20 MAMMALIAN DESCENT. [Lect. I. 



but ' your young men, sliall see visions.' " Now, if one of 

 tlie bright young soldiers in our rapidly increasing army 

 were permitted to see the wdiole web (woof and warp) of 

 organic life, he would every^vdiere see glimpses of the 

 human face di^dne ; the features of the latest creature 

 would be traceable in the face of the earliest. 



Yet these types and foreshadowings of the great 

 Keasoner, to be developed in the parturient fulness of 

 time, only reached their own little Pisgahs ; they looked 

 over towards the human territory, but they entered not 

 in. As for the direct ancestors of man, time has buried 

 them, and no man knoweth of their sepulchre to 

 this day. 



ADDENDUM TO LECTURE I. 



That Avhicli is biological in the foregoing Lecture will be con- 

 sidered and treated of from time to time in the succeedmg Lectures, 

 and also in the Addenda attached to them. But there is one thing 

 that may be brought in here, namely, the conceptions that the 

 Ancients held with regard to the Origin of the Universe, and esiDecially 

 of living creatures. Amongst these the Jewish Bards stand first, far 

 in front, indeed, and moreover their poems have been Avorthily ren- 

 dered into what Swinburne truly calls " Divine English." 



I am, of course, well aware that Moses, and Job, and Daviil Avere 

 not the only great and wise and good men who in ancient times sang 

 — " How the Earth rose out of Chaos." 



Whilst composing these Lectures, a friend kindly put into my liands 

 two invaluable works that have yielded me great pleasure and profit. 

 The first of these is A Manual of Buddldsm,^ by R. Spence Hardy; 



^ 2nd edition. London : Williams & Norgate. ISSO. 



