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    Blood: A Story of Two Brothers - Page 2

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    character, falls on evil days and is
    eventually submerged in the classes beneath, we know that the aspects
    which please, the good features and expression, will often persist for
    long generations. Now this submerging process is perpetually going on
    all over the land and so it has been for centuries. We notice from year
    to year the rise from the ranks of numberless men to the highest
    positions, who are our leaders and legislators, owners of great estates
    who found great families and receive titles. But we do not notice the
    corresponding decline and final disappearance of those who were highly
    placed, since this is a more gradual process and has nothing
    sensational about it. Yet the two processes are equally great and far-
    reaching in their effects, and are like those two of Elaboration and
    Degeneration which go on side by side for ever in nature, in the animal
    world; and like darkness and light and heat and cold in the physical
    world.

    As a fact, the country is full of the descendants of families that have
    "died out." How long it takes to blot out or blur the finer features
    and expression we do not know, and the time probably varies according
    to the length of the period during which the family existed in its
    higher phase. The question which confronts us is: Does the higher or
    better nature, the "inward perfections" which are correlated with the
    aspects which please, endure too, or do those who fall from their own
    class degenerate morally to the level of the people they live and are
    one with?

    It is a nice question. In Sussex, with Mr. M. A. Lower, who has written
    about the vanished or submerged families of that county, for my guide
    as to names, I have sought out persons of a very humble condition, some
    who were shepherds and agricultural labourers, and have been surprised
    at the good faces of many of them, the fine, even noble, features and
    expression, and with these an exceptionally fine character. Labourers
    on the lands that were once owned by their forefathers, and children of
    long generations of labourers, yet still exhibiting the marks of their
    aristocratic descent, the fine features and expression and the fine
    moral qualities with which they are correlated.

    I will now give in illustration an old South American experience, an

    example, which deeply impressed me at the time, of the sharp contrast
    between a remote descendant of aristocrats and a child of the people in
    a country where class distinctions have long ceased to exist.

    It happened that I went to stay at a cattle ranch for two or three
    months one summer, in a part of the country new to me, where I knew
    scarcely anyone. It was a good spot for my purpose, which was bird
    study, and this wholly occupied my mind.
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