I am not sure that the subject of
my address is rightly chosen. I am not sure
that I ought not to have postponed a question of mere
natural history, to speak to you as scientific men,
on the questions of life and death, which have been
forced upon us by the awful warning of an illustrious
personage’s illness; of preventible disease,
its frightful prevalency; of the 200,000 persons who
are said to have died of fever alone since the Prince
Consort’s death, ten years ago; of the remedies;
of drainage; of sewage disinfection and utilisation;
and of the assistance which you, as a body of scientific
men, can give to any effort towards saving the lives
and health of our fellow-citizens from those unseen
poisons which lurk like wild beasts couched in the
jungle, ready to spring at any moment on the unsuspecting,
the innocent, the helpless. Of all this I longed
to speak; but I thought it best only to hint at it,
and leave the question to your common sense and your
humanity; taking for granted that your minds, like
the minds of all right-minded Englishmen, have been
of late painfully awakened to its importance.
It seemed to me almost an impertinence to say more
in a city of whose local circumstances I know little
or nothing. As an old sanitary reformer, practical,
as well as theoretical, I am but too well aware of
the difficulties which beset any complete scheme of
drainage, especially in an ancient city like this;
where men are paying the penalty of their predecessors’
ignorance; and dwelling, whether they choose or not,
over fifteen centuries of accumulated dirt.
And, therefore, taking for granted
that there is energy and intellect enough in Winchester
to conquer these difficulties in due time, I go on
to ask you to consider, for a time, a subject which
is growing more and more important and interesting,
a subject the study of which will do much towards
raising the field naturalist from a mere collector
of specimens as he was twenty years ago to
a philosopher elucidating some of the grandest problems.
I mean the infant science of Bio-geology the
science which treats of the distribution of plants
and animals over the globe, and the cause of that
distribution.
I doubt not that there are many here
who know far more about the subject than I; who are
far better read than I am in the works of Forbes,
Darwin, Wallace, Hooker, Moritz Wagner, and the other
illustrious men who have written on it. But I
may, perhaps, give a few hints which will be of use
to the younger members of this Society, and will point
out to them how to get a new relish for the pursuit
of field science.
Bio-geology, then, begins with asking
every plant or animal you meet, large or small, not
merely What is your name? That is
the collector and classifier’s duty; and a most
necessary duty it is, and one to be performed with
the most conscientious patience and accuracy, so that
a sound foundation may be built for future speculations.
But young naturalists should act not merely as Nature’s
registrars and census-takers, but as her policemen
and gamekeepers; and ask everything they meet How
did you get there? By what road did you come?
What was your last place of abode? And now
you are here, how do you get your living? Are
you and your children thriving, like decent people
who can take care of themselves, or growing pauperised
and degraded, and dying out? Not that we have
a fear of your becoming a dangerous class. Madame
Nature allows no dangerous classes, in the modern sense.
She has, doubtless for some wise reason, no mercy
for the weak. She rewards each organism according
to its works; and if anything grows too weak or stupid
to take care of itself, she gives it its due deserts
by letting it die and disappear. So, you plant
or you animal, are you among the strong, the successful,
the multiplying, the colonising? Or are you among
the weak, the failing, the dwindling, the doomed?
These questions may seem somewhat
rude: but you may comfort yourself by the thought
that plants and animals, though they deserve all kindness,
all admiration, deserve no courtesy at least
in this respect. For they are, one and all,
wherever you find them, vagrants and landlopers, intruders
and conquerors, who have got where they happen to
be simply by the law of the strongest
generally not without a little robbery and murder.
They have no right save that of possession; the same
by which the puffin turns out the old rabbits, eats
the young ones, and then lays her eggs in the rabbit-burrow simply
because she can.
Now, you will see at once that such
a course of questioning will call out a great many
curious and interesting answers, if you can only get
the things to tell you their story; as you always may
if you will cross-examine them long enough; and will
lead you into many subjects beside mere botany or
entomology. So various, indeed, are the subjects
which you will thus start, that I can only hint at
them now in the most cursory fashion.
