ORGANIC EVOLUTION WITHOUT NATURAL SELECTION,
“ The playbill, which is said to have announced the tragedy of
Hamlet, the character of the Prince of Denmark being left out.”
—The Talisman.
To those who believe that Natural Selection has been
demonstrated to be a great law of nature beyond the
shadow of a doubt, and who affirm that only those who
are incapacitated by ignorance, misled by superficial
knowledge, or blinded by theological prejudice, can hold
the contrary opinion, it will seem an absurd thing to talk
of the possibility of Organic Evolution without Natural
Selection. It will seem as nonsensical as it is to talk of a
representation of the play of Hamlet, the character of
Hamlet being left out. And yet it is conceivable, to say
the least, that a play might be designated by the name of
a person who never appears upon the scene at all. That
is actually the case in a dramatic representation known as
Walker, London, of whom we hear nothing till the very
last, when we discover that it is, or is pretended to be, the
telegraphic address of the barber who has been posing as
a world-renowned traveller. Nor does it seem to me
inconceivable that a play of Hamlet Prince of Denmark
might have been written, in which Hamlet should not
appear ; in which we might hear of his return home, of his
interview with the ghost, of his immediate retirement from