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The narrator spends a lazy Sunday with his friend Potter, watching the endless tide of people drifting along a bustling boulevard. Potter’s bitter observation—that crowds reduce humanity to a mass of vacant‑minded vermin—sparks a lively debate about what it really means to be human. The conversation quickly turns to the idea that our very nature is rooted in a long, tangled lineage of simian ancestors, a heritage that colors everything from our love of spectacle to our restless social habits.
From that point, the narrator muses on evolution’s grand design, suggesting that our “simian civilization” carries both the promise of untapped potential and the peculiar limits of our animal past. He imagines a world where early ape‑like conquerors forged the path that eventually led to modern society, and wonders how that ancient drive still shapes our aspirations and anxieties today. The essay invites listeners to reconsider the ordinary rush of city life through the lens of a deep, primal inheritance, hinting at larger questions about destiny and the forces that push humanity forward.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (87K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-11-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1874–1935
Best remembered for the warmly comic memoir Life with Father, this New York writer turned family memories into some of the most enduring humor of his era. He was also a cartoonist and essayist with a gift for making everyday domestic life feel vivid and funny.
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