Bates Student . Terms, $1 per annum. Single Copies, 10 Cents. 5 Vol. IV. OCTOBER, 1876. No. 8. THE BATES STUDENT. A MONTHLY MAGAZINE, fiiblt%b frg % Class of 77, EDITED BY GEORGE H. WYMAN J\ND HENRY W. Manager: OLIVER B. CLASOIST. CONTENTS. Permanency of Types Igvj Common Sense 185 Thouffbt 187 The Adirondacks Ym . ] 188 Settled Things ....... 190 At Parting ........[ ! 191 The Inner and Written Revelation 192 Devotion to Duty ...[.... ... 194 October - jq^ EDITOKS PORTFOLIO J99 Our Literary .Our .Base-Ball* .Exchanges. Odds and


Bates Student . Terms, $1 per annum. Single Copies, 10 Cents. 5 Vol. IV. OCTOBER, 1876. No. 8. THE BATES STUDENT. A MONTHLY MAGAZINE, fiiblt%b frg % Class of 77, EDITED BY GEORGE H. WYMAN J\ND HENRY W. Manager: OLIVER B. CLASOIST. CONTENTS. Permanency of Types Igvj Common Sense 185 Thouffbt 187 The Adirondacks Ym . ] 188 Settled Things ....... 190 At Parting ........[ ! 191 The Inner and Written Revelation 192 Devotion to Duty ...[.... ... 194 October - jq^ EDITOKS PORTFOLIO J99 Our Literary .Our .Base-Ball* .Exchanges. Odds and Ends 204 Colt/kge Items 206 Personals 208 LEWISTON :PRINTED AT THE JOURNAL OFFICE. THE « BATES STUDENT. Vol. IV. OCTOBER, 1876. No. 8. EVERY form of animal life be-longs to some particular type ;the animal kingdom being dividedinto four types, each a strict unit initself. Metamorphosis is a normalprocess of development, throughregular cycles that always return tothe same point. In some types the development isslow; one phase is introduced afteranother, each seemingly distinct,until at length the original is repro-duced, proving these phases to beonly parts of the same life. TheDistoma require four generations toevolve the perfect animal; the Aphi-des eight or nine. These metamor-phoses have ali the invariability ofevery other embryonic growth. The great power of inheritancefails to produce any new type. Bycultivation and the imparting of at-tainments from one generation to itssuccessors, extreme varieties may Y OF TYPES. rise up; but such varieties degener-ate, die out, or return to the origi-nal. Domesticated animals whenleft to themselves resume their nat-ural wi


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