred  in  the 
bone,'  says  the  wise  old  proverb,  *  will  out  in 
the  blood.* 


BLACKCOCK. 


189 


he 

in    ' 

XX. 

BLACKCOCK. 

1' 

Just  at  the  present  moment  the  poor  black 

' 

grouse  are  generally  having  a  hot  time  of  it. 

* 

After  their   quiet   spring  and  summer  they 

■  '  '•            1 

suddenly  find  their  heath-clad  wastes  invaded 

by  a  strange  epidemic  of  men,   dogs,    and 

hideous  shooting  implements ;  and  being  as 

yet  but  young  and  inexperienced,  they  are  fall- 

ing victims  by  the  thousand  to  their  youthful 

habit  of  clinging  closely  for  protection  to  the 

treacherous  reed-beds.     A  little  later  in  the 

season,  those  of  them  that  survive  will  have 

learned   more   wary  ways :   they   will   pack 

. 

among  the  juniper  thickets,  and  become  as 

cautious  on  the  approach  of  perfidious  man 

as  their  cunning  cousins,  the  red  grouse  of 

mtsf' 


wmmmmmmmmvm 


190 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


m 


m 


i  II 

i   ii 


the  Scottish  moors.  But  so  far  youthful 
innocence  prevails  ;  no  sentinels  as  yet  are 
set  to  watch  for  the  distant  gleam  of  metal, 
and  no  foreshadowing  of  man's  evil  intent 
disturbs  their  minds  as  they  feed  in  fancied 
security  upon  the  dry  seeds  of  the  marsh 
plants  in  their  favourite  sedges. 

The  great  families  of  the  pheasants  and 
partridges,  in  which  the  blackcock  must  be 
included,  may  be  roughly  divided  into  two 
main  divisions  so  far  as  regards  their  appear- 
ance and  general  habits.  The  first  class  con- 
sists of  splendidly  coloured  and  conspicuous 
birds,  such  as  the  peacock,  the  golden  phea- 
sant, and  the  tragopan  ;  and  these  are,  almost 
without  exception,  originally  jungle-birds  of 
tropical  or  sub-tropical  lands,  though  a  few 
of  them  have  been  acclimatised  or  domesti- 
cated in  temperate  countries.  They  live  in 
regions  where  they  have  few  natural  enemies, 
and  where  they  are  little  exposed  to  the 
attacks  of  man.  Most  of  them  feed  more  or 
less   upon   fruits   and   bright-coloured   food- 


IPH"! 


mm 


BLACKCOCK, 


191 


Stuffs,  and  they  are  probably  every  one  of 
them  polygamous  in  their  habits.  Thus  we 
can  hardly  doubt  that  the  male  birds,  which 
alone  possess  the  brilliant  plumage  of  their 
kindj  owe  their  beauty  to  the  selective  pre- 
ference of  their  mates  ;  and  that  the  taste 
thus  displayed  has  been  aroused  by  their  rela- 
tion to  their  specially  gay  and  bright  natural 
surroundings.  The  most  lovely  species  of 
pheasants  are  found  among  the  forests  of  the 
Himalayas  and  the  Malay  Archipelago,  with 
their  gorgeous  fruits  and  flowers  and  their 
exquisite  insects.  Even  in  England  our 
naturalised  Oriental  pheasants  still  delight 
in  feeding  upon  blackberries,  sloes,  haws, 
and  the  pretty  fruit  of  the  honeysuckle  and 
the  holly  ;  while  our  dingier  partridges  and 
grouse  subsist  rather  upon  heather,  grain, 
and  small  seeds.  Since  there  must  always 
be  originally  nearly  as  many  cocks  as  hens 
in  each  brood,  it  will  follow  that  only  the 
handsomest  or  most  attractive  in  the  poly- 
gamous species  will  succeed  in  attracting  to 


mmmftm^'mmmm 


mmmmmi^ 


y 


192 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


them  a  harem  ;  and  as  beauty  and  strength 
usually  go  hand  in  hand,  they  will  also  be 
the  conquerors  in  those  battles  which  are 
universal  with  all  polygamists  in  the  animal 
world.  Thus  we  account  for  the  striking 
and  conspicuous  difference  between  the  pea- 
cock and  the  peahen,  or  between  the  two 
sexes  in  the  pheasant,  the  turkey,  and  the 
domestic  fowl. 

On  the  other  hand,  the  second  class  con- 
sists of  those  birds  which  are  exposed  to  the 
hostility  of  many  wild  animals,  and  more 
especially  of  man.  These  kinds,  typified  by 
the  red  grouse,  partridges,  quails,  and  guinea- 
fowls,  are  generally  dingy  in  hue,  with  a  ten- 
dency to  pepper-and-salt  in  their  plumage ; 
and  they  usually  display  very  little  difference 
between  the  sexes,  both  cocks  and  hens 
being  coloured  and  feathered  much  alike. 
In  short,  they  are  protectively  designed, 
while  the  first  class  are  attractive.  Their 
plumage  resembles  as  nearly  as  possible  the 
ground  on    which  they   sit  or  the  covert  in 


mmk 


mmmm 


V 


mmrmm 


mmms^ 


wmmm 


BLACKCOCK 


193 


which  they  skulk.     They  are  thus  enabled  to 
escape  the  notice   of  their  natural  enemies, 
the  birds  of  prey,  from  whose  ravages  they 
suffer  far  more  in  a  state  of  nature  than  from 
any  other  cause.     We  may  take  the  ptarmi- 
gans  as   the   most   typical    example  of  this 
class  of  birds  ;  for  in  summer  their  zigzagged 
black-and-brown  attire  harmonises  admirably 
with   the   patches  of    faded    heath    and  soil 
upon  the  mountain-side,  as  every  sportsman 
well  knows ;    while  in  the  winter  their  pure 
white  plumage  can  scarcely  be  distinguished 
from  the  snow  in  which  they  lie  hiiddled  and 
crouching  during  the  colder  months.     Even 
in  the  brilliant  species,  Mr.  Darwin  and  Mr. 
Wallace   have   pointed    out   that   the   orna- 
mental colours  and  crest  are  never  handed 
down  to  female  descendants  when  the  habits 
of  nesting  are  such  that  the  mothers  would 
be  exposed  to  danger  by  their  conspicuous- 
ness  during  incubation.     Speaking   broadly, 
only  those  female  birds  which  build  in  hollow 
trees  or  make  covered  nests  have  bright  hues 


194 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


ii 


I 


at  all  equal  to  those  of  the  males.  A  female 
bird  nesting  in  the  open  would  be  cut  off  if 
it  showed  any  tendency  to  reproduce  the 
brilliant  colouring  of  its  male  relations. 

Now  the  blackcock  occupies  to  some  ex- 
tent an  intermediate  position  between  these 
two  types  of  pheasant  life,  though  it  inclines 
on  the  whole  to  that  first  described.  It  is  a 
polygamous  bird,  and  it  differs  most  con- 
spicuously in  plumage  from  its  consort,  the 
grey-hen,  as  may  be  seen  from  the  very 
names  by  which  they  are  each  familiarly 
known.  Yet,  though  the  blackcock  is  hand- 
some enough  and  shows  evident  marks  of 
selective  preference  on  the  part  of  his  ances- 
tral hens,  this  preference  has  not  exerted 
itself  largely  in  the  direction  of  bright  colour, 
and  that  for  two  reasons.  In  the  first  place 
the  blackcock  does  not  feed  upon  brilliant 
foodstuffs,  but  upon  small  bog  berries,  hard 
seeds,  and  young  shoots  of  heather,  and  it  is 
probable  that  an  aesthetic  taste  for  pure  and 
dazzling   hues    is   almost  confined   to   those 


BLACKCOCK. 


