George Bouverie Goddard in the context of "The Illustrated London News"

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⭐ Core Definition: George Bouverie Goddard

George Bouverie Goddard (25 December 1832 – 6 March 1886) was a British sporting and animal painter and illustrator.

Goddard was born in Salisbury. From age ten, the drawings of this youthful genius were in great demand, even though he had received no formal artistic training, and faced much opposition in choosing art as a profession. Arriving in London in 1849, he spent some two years in sketching animal life in the Zoological Gardens. During this period he eked out a living by drawing on wood sporting illustrations for Punch and other periodicals. On his return to Salisbury he received numerous commissions, but finding the scope of these too limited, he returned and settled in London in 1857.

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George Bouverie Goddard in the context of Struggle for existence

The concept of the struggle for existence (or struggle for life) concerns the competition or battle for resources needed to live. It can refer to human society, or to organisms in nature. The concept is ancient, and the term struggle for existence was in use by the end of the 18th century. From the 17th century onwards the concept was associated with a population exceeding resources, an issue shown starkly in Thomas Robert MalthusAn Essay on the Principle of Population which drew on Benjamin Franklin's Observations Concerning the Increase of Mankind, Peopling of Countries, etc..

It is sometimes forgotten that Charles Darwin used the term "struggle for existence" in what he called a metaphorical sense. This was because he used it to refer not only to direct competition between (and within) species but indirect competition (as with a plant at the edge of the desert). Darwin noted that the struggle for existence could also involve active or passive mutual aid between organisms of the same or different species, instancing social insects (see also symbiosis).

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