CONCLUSIONS. 213 



(403.) The inhabitants of New Hollancl, like its animals, 

 are the most grotOvsque and uncouth of all races, (433.) 



452. The same parallelism holds good elsewhere, though 

 not always in so remarkable a degree. In America, espe- 

 cially, while the aboriginal race is as well distinguished from 

 other races as is its flora, the minor divisions arc not so 

 decided. Indeed, the facilities, or we might sometimes 

 rather say necessities, arising from the varied supplies of 

 animal and vegetable food in the several regions, might be 

 expected to involve, with his corresponding customs and 

 modes of life, a difference in the physical constitution of 

 man, which would contribute to augment any primeval dif- 

 ferences. It could not indeed be expected, that a people 

 constantly subjected to cold, like the people of the North, 

 and living almost exclusively on fish, which is not to bo 

 obtained without great toil and peril, should present the same 

 characteristics, either bodily or mental, as those who idly 

 I3gale on the spontaneous bounties of tropical vegetat'on. 