»95 


creatures  which,  hke  butterflies,  humming- 
birds, and  parrots,  seek  their  livehhood 
amongst  beautiful  fruits  or  flowers.  In  the 
second  place,  red,  yellow,  or  orange  orna- 
ments would  render  the  blackcock  too  con- 
spicuous a  mark  for  the  hawk,  the  falcon,  or 
the  weapons  of  man  ;  for  we  must  remember 
that  only  those  blackcocks  survive  from  year 
to  year  and  hand  down  their  peculiarities  to 
descendants  which  succeed  in  evading  the 
talons  of  birds  of  prey  or  the  small-shot  of 
sportsmen.  Feeding  as  they  do  on  the  open, 
they  are  not  protected,  like  jungle-birds,  by 
the  shade  of  trees.  Thus  any  bird  which 
showed  any  marked  tendency  to  develop 
brighter  or  more  conspicuous  plumage  would 
almost  infallibly  fall  a  victim  to  one  or  other 
of  his  many  foes ;  and  however  much  his 
beauty  might  possibly  charm  his  mates  (sup- 
posing them  for  the  moment  to  possess  a  taste 
for  colour),  he  would  have  no  chance  of 
transmitting  it  to  a  future  generation.  Ac- 
cordingly, the  decoration  of  the  blackcock  is 

0t 


j^-*«i^^T!!«nr_-3i3P 


-U ^-BH!-5H 


II 


196 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


confined  to  glossy  plumage  and  a  few  orna- 
mental tail-feathers.  The  grey-hen  herself 
still  retains  the  dull  and  imitative  colouring 
of  the  grouse  race  generally ;  and  as  for  the 
cocks,  even  if  a  fair  percentage  of  them  is 
annually  cut  off  through  their  comparative 
conspicuousness  as  marks,  their  loss  is  less 
felt  than  it  would  be  in  a  monogamous  com- 
munity. Every  spring  the  blackcock  hold  a 
sort  of  assembly  or  court  of  love,  at  which 
the  pairing  for  the  year  takes  place.  The 
cocks  resort  to  certain  open  and  recognised 
spots,  and  there  invite  the  grey-hens  by  their 
calls,  a  little  duelling  going  on  meanwhile. 
During  these  meetings  they  show  off  their 
beauty  with  great  emulation,  after  the  fashion 
with  which  we  are  all  familiar  in  the  case  of 
the  peacock ;  and  when  they  have  gained 
the  approbation  of  their  mates  and  maimed 
or  driven  away  their  rivals,  they  retire  with 
their  respective  families.  Unfortunately,  like 
most  polygamists,  they  make  bad  fathers, 
leaving  the  care  of  their  young  almost   en- 


■■ 


wmmmm 


mgmmmmm 


BLACKCOCK. 


197 


tirely  to  the  hens.  According  to  the  vera- 
cious account  of  Artemus  Ward,  the  great 
Brigham  Young  himself  pathetically  des- 
canted upon  the  difficulty  of  extending  his 
parental  affections  to  131  children.  The 
imperious  blackcock  seems  to  labour  under 
the  same  sentimental  disadvantage. 


■■ 


198 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


'•ill 
.  '"1 


i: 


XXI. 

BINDWEED, 

Not  the  least  beautiful  among  our  native 
wild  flowers  are  many  of  those  which  grow, 
too  often  unheeded,  along  the  wayside  of 
every  country  road.  The  hedge-bordered 
highway  on  which  I  ani  walking  to-day,  to 
take  my  letters  to  the  village  post,  is  bor- 
dered on  either  side  with  such  a  profusion 
of  colour  as  one  may  never  see  equalled 
during  many  years'  experience  of  tropical  or 
sub-tropical  lands.  Jamaica  and  Ceylon 
could  produce  nothing  so  brilliant  as  this 
tangled  mass  of  gorse,  and  thistle,  and  St. 
John's-wort,  and  centaury,  intermingled  with 
the  lithe  and  whitening  sprays  of  half-opened 
clematis.     And   here,  on   the   very  edge  of 


nix  DIVE  ED. 


199 


the  road,  half-smothered  in  its  grey  dust,  I 
have  picked  a  pretty  little  convolvulus  blos- 
som, with  a  fly  buried  head  foremost  in  its 
pink  bell ;  and  I  am  carrying  them  both 
along  with  me  as  I  go,  for  contemplation  and 
study.  For  this  little  flower,  the  lesser 
bindweed,  is  rich  in  hints  as  to  the  strange 
ways  in  which  Nature  decks  herself  with  so 
much  waste  loveliness,  whose  meaning  can 
only  be  fully  read  by  the  eyes  of  man,  the 
latest  comer  among  her  children.  The  old 
school  of  thinkers  imagined  that  beauty  was 
given  to  flowers  and  insects  for  the  sake  of 
man  alone  :  it  would  not,  perhaps,  be  too 
much  to  say  that,  if  the  new  school  be  right, 
the  beauty  is  not  in  the  flowers  and  insects 
themselves  at  all,  but  is  read  into  them  by 
the  fancy  of  the  human  race.  To  the  but- 
terfly the  world  is  a  little  beautiful ;  to  the 
farm-labourer  it  is  only  a  trifle  more  beautiful : 
but  to  the  cultivated  man  or  the  artist  it  is 
lovely  in  every  cloud  and  shadow,  in  every 
tiny  blossom  and  passing  bird. 


200 


THE  F.VOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


!'i 


The  outer  face  of  the  bindweed,  the  ex- 
terior of  the  cup,   so   to  speak,    is   prettily 
marked    with    five    dark   russet-red    bands, 
between  which  the  remainder  of  the  corolla 
is  a  pale  pinky-white  in  hue.     Ts^othing"  could 
be  simpler  and  prettier  than  this  alternation 
of  dark  and  light   belts  ;  but  how  is  it  pro- 
duced ?      Merely    thus.      The    convolvulus 
blossom  in  the  bud  is  twisted  or  contorted 
round    and    round,  part   of  the    cup    being 
folded    inside,  while    the  five  joints   of  the 
corolla    are  folded  outside,   much   after   the 
fashion  of  an  umbrella  when  rolled  up.     And 
just  as  the  bits   of  the   umbrella  which  are 
exposed   when  it  is  folded  become  faded  in 
colour,  so  the  bits  of  the  bindweed  blossom 
which    are    outermost   in  the   bud    become 
more  deeply  oxidised  than  the  other  parts^ 
and  acquire  a  russet-red  hue.     The   belted 
appearance   which   thus   results  is  really  as 
accidental,  if  I  may  use  that  unphilosophical 
expression,  as  the  belted  appearance  of  the 
old   umbrella,  or  the  wrinkles  caused  by  the 


lUXOU'K/CD. 


