How much woariiipKR has there been m the hnman race dnrinf; the 

 last fifty years, because the huuian race cannot stop imlitically where it 

 was, and, finding no rest, is iiushed to a strange future that tire wisest 

 look forward to gravely, as certainly very dark, and probably very danger- 

 ous ! Meanwhile have the bees suffered any political uneasiness ? have 

 they doubted the use of royalty, or begrudged the cost of their Queen ? 

 Have those mdnstrious repuldicans, the ants, gone about uneasily seeking 

 after a sovereign ? Has the eagle grown weary of his isolation, and 

 sought strength in the practice of socialism ? Has the dog become too 

 enlightened to endure any longer his position as man's humble friend, 

 and contemplated a canine union for mutual protection against masters ? 

 No ! the great principles of these existences are superior to change ; and 

 that which man is perpetually seeking, a political order in perfect 

 harmony with his condition, the brute has inherited with his mstincts. 



P. G. Hamerton, Chapters on Animals. 



Presumption is our natural and original disease. Man withdraws and 

 separates himself fi'oni the crowd of other creatures ; cuts out the shares 

 of the animals, his fellows and companions ; and distributes to them 

 portions of faculties and force, as himself thinks fit. How does he know, 

 by the strength of his understanding, the secret and internal motions of 

 animals ? — Montaigne. 



