ORDERLY DEVELOPMENT. 51 



There are no breaks or lines of demarcation 

 between the various sections of either 

 plants or animals, not even marking oft 

 man from the rest of the animal world. 22 



22 " By what other means than by the operation of 

 natural ' laws ' can we think of the Infinite Power, extend 

 ing through all extent as the fountain of all being } as acting ?" 



DALLINGERj p. 39. 



" He who is not content to lookj like a savage, at the 

 phenomena of nature as disconnected^ cannot any longer 

 believe that man is the work of a separate act of creation." 

 DARWIN, p. 927. 



" The time will before long come when it will be thought 

 wonderful that naturalists, who were well acquainted 

 with the comparative structure and development of man 

 and other animals 3 should have believed that each was 

 the work of a separate act of creation." DARWIN, pj 371 