20 1 


waves  on  the  sea-sands.  The  flower  hap- 
pened to  be  folded  so,  and  <j^ot  coloured,  or 
discoloured  accordinorly.  But  when  a  man 
comes  to  look  at  it,  he  reco^^nises  in  the 
alternation  of  colours  and  the  symmetrical 
arranii^ement  one  of  those  elements  of  beauty 
with  which  he  is  familiar  in  the  handicraft 
of  his  own  kind.  He  reads  an  intention  into 
this  result  of  natural  causes,  and  personifies 
Nature  as  though  she  worked  with  an  a-s- 
thetic  design  in  view,  just  as  a  decorative 
artist  works  w^hen  he  similarly  alternates 
colours  or  arranges  symmetrical  and  radial 
figures  on  a  cup  or  other  piece  of  human 
pottery.  The  beauty  is  not  in  the  flower 
itself;  it  is  in  the  eye  which  sees  and  the 
brain  which  recognises  the  intellectual  order 
and  perfection  of  the  work. 

I  turn  the  bindweed  blossom  mouth  up- 
ward, and  there  I  see  that  these  russet 
marks,  though  paler  on  the  inner  surface, 
still  show  faintly  through  the  pinky-white 
corolla.     This  produces  an  effect  not  unlike 


^^ 


202 


7//E  EV0LUT10N1S7  AT  LARGE. 


that  of  a  delicate  shell  cameo,  with  its  dainty 
gradations  of  semi-transparent  white  and  in- 
terfusing pink.  But  the  inner  effect  can  be 
no  more  designed  with  an  eye  to  beauty  than 
the  outer  one  was ;  and  the  very  terms  in 
which  I  think  of  it  clearly  show  that  my 
sense  of  its  loveliness  is  largely  derived 
from  comparison  with  human  handicraft.  A 
farmer  would  see  in  the  convolvulus  nothing 
but  a  useless  weed ;  a  cultivated  eye  sees 
in  it  just  as  much  as  its  nature  permits 
it  to  see.  I  look  closer,  and  observe  that 
there  are  also  thin  lines  running  from  the 
circumference  to  the  centre,  midway  between 
the  dp.rk  belts.  These  lines,  which  add 
greatly  to  the  beauty  of  the  flower,  by  marking 
it  out  into  zones,  are  also  due  to  the  folding 
in  the  bud  ;  they  are  the  inner  angles  of  the 
folds,  iust  as  the  dark  belts  are  the  over- 
lapping  edges  of  the  outer  angles.  But,  in 
addition  to  the  minor  beauty  of  these  little 
details,  there  is  the  general  beauty  of  the 
cup  as  a  whole,  which  also  calls  for  explana- 


»PWP 


■■■1 


BIND  WEED. 


203 


tion.  Its  shape  is  as  graceful  as  that  of 
any  Greek  or  Etruscan  vase,  as  swelling  and 
as  simply  beautiful  as  any  beaker.  Can  I 
account  for  these  peculiarities  on  mere  natural 
grounds  as  well  as  for  the  others  ?  I  some- 
how fancy  I  can. 

The  bindweed  is  descended  from  some 
earlier  ancestors  which  had  five  separate 
petals,  instead  of  a  single  fused  and  circular 
cup.  But  in  the  convolvulus  family,  as  in 
many  others,  these  five  petals  have  joined 
into  a  continuous  rim  or  bowl,  and  the  marks 
on  the  blossom  where  it  was  folded  in  the 
bud  still  answer  to  the  five  petals.  In  many 
plants  you  can  see  the  pointed  edges  of  the 
former  distinct  flower-rays  as  five  projections, 
though  their  lower  parts  have  coalesced  into 
a  bell-shaped  or  tubular  blossom,  as  in  the 
common  harebell.  How  this  comes  to  pass 
we  can  easily  understand  if  we  watch  an  un- 
opened fuchsia  ;  for  there  the  four  bright- 
coloured  sepals  remain  joined  together  till 
the    bud    is    ready    to   open,  and    then  split 


w 


204 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


f  I 


along  a  line  marked  out  from  the  very  first. 
In  the  plastic  bud  condition  it  is  very  easy 
for  parts  usually  separate  so  to  grow  out  in 
union  with  one  another.  I  do  not  mean 
that  separate  pieces  actually  grow  together, 
but  that  pieces  which  usually  grow  distinct 
sometimes  grow  united  from  the  very  first. 
Now,  four  or  five  petals,  radially  arranged, 
in  themselves  produce  that  kind  of  symmetry 
which  man,  with  his  intellectual  love  for 
order  and  definite  patterns,  always  finds 
beautiful.  But  the  symmetry  in  the  flower 
simply  results  from  the  fact  that  a  single 
whorl  of  leaves  has  grown  into  this  particular 
shape,  while  the  outer  and  inner  whorls  have 
grown  in^-o  other  shapes  ;  and  every  such 
whorl  always  and  necessarily  presents  us  with 
an  example  of  the  kind  of  symmetry  which 
we  so  much  admire.  Again,  when  the  petals 
forming  a  whorl  coalesce,  they  must,  of  course, 
produce  a  more  or  less  regular  circle.  If 
the  points  of  the  petals  remain  as  projec- 
tions, then  we  get  a  circle  with  vandyked 


m^mmmmmm 


BINDWEED. 


205 


edges,  as  in  the  lily  of  the  valley  ;  if  they 
do  not  project,  then  we  get  a  simple  circular 
rim,  as  in  the  bindweed.  All  the  lovely 
shapes  of  bell -blossoms  are  simply  due  to 
the  natural  coalescence  of  four,  five,  or  six 
petals  ;  and  this  coalescence  is  again  due  to 
an  increased  certainty  of  fertilisation  secured 
for  the  plant  by  the  better  adaptation  to 
insect  visits.  Similarly,  we  know  that  the 
colours  of  the  corolla  have  been  acquired  as 
a  means  of  rendering  the  flower  conspicuous 
to  the  eyes  of  bees  or  butterflies  ;  and  the 
hues  which  so  prove  attractive  to  insects  are 
of  the  same  sort  which  arouse  pleasurable 
stimulation  in  our  own  nerves.  Thus  the 
whole  loveliness  of  flowers  is  in  the  last 
resort  dependent  upon  all  kinds  of  accidental 
causes — causes,  that  is  to  say,  into  which  the 
deliberate  design  of  the  production  of  beau- 
tiful effects  did  not  enter  as  a  distinct  factor. 
Those  parts  of  nature  which  are  of  such  a 
sort  as  to  arouse  in  us  certain  feelings  we 
call  beautiful ;  and  those  parts  which  are  of 


2o6 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


such  a  sort  as  to  arouse  in  us  the  opposite 
feelings  we  call  ugly.  But  the  beauty  and 
the  ugliness  are  not  parts  of  the  things  ; 
they  are  merely  human  modes  of  regarding 
some  among  their  attributes.  Wherever  in 
nature  we  find  pure  colour,  symmetrical 
form,  and  intricate  variety  of  pattern,  we 
imagine  to  ourselves  that  nature  designs  the 
object  to  be  beautiful.  When  we  trace  these 
peculiarities  to  their  origin,  however,  we  find 
that  each  of  them  owes  its  occurrence  to 
some  special  fact  in  the  history  of  the  ob- 
ject ;  and  we  are  forced  to  conclude  that  the 
notion  of  intentional  design  has  been  read 
into  it  by  human  analogies.  All  nature  is 
beautiful,  and  most  beautiful  for  those  in 
whom  the  sense  of  beauty  is  most  highly 
developed  ;  but  it  is  not  beautiful  at  all 
except  to  those  whose  own  eyes  and  emo- 
tions are  fitted  to  perceive  its  beauty. 


