[304] Op. cit. p. 191.
[305] Milnes Marshall, Lectures on Darwinian Theory, p. 66.
[306] See Appendix C. p. 285.
[307] Modern Ideas of Evolution, c. iv.
[308] "Primeval Vegetation in its relation to the Doctrine of Natural Selection and Evolution." (Essays and Addresses, Owen's College, Manchester, p. 200.)
[309] History of Creation, ii. 92, English Edition.
[310] Ibid., p. 295.
[311] Les Emules de Darwin, ii. 76.
[312] As an instance M. de Quatrefages cites Haeckel's own words, from his Anthropogenie. "The Vertebrate Ancestor No. 15, akin to the Salamanders, must have been a species of Saurian (Lizard). There remains to us no fossil relic of this animal; in no respect did he resemble any form actually existing. Nevertheless, comparative anatomy and ontogeny authorize us in affirming that he once existed. We will call this animal Protamnion."
[313] Ibid., p. 122.