This fact, also, is one of constant experience' but our opinion of it is not that it stands to reason, but rather that it is irrational. We incline to think that heredity is the law, variation the accident, or the exception to the law. Strictly speaking, we fancy, there ought to be no such thing as varia tion; but of course it is unreasonable to expect that heredity shall always be perfect, and something or other is doubtless Often apt to mar its accuracy, thus leading to that anomalous (or, in English, lawless) occurrence which we call variation.
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