I  MPPAl-iytlWHW  "-'■"■' 


ON  CORAISH  CLIFFS. 


207 


XXII. 


ON  CORNISH  CLIFFS. 


I  AM  lying  on  my  back  in  the  sunshine,  close 
to  the  edge  of  a  great  broken  precipice, 
beside  a  clambering  Cornish  fishing  village. 
In  front  of  me  is  the  sea,  bluer  than  I  have 
seen  it  since  last  I  lay  in  like  fashion  a  few 
months  ago  on  the  schistose  slopes  of  the 
Maurettes  at  Hyeres,  and  looked  away  across 
the  plain  to  the  unrippled  Mediterranean  and 
the  Stoechades  of  the  old  Phocaean  merchant- 
men. On  either  hand  rise  dark  cliffs  of 
hornblende  and  serpentine,  weathered  above 
by  wind  and  rain,  and  smoothed  below  by 
the  ceaseless  dashing  of  the  winter  waves. 
Up  to  the  limit  of  the  breakers  the  hard  rock 
is  polished  like  Egyptian  syenite;  but  beyond 


<^ 


PMPK 


I 


( 


^ 


i 


208 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


that  point  it  is  fissured  by  disintegration  and 
richly  covered  with  a  dappled  coat  of  grey 
and  yellow  lichen.  The  slow  action  of  the 
water  always  beating  against  the  solid  wall 
of  crystalline  rock,  has  eaten  out  a  thousand 
such  little  bays  all  along  this  coast,  each 
bounded  by  long  headlands,  whose  points 
have  been  worn  into  fantastic  pinnacles,  or 
severed  from  the  main  mass  as  precipitous 
islets,  the  favourite  resting-place  of  gulls  and 
cormorants.  No  grander  coast  scenery  can 
be  found  anywhere  in  the  southern  half  of 
Great  Britain. 

Yet  when  I  turn  inland  I  see  that  all  this 
beauty  has  been  produced  by  the  mere  inter- 
action of  the  sea  and  the  barren  moors  of  the 
interior.  Nothing  could  be  flatter  or  more 
desolate  than  the  country  whose  seaward 
escarpment  gives  rise  to  these  romantic  coves 
and  pyramidal  rocky  islets.  It  stretches 
away  for  miles  in  a  level  upland  waste,  only 
redeemed  from  complete  barrenness  by  the 
low   straggling   bushes  of  the   dwarf  furze, 


' 


wm 


■■ 


'ON  CORNISH  CUFFS. 


209 


whose  golden   blossom  is  now   interspersed 
with  purple  patches  of  ling  or  the  paler  pink 
flowers  of  the  Cornish  heath.     Here,  then,  I 
can  see  beauty  in  nature  actually  beginning 
to  be.     I  can    trace  the   origin  of  all  these 
little  bays  from  small  rills  which  have  worn 
themselves    gorge-like    valleys   through   the 
hard   igneous    rock,    or   else    from    fissures 
finally  giving  rise  to  sea-caves,  like  the  one 
into  which  I  rowed  this  morning  for  my  early 
swim.     The  waves  penetrate  for  a  couple  of 
hundred  yards  into  the  bowels  of  the  rock, 
hemmed  in  by  walls  and  roof  of  dark  serpen- 
tine, with  its  interlacing  veins  of  green  and 
red  bearing  witness  still  to  its  once  molten 
condition  ;  and  at  length  in  most  cases  they 
produce  a  blow-hole  at   the   top,   communi- 
cating with   the  open  air  above,  either  be- 
cause the  fissure  there  crops  up  to  the  surface, 
or   else  through  the   agency   of  percolation. 
At  last,  the  roof  falls    in ;  the  boulders  are 
carried  av/ay  by  the  waves ;  and  we  get  a 
long  and  narrow  cove,  still  bounded  on  either 

p 


w- 


y 


WB^ 


'  1 


(! 


..» 


i 


i/ 


2IO 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


side  by  tall  clifTs,  whose  summits  the  air  and 
rainfall  slowly  wear  away  into  jagged  and 
exquisite  shapes.  Yet  in  all  this  we  see 
nothing  but  the  natural  play  of  cause  and 
effect ;  we  attribute  the  beauty  of  the  scene 
merely  to  the  accidental  result  of  inevitable 
laws ;  we  feel  no  necessity  for  calling  in  the 
aid  of  any  underlying  aesthetic  intention  on 
the  part  of  the  sea,  or  the  rock,  or  the  creep- 
ing lichen,  in  order  to  account  for  the  loveli- 
ness which  we  find  in  the  finished  picture. 
The  winds  and  the  waves  carved  the  coast 
into  these  varied  shapes  by  force  of  blind 
currents  working  on  hidden  veins  of  harder 
or  softer  crystal :  and  we  happen  to  find  the 
result  beautiful,  just  as  we  happen  to  find  the 
inland  level  dull  and  ugly.  The  endless 
variety  of  the  one  charms  us,  while  the  un- 
broken monotony  of  the  other  wearies  and 
repels  us. 

Here  on  the  cliff  I  pick  up  a  pretty  fern 
and  a  blossoming  head  of  the  autumn  squill 
— though  so  sweet  a  flower  deserves  a  better 


mp. 


'"^TWf 


wmmammm 


ON  CORNISH  CUFFS. 


211 


name.  This  fern,  too,  is  lovely  in  its  way, 
with  its  branching  leaflets  and  its  rich  gloss)  - 
green  hue.  Yet  it  owes  its  shape  just  as 
truly  to  the  balance  of  external  and  internal 
forces  acting  upon  it  as  does  the  Cornish 
coast-line.  How  comes  it  then  that  in  the 
one  case  we  instinctively  regard  the  beauty 
as  accidental,  while  in  the  other  we  set  it 
down  to  a  deliberate  esthetic  intent  ?  I 
think  because,  in  the  first  case,  we  can 
actually  see  the  forces  at  work,  while  in  the 
second  they  are  so  minute  and  so  gradual  in 
their  action  as  to  escape  the  notice  of  all  but 
trained  observers.  This  fern  grows  in  the 
shape  that  I  see,  because  its  ancestors  have 
been  slowly  moulded  into  such  a  form  by  the 
whole  group  of  circumstances  directly  or  in- 
directly affecting  them  in  all  their  past  life ; 
and  the  germ  of  the  complex  form  thus  pro- 
duced was  impressed  by  the  parent  plant 
upon  the  spore  from  which  this  individual 
fern  took  its  birth.  Over  yonder  I  see  a 
great  dock-leaf ;  it  grows  tall  and  rank  above 


i^  2 


212 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


\S 


liii 


all  other  plants,  and  is  able  to  spread  itself 
boldly  to  the  light  on  every  side.  It  has 
abundance  of  sunshine  as  a  motive-power  of 
growth  and  abundance  of  air  from  which  to 
extract  the  carbon  that  it  needs.  Hence  it 
and  all  its  ancestors  have  spread  their  leaves 
equally  on  every  side,  and  formed  large  flat 
undivided  blades.  Leaves  such  as  these  are 
common  enoi  gh  ;  but  nobody  thinks  of  call- 
ing them  pretty.  Their  want  of  minute  sub- 
division, their  monotonous  outline,  their  dull 
surface,  all  make  them  ugly  in  our  eyes,  just 
as  the  flatness  of  the  Cornish  plain  makes  it 
also  ugly  to  us.  Where  symmetry  is  slightly 
marked  and  variety  wanting,  as  in  the  cab- 
bage leaf,  the  mullein,  and  the  burdock,  we 
see  little  or  nothing  to  admire.  On  the  other 
hand,  ferns  generally  grow  in  hedge-rows  or 
thickets  where  sunlight  is  much  interrupted 
by  other  plants,  and  where  air  is  scanty,  most 
of  its  carbon  being  extracted  by  neighbouring 
plants  which  leave  but  little  for  one  another's 
needs.     Hence  you   may  notice   that   most 


'\ 


ON  CORNISH  CLIFFS. 


