summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-07 17:25:51 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-07 17:25:51 -0800
commit3664e995b1483c4e14d6d54b9b173441d1ac1914 (patch)
tree27f8a4d3468349c4f144efc714d372d1a7dbc362
parentd2154a5175aa8c72e1d0b418a8899ebe684e34b9 (diff)
NormalizeHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/55785-0.txt20555
-rw-r--r--old/55785-0.zipbin462368 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55785-h.zipbin639894 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55785-h/55785-h.htm23169
-rw-r--r--old/55785-h/images/cover.jpgbin129187 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55785-h/images/deco_p55.jpgbin19656 -> 0 bytes
9 files changed, 17 insertions, 43724 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1cbfa51
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55785 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55785)
diff --git a/old/55785-0.txt b/old/55785-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 9825bca..0000000
--- a/old/55785-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,20555 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ethics of Diet, by Howard Williams
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Ethics of Diet
- A Catena of Authorities Deprecatory of the Practice of Flesh Eating
-
-Author: Howard Williams
-
-Release Date: October 21, 2017 [EBook #55785]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ETHICS OF DIET ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Jane Robins, Reiner Ruf, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- ######################################################################
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-This e-text is based on ‘The Ethics of Diet,’ from 1883. Inconsistent
-and uncommon spelling and hyphenation have been retained; punctuation
-and typographical errors have been corrected. Quotations, particularly
-in languages other than English, have not been changed. Some footnote
-anchors are missing in the original text. They have been restored in
-the position where they make sense on the page in question.
-
-The succession of chapter titles in the table of contents has been
-rearranged for chapters XLIII.–XLVII. to match the order of chapters
-printed in the text. Neither the author Louis Lémery, referred to in
-the index, nor any of his works could be located in the text; the
-reference has been retained, though.
-
-Passages in italics have been surrounded by _underscores_; small
-capitals have been converted to UPPERCASE LETTERS.
-
- ######################################################################
-
-
-
-
- THE ETHICS OF DIET.
-
- A Catena
- OF
- AUTHORITIES DEPRECATORY OF THE PRACTICE OF FLESH-EATING.
-
- BY
- HOWARD WILLIAMS, M.A.
-
- “Man by Nature was never made to be a carnivorous animal, nor is
- he armed at all for prey and rapine.”
- --_Ray._
-
- “Hommes, soyez _humains_! c’est votre premier devoir. Quelle sagesse
- y-a-t-il pour vous hors de l’humanité?”
- --_Rousseau._
-
- “Der Mensch ist was er isst.”
- --_German Proverb._
-
- LONDON: F. PITMAN, 20, PATERNOSTER ROW; JOHN HEYWOOL, 11,
- PATERNOSTER BUILDINGS, MANCHESTER: JOHN HEYWOOD, DEANSGATE AND
- RIDGEFIELD.
-
- 1883.
-
- [_All Rights Reserved._]
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAP. PAGE.
-
- Preface i.-vi.
-
- I. Hesiod 1
-
- II. Pythagoras 4
-
- III. Plato 12
-
- IV. Ovid 23
-
- V. Seneca 27
-
- VI. Plutarch 41
-
- VII. Tertullian 51
-
- VIII. Clement of Alexandria 56
-
- IX. Porphyry 63
-
- X. Chrysostom 76
-
- XI. Cornaro 83
-
- XII. Thomas More 90
-
- XIII. Montaigne 94
-
- XIV. Gassendi 100
-
- XV. Ray 106
-
- XVI. Evelyn 107
-
- XVII. Mandeville 113
-
- XVIII. Gay 115
-
- XIX. Cheyne 120
-
- XX. Pope 128
-
- XXI. Thomson 134
-
- XXII. Hartley 138
-
- XXIII. Chesterfield 139
-
- XXIV. Voltaire 141
-
- XXV. Haller 156
-
- XXVI. Cocchi 157
-
- XXVII. Rousseau 159
-
- XXVIII. Linné 164
-
- XXIX. Buffon 166
-
- XXX. Hawkesworth 168
-
- XXXI. Paley 169
-
- XXXII. St. Pierre 173
-
- XXXIII. Oswald 179
-
- XXXIV. Hufeland 184
-
- XXXV. Ritson 185
-
- XXXVI. Nicholson 190
-
- XXXVII. Abernethy 196
-
- XXXVIII. Lambe 198
-
- XXXIX. Newton 205
-
- XL. Gleïzès 208
-
- XLI. Shelley 218
-
- XLII. Phillips 235
-
- XLIII. Lamartine 245
-
- XLIV. Michelet 252
-
- XLV. Cowherd 258
-
- XLVI. Metcalfe 260
-
- XLVII. Graham 264
-
- XLVIII. Struve 271
-
- XLIX. Daumer 282
-
- L. Schopenhauer 286
-
-
- APPENDIX.
-
- I. Hesiod 293
-
- II. The Golden Verses 294
-
- III. The Buddhist Canon 295
-
- IV. Ovid 299
-
- V. Musonius 303
-
- VI. Lessio 305
-
- VII. Cowley 308
-
- VIII. Tryon 309
-
- IX. Hecquet 314
-
- X. Pope 318
-
- XI. Chesterfield 320
-
- XII. Jenyns 322
-
- XIII. Pressavin 324
-
- XIV. Schiller 326
-
- XV. Bentham 327
-
- XVI. Sinclair 329
-
- XVII. Byron 331
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-At the present day, in all parts of the civilised world, the once
-orthodox practices of cannibalism and human sacrifice universally are
-regarded with astonishment and horror. The history of human development
-in the past, and the slow but sure progressive movements in the present
-time, make it absolutely certain that, with the same astonishment
-and horror will the now prevailing habits of living by the slaughter
-and suffering of the inferior species--habits different in degree
-rather than in kind from the old-world barbarism--be regarded by an
-age more enlightened and more refined than ours. Of such certainty
-no one, whose _beau idéal_ of civilisation is not a State crowded
-with jails, penitentiaries, reformatories, and asylums, and who does
-not measure Progress by the imposing but delusive standard of an
-ostentatious Materialism--by the statistics of commerce, by the amount
-of wealth accumulated in the hands of a small part of the community,
-by the increase of populations which are mainly recruited from the
-impoverished classes, by the number and popularity of churches and
-chapels, or even by the number of school buildings and lecture halls,
-or the number and variety of charitable institutions throughout the
-country--will pretend to have any reasonable doubt.
-
-In searching the records of this nineteenth century--the minutes
-and proceedings of innumerable learned and scientific societies,
-especially those of Social and Sanitary Science Congresses--our more
-enlightened descendants (let us suppose, of the 2001st century of the
-Christian era), it is equally impossible to doubt, will observe with
-amazement that, amid all the immeasurable talking and writing upon
-social and moral science, there is discoverable little or no trace of
-serious inquiry in regard to a subject which the more thoughtful Few,
-in all times, have agreed in placing at the very foundation of all
-public or private well-being. Nor, probably, will the astonishment
-diminish when, further, it is found that, amid all the vast mass of
-theologico-religious publications, periodical or other (supposing,
-indeed, any considerable proportion of them to survive to that age),
-no consciousness appeared to exist of the reality of such virtues as
-Humaneness and Universal Compassion, or of any obligation upon the
-writers to exhibit them to the serious consideration of the world: and
-this, notwithstanding the contemporary existence of a long-established
-association of humanitarian reformers who, though few in number, and
-not in the position of dignity and power which compels the attention
-of mankind, none the less by every means at their disposal--upon the
-platform and in the press, by pamphlets and treatises appealing at once
-to physical science, to reason, to conscience, to the authority of
-the most earnest thinkers, to the logic of facts--had been protesting
-against the cruel barbarisms, the criminal waste, and the demoralising
-influences of Butchery; and demonstrating by their own example, and
-by that of vast numbers of persons in the most different parts of the
-globe, the entire practicability of Humane Living.