At the outset you will soon find yourself
involved in chemical and meteorological questions;
as, for instance, when you ask How is it
that I find one flora on the sea-shore, another on
the sandstone, another on the chalk, and another on
the peat-making gravelly strata? The usual answer
would be, I presume if we could work it
out by twenty years’ experiment, such as Mr.
Lawes, of Rothampsted, has been making on the growth
of grasses and leguminous plants in different soils
and under different manures the usual answer,
I say, would be Because we plants want
such and such mineral constituents in our woody fibre;
again, because we want a certain amount of moisture
at a certain period of the year: or, perhaps,
simply because the mechanical arrangement of the particles
of a certain soil happens to suit the shape of our
roots and of their stomata. Sometimes you will
get an answer quickly enough; sometimes not.
If you ask, for instance, Asplenium viride how
it contrives to grow plentifully in the Craven of
Yorkshire down to 600 or 800 feet above the sea, while
in Snowdon it dislikes growing lower than 2000 feet,
and is not plentiful even there? it will
reply Because in the Craven I can get as
much carbonic acid as I want from the decomposing
limestone; while on the Snowdon Silurian I get very
little; and I have to make it up by clinging to the
mountain tops, for the sake of the greater rainfall.
But if you ask Polypodium calcareum How
is it you choose only to grow on limestone, while
Polypodium Dryopteris, of which, I suspect, you are
only a variety, is ready to grow anywhere? Polypodium
calcareum will refuse, as yet, to answer a word.
Again I can only give you
the merest string of hints you will find
in your questionings that many plants and animals have
no reason at all to show why they should be in one
place and not in another, save the very sound reason
for the latter which was suggested to me once by a
great naturalist. I was asking Why
don’t I find such and such a species in my parish,
while it is plentiful a few miles off in exactly the
same soil? and he answered For
the same reason that you are not in America.
Because you have not got there. Which answer
threw to me a flood of light on this whole science.
Things are often where they are, simply because they
happen to have got there, and not elsewhere.
But they must have got there by some means, and those
means I want young naturalists to discover; at least,
to guess at.
A species, for instance and
I suspect it is a common case with insects may
abound in a single spot, simply because, long years
ago, a single brood of eggs happened to hatch at a
time when eggs of other species, who would have competed
against them for food, did not hatch; and they may
remain confined to that spot, though there is plenty
of food for them outside it, simply because they do
not increase fast enough to require to spread out
in search of more food. Thus I should explain
a case which I heard of lately of Anthocera trifolii,
abundant for years in one corner of a certain field,
and only there; while there was just as much trefoil
all round for its larvae as there was in the selected
spot. I can, I say, only give hints: but
they will suffice, I hope, to show the path of thought
into which I want young naturalists to turn their
minds.
Or, again, you will have to inquire
whether the species has not been prevented from spreading
by some natural barrier. Mr. Wallace, whom you
all of course know, has shown in his “Malay Archipelago”
that a strait of deep sea can act as such a barrier
between species. Moritz Wagner has shown that,
in the case of insects, a moderately-broad river
may divide two closely-allied species of beetles, or
a very narrow snow-range, two closely-allied species
of moths.
Again, another cause, and a most common
one, is: that the plants cannot spread because
they find the ground beyond them already occupied
by other plants, who will not tolerate a fresh mouth,
having only just enough to feed themselves. Take
the case of Saxífraga hypnoides and S. umbrosa,
“London pride.” They are two especially
strong species. They show that, S. hypnoides
especially, by their power of sporting, of diverging
into varieties; they show it equally by their power
of thriving anywhere, if they can only get there.
They will grow both in my sandy garden, under a rainfall
of only 23 inches, more luxuriantly than in their
native mountains under a rainfall of 50 or 60 inches.
Then how is it that S. hypnoides cannot get down
off the mountains; and that S. umbrosa, though
in Kerry it has got off the mountains and down to the
sea-level, exterminating, I suspect, many species
in its progress, yet cannot get across County Cork?
