INTERNAL ANATOMY OF INSECTS. 83 
they might do as well without sight, hearing, smell, touch, 
&c. but having these senses and their organs, it seems to 
me a necessary consequence, that they must have a suf- 
ficient degree of intellect, memory, and judgement, to en- 
able them advantageously to employ them. 
There is this difference between intellect in man, and 
the rest of the animal creation. Their intellect teaches 
them to follow the lead of their senses, and make such 
use of the external world as their appetites or instincts 
incline them,.to,—and this zs their wisdom ; while the in- 
tellect of man, being associated with an immortal princi- 
ple, and being in connexion with a world above that 
which his senses reveal to him, can, by aid derived from 
heaven, control those senses, and bring under his instinc- 
tive appetites, so as to render them obedient to the ro jye- 
povixov, OF governing power of his nature: AND THIS Is 
HIS WISDOM. 
I am, &c. 
VOL. IV. D 