-
-When, further, it is revealed in the popular literature, as well as in
-the scientific books and journals of this nineteenth century, that the
-innocent victims of the luxurious gluttony of the richer classes in
-all communities, subjected as they were to every conceivable kind of
-brutal atrocity, were yet, by the science of the time, acknowledged,
-without controversy, to be beings essentially of the same physical and
-mental organisation with their human devourers; to be as susceptible
-to physical suffering and pain as they; to be endowed--at all events,
-a very large proportion of them--with reasoning and mental faculties
-in very high degrees, and far from destitute of moral perceptions, the
-amazement may well be conjectured to give way to incredulity, that
-such knowledge and such practices could possibly co-exist. That the
-outward signs of all this gross barbarism--the entire or mangled bodies
-of the victims of the Table--were accustomed to be put up for public
-exhibition in every street and thoroughfare, without manifestations of
-disgust or abhorrence from the passers-by--even from those pretending
-to most culture or fashion--such outward proofs of extraordinary
-insensibility on the part of all classes to finer feeling may,
-nevertheless, scarcely provoke so much astonishment from an enlightened
-posterity as the fact that every public gathering of the governors or
-civil dignitaries of the country; every celebration of ecclesiastical
-or religious festivals appeared to be made the special occasion of the
-sacrifice and suffering of a greater number and variety than usual
-of their harmless fellow-beings; and all this often in the near
-neighbourhood of starving thousands, starving from want of the merest
-necessaries of life.
-
-Happily, however, there will be visible to the philosopher of the
-Future signs of the dawn of the better day in this last quarter of the
-nineteenth century. He will find, in the midst of the general barbarism
-of life, and in spite of the prevailing indifferentism and infidelity
-to truth, that there was a gradually increasing number of dissenters
-and protesters; that already, at the beginning of that period, there
-were associations of dietary reformers--offshoots from the English
-parent society, founded in 1847--successively established in America,
-in Germany, in Switzerland, in France, and, finally, in Italy; small
-indeed in numbers, but strenuous in efforts to spread their principles
-and practice; that in some of the larger cities, both in this country
-and in other parts of Europe, there had also been set on foot _Reformed
-Restaurants_, which supplied to considerable numbers of persons at once
-better food and better knowledge.
-
-If the truth or importance of any Principle or Feeling is to be
-measured, not by its popularity, indeed--not by the _quod ab
-omnibus_--but by the extent of its recognition by the most refined
-and the most earnest thinkers in all the most enlightened times--by
-the _quod a sapientibus_--the value of no principle has better been
-established than that which insists upon the vital importance of a
-radical reform in Diet. The number of the protesters against the
-barbarism of human living who, at various periods in the known history
-of our world, have more or less strongly denounced it, is a fact
-which cannot fail to arrest the attention of the most superficial
-inquirer. But a still more striking characteristic of this large body
-of protestation is the _variety_ of the witnesses. Gautama Buddha and
-Pythagoras, Plato and Epikurus, Seneca and Ovid, Plutarch and Clement
-(of Alexandria), Porphyry and Chrysostom, Gassendi and Mandeville,
-Milton and Evelyn, Newton and Pope, Ray and Linné, Tryon and Hecquet,
-Cocchi and Cheyne, Thomson and Hartley, Chesterfield and Ritson,
-Voltaire and Swedenborg, Wesley and Rousseau, Franklin and Howard,
-Lambe and Pressavin, Shelley and Byron, Hufeland and Graham, Gleïzès
-and Phillips, Lamartine and Michelet, Daumer and Struve--such are some
-of the more or less famous, or meritorious, names in the Past to be
-found among the prophets of Reformed Dietetics, who, in various degrees
-of abhorrence, have shrunk from the _régime_ of blood. Of many of those
-who have revolted from it, it may almost be said that they revolted _in
-spite of themselves_--in spite, that is to say, of the most cherished
-prejudices, traditions, and sophisms of Education.
-
-If we seek the historical origin of anti-kreophagist philosophy, it is
-to the Pythagorean School, in the later development of the Platonic
-philosophy especially, that the western world is indebted for the
-first systematic enunciation of the principle, and inculcation of the
-practice, of anti-materialistic living--the first historical protest
-against the _practical_ materialism of every-day eating and drinking.
-How Christianity, which, in its first origin, owes so much to, and was
-so deeply imbued with, on the one hand, Essenian, and, on the other,
-Platonic principles, to the incalculable loss of all the succeeding
-ages, has failed to propagate and develope this true and vital
-spiritualism--in spite, too, of the convictions of some of its earliest
-and best exponents, an Origen or Clemens, seems to be explained, in
-the first instance, by the hostility of the triumphant and orthodox
-Church to the “Gnostic” element which, in its various shapes, long
-predominated in the Christian Faith, and which at one time seemed
-destined to be the ruling sentiment in the Church; and, secondly,
-by the natural growth of materialistic principles and practice in
-proportion to the growth of ecclesiastical wealth and power; for,
-although the virtues of “asceticism,” derived from Essenism and
-Platonism, obtained a high reputation in the orthodox Church, they were
-relegated and appropriated to the ecclesiastical order (theoretically
-at least), or rather to certain departments of it.
-
-Such was what may be termed the sectarian cause of this fatal
-abandonment of the more spiritual elements of the new Faith, operating
-in conjunction with the corrupting influences of wealth and power.
-As regards the _humanitarian_ reason of anti-materialistic living,
-the failure and seeming incapacity of Christianity to recognise this,
-the most significant of all the underlying principles of reformation
-in Diet--the cause is not far to seek. It lay, essentially, in the
-(theoretical) depreciation of, and contempt for, _present_ as compared
-with _future_ existence. All the fatal consequence of this theoretical
-teaching (which yet has had no extensive influence, even in the way
-it might have been supposed to act beneficially), in regard to the
-status and rights of the non-human species, has been well indicated
-by a distinguished authority. “It should seem,” writes Dr. Arnold,
-“as if the primitive Christians, by laying so much stress upon a
-future life, and placing the lower beings out of the pale of hope [of
-extended existence], placed them at the same time out of the pale of
-sympathy, and thus laid the foundation for this utter disregard of
-[other] animals in the light of our fellow-beings. Their definition
-of _Virtue_ was the same as that of Paley--that it was good performed
-for the sake of ensuring everlasting happiness; which, of course,
-excluded all the [so-called] brute creatures.”[1] Hence it comes about
-that Humanitarianism and, in particular, Humane Dietetics, finds no
-place whatever in the religionism or pseudo-philosophy of the whole
-of the ages distinguished as the _Mediæval_--that is to say, from
-about the fifth or sixth to the sixteenth century--and, in fact,
-there existed not only a negative indifferentism, but even a positive
-tendency towards the still further depreciation and debasement of the
-extra-human races, of which the great doctor of mediæval theology,
-St. Thomas Aquinas (in his famous _Summa Totius Theologiæ_--the
-standard text book of the orthodox church), is especially the exponent.
-After the revival of reason and learning in the sixteenth century,
-to Montaigne, who, following Plutarch and Porphyry, reasserted the
-rights of the non-human species in general; and to Gassendi, who
-reasserted the right of innocent beings to life, in particular,
-among philosophers, belongs the supreme merit of being the first
-to dispel the long-dominant prejudices, ignorance, and selfishness
-of the common-place teachers of Morals and Religion. For orthodox
-Protestantism, in spite of its high-sounding name, so far at least as
-its theology is concerned, has done little in _protesting_ against the
-infringement of the moral rights of the most helpless and the most
-harmless of all the members of the great commonwealth of Living Beings.
-
-The principles of Dietary Reform are widely and deeply founded upon the
-teaching of (1) Comparative Anatomy and Physiology; (2) Humaneness, in
-the two-fold meaning of Refinement of Living, and of what is commonly
-called “Humanity;” (3) National Economy; (4) Social Reform; (5)
-Domestic and Individual Economy; (6) Hygienic Philosophy, all of which
-are amply displayed in the following pages. Various minds are variously
-affected by the same arguments, and the force of each separate one
-will appear to be of different weight according to the special bias
-of the inquirer. The _accumulated_ weight of all, for those who are
-able to form a calm and impartial judgment, cannot but cause the
-subject to appear one which demands and requires the most serious
-attention. To the present writer, the humanitarian argument appears
-to be of double weight; for it is founded upon the irrefragable
-principles of Justice and Compassion--universal Justice and universal
-Compassion--the two principles most essential in any system of ethics
-worthy of the name. That this argument seems to have so limited an
-influence--even with persons otherwise humanely disposed, and of finer
-feeling in respect to their own, and, also, in a general way, to other
-species--can be attributed only to the deadening power of custom and
-habit, of traditional prejudice, and educational bias. If they could be
-brought to reflect upon the simple ethics of the question, divesting
-their minds of these distorting media, it must appear in a light very
-different from that in which they accustom themselves to consider it.
