54 
belief that all animals and plants N *“- 
prototype. But analogy may be a deceitful g^ d e- ^verthe 
less all living things have much m common— m their chemical 
composition, their cehular structure, their laws of growth, and 
their liability to injurious influences. We see this even in so 
trifhnga circumstance as that the same poison oftensimilariy 
affect? plants and animals ; or that the ^ 
p*all-flv -produces monstrous growtlis on the wi 
free In ah organic beings the union of a male and female 
elemental ceh seems occasionally to be 
Ss zSilr t» *1 j»sd“ “3 
■•it 3T»; *», 
descended from a single parent. mj , t 
Mr. Darwin, therefore, with every G f sneciesV 
our faith in a Creator is sought to be unsettled-P Methods and 
follows in the same manner m ms paper “ On the ^noas 
Results of Ethnology,” in the 
says^“°Mve- Seths' 1 of ‘the^public are taught this Adamitic 
