156 



DEATH. 



action of these ministers of death. Their species, rapidly growing 

 rarer and rarer, are the memorials, the evidences of an anterior stage 

 of the globe in which the inferior life swarmed, while nature laboured 

 to purge the excessive fecundity. 



We can retrace in thought the scale of the successive necessities 

 of destruction which the earth was thus constrained to undergo. 



Against the irrespirable air which at first enveloped it, vegetables 

 were its saviours. Against the suffocating and terrific density of 

 these lower vegetable forms, the rough coating which encrusted it, 

 the nibblinof, gnawing insect, which we have since execrated, was the 

 sanitary agent. Against the insect, the frog, and the reptile mass, 

 the venomous reptile proved an useful expurgator. Finally, when 

 the higher life, the winged life, took its flight, earth found a barrier 

 against the too rapid transpoi"ts of her young fecundity in the power- 

 ful voracious birds, eagles, falcons, or vultures. 



But these useful destroyers have diminished in numbers as they 

 have become less necessary. The swarms of small creeping animals 

 on which the viper principally whetted his teeth having wonderfully 

 thinned, the viper also grows rare. The world of winged game being 

 cleared in its turn, either by man's depredations or by the disappear- 

 ance of certain insects on which the small birds lived, you see that 



?fe*^?^f>^^ 



the odious tyrants of the air are also decreasing; the eagle is seldom 

 met with, even among the Alps, and the exaggerated and enor- 