-This subject, however, has been abundantly insisted upon with eloquence
-and ability much greater than the present writer has any pretensions
-to. It is necessary to add here, upon this particular branch of the
-subject, only one or two observations. The popular objections to the
-disuse of the flesh-diet may be classified under the two heads of
-fallacies and subterfuges. Not a few candid inquirers, doubtless,
-there are who sincerely allege certain _specious_ objections to the
-humanitarian argument, which have a considerable amount of _apparent_
-force; and these fallacies seem alone to deserve a serious examination.
-
-In the general constitution of life on our globe, suffering and
-slaughter, it is objected, are the normal and constant condition
-of things--the strong relentlessly and cruelly preying upon the
-weak in endless succession--and, it is asked, why, then, should the
-human species form an exception to the general rule, and hopelessly
-fight against Nature? To this it is to be replied, first: _that_,
-although, too certainly, an unceasing and cruel internecine warfare
-has been waged upon this atomic globe of ours from the first origin
-of Life until now, yet, apparently, there has been going on a slow,
-but not uncertain, progress towards the ultimate elimination of the
-crueller phenomena of Life; _that_, if the _carnivora_ form a very
-large proportion of Living Beings, yet the _non-carnivora_ are in the
-majority; and, lastly, what is still more to the purpose, _that_ Man,
-most evidently, by his origin and physical organisation, belongs not
-to the former but to the latter; besides and beyond which, _that_ in
-proportion as he boasts himself--and as he is seen _at his best_ (and
-only so far) he boasts himself with justness--to be the highest of
-all the gradually ascending and co-ordinated series of Living Beings,
-so is he, in that proportion, bound to prove his right to the supreme
-place and power, and his asserted claims to moral as well as mental
-superiority, by his conduct. In brief, in so far only as he proves
-himself to be the _beneficent ruler and pacificator_--and not the
-selfish Tyrant--of the world, can he have any just title to the moral
-pre-eminence.
-
-If the philosophical fallacy (the _eidolon specûs_) thus vanishes under
-a near examination; the next considerable objection, upon a superficial
-view, not wholly unnatural, that, if slaughtering for food were to be
-abolished, there would be a failure of manufacturing material for the
-ordinary uses of social life, is, in reality, based upon a contracted
-apprehension of facts and phenomena. For it is a reasonable and
-sufficient reply, that the whole history of civilisation, as it has
-been a history of the slow but, upon the whole, continuous advance
-of the human race in the arts of Refinement, so, also, has it proved
-that _demand creates supply_--that it is the absence of the former
-alone which permits the various substances, no less than the various
-forces, yet latent in Nature to remain uninvestigated and unused. Nor
-can any thoughtful person, who knows anything of the history of Science
-and Discovery, doubt that the resources of Nature and the mechanical
-ingenuity of man are all but boundless. Already, notwithstanding
-the absence of any demand for them, excepting within the ranks of
-anti-kreophagists, various non-animal substances have been proposed, in
-some cases used, as substitutes for the prepared skins of the victims
-of the Slaughter-house; and that, in the event of a general demand
-for such substitutes, there would spring up an active competition
-among inventors and manufacturers in this direction there is not the
-least reason for doubt. Besides, it must be taken into account that
-the process of conversion of the flesh-eating (that is to say, of the
-richer) sections of communities to the bloodless diet will, only too
-certainly, be very slow and gradual.
-
-As for the popular--perhaps the most popular--fallacy (the _eidolon
-fori_), which exhibits little of philosophical accuracy, or, indeed,
-of common reason, involved in the questions: “What is to become of
-_the animals_?” and, “Why were they created, if they are not intended
-for Slaughter and for human food?”--it is scarcely possible to
-return a grave reply. The brief answer, of course, is--that those
-variously-tortured beings have been brought into existence, and their
-numbers maintained, by selfish human invention only. Cease to breed
-for the butcher, and they will cease to exist beyond the numbers
-necessary for lawful and innocent use; they were “created” indeed,
-but they have been created by man, since he has vastly modified and,
-by no means, for the benefit of his helpless dependants, the natural
-form and organisation of the original types, the parent stocks of the
-domesticated Ox, Sheep, and Swine, now very remote from the native
-grandeur and vigour of the Bison, the Mouflon, and the wild Boar.
-
-There remains one fallacy of quite recent origin. An association has
-been formed--somewhat late in the day, it must be allowed--consisting
-of a few sanitary reformers, who put forward, also, humane reasons, for
-“Reform of the Slaughter-Houses,” one of the secondary propositions
-of which is, that the savagery and brutality of the Butchers’ trade
-could be obviated by the partial or general use of less lingering and
-revolting modes of killing than those of the universal knife and axe.
-No humanitarian will refuse to welcome any sign, however feeble, of
-the awakening of the conscience of the Community, or rather of the
-more thoughtful part of it, to the paramount obligations of common
-Humanity, and of the recognition of the claims of the subject species
-to _some_ consideration and to _some_ compassion, if not of the
-recognition of the claims of Justice; or will refuse to welcome any
-sort of proposition to lessen the enormous sum total of atrocities to
-which the lower animals are constantly subjected by human avarice,
-gluttony, and brutality. But, at the same time, no earnest humanitarian
-can accept the sophism, that an attempt at a mitigation of cruelty and
-suffering which, fundamentally, are _unnecessary_, ought to satisfy
-the educated conscience or reason. Vainly do the more feeling persons,
-who happen to have some scruples of conscience in respect to the
-sanction of the barbarous practice of Butchering, think to abolish the
-cruelties, while still indulging the appetite for the flesh luxuries,
-of the Table. The vastness of the demands upon the butchers--demands
-constantly increasing with the pecuniary resources of the nation,
-and stimulated by the pernicious example of the wealthy classes; the
-immensity of the traffic in “live stock” (as they complacently are
-termed) by rail and by ship,[2] the frightful horrors of which it has
-often been attempted, though inadequately, to describe; the utter
-impossibility of efficiently supervising and regulating such traffic
-and such slaughter--even supposing the desire to do so to exist to
-any considerable extent--and the inveterate indifferentism of the
-Legislature and of the influential classes, sufficiently declare the
-futility of such expectation and of the indulgence of such comfortable
-hope. It is, in brief, as with other attempts at patching and mending,
-or at applying salves to a hopelessly festered and gangrened wound,
-merely to put the “flattering unction” of compromise to the conscience.
-“Diseases, desperate grown, by desperate appliances are relieved, or
-not at all;” the foul stream of cruelty must be stopped at its source;
-the fountain and origin of the evil--the Slaughter-House itself--must
-be abolished. _Delendum est Macellum._
-
-It has been well said by one of the most eloquent of the prophets
-of Humane Living, that there are steps on the way to the summit of
-Dietetic Reform, and, if only one step be taken, yet that that single
-step will be not without importance and without influence in the world.
-The step, which leaves for ever behind it the barbarism of slaughtering
-our fellow-beings, the Mammals and Birds, is, it is superfluous to add,
-the most important and most influential of all.
-
-As for the plan of the present work, living writers and
-authorities--numerous and important as they are--necessarily have been
-excluded. Its bulk, already extended beyond the original conception
-of its limits, otherwise would have been swollen to a considerably
-larger size. For its entire execution, as well as for the collection
-and arrangement of the matter, the compiler alone is responsible;
-and, conscious that it must fall short of the completeness at which
-he aimed, he can pretend only to the merits of careful research and
-an eclectic impartiality. To the fact that the work already has
-appeared in the pages of the _Dietetic Reformer_, to which it has been
-contributed periodically during a space of time extending over five
-years, is owing some repetition of matter, which also, necessarily, is
-due to the nature of the subject. Errors of inadvertence, it is hoped,
-will be found to be few and inconsiderable. For the rest, he leaves the
-_Ethics of Diet_ to the candour of the critics and of the public.
-
-
-
-
-THE ETHICS OF DIET.
-
-
-
-
-I.
-
-HESIOD. EIGHTH CENTURY B.C.
-
-
-HESIOD--the poet _par excellence_ of peace and of agriculture,
-as Homer is of war and of the “heroic” virtues--was born at Ascra, a
-village in Bœotia, a part of Hellas, which, in spite of its proverbial
-fame for beef-eating and stupidity, gave birth to three other eminent
-persons--Pindar, the lyric poet, Epameinondas, the great military
-genius and statesman, and Plutarch, the most amiable moralist of
-antiquity.