213 


plants  growing  under  such  circumstances 
have  leaves  minutely  sub-divided,  so  as  to 
catch  such  stray  gleams  of  sunlight  and  such 
floating  particles  of  carbonic  acid  as  happen 
to  pass  their  way.  Look  into  the  next 
tangled  and  over-grown  hedge-row  which  you 
happen  to  pass,  and  you  will  see  that  almost 
all  its  leaves  are  of  this  character  ;  and  when 
they  are  otherwise  the  anomaly  usually  admits 
of  an  easy  explanation.  Of  course  the  shapes 
of  plants  are  mostly  due  to  their  normal  and 
usual  circumstances,  and  are  comparatively 
little  influenced  by  the  accidental  surround- 
ings of  individuals  ;  and  so,  when  a  fern  of 
such  a  sort  happens  to  grow  like  this  one  on 
the  open,  it  still  retains  the  form  impressed 
upon  it  by  the  life  of  its  ancestors.  Now,  it 
is  the  striking  combination  of  symmetry  and 
variety  in  the  fern,  together  with  vivid  green 
colouring,  which  makes  us  admire  it  so  much. 
Not  only  is  the  frond  as  a  whole  symmetrical, 
but  each  frondlet  and  each  division  of  the 
frondlet  is   separately  symmetrical   as   well. 


NW 


214 


THE  EVOLUTIONIST  AT  LARGE. 


This  delicate  minuteness  of  workmanship,  as 
we  call  it,  reminds  us  of  similar  human 
products — of  fine  lace,  of  delicate  tracery,  of 
skilful  filigree  or  engraving.  Almost  all  the 
green  leaves  which  w^e  admire  are  noticeable, 
more  or  less,  for  the  same  effects,  as  in  the 
case  of  maple,  parsley,  horse-chestnut,  and 
vine.  It  is  true,  mere  glossy  greenness  may, 
and  often  does,  make  up  for  the  want  of 
variety,  as  we  see  in  the  arum,  holly,  laurel 
and  hart's-tongue  fern  ;  but  the  leaves  which 
we  admire  most  of  all  are  those  which,  like 
maidenhair,  are  both  exquisitely  green  and 
delicately  designed  in  shape.  So  that,  in  the 
last  resort,  the  beauty  of  leaves,  like  the 
beauty  of  coast  scenery,  is  really  due  to  the 
constant  interaction  of  a  vast  number  of 
natural  laws,  not  to  any  distinct  aesthetic 
intention  on  the  part  of  Nature. 

On  the  other  hand,  the  pretty  pink  squill 
reminds  me  that  semi-conscious  aesthetic 
design  in  animals  has  something  to  do  with 
the  production  of  beauty  in  nature — at  least, 


ON  CORX/SH  CUFFS. 


:i5 


in  a  few  cases.  Just  as  a  flower  garden  has 
been  intentionally  produced  by  man,  so 
flowers  have  been  unconsciously  produced 
by  insects.  As  a  rule,  all  bright  red,  blue, 
or  orange  in  nature  (except  in  the  rare  case 
of  gems)  is  due  to  animal  selection,  either  of 
flowers,  fruits,  or  mates.  Thus  we  may  say 
that  beauty  in  the  inorganic  world  is  always 
accidental;  but  in  the  organic  world  it  is 
sometimes  accidental  and  .sometimes  de- 
signed. A  waterfall  is  a  mere  result  of  geo- 
logical and  geographical  causes,  but  a  blue- 
bell or  a  butterfly  is  partly  the  result  of  a 
more  or  less  deliberate  aesthetic  choice. 


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■R 


^Pl 


CHAftO  ^  Wlt^DVS,  PtCCADtLlY. 


i1 


Imes," 


By  Sir 


Mayfair  Library,  continued— 
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Quy  Wtitepman.       \  Two  Opeamapa. 
Tha  Lion  in  tha  Path. 

BY  KATHARINE  SAUNDERS. 
Mapgapot  and  Eliiabeth. 
Qldeon'a  Rook.        I    Heapt  Salvage. 
Tha  High  Mllla.  Sebastian. 

BY  T.   W.  SPEIGHT. 
Tha  IMyataplea  of  Hepon  Dyke. 
BY  R.  A.  STERNDALB. 
1  .le  Afthan  Knifia. 

BY  BERTHA  THOMAS, 
Ppoud  IMaiala.  |  Crasaida. 
The  VIolln-Playap 


Piccadilly  Novels,  coHtiHUtd— 

BY  ANTHONY  TROLLOPS, 
The  Way  we  Live  Now. 
Fpau  Fpohmann.   |   IMaplon  Fay. 
Kept  In  the  Dapk. 
Mp.  Scapbopough'a  Family. 
The  Land-Leaguepa. 

BY  FRANCES  E.  TROLLOPS. 
Like  Shipa  upon  the  Sea. 
Anne  Fupness-     I  Mabel'a  Progpess. 

BY  IVAN  TURGENIEFF,  &c. 
Stopiea  fN>m  Fopeign  Novelists. 

BY  SARAH  TYTLER. 
What  She  Came  Thpough. 
TheBpldeNPaaa.  I  Saint  Mungo's City. 
Beauty  and  tha  Baaat. 
Noblesse  Oblige. 
Citoyenne  Jacqueline. 
Lady  Bell.  |  Bupled  Olamonda. 

The  Blaokhaii  Qhoata. 

BY  C.C.  FRASER-TYTLBR, 
Miatpese  Judith. 


CHEAP  EDITIONS  OF 

Post  8vo,  illostrated 
BYTHE  AUTHOROF^MEHALAH," 
Red  Spldap. 

BY  BDMOND  APnUT, 
The  Fellah. 

BY  HAMILTON  AIDi. 
CappofCappiyon.   |      Confldanoaa. 

BY  MRS.  AZ  EXANDER. 
Maid,  Wife,  OP  Widow? 
Valepie'e  Fate. 

BY  GRANT  A  I, LBN, 
Stpange  Stopiea. 
Philistia. 
Babylon. 
In  all  Shades. 
The  Beckoning  Hand. 
Fop  Maimie's  Sake. 

BY  SHELSLEY  BSAUCHAMP, 
Qpantlay  Qpange. 