The only answer is, I believe, that both species
are continually trying to go ahead; but that the other
plants already in front of them are too strong for
them, and massacre their infants as soon as born.
And this brings us to another curious
question: the sudden and abundant appearance
of plants, like the foxglove and Epilobium angustifolium,
in spots where they have never been seen before.
Are there seeds, as some think, dormant in the ground;
or are the seeds which have germinated, fresh ones
wafted thither by wind or otherwise, and only able
to germinate in that one spot because there the soil
is clear? General Monro, now famous for his unequalled
memoir on the bamboos, holds to the latter theory.
He pointed out to me that the Epilobium seeds, being
feathered could travel with the wind; that the plant
always made its appearance first on new banks, landslips,
clearings, where it had nothing to compete against;
and that the foxglove did the same. True, and
most painfully true, in the case of thistles and groundsels:
but foxglove seeds, though minute, would hardly be
carried by the wind any more than those of the white
clover, which comes up so abundantly in drained fens.
Adhuc sub judice lis est, and
I wish some young naturalists would work carefully
at the solution; by experiment, which is the most
sure way to find out anything.
But in researches in this direction
they will find puzzles enough. I will give them
one which I shall be most thankful to hear they have
solved within the next seven years How is
it that we find certain plants, namely, the thrift
and the scurvy grass, abundant on the sea-shore and
common on certain mountain-tops, but nowhere between
the two? Answer me that. For I have looked
at the fact for years before, behind, sideways,
upside down, and inside out and I cannot
understand it.
But all these questions, and especially,
I suspect, that last one, ought to lead the young
student up to the great and complex question How
were these islands re-peopled with plants and animals,
after the long and wholesale catastrophe of the glacial
epoch?
I presume you all know, and will agree,
that the whole of these islands, north of the Thames,
save certain ice-clad mountain-tops, were buried for
long ages under an icy sea. From whence did
vegetable and animal life crawl back to the land, as
it rose again; and cover its mantle of glacial drift
with fresh life and verdure?
Now let me give you a few prolegomena
on this matter. You must study the plants of
course, species by species. Take Watson’s
“Cybele Britannica” and Moore’s “Cybele
Hibernica;” and let as Mr. Matthew
Arnold would say “your thought play
freely about them.” Look carefully, too,
in the case of each species, at the note on its distribution,
which you will find appended in Bentham’s “Handbook,”
and in Hooker’s “Student’s Flora.”
Get all the help you can, if you wish to work the
subject out, from foreign botanists, both European
and American; and I think that, on the whole, you will
come to some such theory as this for a general starling
platform. We do not owe our flora I
must keep to the flora just now to so many
different regions, or types, as Mr. Watson conceives,
but to three, namely, an European or Germanic flora,
from the south-east; an Atlantic flora, from the south-east;
a Northern flora, from the north. These three
invaded us after the glacial epoch; and our general
flora is their result.
But this will cause you much trouble.
Before you go a step farther you will have to eliminate
from all your calculations most of the plants which
Watson calls glareal, i.e. found in cultivated
ground about habitations. And what their limit
may be I think we never shall know. But of this
we may be sure; that just as invading armies always
bring with them, in forage or otherwise, some plants
from their own country just as the Cossacks,
in 1815, brought more than one Russian plant through
Germany into France just as you have already
a crop of North German plants upon the battle-fields
of France thus do conquering races bring
new plants. The Romans, during their 300 or
400 years of occupation and civilisation, must have
brought more species, I believe, than I dare mention.
I suspect them of having brought, not merely the
common hedge elm of the south, not merely the three
species of nettle, but all our red poppies, and a
great number of the weeds which are common in our
cornfields; and when we add to them the plants which
may have been brought by returning crusaders and pilgrims;
by monks from every part of Europe, by Flemings or
other dealers in foreign wool we have to
cut a huge cantle out of our indigenous flora:
only, having no records, we hardly know where and
what to cut out; and can only, we elder ones, recommend
the subject to the notice of the younger botanists,
that they may work it out after our work is done.
