48 All the Articles of the Ddrwin Faith. 



nism to those real philosophers, by whose comprehensive 

 grasp and penetrating insight that order has been so far 

 disclosed." 



And, another, 



4< It must not be supposed that there is much unity among 

 these " philosophers." But in this they all agree, they all 

 argue a posteriori, and they are all infallible." 



"LOOK ON THIS PICTURE" 

 WORDS OF THE WISE. 



TJiere is a path which no fowl 

 knoweth, and which the vulture's 

 eye hath mt seen. 



The lion's whelps have not 

 trodden it, nor the tierce lion 

 passed it. 



He putteth forth His hand upon 

 the rock; He overturaeth the 

 mountains by the roots. 



He cutteth out rivers among 

 the rocks; and His eye teeth 

 every precious thing. 



He bindeth the floods from 

 overflowing; and the thing that 

 is hid briugeth He forth to light. 



But where shall wisdom be 

 found ? and where is the place of 

 understanding ? 



Man knoweth not the price 

 thereof ; neither is it found in the 

 land of the living. 



" It cannot be valued with the 

 gold of Ophir. with the precious 

 onyx, or the sapphire." 



"AND ON THAT" 



WORDS OF THE WISEACRE. 



" What little I know about the 

 matter leads me to think that if M 

 Comte, had possessed the slight- 

 est acquaintance with biological 

 science, ( Philo>oplu'rs disagree, it 

 seems) tie would have turned his 

 phraseology upside, dotrn, and 

 have fouud that tve can hare no 

 liiunck'dye of the great laws of 

 life, except that which is based 

 iipun the study of natural living 

 beings." (Huxley ! ! I) 



" If there is one thing clear " 

 (clear ! ) about the progress of 

 modern science.it is the tendency 

 to reduce all scientitic problems 

 except thnse *vbich are purely 

 intellectual to questions ot 

 molecular physics, that is to say 

 to the attractions, repulsions, 

 motions, and coordination of the 

 alterna'e particles of matter. So- 

 cial plicenomena are the result of 

 the interaction of the complements 

 of society.or men withone another 

 in the surrounding universe. But 

 in the language of physical science, 