BY  WALTER  BESANT  &  J.  RICE, 
ReadyMoney  Moptlboy. 
With  Happ  and  Cpown. 
This  Son  of  Vulcan.  |  My  Little  QIpI. 
The  Caae  of  Mp.  Lucpaft. 
The  Qolden  Buttepfly. 
By  Cella'e  Apboup 
The  Monke  of  Thelema. 
'Twaa  In  Tpafalgap'a  Bay. 
The  Seamy  Side. 
The  Ten  Yeaps'  Tenant. 
The  Cha#laln  of  the  Fleet. 

BY  WALTER  BESANT. 
All  Sopta  and  Condltiona  (»f  Men. 
The  Captaina'  Room. 
All  In  a  Qapden  Fair. 
Dopothy  Fopatar. 
Unoia  Jaok. 
Chlldpan  of  Qibeon. 
Tha  World  Want  Vary  Well  Than. 


POPULAR  NOVELS. 

boards,  2i.  each. 

BY  FREDERICK  BOYLE. 
Camp  Notee.     |     Savage  Lif  a 
Chponiclea  of  No-man'a  Land. 

BY  BRET  HARTS. 
An  Helpeaa  of  Red  Dog. 
The  Luck  of  Reaping  Campi 
Califopnian  Stoplea. 
QabPlei  Conpoy.  |        Flip. 
MapiUa.   I   A  Phyllis  of  the  Sieppua. 

BY  HAROLD  BRYDGES. 
Uncle  Sam  at  Home. 

BY  ROBERT  BUCHANAN. 
The    Shadow    of 


The    Maptypdom 

of  Madsline. 
Annan  V/atep. 
The  New  Abelapd. 
Matt. 
TheHaiPofLinna 


the  Swopd. 
AChlldof  Natupa. 
Qod  and  the  Man. 
Love  Me  for  Ever. 
Foxglove  Manop. 
The  Maatep  of  the  Mint. 

fly  MRS.  BURNETT. 
Surly  Tim. 

BY  HALL  CAINE. 
The  Shadow  of  a  Crime. 
A  Son  of  Hagap.     |  The  Deemstep. 
BY  COMMANDER  CAMERON. 
The  Cpulse  of  the  "  Black  Pplnce." 

BY  MRS.  LOVJLTT  CAMERON* 
Decelvepe  Evep.  |  Juliet's  Quapdian. 

BY  MACLAREN  COBBAN. 
The  Cupe  of  Souls. 

BY  C.  ALLSTON  COLLINS, 
The  Bap  Sinir.tep. 

BY  WJ.LKIE  COLLINS. 


Antonina. 

Baall. 

Hide  and  Seek. 

The  Dead  Seopet. 

Queen  of  Heapta. 


My  MIsoeilanlaa. 
Woman  in  White. 
The  Moonstone. 
Man  and  Wife. 
Poor  Miaa  FIneh. 


30 


^OOJTS  PVBUSHEi}  6V 


Chsap  Populab  Novbls.  cotttmutd— 
WiLBiB  CoLLiMS,  Continued. 


Miss  OP  MPS.P 
Naw  Magdalen. 
Tha  Fpozan  Daap. 
Tha  Law  and  tha 

Lady. 
ThaTwoOaatiniea 
Hauntad  Hotal. 


Tha  Fallen  Laavee. 
JezabaraOaughtep 
The  Blaek  Robe. 
Heapt  and  Solenoe 
"  I  Say  No." 
The  Evil  Qenlus. 
Little  Novels. 


fi 


BY  MORTIMER  COLLINS. 
Sweet  Anne  Page.  I  Fpom  Midnight  to 
Tpanamlgpatlon.  |     Midnight. 
A  Fight  with  Foptune. 
MORTIMER  &  FRANCES  COLLINS. 
Sweet  and  Twenty.  |     Fpancea. 
Blackamlth  and  Soholap. 
Tha  Village  Comedy. 
You  Play  m»  Falsa. 

BY  M.  J.  COLQUHOVN. 
Evapy  Inch  a  Soldlep. 

BY  MONCURE  D.  CONWAY. 
Pine  and  Palm. 

BY  BUTTON  COOK. 
Lao.  I  PAUI  Fostep's  Daughtep. 

BY  C.  EGBERT  CRADDOCK. 
The  Ppophet  of  the   Qpeat   Smoky 
Mountalna. 

BY  WILLIAM  CYPLES. 
Haapta  of  Gold. 

BY  ALPHONSE  DAUDET. 

Tha  Evangelist;  or.  Port  Salvation. 

BY  JAMES  DB  MILLS, 

Caatia  In  Spain. 

BY  J.  LEITH  DERWENT. 

Oup  Lady  of  Teapa.!   CIpoe's  Loveps. 

BY  CHARLES  DICKENS. 
Sketchea  by  Boz.   I  Ollvep  Twist. 
Pickwiok  Papape.  |  Nicholas  Nickleby 

BY  DICK  DONOVAN, 
Tha  Man-HwitaP. 
Caught  at  Last! 

BY  MRS.  ANNIE  EDWARDES. 
A  Point  of  Hwioup.  I    Apohle  Love!!. 

BY  M.  EETHAM-EDWARDS. 
Fellola.  I        Kitty. 

BY  EDWARD  EGGLESTON. 
Roxy. 

BY  PERCY  FITZGERALD. 
Bella  Donna.       |  Nevep  Fopgotten. 
The  Second  Mps.  Tiliotson. 
Polly.  I   Fatal  Zepo. 

Seventy-five  Bpooke  Stpoet. 
The  Lady  of  Bpantome. 
BY  ALBANY  DE  FONBLANQUE, 
Filthy  Lucpe. 

BY  R.  E.  FRANCILLON. 
Olympla.  I  Queen  Cophetua. 

One  by  Ono.         I  A  Real  Queen. 

BY  HAROLD  FREDERIC. 
Seth'e  Bpothep's  Wife. 
Vrefaeti  by  Sir  H.  3ARTLE  FRERE. 
Pandupang  Hari. 

BY  HAW  FRISWELL. 
One  of  Two. 

BY  EDWARD  GARRETT. 
Tha  Capal  QlPia. 


Chbap  Popular  Novbls,  coaMmm^- 
BY  CHARLES  GIBBON. 


Robin  Opay. 
Fop  Lack  of  Qold. 
What     will     the 

Wopid  SayP 
In  Honoup  Bound. 
In  Love  and  Wap. 
Fop  the  King. 
In  PastupesQpeen 
QueenoftheMea* 

dow, 


The  Flowep  of  the 

Fopest. 
Braee  of  Ysppow. 
The  Qolden  Shaft. 
Of  High  Degpee. 
Fancy  Fpee. 
Mead  and  Stream. 
Loving  a  Dream. 
A  Hapd  Knot. 
Heapt'a  Delight. 


A  Heapt'a  Ppoblam 

BY  WILLIAM  GILBERT. 
Dp.  Austin's  Quests,  j  Jamea  Duke. 
The  WIzapd  of  the  Mountain. 

BY  JAMES  GREENWOOD. 
Dick  Temple. 

BY  JOHN  HABBERTON. 
Brueton's  Bayou.  I  Countpy  Luck. 

BY  ANDREW  HALLWAY 
Every-Day  Papeps. 

BY  LADYDUFFUS  HARDY. 
Paul  Wyntep's  Sacpifloe. 