Of course these plants introduced
by man, if they are cut out, must be cut out of only
one of the floras, namely, the European; for
they, probably, came from the south-east, by whatever
means they came.
That European flora invaded us, I
presume, immediately after the glacial epoch, at a
time when France and England were united, and the
German Ocean a mere network of rivers, which emptied
into the deep sea between Scotland and Scandinavia.
And here I must add, that endless questions of interest
will arise to those who will study, not merely the
invasion of that truly European flora, but the invasion
of reptiles, insects, and birds, especially birds of
passage, which must have followed it as soon as the
land was sufficiently covered with vegetation to support
life. Whole volumes remain to be written on
this subject. I trust that some of your younger
members may live to write one of them. The way
to begin will be; to compare the flora and fauna of
this part of England very carefully with that of the
southern and eastern counties; and then to compare
them again with the fauna and flora of France, Belgium,
and Holland.
As for the Atlantic flora, you will
have to decide for yourselves whether you accept or
not the theory of a sunken Atlantic continent.
I confess that all objections to that theory, however
astounding it may seem, are outweighed in my mind
by a host of facts which I can explain by no other
theory. But you must judge for yourselves; and
to do so you must study carefully the distribution
of heaths both in Europe and at the Cape, and their
non-appearance beyond the Ural Mountains, and in America,
save in Labrador, where the common ling, an older
and less specialised form, exists. You must consider,
too, the plants common to the Azores, Portugal, the
West of England, Ireland, and the Western Hebrides.
In so doing young naturalists will at least find
proofs of a change in the distribution of land and
water, which will utterly astound them when they face
it for the first time.
As for the Northern flora, the question
whence it came is puzzling enough. It seems
difficult to conceive how any plants could have survived
when Scotland was an archipelago in the same ice-covered
condition as Greenland is now; and we have no proof
that there existed after the glacial epoch any northern
continent from which the plants and animals could
have come back to us. The species of plants
and animals common to Britain, Scandinavia, and North
America, must have spread in pre-glacial times when
a continent joining them did exist.
But some light has been thrown on
this question by an article, as charming as it is
able, on “The Physics of the Arctic Ice,”
by Dr. Brown of Campster. You will find it in
the “Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society”
for February, 1870. He shows there that even
in Greenland peaks and crags are left free enough from
ice to support a vegetation of between three hundred
or four hundred species of flowering plants; and,
therefore, he well says, we must be careful to avoid
concluding that the plant and animal life on the dreary
shores or mountain-tops of the old glacial Scotland
was poor. The same would hold good of our mountains;
and, if so, we may look with respect, even awe, on
the Alpine plants of Wales, Scotland, and the Lake
mountains, as organisms, stunted it may be, and even
degraded by their long battle with the elements, but
venerable from their age, historic from their endurance.
Relics of an older temperate world, they have lived
through thousands of centuries of frost and fog, to
sun themselves in a temperate climate once more.
I can never pick one of them without a tinge of shame;
and to exterminate one of them is to destroy, for
the mere pleasure of collecting, the last of a family
which God has taken the trouble to preserve for thousands
of centuries.
I trust that these hints for
I can call them nothing more will at least
awaken any young naturalist who has hitherto only collected
natural objects, to study the really important and
interesting question How did these things
get here?
Now hence arise questions which may
puzzle the mind of a Hampshire naturalist. You
have in this neighbourhood, as you well know, two,
or rather three, soils, each carrying its peculiar
vegetation. First, you have the clay lying on
the chalk, and carrying vast woodlands, seemingly
primeval. Next, you have the chalk, with its
peculiar, delicate, and often fragrant crop of lime-loving
plants; and next, you have the poor sands and clays
of the New Forest basin, saturated with iron, and
therefore carrying a moorland or peat-loving vegetation,
in many respects quite different from the others.
And this moorland soil, and this vegetation, with a
few singular exceptions, repeats itself, as I daresay
you know, in the north of the county, in the Bagshot
basin, as it is called the moors of Aldershot,
Hartford Bridge, and Windsor Forest.