-
-The little that is known of the life of Hesiod is derived from his
-_Works and Days_. From this celebrated poem we learn that his father
-was an emigrant from Æolia, the Greek portion of the north-west corner
-of the Lesser Asia; that his elder brother, Perses, had, by collusion
-with the judges, deprived him of his just inheritance; that after this
-he settled at Orchomenos, a neighbouring town--in the pre-historical
-ages a powerful and renowned city. This is all that is certainly known
-of the author of the _Works and Days_, and _The Theogony_. Of the
-genuineness of the former there has been little or no doubt; that of
-the latter--at least in part--has been called in question. Besides
-these two chief works, there is extant a piece entitled _The Shield
-of Herakles_, in imitation of the Homeric Shield (_Iliad_ xviii.) The
-_Catalogues of Women_--a poem commemorating the heroines beloved by the
-gods, and who were thus the ancestresses of the long line of heroes,
-the reputed founders of the ruling families in Hellas--is lost.
-
-The charm of the _Works and Days_--the first didactic poem extant--is
-its apparent earnestness of purpose and simplicity of style. The
-author’s frequent references to, and rebuke of, legal injustices--his
-sense of which had been quickened by the iniquitous decisions of the
-judges already referred to--are as _naïve_ as they are pathetic.
-
-Of the _Theogony_, the subject, as the title implies, is the history of
-the generation and successive dynasties of the Olympian divinities--the
-objects of Greek worship. It may, indeed, be styled the Hellenic Bible,
-and, with the Homeric Epics, it formed the principal theology of the
-old Greeks, and of the later Romans or Latins. The “Proœmium,” or
-introductory verses--in which the Muses are represented as appearing
-to their votary at the foot of the sacred Helicon, and consecrating
-him to the work of revealing the divine mysteries by the gift of a
-laurel-branch--and the following verses, describing their return to the
-celestial mansions, where they hymn the omnipotent Father, are very
-charming. To the long description of the tremendous struggle of the
-warring gods and Titans, fighting for the possession of heaven, Milton
-was indebted for his famous delineation of a similar conflict.
-
-The _Works and Days_, in striking contrast with the military spirit
-of the Homeric epic, deals in plain and simple verse with questions
-ethical, political, and economic. The ethical portion exhibits much
-true feeling, and a conviction of the evils brought upon the earth by
-the triumph of injustice and of violence. The well-known passages in
-which the poet figures the gradual declension and degeneracy of men
-from the golden to the present iron race, are the remote original of
-all the later pleasing poetic fictions of golden ages and times of
-innocence.
-
-According to Hesiod, there are two everlastingly antagonistic agents
-at work on the Earth; the spirit of war and fighting, and the peaceful
-spirit of agriculture and mechanical industry. And in the apostrophe in
-which he bitterly reproaches his unrighteous judges--
-
- “O fools! they know not, in their selfish soul,
- How far the half is better than the whole:
- The good which Asphodel and Mallows yield,
- The feast of herbs, the dainties of the field”--
-
-he seems to have a profound conviction of the truth taught by
-Vegetarianism--that luxurious living is the fruitful parent of
-selfishness in its manifold forms.[3]
-
-That Hesiod regarded that diet which depends mainly or entirely upon
-agriculture and upon fruits as the highest and best mode of life is
-sufficiently evident in the following verses descriptive of the “Golden
-Age” life:--
-
- “Like gods, they lived with calm, untroubled mind,
- Free from the toil and anguish of our kind,
- Nor did decrepid age mis-shape their frame.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Pleased with earth’s unbought feasts: all ills removed,
- Wealthy in flocks,[4] and of the Blest beloved,
- Death, as a slumber, pressed their eyelids down:
- All Nature’s common blessings were their own.
- The life-bestowing tilth its fruitage bore,
- A full, spontaneous, and ungrudging store.
- They with abundant goods, ’midst quiet lands,
- All willing, shared the gatherings of their hands.
- When Earth’s dark breast had closed this race around,
- Great Zeus, as demons,[5] raised them from the ground;
- Earth-hovering spirits, they their charge began--
- The ministers of good, and guards of men.
- Mantled with mist of darkling air they glide,
- And compass Earth, and pass on every side;
- And mark, with earnest vigilance of eyes,
- Where just deeds live, or crooked ways arise,
- And shower the wealth of seasons from above.”[6]
-
-The second race--the “Silver Age”--inferior to the first and wholly
-innocent people, were, nevertheless, guiltless of bloodshed in the
-preparation of their food; nor did they offer sacrifices--in the poet’s
-judgment, it appears, a damnable error. For the third--the “Brazen
-Age”--it was reserved to inaugurate the feast of blood:--
-
- “Strong with the ashen spear, and fierce and bold,
- Their thoughts were bent on violence alone,
- The deed of battle, and the dying groan.
- _Bloody their feasts, with wheaten food unblessed._”
-
-According to Hesiod, who is followed by the later poets, the “immortals
-inhabiting the Olympian mansions” feast ever on the pure and bloodless
-food of _Ambrosia_, and their drink is _Nectar_, which may be taken to
-be a sort of refined dew. He represents the divine Muses of Helicon,
-who inspire his song, as reproaching the shepherds, his neighbours,
-“that tend the flocks,” with the possession of “mere fleshly appetites.”
-
-Ovid, amongst the Latins, is the most charming painter of the innocence
-of the “Golden Age.” Amongst our own poets, Pope, Thomson, and
-Shelley--the last as a prophet of the future and actual rather than the
-poet of a past and fictitious age of innocence--have contributed to
-embellish the fable of the Past and the hope of the Future.
-
-
-
-
-II.
-
-PYTHAGORAS. 570-470 B.C.
-
-
-“A greater good never came, nor ever will come, to mankind, than
-that which was imparted by the gods through Pythagoras.” Such is the
-expression of enthusiastic admiration of one of his biographers. To
-those who are unacquainted with the historical development of Greek
-thought and Greek philosophy it may seem to be merely the utterance
-of the partiality of hero-worship. Those, on the other hand, who know
-anything of that most important history, and of the influence, direct
-or indirect, of Pythagoras upon the most intellectual and earnest
-minds of his countrymen--in particular upon Plato and his followers,
-and through them upon the later Jewish and upon very early Christian
-ideas--will acknowledge, at least, that the name of the prophet of
-Samos is that of one of the most important and influential factors in
-the production and progress of higher human thought.
-
-There is a true and there is a false hero-worship. The latter, whatever
-it may have done to preserve the blind and unreasoning subservience
-of mankind, has not tended to accelerate the progress of the world
-towards the attainment of truth. The old-world occupants of the popular
-Pantheon--“the patrons of mankind, gods and sons of gods, destroyers
-rightlier called and plagues of men”--are indeed fast losing, if they
-have not entirely lost, their ancient credit, but their vacant places
-have yet to be filled by the representatives of the most exalted
-ideals of humanity. Whenever, in the place of the representatives of
-mere physical and mental force, the _true_ heroes shall be enthroned,
-amongst the moral luminaries and pioneers who have contributed to
-lessen the thick darkness of ignorance, barbarism, and selfishness,
-the name of the first western apostle of humanitarianism and of
-spiritualism must assume a prominent position.
-
-It is a natural and legitimate curiosity which leads us to wish to
-know, with something of certainty and fulness, the outer and inner life
-of the master spirits of our race. Unfortunately, the _personality_
-of many of the most interesting and illustrious of them is of a vague
-and shadowy kind. But when we reflect that little more is known of the
-personal life of Shakspere than of that of Pythagoras or Plato--not to
-mention other eminent names--our surprise is lessened that, in an age
-long preceding the discovery of printing, the records of a life even so
-important and influential as that of the founder of Pythagoreanism are
-meagre and scanty.
