WHAT IS AFFINITY? 5 



The science of language, with its great results, dis- 

 plays the most important side of human nature — mrm 

 in the elevation which he has gradually acquired above 

 the rest of the living world — but it displays this side 

 alone. Although the founders of linguistic inquiry, oi 

 whom we have already spoken, had already represented 

 man as first acquiring reason and becoming man, by 

 means of language proceeding from primitive rudi- 

 ments, they were, nevertheless, satisfied to assume the 

 privileged position of man as an absolute endowment, 

 or a self-evident axiom. This continued as long as 

 natural science was limited to a merely superficial clas- 

 sification of organisms. 



Man, as consisting of fiesh and blood, seemed, indeed, 

 akin to the higher animals; but so long as their descent, 

 their actual consanguinity was not discussed, so long as 

 nothing was demanded beyond their juxtaposition, ac- 

 cording to the analogy of their characteristics, without 

 any scrutiny of the deeper causes of their divergence 

 or similarity, man indisputably occupied the highest 

 grade in the system of living beings. Linnaeus places 

 man in the order of Primates, together with bats, le- 

 murs, and apes, without, on that account, being accused 

 from pulpit and from chair of an assault on the dignity 

 of mankind. BufTon, likewise, was able, unrebuked, to 

 indulge his whim, by specially discussing our race in 

 his description of the ass. 



Only when, quite recently, the world became aware 

 that the word " afiinity," hitherto uttered with supreme 

 indifference, was henceforth to be taken seriously and 

 literally, since that which is akin is also the fruit of one 

 and the same tree, a beam of joyful recognition thrilled 