Now what a variety of interesting
questions are opened up by these simple facts.
How did these three floras get each to its present
place? Where did each come from? How did
it get past or through the other, till each set of
plants, after long internecine competition, settled
itself down in the sheet of land most congenial to
it? And when did each come hither? Which
is the oldest? Will any one tell me whether
the healthy floras of the moors, or the thymy
flora of the chalk downs, were the earlier inhabitants
of these isles? To these questions I cannot
get any answer; and they cannot be answered without,
first a very careful study of the range
of each species of plant on the continent of Europe;
and next, without careful study of those stupendous
changes in the shape of this island which have taken
place at a very late geological epoch. The composition
of the flora of our moorlands is as yet to me an utter
puzzle. We have Lycopodiums three
species enormously ancient forms which
have survived the age of ice: but did they crawl
downward hither from the northern mountains or upward
hither from the Pyrénées? We have the beautiful
bog asphodel again an enormously ancient
form; for it is, strange to say, common to North America
and to Northern Europe, but does not enter Asia almost
an unique instance. It must, surely, have come
from the north; and points as do many species
of plants and animals to the time when
North Europe and North America were joined. We
have, sparingly, in North Hampshire, though, strangely,
not on the Bagshot moors, the Common or Northern Butterwort
(Pinguicula vulgaris); and also, in the south, the
New Forest part of the county, the delicate little
Pinguicula lusitanica, the only species now found in
Devon and Cornwall, marking the New Forest as the
extreme eastern limit of the Atlantic flora.
We have again the heaths, which, as I have just said,
are found neither in America nor in Asia, and must,
I believe, have come from some south-western land
long since submerged beneath the sea. But more,
we have in the New Forest two plants which are members
of the South Europe, or properly, the Atlantic flora;
which must have come from the south and south-east;
and which are found in no other spots in these islands.
I mean the lovely Gladiolus, which grows abundantly
under the ferns near Lyndhurst, certainly wild, but
it does not approach England elsewhere nearer than
the Loire and the Rhine; and next, that delicate orchid,
the Spiranthes aestivalis, which is known only
in a bog near Lyndhurst and in the Channel Islands,
while on the Continent it extends from Southern Europe
all through France. Now, what do these two plants
mark? They give us a point in botany, though
not in time, to determine when the south of England
was parted from the opposite shores of France; and
whenever that was, it was just after the Gladiolus
and Spiranthes got hither. Two little colonies
of these lovely flowers arrived just before their
retreat was cut off. They found the country already
occupied with other plants; and, not being reinforced
by fresh colonists from the south, have not been able
to spread farther north than Lyndhurst. Thus,
in the New Forest, and, I may say in the Bagshot moors,
you find plants which you do not expect, and do not
find plants which you do expect; and you are, or ought
to be, puzzled, and I hope also interested, and stirred
up to find out more.
I spoke just now of the time when
England was joined to France, as bearing on Hampshire
botany. It bears no less on Hampshire zoology.
In insects, for instance, the presence of the purple
emperor and the white admiral in our Hampshire woods,
as well as the abundance of the great stag-beetle,
point to a time when the two countries were joined,
at least as far west as Hampshire; while the absence
of these insects farther to the westward shows that
the countries, if ever joined, were already parted;
and that those insects have not yet had time to spread
westward. The presence of these two butterflies,
and partly of the stag-beetle, along the south-east
coast of England as far as the primeval forests of
South Lincolnshire, points, as do a hundred other
facts, to a time when the Straits of Dover either
did not exist, or were the bed of a river running
from the west; and when, as I told you just now, all
the rivers which now run into the German Ocean, from
the Humber on the west to the Elbe on the east, discharged
themselves into the sea between Scotland and Norway,
after wandering through a vast lowland, covered with
countless herds of mammoth, rhinoceros, gigantic ox,
and other mammals now extinct; while the birds, as
far as we know, the insects, the fresh-water fish,
and even, as my friend Mr. Brady has proved, the Entomostraca
of the rivers, were the same in what is now Holland
as in what is now our Eastern counties. I could
dwell long on this matter. I could talk long
about how certain species of Lepidoptera moths
and butterflies like Papilio Machaon
and P. Podalirius, swarm through France, reach up
to the British Channel, and have not crossed it, with
the exception of one colony of Machaon in the
Cambridgeshire fens. I could talk long about
a similar phenomenon in the case of our migratory
and singing birds; how many exquisite species notably
those two glorious songsters, the Orphean Warbler
and Hippolais, which delight our ears everywhere on
the other side of the Channel follow our
nightingales, blackcaps, and warblers northward every
spring almost to the Straits of Dover, but dare not
cross, simply because they have been, as it were, created
since the gulf was opened, and have never learnt from
their parents how to fly over it.