-
-The earliest account of his teaching is given by Philolaus (“Lover of
-the People,” an auspicious name) of Tarentum, who, born about forty or
-fifty years after the death of his master--was thus contemporary with
-Sokrates and Plato. His _Pythagorean System_, in three books, was so
-highly esteemed by Plato that he is said to have given £400 or £500
-for a copy, and to have incorporated the principal part of it in his
-_Timæus_. Sharing the fate of so many other valuable products of the
-Greek genius, it has long since perished. Our remaining authorities
-for the Life are Diogenes of Laerte, Porphyry, one of the most erudite
-writers of any age, and Iamblichus. Of these, the biography of the
-last is the fullest, if not the most critical; that of Porphyry wants
-the beginning and the end; whilst of the ten books of Iamblichus _On
-the Pythagorean Sect_ (Περὶ Πυθαγόρου Αἱρέσεως), of which only five
-remain, the first was devoted to the life of the founder. Diogenes,
-who seems to have been of the school of Epikurus, belongs to the
-second, while Porphyry and Iamblichus, the well-known exponents of
-Neo-Platonism, wrote in the third and fourth centuries of our era.
-
-Pythagoras was born in the Island of Samos, somewhere about the year
-570 B.C. At some period in his youth, Polykrates--celebrated by the
-fine story of Herodotus--had acquired the _tyranny_ of Samos, and his
-rule, like that of most of his compeers, has deserved the stigma of the
-modern meaning of the Greek equivalent for princely and monarchical
-government. The future philosopher, we are told, unable to descend to
-the ordinary arts of sycophancy and dissimulation, left his country,
-and entered, like the Sirian philosopher of Voltaire, upon an extensive
-course of travels--extensive for the age in which he lived. How far he
-actually travelled is uncertain. He visited Egypt, the great nurse of
-the old-world science, and Syria, and it is not impossible that he may
-have penetrated eastwards as far as Babylon, perhaps as the captive
-of the recent conqueror of Egypt--the Persian Kambyses. It was in the
-East, and particularly in Egypt, that he probably imbibed the dogma of
-the immortality of the soul, or, as he chose to represent it to the
-public, that of the _metempsychosis_--a fancy widely spread in the
-eastern theologies.
-
-It has been asserted that he had already abandoned the orthodox diet
-at the age of nineteen or twenty. If this was actually the fact, he
-has the additional merit of having adopted the higher life by his
-own original force of mind and refinement of feeling. If not, he may
-have derived the most characteristic as well as the most important
-of his teachings from the Egyptians or Persians, or, through them,
-even from the Hindus--the most religiously strict abstainers from
-the flesh of animals. It is remarkable that the two great apostles
-of abstinence--Pythagoras and Sakya-Muni, or Buddha--were almost
-contemporaries; nor is it impossible that the Greek may, in whatever
-way, have become acquainted with the sublime tenets of the Hindu
-prophet, who had lately seceded from Brahminism, the established
-sacerdotal and exclusive religion of the Peninsula, and promulgated his
-great revelation--until then new to the world--that religion, at least
-his religion, was to be “a religion of mercy to all beings,” human and
-non-human.[7]
-
-As the natural and necessary result of his pure living, we are told
-by Iamblichus that “his sleep was brief, his soul vigilant and pure,
-and his body confirmed in a state of perfect and invariable health.”
-He appears to have passed the period of middle life when he returned
-to Samos, where his reputation had preceded him. Either, however,
-finding his countrymen hopelessly debased by the corrupting influence
-of despotism, or believing that he would find a better field for the
-propagandism of his new revelation, he not long afterwards set out for
-Southern Italy, then known as “Great Greece,” by reason of its numerous
-Greek colonies, or, rather, autonomous communities. At Krotona his
-fame and eloquence soon attracted, it seems, a select if not numerous
-auditory; and there he founded his famous society--the first historical
-anti-flesh-eating association in the western world--the prototype, in
-some respects, of the ascetic establishments of Greek and Catholic
-Christendom. It consisted of about three hundred young men belonging to
-the most influential families of the city and neighbourhood.
-
-It was the practice of the Egyptian priestly caste and of other
-exclusive institutions to reserve their better ideas (of a more
-satisfactory sort, at all events, than the system of theology that was
-promulgated to the mass of the community), into which only privileged
-persons were initiated. This esoteric method, which under the name
-of the _mysteries_ has exercised the learned ingenuity of modern
-writers--who have, for the most part, vainly laboured to penetrate the
-obscurity enveloping the most remarkable institution of the Hellenic
-theology--was accompanied with the strictest vows and circumstances of
-silence and secrecy. As for the priestly order, it was their evident
-policy to maintain the superstitious ignorance of the people and to
-overawe their minds, while in regard to the philosophic sects, it was
-perhaps to shield themselves from the priestly or popular suspicion
-that they shrouded their scepticism in this dark and convenient
-disguise. The parabolic or esoteric method was, perhaps, almost a
-necessity of the earlier ages. It is to be lamented that it should be
-still in favour in this safer age, and that the old exclusiveness of
-the _mysteries_ is in esteem with many modern authorities, who seem to
-hold that to unveil the spotless Truth to the multitude is “to cast
-pearls before swine.”
-
-It was probably from the philosophic motive that the founder of the new
-society instituted his grades of catechumens and probationary course,
-as well as vows of the strictest secrecy. The exact nature of all his
-interior instruction is necessarily very much matter of conjecture,
-inasmuch as, whether he committed his system to writing or not, nothing
-from his own hand has come down to us. However this may be, it is
-evident that the general spirit and characteristic of his teaching
-was self-denial or self-control, founded upon the great principles of
-justice and temperance; and that communism and asceticism were the
-principal aim of his sociology. He was the founder of communism in the
-West--his communistic ideas, however, being of an aristocratic and
-exclusive rather than of a democratic and cosmopolitan kind. “He first
-taught,” says Diogenes, “that the property of friends was to be held in
-common--that friendship is equality--and his disciples laid down their
-money and goods at his feet, and had all things common.”
-
-The moral precepts of the great master were much in advance of the
-conventional morality of the day. He enjoined upon his disciples, the
-same biographer informs us, each time they entered their houses to
-interrogate themselves--“How have I transgressed? What have I done?
-What have I left undone that I ought to have done?” He exhorted them to
-live in perfect harmony, to do good to their enemies and by kindness
-to convert them into friends. “He forbade them either to pray for
-themselves, seeing that they were ignorant of what was best for them;
-or to offer slain victims (σφαγια) as sacrifices; and taught them to
-respect a _bloodless_ altar only.” Cakes and fruits, and other innocent
-offerings were the only sacrifices he would allow. This, and the
-sublime commandment “Not to kill or injure any innocent animal,” are
-the grand distinguishing doctrines of his moral religion. So far did he
-carry his respect for the beautiful and beneficent in Nature, that he
-specially prohibited wanton injury to cultivated and useful trees and
-plants.
-
-By confining themselves to the innocent, pure, and spiritual dietary
-he promised his followers the enjoyment of health and equanimity,
-undisturbed and invigorating sleep, as well as a superiority of mental
-and moral perceptions. As for his own diet, “he was satisfied,” says
-Porphyry, “with honey or the honeycomb, or with bread only, and he did
-not taste wine from morning to night (μεθ’ἣμεραν); or his principal
-dish was often kitchen herbs, cooked or uncooked. Fish he ate rarely.”
-
-Humanitarianism--the extension of the sublime principles of justice
-and of compassion to all innocent sentient life, irrespective of
-nationality, creed, or species--is a very modern and even now very
-inadequately recognised creed; and, although there have been here and
-there a few, like Plutarch and Seneca, who were “splendidly false,”
-to the spirit of their age, the recognition of the obligation (the
-_practice_ has always been a very different thing) of benevolence and
-beneficence, so far from being extended to the non-human races, until
-a comparatively recent time has been limited to the narrow bounds of
-country and citizenship; and patriotism and internationalism are,
-apparently, two very opposite principles.
-
-The obligation to abstain from the flesh of animals was founded by
-Pythagoras on mental and spiritual rather than on humanitarian grounds.
-Yet that the latter were not ignored by the prophet of _akreophagy_ is
-evident equally by his prohibition of the infliction of pain, no less
-than of death, upon the lower animals, and by his injunction to abstain
-from the bloody sacrifices of the altar. Such was his abhorrence of
-the Slaughter-House, Porphyry tells us, that not only did he carefully
-abstain from the flesh of its victims, but that he could never bring
-himself to endure contact with, or even the sight of, butchers and
-cooks.
