en. x.] NATUEAL SELECTION. 19 



powerful of these would find manifest advantage in crouching 

 amid dense foliage and springing down upon unwary victims 

 passing below. The larger and more powerful individuals 

 would more frequently roam about the open country, attack 

 ing the larger ruminants and giving chase to the nimbi ei 

 ones, and would thus increase in strength and fleetness. 

 And thus there would be initiated such differences 01 size 

 and habit as characterize the leopard and the lion. 



It must be borne in mind that this is a purely hypothe 

 tical illustration, which does not pretend to give a complete 

 account of the complex process. I have no idea that the 

 differentiation between antelopes and buffaloes, or between 

 lions and leopards, was accomplished in any such straight 

 forward way as this. But while unduly simplifying the 

 case, the illustration is undoubtedly sound in principle. No 

 doubt the lion is so strong and so swifb because only the 

 strongest and swiftest lions have been able to prey at once 

 upon buffaloes and upon antelopes. No doubt the antelope 

 is so swift and so timid because only the swiftest and most 

 quickly-frightened antelopes have been enabled to get away 

 from the lion, and to propagate their kind. And no doubt in 

 the process above described, we get a partial glimpse of some 

 of the essential incidents in the past careers of these races. 



All the foregoing illustrations unite in enforcing: the con- 



O O ^ 



elusion that the direct and indirect effects of natural selection 

 are by no means limited to slight or superficial changes in 

 organisms. The student of physiology well knows that no 

 change, however seemingly trivial, which ensures the sur 

 vival of the organism in its fierce struggle for existence, can 

 fail in the long run to entail so many other changes as to 

 modify, more or less perceptibly, the entire structure. Even 

 such a slight change as an increased thickness of the woolly 

 coat of a mammal may, by altering the excretory power ot 

 the skin, affect the functions of the lungs, liver, and kidneys, 

 and thus indirectly increase or diminish the size of the 



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