In the case of fishes, again, I might
say much on the curious fact that the Cyprinidae,
or white fish carp, etc. and
their natural enemy, the pike, are indigenous, I believe,
only to the rivers, English or continental, on the
eastern side of the Straits of Dover; while the rivers
on the western side were originally tenanted, like
our Hampshire streams, as now, almost entirely by trout,
their only Cyprinoid being the minnow if
it, too, be not an interloper; and I might ask you
to consider the bearing of this curious fact on the
former junction of England and France.
But I have only time to point out
to you a few curious facts with regard to reptiles,
which should be specially interesting to a Hampshire
bio-geologist. You know, of course, that in Ireland
there are no reptiles, save the little common lizard,
Lacerta agilis, and a few frogs on the mountain-tops how
they got there I cannot conceive. And you will,
of course, guess, and rightly, that the reason of
the absence of reptiles is: that Ireland was
parted off from England before the creatures, which
certainly spread from southern and warmer climates,
had time to get there. You know, of course,
that we have a few reptiles in England. But you
may not be aware that, as soon as you cross the Channel,
you find many more species of reptiles than here,
as well as those which you find here. The magnificent
green lizard which rattles about like a rabbit in a
French forest, is never found here; simply because
it had not worked northward till after the Channel
was formed. But there are three reptiles peculiar
to this part of England which should be most interesting
to a Hampshire zoologist. The one is the sand
lizard (L. stirpium), found on Bourne-heath, and,
I suspect, in the South Hampshire moors likewise a
North European and French species. Another, the
Coronella laevis, a harmless French and Austrian snake,
which has been found about me, in North Hants and South
Berks, now about fifteen or twenty times. I
have had three specimens from my own parish.
I believe it not to be uncommon; and most probably
to be found, by those who will look, both in the New
Forest and Woolmer. The third is the Natterjack,
or running toad (Bufo Rubeta), a most beautifully-spotted
animal, with a yellow stripe down his back, which
is common with us at Eversley, and common also in
many moorlands of Hants and Surrey; and, according
to Fleming, on heaths near London, and as far north-east
as Lincolnshire; in which case it will belong to the
Germanic fauna. Now, here again we have cases
of animals which have just been able to get hither
before the severance of England and France; and which,
not being reinforced from the rear, have been forced
to stop, in small and probably decreasing colonies,
on the spots nearest the coast which were fit for
them.
I trust that I have not kept you too
long over these details. What I wish to impress
upon you is that Hampshire is a country specially
fitted for the study of important bio-geological questions.
To work them out, you must trace the
geology of Hampshire, and indeed, of East Dorset.
You must try to form a conception of how the land
was shaped in miocène times, before that tremendous
upheaval which reared the chalk cliffs at Freshwater
upright, lifting the tertiary beds upon their northern
slopes. You must ask--Was there not land to
the south of the Isle of Wight in those ages, and
for ages after; and what was its extent and shape?
You must ask When was the gap between
the Isle of Wight and the Isle of Purbeck sawn through,
leaving the Needles as remnants on one side, and Old
Harry on the opposite? And was it sawn asunder
merely by the age-long gnawing of the waves?
