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Man's Place In Nature, Dedicated To Darwin And Huxley

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They told him gently he was made         Of nicely tempered mud,     That man no lengthened part had played         Anterior to the Flood.     'Twas all in vain; he heeded not,         Referring plant and worm,     Fish, reptile, ape, and Hottentot,         To one primordial germ.     They asked him whether he could bear         To think his kind allied     To all those brutal forms which were         In structure Pithecoid;     Whether he thought the apes and us         Homologous in form;     He said, "Homo and Pithecus         Came from one common germ."     They called him "atheistical,"         "Sceptic," and "infidel."     They swore his doctrines without fail         Would plunge him into hell.     But he with proofs in no way lame,         Made this deduction firm,     That all organic beings came         From one primordial germ.     That as for the Noachian flood,         'Twas long ago disproved,     That as for man being made of mud,         All by whom truth is loved     Accept as fact what, malgre strife,         Research tends to confirm,     That man, and everything with life,         Came from one common germ.

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