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Show 210 DAR WIN IAN A. seeds and others they brought wHh them, have multipli~ d there into numbers probably much exceeding those extant in their native lands; indeed, when we contemplate our own race, and our particular stock, taking · . such recent but dominating possession of this New World ; when we consider how the indigenous flora of islands generally succumbs to the foreigners which come in the train of man ; and that most weeds (i. e., the prepotent plants in open soil) of all temperate climates are not " to the manner born," but are selfinvited intruders-we must needs abandon the notion of any primordial and absolute adaptation of plants and animals to their habitats, which may stand in lieu of explanation, and so preclude our inquiring any further. The harmony of Nature and its admirable ·.perfection need not be regarded as inflexible . and changele~s. Nor need Nature be likened to a statue, or a cast in rigid bronze, but rather to an organism, with play and adaptability of parts, and life and even soul informing the whole. Under the former view Nature would be "the _faultless monster which the world ne'er saw," but inscrutable as the Sphinx, whom it were vain, or worse, to question of the whence and whither. Under the other, the perfection of Nature, if relative, is multifarious and ever renewed; and much that is enigmatical now may find explanation in some record of the past. That the two species of redwood we are contemplating originated as they are and where they are, and for the part they are now playing, is, to say the least, not a scientific supposition, nor in any sense a probable one. Nor is it more likely that they are destined to SEQUOIA AND ITS IIISTORY. 211 play a conspicuous part in the future, or that they would have done so, even if the Indian's fires and the white man's axe had spared them. The redwood of the coast (Sequoia sempervirens) had the stronger hold upon existence, forming as it did large forests throughout a ~arrow belt ~bout three hundred miles in length, and bemg so tenacwus of life that every large stump sprouts into a copse. But it does not pass the bay of Monterey, nor cross the line of Oregon, although so grandly developed not far below it. The more remarkable Sequoia gigantea of the Sierra exists in numbers so limited that' the separate groves may be reckoned upon the fingers, and the trees of most of them have been counted, except near their southern limit, · where they are said to be more copious. A species limited in individuals holds its existence by a precarious tenure; and this has a foothold only in a few sheltered spots, of a happy mean in temperature, and locally favored with moisture in summer. Even there, for some reason or other, the pines with which they are associated (Pinus Lambertiana and P. ponderosa), the firs (Abies grandis and A. amabilis), and even the incense-cedar (Libocedrus decurrens), possess a great advantage, and, though. they strive in vain to emulate their size, wholly overpower the Sequoias in numbers. "To him that hath shall be given." The force of n~~bers eventually wins. At least in the commonlyVISited groves Sequoia gigantea is invested in its last stronghold, can neither advance into more exposed positions above, nor fall back into drier and barer ~~und below, nor hold its own in the long-run where It Is, under present conditions; and a little further |