402 NINETEENTH CENTURY. pt. hi. 



form, until lastly the bird would take on its own peculiar 

 shape, and the ox would go on alone, having passed through 

 the same stages as the fish, the reptile, and the bird, before 

 it began to shape itself like a mammal. You must notice 

 carefully that this does not mean that the beginning of an 

 ox is at any time like a full-grown fish, which is a mistake 

 that people often make ; but only that there is a time when 

 the embryos of these animals follow exactly the same plan. 



You will see, if you consider for a moment, that the dis- 

 covery of this curious fact gave naturalists a new and much 

 m ore perfect w aZ- q£^ -cl assify ing._animals ; for they could 

 actually read the history of an animal by watching it in the 

 earlier stages of its ffl owth, and seeing at what point it 

 Igranched off and put on special peculiarities of its own ; and 

 in some of the lower "aRdTYiore obscure animals several mis- 

 takes of classification were corrected by this means. There 

 was also another very important question settled by Von 

 Baer's law. It proved that St.-Hilaire was certainly right in 

 saying that animals are formed on one plan, having special 

 parts altered to suit their wants, for here in the embryo those 

 parts can be seen actually developing differently in different 

 animals out of the same beginnings. The study of em- 

 bryology has been carried to great perfection since Von Baer 

 published his * History of the Development of Animals ' in 

 1828; but though many names are better known than his in 

 connection with it, still it should always be remembered that 

 he was the discoverer of the law of embryological-develop- 

 ment. ~ ~~~ 



Chief Works consulted. — Goethe's 'CEuvres Scientifiques,' Faivre, 

 1862 J Asa Gray's 'Botany,' 1858; L. Agassiz's ' Centenary Address 

 on A. von Humboldt,' 1869; HamTx>ldt's 'Cosmos;' 'Biog. Univer- 



