APES AND MONKEYS. 



307 



trembling and shuddering, to the fate which overtook him a moment 

 later. 



It must be admitted that no mammal of any other order, not 

 even the dog, who has associated with us, and been educated, and, 



Big 4b -Macaque oi J^oiinet monkey (ilacaem umcus) and bnake 



Strictly speaking, formed by us for thousands of years, acts in the 

 manner described, or exhibits such a high degree of intelligence. 

 And yet a wide gulf lies between the dog-like monkeys and the 

 anthropoid apes, of which I have said that they rise even above the 

 average of monkeyhood. 



