1890 LETTEE ON WEISMANN'S THEOEY 267 



P.S. — If possible, I should much like to attend 

 the funeral. Can you let me hear as to this ? 



To Professor Poulton. 



18 Cornwall Terrace, Eegent's Park, N.W. : January 27, 1890. 



My dear Poulton, — Many thanks for your letter, 

 with its very clear and cogent reasoning. But I am 

 not sure that the latter does not hit Weismann 

 harder than it hits me. For the cases you have in 

 view are those where very recently acquired charac- 

 ters are concerned; and where, therefore, according 

 to my views, ' the force of heredity ' is weak and thus 

 quickly ' worn out.' In such cases (as I say in the 

 last passages of enclosed, which I return for you to 

 hand me on Friday) ' cessation will (quickly) ensure 

 the reduction of an unused organ below fifty per cent, 

 of its original size, and so on down to zero ; but this 

 it does because it is now assisted by another and 

 co-operating principle — viz. the eventual failure of 

 heredity.' 



Now, it is just this co-operating principle that 

 Weismann is debarred from recognising by his dogma 

 about ' stability of germ-plasm.' And it is a principle 

 that must act the more energetically (i.e. L quickly ') 

 the shorter the time since the now degenerating organ 

 was originally acquired. In the 'Nature' articles I 

 was speaking of ' rudimentary organs ' which in 

 Darwin's sense are very old heirlooms. All this to 

 make you reconsider whether there is any disagree- 

 ment between us upon this point. 



