INDEX. 



3?S 



Man, many Mmoebas, 130 



Manner, this was not Mr. Dar- 

 win's, 64 



Martins, C, on Lamarck, 276 



Materialism, and spiritualism, 154 



Matter, and modes of motion, 309, 

 &c, 



Matthew, P., on natural selection, 

 90,91 



Meanness, I know not whether 

 most to wonder at C. Darwin's, 

 or the greatness of his services, 

 242 



Mechanism, the more they reduced 

 the body to, 150 



to the level of unerring, 156 



Mendelejefi's law, 309 



Mental growth, correlation of, 289 



Mind and body, interaction of, 80 



the more a thing knows its 



own, &o., 167 



manifested through form, 302 



— - elementary in stone, 306 



feeling no part of, 307 



Minimis, de, &c., 28 

 Miracle, none can say exactly where 

 it must cease, 32 



a, in respect of only two or 



three per cent,, 74 



death as great a, as life, 77 



Miraculous, change, essentially, 28 



the lawful home of the, 28 



the, writ large, &o., kills, 29 



all fusion and diffusion, 30 



~ all change is, 76 



Mirrors, life and death as reflec- 

 tions in two, 169, 17s 

 Mistletoe, C. Darwin's figure of 



straw re the, 198 

 Mivart, ProfessorSt. 6., his "Gene- 

 sis of Species," s, 9 



reviewed my books in the 



Americmi Catholic Quarterly, 37 



" what is a living being ?" 133 



" what is a thing t " 172 



and C. Darwin, 293 



Modification, begins at home, 127 

 Modus Vivendi, all living forms 



establish a, &c., 74 

 Money and food, 129 



gives new lease of, life, 167 



sensible people alone hold, 290 



Monistic conception of the universe, 



we all desire, 151 

 Moral, a, uniformity, 82 

 Moseley, Prof essor, on "individual, " 



172 



Motion, most essential character- 

 istic of a stone, 305 



modes of, and matter, 309 



Moulders, mould themselves, 127 

 Mutilation, rule, re inherited, 275 

 "My," C. Darwin's categorical, 



223, 236 

 My's smitten with homing instinct, 

 238 



Kaive, this is very, 200 

 Nails, that want cutting, 131, 171 

 Natural selection, the early evolu- 

 tionists taught this, 90-92 



Patrick Matthew on, 90-92 



a misleading expression, 92 



■ two theories of, 67, 93, 180, 



214, 227, 228, 241, 24s, 254, 25s 



the preservation of lucky 



races, 85 



the original title of the "Origin 



of Species," 87 

 the biggest biological boom, 



71 , 



as applied to machines, 94, 



9S 



representing a power, 99-101 



intently watching, &c., 100 



Duke of Argyll on, 163, 165 



C. Darwin's, explained by his 



attitude towards descent, 191 



as in last paragraph of the 



"Origin of Species," 180 



treated as identical with de- 

 scent, 209, &c., 214, &c., 228, 229, 

 232 



not a theory, but a fact, 218 



and ordinary generation, 221, 



222 

 Allen, G.'s, record re, 253 



no distinctive feature of C. 



Darwin, 255 



"Neanderthal Skull," review, 266 

 Newlands' law, 309 

 Nexus, it was not in the, 41 

 Non-readers, many of my, 32 

 Norwich, Bathybius, died at, 147 

 Nutrition and reproduction, 142 



Opinion, divided, and form, 303 

 Organic wealth, and thrift, 73 



wealth not figurative, 128 



Organism and surroundings run 



into one another, 106 

 in account with universe, 122 



