Origin, Ed. i. p. 313, vi. p. 454.
416
Origin, Ed. i. p. 341, vi. p. 487.
417
Origin, Ed. i. p. 396, vi. p. 549.
418
Origin, Ed. i. p. 340, vi. p. 486.
419
Origin, Ed. i. p. 299, vi. p. 437.
420
“Nature may almost be said to have guarded against the frequent discovery of her transitional or linking forms,” Origin, Ed. i. p. 292. A similar but not identical passage occurs in Origin, Ed. vi. p. 428.
421
Origin, Ed. i. p. 291, vi. p. 426.
422
Origin, Ed. i. p. 288, vi. p. 422.
423
Origin, Ed. i. p. 289, vi. p. 423.
424
Origin, Ed. i. p. 300, vi. p. 439.
425
Ch. XIII of the Origin, Ed. i., Ch. XIV Ed. vi. begins with a similar statement. In the present Essay the author adds a note: – “The obviousness of the fact (i. e. the natural grouping of organisms) alone prevents it being remarkable. It is scarcely explicable by creationist: groups of aquatic, of vegetable feeders and carnivorous, &c., might resemble each other; but why as it is. So with plants, – analogical resemblance thus accounted for. Must not here enter into details.” This argument is incorporated with the text in the Origin, Ed. i.
426
Origin, Ed. i. p. 411, vi. p. 566.
427
Origin, Ed. i. p. 316, vi. p. 457.
428
Origin, Ed. i. p. 321, vi. p. 463.
429
In the Origin, Ed. i. this preliminary matter is replaced (pp. 411, 412, vi. pp. 566, 567) by a discussion in which extinction is also treated, but chiefly from the point of view of the theory of divergence.
430
Origin, Ed. i. p. 414, vi. p. 570.
431
Origin, Ed. i. p. 414, vi. p. 570.
432
These instances occur with others in the Origin, Ed. i. p. 416, vi. p. 572.
433
Origin, Ed. i. p. 418, vi. p. 574.
434
Origin, Ed. i. pp. 419, 440, vi. pp. 575, 606.
435
Origin, Ed. i. pp. 418, 425, vi. pp. 574, 581.
436
Origin, Ed. i. p. 413, vi. p. 569.
437
Origin, Ed. i. pp. 419, 427, vi. pp. 575, 582.
438
This is discussed from the point of view of divergence in the Origin, Ed. i. pp. 420, 421, vi. pp. 576, 577.
439
«Footnote by the author.» I discuss this because if Quinarism true, I false. «The Quinary System is set forth in W. S. Macleay’s Horæ Entomologicæ, 1821.»
440