278 
Mirrors, life and death as reflec- 
tions in two, 149, 154 
Mistletoe, C. Darwin’s figure of 
* straw ve the, 172 
Misunderstanding, people can 
remove if they chose, 236, 237 
Mivart, Professor St. G., his 
“* Genesis of Species,’’ 16, 19 
reviewed my books in the 
American Catholic Quarterly, 43 
‘What are living beings ?’”’ 
121, 152 
and C. Darwin, 248 
Modification, begins at home, 117 
Modus vivendi, all living forms 
established a, &c., 72 
Money and food, 118 
—gives new lease of life, 147 
— sensible people alone hold, 
246 
Monistic conception of the uni- 
verse, we all desire, 135 
Moral, a, uniformity, 78 
Moseley, Professor, on “‘individ- 
ual,” 152 
Motion, most essential character- 
istic of a stone, 258 
modes of, and matter, 260 
Moulders, mould themselves, 117 
Mused forth asa general gnome, 
63 
Mutilation, rule, ve inherited, 233 
“My,” C. Darwin’s categorical, 
192, 203 
“My’s”’ smitten with homing in- 
stinct, 204 
Nalts, that want cutting,120,151 
Naive, this is very, 174 
Natural selection, the early 
evolutionists taught this, 85- 
87 
Patrick Matthew on, 85-87 
——a misleading expression, 87 
two theories of, 66, 88, 159, 
185,195,196, 206, 210, 217, 218 
. the preservation of lucky 
races, 82 
Luck, or Cunning? 
Natural selection, the original 
title of the ‘Origin of 
Species,’’ 83 
the biggest biological boom, 
70 
——as applied to machines, 89, 
90 
representing a power, 93, 94 
intently watching, &c., 93 
Duke of Argyll on, 144, 146 
——C. Darwin’s, explained by 
his attitude towards descent, 
167 
as in last paragraph of 
the “‘ Origin of Species,” 158, 
159 
treated as identical with 
descent, 180, &c., 185, &c., 196, 
197: 199 
not a theory, but a fact, 188 
and ordinary generation, 
1QI 
Allen,G.’s, record ve, 216,217 
——no distinctive feature of C. 
Darwin, 218 
“Neanderthal Skull,” review, 
226 
Newlands’ law, 260 
New life, new conditions, 232 
Nexus, it was not in the, 46 
Non-readers, many of my, 38 
Norwich, Bathybius, died at, 132, 
133 
Nutrition and reproduction, 128 
Opinion, divided, and form, 255 
Oratorio, almost any one can 
compose an, 244 
Organic wealth, and thrift, 71 
wealth not figurative, 117 
and inorganic, une ligne de 
démarcation nette, &c., 150 
Organism and surroundings run 
into one another, 98 
in account with universe, 
113 
more important than en- 
vironment, 115 
