4 D. F. Weinland on Animal Psychology. 
forest of the tropics. I will not dwell upon the intermedi: 
degrees of psychical organization as exhibited in birds and the 
lower mammalia, but consider next the monkey. How mi 
at once the organization for sympathetic motions. The fron 
legs—in the lizard mere locomotory organs—are in the monkey — 
oot, 
play of the muscles of the face, with the eyelids, with the tongue, _ 
with sounds, etc., the monkey shows to his fellow creatures wh 
it likes and what it hates, what it wants and what it think 
Finally let us consider man. The natural position of th 
monkey is on four legs; in consequence, his head is naturall 
half bent downwards, thus confining the horizon of his eyes, 
but to the outer world genera ly. Whatever our civilization | 
_ performed, has been done by improving these natural pyschic 