You must ask Where did the great river
which ran from the west, where Poole Harbour is now,
and probably through what is now the Solent, depositing
brackish water-beds right and left where,
I say, did it run into the sea? Where the Straits
of Dover are now? Or, if not there, where?
What, too, is become of the land to the Westward,
composed of ancient metamorphic rocks, out of which
it ran, and deposited on what are now the Haggerstone
Moors of Poole, vast beds of grit? What was the
climate on its banks when it washed down the delicate
leaves of broad-leaved trees, akin to our modern English
ones, which are found in the fine mud-sand strata
of Bournemouth? When, finally, did it dwindle
down to the brook which now runs through Wareham town?
Was its bed, sea or dry land, or under an ice sheet,
during the long ages of the glacial epoch? And
if you say Who is sufficient for these
things? Who can answer these questions?
I answer Who but you, or your pupils after
you, if you will but try?
And if any shall reply And
what use if I do try? What use, if I do try?
What use if I succeed in answering every question
which you have propounded to-night? Shall I
be the happier for it? Shall I be the wiser?
My friends, whether you will be the
happier for it, or for any knowledge of physical science,
or for any other knowledge whatsoever, I cannot tell:
that lies in the decision of a Higher Power than
I; and, indeed, to speak honestly, I do not think that
bio-geology or any other branch of physical science
is likely, at first at least, to make you happy.
Neither is the study of your fellow-men. Neither
is religion itself. We were not sent into the
world to be happy, but to be right; at least, poor
creatures that we are, as right as we can be; and
we must be content with being right, and not happy.
For I fear, or rather I hope, that most of us are
not capable of carrying out Talleyrand’s recipe
for perfect happiness on earth namely,
a hard heart and a good digestion. Therefore,
as our hearts are, happily, not always hard, and our
digestions, unhappily, not always good, we will be
content to be made wise by physical science, even
though we be not made happy.
And we shall be made truly wise if
we be made content; content, too, not only with what
we can understand, but, content with what we do not
understand the habit of mind which theologians
call and rightly faith in God;
the true and solid faith, which comes often out of
sadness, and out of doubt, such as bio-geology may
well stir in us at first sight. For our first
feeling will be I know mine was when I
began to look into these matters one somewhat
of dread and of horror.
Here were all these creatures, animal
and vegetable, competing against each other.
And their competition was so earnest and complete,
that it did not mean as it does among honest
shopkeepers in a civilised country I will
make a little more money than you; but I
will crush you, enslave you, exterminate you, eat you
up. “Woe to the weak,” seems to be
Nature’s watchword. The Psalmist says:
“The righteous shall inherit the land.”
If you go to a tropical forest, or, indeed, if you
observe carefully a square acre of any English land,
cultivated or uncultivated, you will find that Nature’s
text at first sight looks a very different one.
She seems to say: Not the righteous, but the
strong, shall inherit the land. Plant, insect,
bird, what not Find a weaker plant, insect,
bird, than yourself, and kill it, and take possession
of its little vineyard, and no Naboth’s curse
shall follow you: but you shall inherit, and
thrive therein, you, and your children after you, if
they will be only as strong and as cruel as you are.
That is Nature’s law: and is it not at
first sight a fearful law? Internecine competition,
ruthless selfishness, so internecine and so ruthless
that, as I have wandered in tropic forests, where this
temper is shown more quickly and fiercely, though not
in the least more evilly, than in our slow and cold
temperate one, I have said: Really these trees
and plants are as wicked as so many human beings.
Throughout the great republic of the
organic world the motto of the majority is, and always
has been as far back as we can see, what it is, and
always has been, with the majority of human beings:
“Everyone for himself, and the devil take the
hindmost.” Overreaching tyranny; the temper
which fawns, and clings, and plays the parasite as
long as it is down, and when it has risen, fattens
on its patron’s blood and life these,
and the other works of the flesh, are the works of
average plants and animals, as far as they can practise
them. At least, so says at first sight the science
of bio-geology; till the naturalist, if he be also
human and humane, is glad to escape from the confusion
and darkness of the universal battle-field of selfishness
into the order and light of Christmas-tide.
