164 MORAL SENSE IN MAN. 



larly regarded as non-criminal classes, higher and lower, 

 among civilised nations. 



7. Eunuchs, as illustrating certain peculiarities of corre- 

 lated physical malformation and mental degeneration. 



' 8. The second childhood of old age, even in the midst of 

 the highest civilisation. 



We have first, then, to consider the moral condition of 

 such savage or primitive races as the following : 



I. African. 



1. East tropical or subtropical 



a. Johanna men, Mpongwe (Burton), and other 



negroes. 

 6. Dokos of Abyssinia (Biichner). 



2. West tropical or subtropical. 



c. Natives of Dahomey (Ellis). 



d. Natives of Angola (Monteiro). 



e. Suahali tribe of Sierra Leone (Krap, Yidal) . 

 /. Negroes of the Soudan (Biichner). 



3. Central tropical or subtropical. 



g. Bari, Nuehr, Latooka, and other tribes of the 

 White Nile and Albert Nyanza districts (Baker). 



4. Southern. 



h. Bosjesmans and Kafirs (Wood, Andersson). 



II. Asiatic. 



a. The ' wild men of the woods,' the jungle Veddas 



(or Weddahs) of Ceylon (Hartshorne). 

 6. The ' wild men of the woods,' the apelike tribes, 



the Samangs or Jacoons of the Malay Peninsula 



(Bradley), 

 c. The Andaman Islanders or Mincopies (Biichner, 



Owen). 



III. American. 



1. North. 



a. Mexican, Apache, and other Indians (Biichner). 



2. South. 



b. The * men of the woods/ or Botokudos, of Brazil 



(Biichner) . 



IV. Australasian. 



a. The aborigines or ' blacks' of Australia (Biichner). 