BY  THOMAS  HARDY. 
Undep  the  Gpeenwood  Tpee. 

BY  J.  BERWICK  HARWOOD. 
The  Tenth  Eapl. 

BY  JULIAN  HAWTHORNE. 
Qarth.  I  Sebastian  Stpome 

ElliceQuentin.        |  Dust. 
Prince  Saronl'a  Wife. 
Fortune's  Fool.     I  Beatrix  Randolph. 
MissOadogna.       |  Love — op  a  Name. 
David  Polndextep's  Disappeapance. 

BYSIR  ARTHUR  HELPS. 
Ivan  de  Bipon. 

BY  MRS.  CASHEL  HOEY. 
The  Lover's  Creed. 

BY  TOM  HOOD. 
A  Qoiden  Heart. 

BY  MRS.  GEORGE  HOOPER, 
The  House  of  Raby. 

BY  TIGHE  HOPKINS. 
'Twixt  Love  and  Duty. 

BY  MRS.  ALFRED  HUNT, 
Thorn  icpoft's  Model. 
The  Leaden  Casket. 
Self  Condemned.  I  That  other  Pepeon 

BY  JEAN  INGELOW. 
Fated  to  be  Fpee. 

BY  HARRIETT  JAY, 
The  Dark  Colleen. 
The  Queen  of  Connaught. 

BY  MARK  KERSHAW. 
Colonial  Facta  and  Fictions. 
BY  R.  ASHE  KING. 
A  Drawn  Game. 
"The  WeaHng  of  the  Gpeen." 

BY  HENRY  KINGSLEY. 
OakahottCaatle 

BY  JOHN  LEYS. 
The  Lindsays. 

BY  MARY  LINSKILL. 
In  Exchange  fop  a  Soul. 

BYE.  LYNN  LINTON. 
Patplola  Kambali. 
Tha  Atonement  of  Lt am  Dundao. 


i ' 


mmmmm 


CHATTO  *  WINDUS,  PICCADILLY. 


31 


thd 

)W. 

aft. 

le. 

am. 
m. 

It. 


ke. 


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). 

•ome 

olph. 
ame. 
ice. 


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BPton 


Cheap  Popular  Novels,  eontinutd'^ 

E.  Lynh  Linton,  continued— 
The  Wopid  Well  Lost. 
Under  which  Lord  ?  |  Paston  Carew. 
With  a  Silken  Thread. 
The  Rebel  of  the  Family. 
"My  Love."         |     lone. 

BY  HENRY  W.  LUCY. 
Gideon  Fleyce. 

BY  JUSTIN  McCarthy. 


MIeaMlaanthPope 
Donna  Quixote. 
The  Xomet  of  a 

Season. 
Maid  of  Athene. 
Camlola. 


Dear  LadyDlsdaIn 
The  Watepdale 

Nelghboupe. 
My  Enemy's 
Daughter. 
A  Fair  Saxon. 
LInley  Rochford. 

BY  MRS.  MACDONELL. 
Quaker  Cousins ' 

BY  KATHARINE  S.  MACQUOID, 
The  Evil  Eye.         |     Lost  Rose. 

BY  W.H.  M ALLOC K. 
The  New  Republic.  " 

BY  FLORENCE  MARRY  AT. 


Fighting  the  Air. 
Written  In  Fire. 


Op«r!  Sesame. 
A  HM^est  of  Wild 
Oats. 

BY  J.  MASTERMAN. 
Half-a-dozen  Daughters. 

BY  BRANDER  MATTHEWS. 
A  Secret  of  the  Sea. 

BY  JEAN  MIDDLEMASS. 
Touch  and  Qo.      |     Mr.  Oorllllon. 

BY  MRS.  MOLESWORTH. 
Hathercourt  Rectory. 

BY  U.  CiRISTIE  MURRAY. 
ALIfe'sAtonement    Hearts. 
A  Model  Father. 
Joseph's  Coat. 
Coals  of  Fire. 
By  the  Gate  of  the 

Sea. 
Val  Strange. 
Old  Blazer'e  Hero. 

BY  ALICE  O'HANLON. 
The  Unforeseen. 

BY  MRS.  OLIPHANT. 
WHlteiadies.      |  The  Primrose  Path. 
The  Greatest  Heiress  in  England. 
BY  MRS.  10 BERT  O'REILLY. 
Phoebe's  Fort      ss. 

h      QUID  A. 
Held  In  Bondage.    TwoLlttleWooden 


Way  of  the  World. 

A  Bit  of  Human 
Nature. 

First  Person  Sin- 
gular. 

Cynic  Fortune. 


Strathmore. 

Chandos. 

Under  Two  Flags. 

Idalla. 

Cecil     Castle- 

malnrs  Gage. 
Tricotrin.  |  Puck. 
Foils  Ferine. 
A  Dog  of  Flanders. 
Pasearel. 
SIgna.  [ine. 

Princess  Maprax' 
Vn  a  Winter  Oty 


Shoes. 

Ariadne. 

Friendship. 

Moths. 

Pipistrelio. 

A   Village  Com- 
mune. 

Bimbi.  I  Wanda. 

Frescoes. 

In  Maremma. 

Othmar. 

Wkdom,  Wit,  and 
Pathos. 


Cheap  Popular  Novels,  contiHutd-^ 
BY  MARGARET  AGNES  PAUL. 
Gentle  and  Simple. 

BY  JAMES  PAYN. 


Marine  Residence. 
Married  Beneath 

Him. 
Mirk  Abbey. 
;  Noc    Wooed,    but 

Won.r 
Less   Black  than 

We're  Painted. 
By  Proxy. 
Under  One  Roof. 
High  Spirits. 
Carlyon's  Year. 
A    Confidential 

Agent. 
Some    Private 

Views. 
From  Exile. 
A  Grape  from  a 

Thorn. 
For  Cash  Only. 
Kit :  A  Memory. 
The  Canon'e  Ward 
Talk  of  the  Town. 
Holiday  Tasks. 
Glow-worm  Taios. 


Lost  Sir  Massing 
berd. 

APerfectTreasure 

Bentinck's  Tutor. 

Murphy's  Master. 

A  County  Family. 

At  Her  Mercy. 

A  Woman's  Ven- 
geance. 

Cecil's  Tryst. 

ClylTiRrds  of  ClyfTe 

The  Family  Scape- 
grace. 

Foster  Brothers. 

Found  Dead. 

Best  of  Husbands. 

Walter's  Word. 

Halves. 

Fallen  Fortunes. 

WhatHeCoetHer 

HumorousStoriea 

Gwendoline's  Har- 

£200   {eward. 
Like  Father,  Like 

Son. 

BY  C.L.  PIRKIS, 
Lady  Lovelace. 

BY  EDGAR  A.  PCS. 
The  Myetery  of  Marie  Roget. 

BY  B.C.  PRICE. 
Valentine.  |   The  Foreigner*! 

Mrs.  Lancaster'e  Rival. 
Gerald. 

BY  CHARLES  READE. 
It  le  Never  Too  Late  to  Mend. 
Hard  Cash.  |   Peg  Wofnni,tor 

Christie  Johnstone. 
Griffith  Gaunt. 
Put  Yourself  in  His  Place. 
The  Double  Marriage. 
Love  Me  Little,  Love  Me  Long. 
Foul  Play. 

