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n the liberty of referring to the story as familiar to ourselves. {48} The first edition of the Fair Haven was published April 1873. {68} The first edition of Life and Habit was published in December, 1877. {96} See page 228 of this book, "Remarks on Mr. Romanes' 'Mental Evolution in Animals.'" {119} Kegan Paul, 1875. {125} It is now (January 1884) more than six years since Life and Habit was published, but I have come across nothing which makes me wish to alter it to any material extent. {127} It must be remembered that the late Mr. C. Darwin expressly denied that instinct and inherited habit are generally to be connected.--See Mr. Darwin's "Origin of Species," end of chapter viii., where he expresses his surprise that no one has hitherto adduced the instincts of neuter insects "against the well-known doctrine of inherited habit as advanced by Lamarck." Mr. Romanes, in his "Mental Evolution in Animals" (November, 1883), refers to this passage of Mr. Darwin's, and endorses it with approbation (p. 297). {131} Evolution, Old and New, was published in May, 1879. {134a} Quatrefages, "Metamorphoses de l'Homme et des Animaux," 1862, p. 42; G. H. Lewes, "Physical Basis of Mind," 1877, p. 83. {134b} I have been unable, through want of space, to give this chapter here. {141} Page 210, first edition. {144} 1878. {148} "Nat. Theol." ch. xxiii. {153a} 1878. {153b} "Oiseaux," vol. i. p. 5. {162} "Discours de Reception a l'Academie Francaise." {163} I Cor. xiii. 8, 13. {164a} Tom. i. p. 24, 1749. {164b} Tom. i. p. 40, 1749. {165} Vol. i. p. 34, 1749. {166a} Tom. i. p. 36. {166b} See p. 173. {166c} Tom. i. p. 33. {168} The Naturalist's Library, vol. ii. p. 23. Edinburgh, 1843. {174} Tom. iv. p. 381, 1753. {176} Tom. iv. p. 383, 1753 (this was the first volume on the lower animals). {177a} Tom xiii. p. 1765. {177b} Sup. tom. v. p. 27, 1778. {180} Tom. i. p. 28, 1749. {181a} Unconscious Memory was published December, 1880. {181b} See Unconscious Memory, chap. vi. {181c} The Spirit of Nature, p. 39. J. A. Churchill & Co. 1880. {184} I have put these words into the mouth of my supposed objector, and shall put others like them, because they are characteristic; but nothing can become so well known as to escape being an inference. {189} Erewhon, chap, xxiii. {198a} It must be remembered that this passage is put as if in t
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