[240] Essay, ii. 301-36 (bk. iv. ch. i. and ii.). Sumner's Treatise on the Records of the Creation, and on the Moral Attributes of the Creator: with Particular Reference to the Jewish History and the Consistency of the Principle of Population with the Wisdom and Goodness of the Creator (1815), had gained the second Burnett prize. It went through many editions; and shows how Cuvier confirms Genesis, and Malthus proves that the world was intended to involve a competition favourable to the industrious and sober. Sumner's view of Malthus is given in Part ii., chaps, v. and vi. In previous chapters he has supported Malthus's attack on Godwin and Condorcet.
[241] Essay, ii. 266 (bk. iv. ch. i.).
[242] Essay, ii 268 (bk. iv. ch. i.).
[243] Ibid. (bk. iv. ch. ii.).
[244] Essay, 241 (bk. iii. ch. iv.).
[245] Ibid. ii. 241 (bk. iii. ch. xiv.).
[246] Ibid. ii. 293 (bk. iv. ch. iv.).
[247] Ibid. ii. 425 (bk. iv. ch. xiii.). Malthus expresses a hope that Paley had modified his views upon population, and refers to a passage in the Natural Theology.
[248] Essay, ii. 292 (bk. iv. ch. iv.).
[249] Political Economy (1836), p. 214.