306 
XXIII As to the direct, not to say rough, ^ 
™«~fc^ w 4w7e.r"t?s 
will be no question. Sa p oom |elled ” so dire a result. 
traces of the progress w 1 jjuld be remembered, is 
Mr Darwin s of S P ««. *" a » 
sfsv a. v«~ 
to Christianity a T^yolutlOn >9 j a doctrine, he J . , 1 
in “Evolution older and honoured chiefs m natural 
“ Sl^Sinevery form” (vol. h p. 2) 5 
and who are exposed, before, to the suspicion (u. 38b) 
° f Swriwlat ZtaZfor granted as the indispensable 
baSo7his doctrine, the «! ^ of^man. ^Some 
theologians (§xiv^ have^ o^ted ,” thoug h allowable for a 
remark that taki g & , Lmmen tative process. It is 
time is not neceS f n a " 1 [ o a 4°"^ d elusiVe influence of those inex- 
singularly open, too > *° , f effone a ges, in which theorists 
haustible ignota sweula, the foregone g , He 
find so secure a refuge from the pursuit 01 S ot}ier 
then relies on a second ^Xfme^ng form 7 His 
species is descended from Xonls worfhy of note, 
method in venturing on is Lyell are quoted for the 
Professor Huxley and Sir Charles nyeu a tte 
statement that in the ‘ ^^^rarter, from ’ the hfgher apes 
bodily conformation “mau J or der rf 
to. 's ‘ to’r . »» »« * ^ 
=r?. t J« to 
mates have been fou conclusion would be, “ there- 
& ^Slftv^SSSJ^SA 
him. If he ha 1 > d S p ec i me ns such as his argu- 
could assure him that they P desired conclusion 
ment needs, so that he could permanently 
that some higher visible org Christian Philosophy 
develop from the lower, still might ^ „ onto f the 
ground ’Mvas wery « belslof the field ” (and we know not all 