-
-While thus careful of the lives and feelings of the innocent non-human
-races, he recognised the necessity of making war upon the ferocious
-_carnivora_. Yet to such a degree had he become familiar with the
-habits and dispositions of the lower animals that he is said, by the
-exclusive use of vegetable food, not only to have tamed a formidable
-bear, which by its devastations on their crops had become the terror
-of the country people, but even to have accustomed it to eat that
-food only for the remainder of its life. The story may be true or
-fictitious, but it is not incredible; for there are well-authenticated
-instances, even in our own times, of true _carnivora_ that have been
-fed, for longer or shorter periods, upon the non-flesh diet.[8]
-
-“Amongst other reasons, Pythagoras,” says Iamblichus, “enjoined
-abstinence from the flesh of animals because it is conducive to
-peace. For those who are accustomed to abominate the slaughter of
-other animals, as iniquitous and unnatural, will think it still more
-unjust and unlawful to kill a man or to engage in war.” Specially, he
-“exhorted those politicians who are legislators to abstain. For if they
-were willing to act justly in the highest degree, it was indubitably
-incumbent upon them not to injure any of the lower animals. Since how
-could they persuade others to act justly, if they themselves were
-proved to be indulging an insatiable avidity by devouring these animals
-that are allied to us. For through the communion of life and the
-same elements, and the sympathy thus existing, they are, as it were,
-conjoined to us by a fraternal alliance.”[9] Maxims how different from
-those in favour in the present “year of grace,” 1877! If the refined
-thinker of the sixth century B.C. were now living, what would be his
-indignation at the enormous slaughter of innocent life for the public
-banquets at which our statesmen and others are constantly _fêted_,
-and which are recorded in our journals with so much magniloquence and
-minuteness? His hopes for the regeneration of his fellow-men would
-surely be terribly shattered. We may apply the words of the great Latin
-satirist, Juvenal, who so frequently denounces in burning language the
-luxurious gluttony of his countrymen under the Empire--“What would not
-Pythagoras denounce, or whither would he not flee, could he see these
-monstrous sights--he who abstained from the flesh of all other animals
-as though they were human?” (_Satire_ xv.)
-
-How long the communistic society of Krotona remained undisturbed is
-uncertain. Inasmuch as its reputation and influence were widely spread,
-it may be supposed that the outbreak of the populace (the origin of
-which is obscure), by which the society was broken up and his disciples
-massacred, did not happen until many years after its establishment.
-At all events, it is commonly believed that Pythagoras lived to an
-advanced age, variously computed at eighty, ninety, or one hundred
-years.
-
-It is not within our purpose to discuss minutely the scientific or
-theological theories of Pythagoras. In accordance with the abstruse
-speculative character of the Ionic school of science, which inclined
-to refer the origin of the universe to some one primordial principle,
-he was led by his mathematical predilections to discover the cosmic
-element in numbers, or proportion--a theory which savours of John
-Dalton’s philosophy, now accepted in chemistry, and a virtual
-enunciation of what we now call _quantitative_ science. Pythagoras
-taught the Kopernican theory prematurely. He regarded the sun as more
-_divine_ than the earth, and therefore set it in the _centre_ of the
-earth and planets. The argument was surely a mark of genius, but it
-was too transcendental for his contemporaries, even for Plato and
-Aristotle. His elder contemporary, the celebrated Thales of Miletus,
-with whom in his early youth he may have been acquainted, may claim,
-indeed, to be the remote originator of the famous nebular hypothesis
-of Laplace and modern astronomy. Another cardinal doctrine of the
-Pythagorean school was the musical, from whence the idea, so popular
-with the poets, of the “music of the spheres.” To music was attributed
-the greatest influence in the control of the passions. In its larger
-sense, by the Greeks generally, the term “Music” (_Musice_--pertaining
-to the Muses) denoted, it is to be remembered, not alone the “concord
-of sweet sounds,” but also an artistic and æsthetic education in
-general--all humanising and refining instruction.
-
-The famous doctrine of the Metempsychosis or Transmigration of
-Souls also was, doubtless, a prominent feature in the Pythagorean
-system; but it is probable that we may presume that by it Pythagoras
-intended merely to convey to the “uninstructed,” by parable, the
-sublime idea that the soul is gradually purified by a severe course
-of discipline until finally it becomes fitted for a fleshless life
-of immortality.[10] We are chiefly concerned with his attitude in
-regard to flesh eating. There can be no question that abstinence was
-a fundamental part of his system, yet certain modern critics--little
-in sympathy with so practical a manifestation of the higher life,
-or, indeed, with self-denial of any kind--have sometimes affected
-either to doubt the fact or to pass it by in contemptuous silence,
-thus ignoring what for the after ages stands out as by far the most
-important residuum of Pythagoreanism. In support of this scepticism
-the fact of the celebrated athlete Milo, whose prodigies of strength
-have become proverbial, has been quoted. Yet if these critics had been
-at the pains of inquiring somewhat further, they would have learned,
-on the contrary, that the non-flesh diet is exactly that which is
-most conducive to physical vigour; that in the East there are at this
-day non-flesh eaters, who in feats of strength might put even our
-strongest men to the blush. The extraordinary powers of the porters
-and boatmen of Constantinople have been remarked by many travellers;
-and the Chinese coolies and others are almost equally notorious for
-their marvellous powers of endurance. Yet their food is not only of
-the simplest--rice, dhourra (_i.e._, millet), onions, &c.--but of the
-scantiest possible. Moreover, the elder Greek athletes themselves, for
-the most part, trained on vegetarian diet. Not to multiply details,
-the fact that, upon a moderate calculation, two-thirds at least of the
-population of our globe--including the mass of the inhabitants of these
-islands--live, _nolentes, volentes_, on a dietary from which flesh is
-almost altogether necessarily excluded, is on the face of it sufficient
-proof in itself of the non-necessity of the diet of the rich.
-
-While the general consent of antiquity and of later times has received
-as undoubted the obligation of strict abstinence on the part of the
-immediate followers of Pythagoras, it seems that as regards the
-uninitiated, or (to use the ecclesiastical term) _catechumens_, the
-obligation was not so strict. Indeed relaxation of the rules of the
-higher life was simply a _sine quâ non_ of securing the attention of
-the mass of the community at all; and, like one still more eminent than
-himself in an after age, he found it a matter of necessity to present
-a teaching and a mode of living not too exalted and unattainable by
-the grossness and “hardness of heart” of the multitude. Hence, in all
-probability, the seeming contradictions in his teaching on this point
-found in the narratives of his followers.
-
-If his critics had been more intent on discovering the excellence of
-his rules of abstinence than on discussing, with frivolous diligence,
-the probable or possible reasons of his alleged prohibition of beans,
-it would have redounded more to their credit for wisdom and love of
-truth. Assuming the fact of the prohibition, in place of collecting
-all the most absurd gossip of antiquity, they might perhaps have found
-a more rational and more solid reason in the hypothesis that the bean
-being, as used in the ballot, a symbol and outward and visible sign of
-political life, was employed by Pythagoras parabolically to dissuade
-his followers from participating in the idle strife of party faction,
-and to exhort them to concentrate their efforts upon an attempt to
-achieve the solid and lasting reformation of mankind.[11] But to be
-much concerned in a patient inquiry after truth unhappily has been not
-always the characteristic of professional commentators.
-
-Blind hero-worship or idolatry of genius or intellect, even when
-directed to high moral aims, is no part of our creed; and it is
-sufficient to be assured that he was human, to be free to confess
-that the historical founder of _akreophagy_ was not exempt from human
-infirmity, and that he could not wholly rise above the wonder-loving
-spirit of an uncritical age. Deducting all that has been imputed to
-him of the fanciful or fantastic, enough still remains to force us to
-recognise in the philosopher-prophet of Samos one of the master-spirits
-of the world.[12]
-
-
-
-
-III.
-
-PLATO. 428-347 B.C.
-
-
-The most renowned of all the prose writers of antiquity may be said to
-have been almost the lineal descendant, in philosophy, of the teacher
-of Samos. He belonged to the aristocratic families of Athens--“the
-eye of Greece”--then and for long afterwards the centre of art and
-science. His original name was Aristokles, which he might well have
-retained. Like another equally famous leader in literature, François
-Marie Arouet, he abandoned his birth-name, and he assumed or acquired
-the name by which he is immortalised, to characterise, as it is said,
-either the breadth of his brow or the extensiveness of his mental
-powers. In very early youth he seems to have displayed his literary
-aptitude and tastes in the various kinds of poetry--epic, tragic, and
-lyric--as well as to have distinguished himself as an athlete in the
-great national contests or “games,” as they were called, the grand
-object of ambition of every Greek. He was instructed in the chief
-and necessary parts of a liberal Greek education by the most able
-professors of the time. He devoted himself with ardour to the pursuit
-of knowledge, and sedulously studied the systems of philosophy which
-then divided the literary world.
