4 22 



EVOLUTION, OLD AND NEW. 



Mainspring, the true, of our exist- 

 ence lies not in these muscles, 

 &c., 32 



Man, the designer of man, 30 



and horse, skeleton of the, 



88, 89 



and the ape, 90 



and the lower animals, Buffon 



on, 107, 108 



Lamarck on, 311, &c. 



Manner, the, is the man himself, 77 



"but this is Mr. Darwin's", 



378 



Manufacture, the, of tools and of 

 organs, two species of the same 

 genus, 39 



Margin, there is a margin in every 

 organic structure, &c., 49, 50 



on the margin of the self- 

 evident the greatest purchase 

 is obtainable, 197 



Market, the higgling and haggling 

 of the, 50 



Martins, M., his life of Lamarck, 

 235, &c. 



Matter less important than the 

 manner, 77 



and mind, inseparable, 371 



Matthew, Mr. Patrick, his work on 

 naval timber and arbori- 

 culture, 64, 65 



extracts from, 315, &c. 



Mr. C. Darwin on, 315 



on animals and plants under 



domestication, 824 



on will as influencing organ- 

 ism, 320, 321, 322 



on the struggle for existence 



with survival of the fittest, 

 320, 322 



and natural selection, 323 



on instinct and memory, and 



on the continued personality 

 of parents in offspring, 321, 

 322, 323 



Means, C. Darwin's dangerous use 

 of this word, 345 



one sine qua non for a thing 



is as much a means of that 

 thing's coming about as any- 

 thing else is, 349 



Mechanism of animals, Paley on 

 the, 14 



Mechanism of animals, evidence ot 

 design in any ordinary, 15 



Memory, and life and heredity, 

 37, 38, 39, 56, 67, 198-203, 

 332, 380, 381 



Professor Hering on, 198-200 



Patrick Matthew on, 322 



Meteoric, both want and power 

 are, 44, 45 



Meninges, Buffon on the, 132 



Microcosm, each organism a history 

 of the universe from its own 

 point of view, 31 



Microscopc,illustration from succes- 

 sive improvements in the, 46, 47 



Mind, "the least inadequate and 

 misleading symbol," for the 

 power that has designed 

 organism, 3, 371 



and body, Lamarck on, 338, 



339, 341 



and matter inseparable, 371 



Misfortune, take advantage of, 51 



Misrepresentation, "great is the 

 power of steady," 251 



Missionaries should avoid trying to 

 effect sudden modifications, 183 



Mistake, the power to make, rated 

 highly, 29 



importance of, depends on 



magnitude rather than on 

 the direction, 50 



Mivart, Professor, says that, " Mind 

 is the least adequate and mis- 

 leading symbol," &c., 3, 371 



referred to, 22, 66, 67 



admits that his objection does 



not tell against the Lamarck - 

 ian theory of evolution, 343 



points out that the admission 



of a principle underlying 

 variations is fatal to C. 

 Darwin's theory concerning 

 natural selection, 313 



on G. Darwin's "haphazard, 



indefinite variations," 343 



how Professor Huxley pointed 



out to him the objection to 

 C. Darwin's theory concern- 

 ing natural selection, 344 



asks what is natural selection ? 



and declares it to be repu- 

 diated by its propounder,369 



