It
is
interesting
to
contemplate
an | an 1859 1860 1861 1866 | | a 1869 1872 |
entangled | entangled 1859 1860 1861 1866 | | tangled 1869 1872 |
bank,
clothed
with
many
plants
of
many
kinds,
with
birds
singing
on
the
bushes,
with
various
insects
flitting
about,
and
with
worms
crawling
through
the
damp
earth,
and
to
reflect
that
these
elaborately
constructed
forms,
so
different
from
each
other,
and
dependent
on | on 1859 1860 1861 1866 1869 | | upon 1872 |
each
other
in
so
complex
a
manner,
have
all
been
produced
by
laws
acting
around
us.
These
laws,
taken
in
the
largest
sense,
being
Growth
with
Reproduction;
Inheritrnce | Inheritrnce 1860 | | Inheritance 1859 1861 1866 1869 1872 |
which
is
almost
implied
by
reproduction;
Variability | Variability 1859 1860 1861 1869 1872 | | variability 1866 |
from
the
indirect
and
direct
action
of
the
external | external 1860 1861 1866 | | external con- 1859 | external 1869 1872 |
conditions | conditions 1860 1861 1866 1869 1872 | | ditions 1859 |
of
life,
and
from
use
and
disuse; | disuse; 1859 1860 1861 1866 1869 | | disuse: 1872 |
a
Ratio
of
Increase
so
high
as
to
lead
to
a
Struggle
for
Life,
and
as
a
consequence
to
Natural
Selection,
entailing
Divergence
of
Character
and
the
Extinction
of
less-improved
forms.
Thus,
from
the
war
of
nature,
from
famine
and
death,
the
most
exalted
object
which
we
are
capable
of
conceiving,
namely,
the
production
of
the
higher
animals,
directly
follows.
There
is
grandeur
in
this
view
of
life,
with
its
several
powers,
having
been
originally
breathed
by the Creator into | by the Creator into 1860 1861 1866 1869 1872 |
| into 1859 |
a
few
forms
or
into
one;
and
that,
whilst
this
planet
has
gone
cycling
on
according
to
the
fixed
law
of
gravity,
from
so
simple
a
beginning
endless
forms
most
beautiful
and
most
wonderful
have
been,
and
are
being,
evolved.
|