-
-In his twentieth year he attached himself to Sokrates, who was then
-at the height of his reputation as a moralist and dialectician. After
-the judicial murder of his master, 399, he withdrew from his native
-city, which, with a theological intolerance extremely rare in pagan
-antiquity, had already been disgraced by the previous persecution of
-another eminent teacher--Anaxagoras--the instructor of Euripides and of
-Perikles. Plato then resided for some time at Megara, at a very short
-distance from Athens, and afterwards set out, according to the custom
-of the eager searchers after knowledge of that age, on a course of
-travels.
-
-He traversed the countries which had been visited by Pythagoras, but
-his alleged visit to the further East is as traditional as that of
-his predecessor. The most interesting fact or tradition in his first
-travels is his alleged intimacy with the Greek prince of Syracuse,
-the elder Dionysius, and his invitation to the western capital of
-the Hellenic world. The story that he was given up by his perfidious
-host to the Spartan envoy, and by him sold into slavery, though not
-disprovable, may be merely an exaggerated account of the ill-treatment
-which he actually received.
-
-His grand purpose in going to Italy was, without doubt, the desire to
-become personally known to the eminent Pythagoreans whose headquarters
-were in the southern part of the Peninsula, and to secure the best
-opportunities of making himself thoroughly acquainted with their
-philosophic tenets. At that time the most eminent representative of
-the school was the celebrated Archytas, one of the most extraordinary
-mathematical geniuses and mechanicians of any age. Upon his return to
-Athens, at about the age of forty, he established his ever-memorable
-school in the suburban groves or “gardens” known as Ἀκαδημία--whence
-the well-known _Academy_ by which the Platonic philosophy is
-distinguished, and which, in modern days, has been so much vulgarised.
-All the most eminent Athenians, present and future, attended his
-lectures, and among them was Aristotle, who was destined to rival the
-fame of his master. From about 388 to 347, the date of his death, he
-continued to lecture in the Academy and to compose his Dialogues.
-
-In the intervals of his literary and didactic labours he twice visited
-Sicily; the first time at the invitation of his friend Dion, the
-relative and minister of the two Dionysii, the younger of whom had
-succeeded to his father’s throne, and whom Dion hoped to win to justice
-and moderation by the eloquent wisdom of the Athenian sage. Such hopes
-were doomed to bitter disappointment. His second visit to Syracuse
-was undertaken at the urgent entreaties of his Pythagorean friends,
-of whose tenets and dietetic principles he always remained an ardent
-admirer. For whatever reason, it proved unsuccessful. Dion was driven
-into exile, and Plato himself escaped only by the interposition of
-Archytas. Thus the only chance of attempting the realisation of his
-ideal of a communistic commonwealth--if he ever actually entertained
-the hope of realising it--was frustrated. Almost the only source of the
-biographies of Plato are the _Letters_ ascribed to him, commonly held
-to be fictitious, but maintained to be genuine by Grote. The narrative
-of the first visit to Sicily is found in the seventh Letter.
-
-We can refer but briefly to the nature of the philosophy and
-writings of Plato. In the notice of Pythagoras it has been stated
-that Plato valued very highly that teacher’s methods and principles.
-Pythagoreanism, in fact, enters very largely into the principal
-writings of the great disciple and exponent (and, it may safely
-be added, improver) of Sokrates, especially in the _Republic_
-and the _Timæus_. The four cardinal virtues inculcated in the
-_Republic_--justice or righteousness (Δικαιοσύνη), temperance or
-self-control (Εγκρατεία or Σωφροσύνη), prudence or wisdom (Φρονήσις),
-fortitude (Ἀνδρεία)--are eminently pythagorean.
-
-The characteristic of the purely speculative portion of Platonism
-is the theory of _ideas_ (used by the author in the new sense of
-_unities_, the original meaning being _forms_ and _figures_), of which
-it may be said that its merit depends upon its poetic fancy rather
-than upon its scientific value. Divesting it of the verbiage of the
-commentators, who have not succeeded in making it more intelligible,
-all that need be said of this abstruse and fantastic notion is, that by
-it he intended to convey that all sensible objects which, according to
-him, are but the shadows and phantoms of things unseen, are ultimately
-referable to certain abstract conceptions or ideas, which he termed
-_unities_, that can only be reached by pure thinking. Hence he asserted
-that “not being in a condition to grasp the idea of the Good with
-full distinctness, we are able to approximate to it only so far as
-we elevate the power of thinking to its proper purity.” Whatever may
-be thought of the premiss, the truth and utility of the deduction
-may be allowed to be as unquestionable as they are unheeded. This
-characteristic theory may be traced to the belief of Plato not only
-in the immortality, but also in the past eternity of the soul. In the
-_Phædrus_, under the form of allegory, he describes the soul in its
-former state of existence as traversing the circuit of the universe
-where, if reason duly control the appetite, it is initiated, as it
-were, into the essences of things which are there disclosed to its
-gaze. And it is this ante-natal experience, which supplies the fleshly
-mind or soul with its ideas of the beautiful and the true.
-
-The subtlety of the Greek intellect and language was, apparently, an
-irresistible temptation to their greatest ornaments to indulge in the
-nicest and most mystic speculation, which, to the possessors of less
-subtle intellects and of a far less flexible language, seems often
-strangely unpractical and hyperbolic. Thus while it is impossible
-not to be lost in admiration of the marvellous powers of the Greek
-_dialectics_, one cannot but at the same time regret that faculties so
-extraordinary should have been expended (we will not say altogether
-wasted) in so many instances on unsubstantial phantoms. If, however,
-the transcendentalism of the Platonic and other schools of Greek
-thought is matter for regret, how must we not deplore the enormous
-waste of time and labour apparent in the theological controversies
-of the first three or four centuries of Christendom--at least of
-Greek Christendom--when the omission or insertion of a single letter
-could profoundly agitate the whole ecclesiastical world and originate
-volumes upon volumes of refined, indeed, but useless verbiage. Yet
-even the ecclesiastical Greek writers of the early centuries may lay
-claim to a certain originality and merit of style which cannot be
-conceded to the “schoolmen” of the mediæval ages, and of still later
-times, whose solemn trifling--under the proud titles of Platonists and
-Aristotelians, or Nominalists and Realists, and the numerous other
-appellations assumed by them--for centuries was received with patience
-and even applause. Nor, unfortunately, is this war of Phantoms by any
-means unknown or extinct in our day. It was the lament of Seneca,
-often echoed by the most earnest minds, that all, or at least the
-greater part of, our learning is expended upon words rather than upon
-the acquisition of wisdom.[13]
-
-Plato deserves his high place among the Immortals not so much on
-account of any very definite results from his philosophy as on
-account of its general _tendency_ to elevate and direct human
-thought and aspirations to sublime speculations and aims. Of all his
-_Dialogues_, the most valuable and interesting, without doubt, is
-the _Republic_--the one of his writings upon which he seems to have
-bestowed the most pains, and in which he has recorded the outcome of
-his most mature reflections. Next may be ranked the _Phædo_ and the
-_Phædrus_--the former, it is well known, being a disquisition on the
-immortality of the soul. In spite of certain fantastic conceptions,
-it must always retain its interest, as well by reason of its
-speculations on a subject which is (or rather which ought to be) the
-most interesting that can engage the mind, as because it purports to
-be the last discourse of Sokrates, who was expecting in his prison the
-approaching sentence of death. The _Phædrus_ derives its unusual merit
-from the beauty of the language and style, and from the fact of its
-being one of the few writings of antiquity in which the charms of rural
-nature are described with enthusiasm.
-
-The _Republic_, with which we are here chiefly concerned, since it
-is in that important work that the author reproduces the dietetic
-principles of Pythagoras, may have been first published amongst his
-earlier writings, about the year 395; but that it was published in a
-larger and revised edition at a later period is sufficiently evident.
-It consists of ten Books. The question of Dietetics is touched upon
-in the second and third, in which Plato takes care to point out the
-essential importance to the well-being of his ideal state, that both
-the mass of the community and, in a special degree, the _guardians_ or
-rulers, should be educated and trained in proper dietetic principles,
-which, if not so definitely insisted upon as we could wish them to have
-been, sufficiently reveal the bias of his mind towards Vegetarianism.
