Authors
of
the
highest
eminence
seem
to
be
fully
satisfied
with
the
view
that
each
species
has
been
independently
created.
To
my
mind
it
accords
better
with
what
we
know
of
the
laws
impressed
on
matter
by
the
Creator,
that
the
production
and
extinction
of
the
past
and
present
inhabitants
of
the
world
should
have
been
due
to
secondary
causes,
like
those
determining
the
birth
and
death
of
the
individual.
When
I
view
all
beings
not
as
special
creations,
but
as
the
lineal
descendants
of
some
few
beings
which
lived
long
before
the
first
bed
of
the
Silurian | Silurian 1859 1860 1861 1866 1869 | | Cambrian 1872 |
system
was
deposited,
they
seem
to
me
to
become
ennobled.
Judging
from
the
past,
we
may
safely
infer
that
not
one
living
species
will
transmit
its
unaltered
likeness
to
a
distant
futurity.
And
of
the
species
now
living
very
few
will
transmit
progeny
of
any
kind
to
a
far
distant
futurity;
for
the
manner
in
which
all
organic
beings
are
grouped,
shows
that
the
greater
number
of
species
of | of 1859 1860 1861 1866 | | in 1869 1872 |
each
genus,
and
all
the
species
of | of 1859 1860 1861 1866 | | in 1869 1872 |
many
genera,
have
left
no
descendants,
but
have
become
utterly
extinct.
We
can
so
far
take
a
prophetic
glance
into
futurity
as
to
foretel | foretel 1859 1860 | | foretell 1861 1866 1869 1872 |
that
it
will
be
the
common
and
widely-spread
species,
belonging
to
the
larger
and
dominant
groups, | groups, 1859 1860 | | groups 1861 1866 1869 1872 |
which | which 1859 1860 |
| within each class, which 1861 1866 1869 1872 |
will
ultimately
prevail
and
procreate
new
and
dominant
species.
As
all
the
living
forms
of
life
are
the
lineal
descendants
of
those
which
lived
long
before
the
Silurian | Silurian 1859 1860 1861 1866 1869 | | Cambrian 1872 |
epoch,
we
may
feel
certain
that
the
ordinary
succession
by
generation
has
never
once
been
broken,
and
that
no
cataclysm
has
desolated
the
whole
world.
Hence
we
may
look
with
some
confidence
to
a
secure
future
of
equally inappreciable | equally inappreciable 1859 1860 1861 1866 1869 | | great 1872 |
length.
And
as
natural
selection
works
|