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always prudent in their loves, but are apt to fling themselves away
on curs of low degree. If reared with a companion of vulgar
appearance, there often springs up between the pair a devotion
which no time can afterwards subdue. The passion, for such it
really is, becomes of a more than romantic endurance.”—(Darwin.
Descent of Man. p. 523.)
We may look at this matter from another point of view,
by raising the question whether the different forms of
married life adopted by animals are favourable to the
isolation of similar variants ; and the inheritance of their
special endowments by their offspring.
Now if the general rule were a life-long monogamy, and
if the pair lived to the same age, and if they united on the
basis of the common possession of favourable variations,
then we should have the precise conditions which we
require. But it does not follow that these conditions will
always be fulfilled. For probably the animals which are
monogamists will unite on the basis of romantic love, and
not on that of favourable variation. And in the case of
the death of one there may be, and probably will be,
a second marriage. There is also the case of a mono
gamous union which lasts only for one season, so that one
female may have in a life-time several husbands, in which
case we have ample evidence that the offspring by the
second husband often bears a marked resemblance to the
first.
We have a good illustration of that form of marriage
known as polygamy, in which one husband has many
wives, in the case of the seals. The following curious
details on the courtship of one of the eared seals (Callo-
rhinus ursinus) are given on the authority of Capt. Bryant,
who had ample opportunities for observation. He says :—
“ Many of the females on their arrival at the island where they breed
appear desirous of returning to some particular male, and frequently
climb the outlying rocks to overlook the rookeries, calling out and