SEEDLINGS. 
29 
value of careful and continuous observation of the most common things ; and even 
those who do not accept his conclusions will not withhold their tribute of ad- 
miration for the steady conscientious work on which they were based, or for the 
Seedling of the Bloody Cranesbill. 
{Geranium san^uineum.) 
Seedling of Good King Henry. 
{Chenopodi u m Bon us- Henrictts . ) 
temperate manner in which they were stated — characteristics which are too often 
conspicuously lacking in those who claim to popularise the great naturalist’s 
views. 
Seedling of Wallflower. 
Seedling of Fennel, 
Sir John Lubbock ranks high among those disciples of Darwin who had the 
advantage of intimate personal relations with the great man, and who have con- 
scientiously followed him in the laborious accumulation of facts and observations. 