For then there comes to him the thought And
are these all the facts? And is this all which
the facts mean? That mutual competition is one
law of Nature, we see too plainly. But is there
not, besides that law, a law of mutual help?
True it is, as the wise man has said, that the very
hyssop on the wall grows there because all the forces
of the universe could not prevent its growing.
All honour to the hyssop. A brave plant, it
has fought a brave fight, and has its just deserts as
everything in Nature has and so has won.
But did all the powers of the universe combine to
prevent it growing? Is not that a one-sided statement
of facts? Did not all the powers of the universe
also combine to make it grow, if only it had valour
and worth wherewith to grow? Did not the rains
feed it, the very mortar in the wall give lime to its
roots? Were not electricity, gravitation, and
I know not what of chemical and mechanical forces,
busy about the little plant, and every cell of it,
kindly and patiently ready to help it if it would only
help itself? Surely this is true; true of every
organic thing, animal and vegetable, and mineral too,
for aught I know: and so we must soften our
sadness at the sight of the universal mutual war by
the sight of an equally universal mutual help.
But more. It is true too
true if you will that all things live on
each other. But is it not, therefore, equally
true that all things live for each other? that
self-sacrifice, and not selfishness, is at the bottom
the law of Nature, as it is the law of Grace; and the
law of bio-geology, as it is the law of all religion
and virtue worthy of the name? Is it not true
that everything has to help something else to live,
whether it knows it or not? that not a
plant or an animal can turn again to its dust without
giving food and existence to other plants, other animals? that
the very tiger, seemingly the most useless tyrant
of all tyrants, is still of use, when, after sending
out of the world suddenly, and all but painlessly,
many an animal which would without him have starved
in misery through a diseased old age, he himself dies,
and, in dying, gives, by his own carcase, the means
of life and of enjoyment to a thousandfold more living
creatures than ever his paws destroyed?
And so, the longer one watches the
great struggle for existence, the more charitable,
the more hopeful, one becomes; as one sees that, consciously
or unconsciously, the law of Nature is, after all self-sacrifice:
unconscious in plants and animals, as far as we know;
save always those magnificent instances of true self-sacrifice
shown by the social insects, by ants, bees, and others,
which put to shame by a civilisation truly noble why
should I not say divine, for God ordained it? the
selfishness and barbarism of man. But be that
as it may, in man the law of self-sacrifice whether
unconscious or not in the animals rises
into consciousness just as far as he is a man; and
the crowning lesson of bio-geology may be, when we
have worked it out after all, the lesson of Christmas-tide of
the infinite self-sacrifice of God for man; and Nature
as well as religion may say to us:
Ah, could you crush that ever craving lust
For bliss, which kills all bliss, and lose your life,
Your barren unit life, to find again
A thousand times in those for whom you die
So were you men and women, and should hold
Your rightful rank in God’s great universe,
Wherein, in heaven or earth, by will or nature,
Naught lives for self. All, all, from crown
to base
The Lamb, before the world’s foundation slain
The angels, ministers to God’s elect
The sun, who only shines to light the worlds
The clouds, whose glory is to die in showers
The fleeting streams, who in their ocean graves
Flee the decay of stagnant self-content
The oak, ennobled by the shipwright’s axe
The soil, which yields its marrow to the flower
The flower, which feeds a thousand velvet worms
Born only to be prey to every bird
All spend themselves on others: and shall man,
Whose twofold being is the mystic knot
Which couples earth with heaven, doubly bound,
As being both, worm and angel, to that service
By which both worms and angels hold their life,
Shall he, whose every breath is debt on debt,
Refuse, forsooth, to be what God has made him?
No; let him show himself the creatures’ Lord
By free-will gift of that self-sacrifice
Which they, perforce, by Nature’s law’s
endure.
My friends, scientific and others,
if the study of bio-geology shall help to teach you
this, or anything like this, I think that though it
may not make you more happy, it may yet make you more
wise; and, therefore, what is better than being more
happy, namely, more blessed.