APPENDIX. 



The following are the passages omitted firom tlie text, to whicli allusion is 

 made in the Editor's preface, p. xii : — 

 P. 122, line 16 from top :— 



" When Su' Walter Scott, in some of his novels, describes some Highland 

 robber, distinguished by a disproportionate length of his arms reaching 

 down to the knee, which enabled him better to handle his sword, he praises 

 the ape type in man, just as the pious painter of the Byzantine school and 

 our present Nazarenes act in depicting their Saviours and Madonnas, with 

 their courts of saints, with long narrow ape-hands and feet, and orang-utan 

 pelves, which warrant the immaculate conception, since no human head 

 could pass through." 



P. 147, line 6 from top : — 



" Herr Bischoff proceeds further : the Esquimaux, Botocudos, New Zea- 

 landers, etc., whose appearance is certainly in many respects not superior 

 to that of animals, have been appealed to ; or instances have been cited of 

 so-called wild men, who, lost in the forest in early youth, have grown up 

 amongst the brutes, and became so degenerate, that on being found they 

 exhibited scarcely any trace of a higher self-consciousness. Perhaps Herr 

 Bischoff only calls those men who attend his lectures at Munich, or have 

 implicit faith in the transformation of urea." 

 P. 165, line 4 from bottom : — 



" Properly speaking, my human character is here gone to the devil ! No 

 operculum, — no covered transition convolution ! To the devil with that 

 devil's ape !* But we see how nature indicates here that the devil stands 

 nearest to man ! It is remarkable enough that the Capuchin stands by the 

 side of the devil. In the Capuchin ape, the superior transition convolution 

 is absent ; the second is superficial in its whole extent, — the operculum 

 almost null. 



" Tables are frequently useful. I present, therefore, a synopsis of that ex- 

 cellent character of man, — the operculum and the convolutions : — 



Part of Brain. 



Man. 



Devil's Ape. 



Capuchin Ape. 



Orang. 



Chimpan- 

 zee. 



Posterior lobe 



Operculum 



Superior transition 



convolutions . . . 

 Second transition 



convolution 



Small. 

 Absent. 



Superficial 



Superficial 



Moderate. 

 Absent. 



Superficial 



Superficial 



Very short. 

 Almost absent 



Absent. 



Superficial. 



Moderate. 

 Imperfect. 



Superficial 



Covered. 



Large. 

 Perfect. 



Absent. 



Covered. 



" Receipt resulting from this Table : — Melt the Devil, and the Capuchin in 

 ape-shape, together, and you have the Man ! Nature seems to be very 

 sarcastic I" 



* The monkey in question is best known as the Marimonda (Ateles Belze- 

 huth). Englishmen apply the name " devil-monkey" to the Cxin.o (Pithecia 

 Satanas) . — Editob. 