The  Cloister  and  the  Hearth. 
The  Couree  of  True  Love. 
Autobiography  of  a  Thief. 
A  Terrible  Temptation. 
The  Wandering  Heir. 
A  Simpleton.         I     A  Woman-Hat. 
Readiana.  I     The  Jilt. 

Singleheart  and  Doubleface. 
Qood    Storlee    of    Men    and   othc 

Animals. 

BY  MRS.  J.  H.  RIDDELL. 
Her  Mother's  Darling. 
Prince  of  Wales's  Garden  Party. 
Weird  Stories.    |     Fairy  Water. 
The  Uninhabited  House. 
The  Mystery  in  Palace  Gardens. 

BY  F.  W.  ROBINSON.. 
Women  are  Strange. 
The  Hands  of  Justice. 


mim 


s^s 


■JHW 


32         BOOKS  PUBLISHED  BY  CHATTO  6*  WINDUS. 


Chbap  Pobular  Novels,  eoHtinued— 

BY  JAMES  RUNCIUAN, 
Skippers  and  Shellbacks.  ■ 
Qpaee  Balmalgn's  Sweetheart. 
Sohools  and  Scholars. 

BY  W.  CLARK  RUSSELL 
Round  the  Galley  Fire. 
On  the  Fo'k'sle  Head. 
In  the  Middle  Watch. 
A  Voyage  to  the  Cape. 
A  Book  for  the  Hammock. 

BY  BAYLE  ST.  JOHN. 
A  Levantine  Family. 

BY  GEORGE  AIJGUSTVS  SALA, 
Gaslight  and  Daylight. 

BY  JOHN  SA  UNDERS. 
Bound  to  the  Wheel 
One  Against  the  World. 
Guy  Waterman.  |  Two  Dreamers. 
The  Lion  In  the  Path. 

BY  KATHARli:-^.  SAUNDERS. 
Joan  Merryweather. 
Margaret  and  Elizabeth. 
The  High  Mllle. 
Heart  Salvage.  J  Sebastian. 

BY  GEORGE  R.  SIMS. 
Rogues  and  Vagabonds. 
The  RIngo'  BellslMary  Jane  Married 
Mary  Jane'e  Memoirs. 

BY  ARTHUR  SKETCHLBY. 
A  Match  In  the  Dark. 

BY  T.  W.  SPEIGHT. 
The  Mysterlee  of  Heron  Dyka. 
The  Golden  Hoop.  iBy  Devious  Ways. 

B.Y  R.  A.  STERN  DALE. 
The  Afghan  Knife. 

Bi  R.  LOUIS  STEVENSON. 
New  Arabian  Nights.   I  Prince  Otto. 

BY  BERTHA  THOMAS. 
Cresslda.  |     Proud  Malsla. 

The  VioMnPlayer. 

BY  W.  MOY  THOMAS. 
A  Fight  for  Life. 

BY  WALTER  THORNBURY. 
Talee  for  the  Marines. 
Old  Stories  Re-told. 

BY  T.  ADOLPHUS  TROLLOPS. 
Diamond  Cut  Diamond. 

BY  ANTHONY  TROLLOPE. 
The  Way  We  Live  Now. 
The  American  Senator. 
Frau  Frohmann.  |  Marion  Fay. 
Kept  in  the  Dark. 
Mr.  Scarberough'a  Family. 
The  Land-Leaguers.  I  John  Caldigate 
The  Golden  Lion  of  Granpere. 

By  F.   ELEANOR   TROLLOPE. 
Like  Shipe  upon  the  Sea. 
Anne  Furness.     I  Mabel's  Progress. 

BY  J.T.  TROWBRIDGE. 
Farnell's  Folly. 

BY  IVANTURGENIEFF,  &c. 
Stories  from  Foreign  Novelists. 

BY  MARK  TWAIN. 
Tom  Savyer.     |    A  Tramp  Abroad. 
The  Stolen  White  Elephant. 


Chbap  Popular  Novels,  continued'^ 

Mark  Twain,  continued. 
A  Pleasure  Trip  on  the  Continent 
Huckleberry  Finn.  [of  Europe. 

Life  on  the  Mississippi. 
The  Prince  and  the  Pauper. 

BY  C.  C.  FRASER-TYTLER. 
Mistress  Judith. 

BY  SARAH  TYTLER, 
What  She  Came  Through. 
The  Bride'e  Pass. 
Saint  MungQ'a  City. 
Beauty  and  the  Beast. 
Lady  Bell.     |   Noblesse  Oblige; 
CItoyenne  Jacqueline  |  Disappeared 
The  Huguenot  Family. 
Burled  Diamonds. 

BY  jf.  S.  WINTER. 
Cavalry  Life.  I  Regimental  Legends. 

BY  H.  F.  WOOD. 
The  Passenger  from  Scotland  Yard. 

BY  LADY  WOOD. 
Sablna. 

BY  EDMUND  YATES. 
The  Forlorn  Hope.  I  Land  at  Last. 

ANONYMOUS. 
Paul  Ferroll. 
Why  Paul  Ferroll  Killed  his  Wife. 

POPULAR  BHILLIHO  BOOKS. 
Jeff  Briggs's  Love  Story.    By  Brbt 

Harte.  [Ditto. 

The  Twins  of  Table  Mountain.  By 
A  Day's  Tour.  By  Percy  Fitzobrald. 
Mrs.  Gainsborough's  Diamonds.  By 

iULIAN  HaWTHORNB. 
'ream  and  a  Forgetting.  By  ditto. 

A  Romance  of  the  Queen's  Hounde. 
By  Charles  James. 

Kathleen    Mavoyrneen.     By    Mrs. 
Burnett. 

Lindsay's  Luck.    By  Mrs.  Burnett. 

Pretty  Polly  Pemberton.    By  Ditto. 

Trooping  with  Crows.  ByC.  L.  Pirkis 

The  Professor's  Wifs.  By  L.  Graham. 

A  Double  Bond.    Br  Linda  Villari. 

Esther's  Glove.  ByR.E.  Francillon. 

The  Garden  that   Paid  the  Rent 
By  Tom  Jerrold. 

Curly.     By  John  Coleman.     Illus- 
trated by  J.  C.  DoLt.MAN. 

Beyond  the  Gates.  By  B.  £ .  Phelps. 

Old  Maid's  Paradise.  By  E.  S.  Phelps. 

Burglars  in  Paradise.  ByE.S. Phelps. 

Jack  the  Fisherman.  BvE.S.Phelps. 

Doom:    An   Atlantic   Episode.      By 
Justin  H.  McCarthy,  M.P. 

Our  Sensation   Novel.     Edited  by 
lusTiN  H.  McCarthy,  M.P. 

Dolly..  By  Justin  H.  McCartmv,  M.P. 

That  Girl  In  Black.  By  Mrs.  Moles- 
worth. 

Bible  Characters.    By  Chas.  Rf.ade. 

TheOagonet  Reciter.  ByG. R.Sims. 

Wife  or  No  Wife  P  By  T.  W.  Speight. 

The  Silverado  Squattors.    By  K, 
Louis  Stevenson. 


-w 


^. 


J,   OQDEN  AND  CO.  LIMITED,  PRINTERS,  GREAT  SAFFRON  HILL|  B.C. 


Mrs. 


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