-In the second Book the discussion turns principally upon the nature
-of Justice; and there is one passage which, still more significant
-for the age in which it was written, is not without instruction
-for the present. While Sokrates is discussing the subject with his
-interlocutors, one of them is represented as objecting:
-
- “With much respect be it spoken, you who profess to be admirers
- of justice, beginning with the heroes of old, have every one
- of you, without exception, made the praise of Justice and the
- condemnation of Injustice turn solely upon the reputation and
- honour and gifts resulting from them. But what each is in itself,
- by its own peculiar force as it resides in the soul of its
- possessor, unseen either by gods or men, has never, in poetry or
- prose, been adequately discussed, so as to show that Injustice is
- the greatest bane that a soul can receive into itself, and Justice
- the greatest blessing. Had this been the language held by you all
- from the first, and had you tried to persuade us of this from our
- childhood, we should not be on the watch to check one another in
- the commission of injustice, because everyone would be his own
- watchman, fearful lest by committing injustice he might attach to
- himself the greatest of evils.”
-
-Very useful and necessary for those times, and not wholly inapplicable
-to less remote ages, is the incidental remark in the same book, that
-“there are quacks and soothsayers who flock to the rich man’s doors,
-and try to persuade him that they have a power at command which
-they procure from heaven, and which enables them, by sacrifices and
-incantations, performed amid feasting and indulgence, to make amends
-for any crime committed either by the individual himself or by his
-ancestors.... And in support of all these assertions they produce the
-evidence of poets--some, to exhibit the facilities of vice, quoting the
-words:--
-
- “Whoso wickedness seeks, may even in masses obtain it
- Easily. Smooth is the way, and short, for nigh is her dwelling.
- Virtue, heaven has ordained, shall be reached by the sweat of
- the forehead.”
-
- --_Hesiod_, _Works and Days_, 287.[14]
-
-It is the fifth Book, however, which has always excited the greatest
-interest and controversy, for therein he introduces his Communistic
-views. Our interest in it is increased by the fact that it is the
-original of the ideal Communisms of modern writers--the prototype of
-the _Utopia_ of More, of the _New Atlantis_ of Francis Bacon, the
-_Oceanica_ of Harrington, and the _Gaudentio_ of Berkeley, &c.
-
-In maintaining the perfect natural equality of women to men,[15] and
-insisting upon an identity of education and training, he advances
-propositions which perhaps only the more advanced of the assertors
-of women’s rights might be prepared to entertain. Whatever may have
-been said by the various admirers of Plato, who have been anxious to
-present his political or social views in a light which might render
-them less in conflict with modern Conservatism, there can be no doubt
-for any candid reader of the _Republic_ that the author published to
-the world his _bonâ fide_ convictions. One of the _dramatis personæ_
-of the dialogue, while expressing his concurrence in the Communistic
-legislation of Sokrates, at the same time objects to the difficulty of
-realising it in actual life, and desires Sokrates to point out whether,
-and how, it could be really practicable. Whereupon Sokrates (who it is
-scarcely necessary to remark, is the convenient mouthpiece of Plato)
-replies: “Do you think any the worse of an artist who has painted the
-_beau idéal_ of human beauty, and has left nothing wanting in the
-picture, because he cannot prove that such a one as he has painted
-might possibly exist? Were not we, likewise, proposing to construct,
-in theory, the pattern of a perfect State? Will our theory suffer at
-all in your good opinion if we cannot prove that it is _possible_ for a
-city to be organised in the manner proposed?”
-
-As has been well paraphrased by the interpreters to whom we are
-indebted for the English version: “The possibilities of realising such
-a commonwealth in actual practice is quite a secondary consideration,
-which does not in the least affect the soundness of the method or the
-truth of the results. All that can fairly be demanded of him is to
-show how the imperfect politics at present existing may be brought
-most nearly into harmony with the perfect State which has just been
-described. To bring about this great result one fundamental change
-is necessary, and only one: the highest political power must, by
-some means or other, be vested in philosophers.” The next point
-to be determined is, What is, or ought to be, implied by the term
-_philosopher_, and what are the characteristics of the true philosophic
-disposition? “They are--(1) an eager desire for the knowledge of all
-real existence; (2) hatred of falsehood, and devoted love of truth; (3)
-contempt for the pleasures of the body; (4) indifference to money; (5)
-high-mindedness and liberality; (6) justice and gentleness; (7) a quick
-apprehension and a good memory; (8) a musical, regular, and harmonious
-disposition.” But how is this disposition to be secured? Under the
-present condition of things, and the corrupting influences of various
-kinds, where temptations abound to compromise truth and substitute
-expediency and self-interest, it would seem wellnigh impossible and
-Utopian to expect it.
-
-“How is this evil to be remedied? The State itself must regulate the
-study of philosophy, and must take care that the students pursue it on
-right principles, and at a right age. And now, surely, we may expect
-to be believed when we assert that if a State is to prosper it must be
-governed by philosophers. If such a contingency should ever take place
-(and why should it not?), our ideal State will undoubtedly be realised.
-So that, upon the whole, we come to this conclusion: The constitution
-just described is the best, if it can be realised; and to realise it is
-difficult, but not impossible.” At this moment, when the question of
-compulsory education, under the immediate superintendence of the State,
-is being fought with so much fierceness--on one side, at least--to
-recur to Plato might not be without advantage.
-
-In the most famous dialogue of Plato--the _Republic_, or, as it might
-be termed _On Justice_--the principal interlocutors, besides Sokrates,
-are Glaukon, Polymachus, and Adeimantus; and the whole piece originates
-in the chance question which rose between them, “What is Justice?”
-In the second Book, from which the following passage is taken, the
-discussion turns upon the origin of society, which gives opportunity
-to Sokrates to develop his opinions upon the diet best adapted for the
-community--at all events, for the great majority:--
-
- “‘They [the artisans and work-people generally] will live, I
- suppose, on barley and wheat, baking cakes of the meal, and
- kneading loaves of the flour. And spreading these excellent cakes
- and loaves upon mats of straw or on clean leaves, and themselves
- reclining on rude beds of yew or myrtle-boughs, they will make
- merry, themselves and their children, drinking their wine, weaving
- garlands, and singing the praises of the gods, enjoying one
- another’s society, and not begetting children beyond their means,
- through a prudent fear of poverty or war.’
-
- “Glaukon here interrupted me, remarking, ‘Apparently you describe
- your men feasting, without anything to relish their bread.’[16]
-
- “‘True,’ I said, ‘I had forgotten. Of course they will have
- something to relish their food. Salt, no doubt, and olives, and
- cheese, together with the country fare of boiled onions and
- cabbage. We shall also set before them a dessert, I imagine,
- of figs, pease, and beans: they may roast myrtle-berries and
- beech-nuts at the fire, taking wine with their fruit in moderation.
- And thus, passing their days in tranquillity and sound health,
- they will, in all probability, live to an advanced age, and dying,
- bequeath to their children a life in which their own will be
- reproduced.’
-
- “Upon this Glaukon exclaimed, ‘Why, Sokrates, if you were founding
- a community of swine, this is just the style in which you would
- feed them up!’
-
- “‘How, then,’ said I, ‘would you have them live, Glaukon?’
-
- “‘In a civilised manner,’ he replied. ‘They ought to recline on
- couches, I should think, if they are not to have a hard life of it,
- and dine off tables, and have the usual dishes and dessert of a
- modern dinner.’
-
- “‘Very good: I understand. Apparently we are considering the
- growth, not of a city merely, but of a _luxurious_ city. I dare
- say it is not a bad plan, for by this extension of our inquiry we
- shall perhaps discover how it is that justice and injustice take
- root in cities. Now, it appears to me that the city which we have
- described is the _genuine_ and, so to speak, _healthy_ city. But
- if you wish us also to contemplate a city that is suffering from
- inflammation, there is nothing to hinder us. Some people will not
- be satisfied, it seems, with the fare or the mode of life which we
- have described, but must have, in addition, couches and tables and
- every other article of furniture, as well as viands.... Swineherds
- again are among the additions we shall require--a class of persons
- not to be found, because not wanted, in our former city, but needed
- among the rest in this. We shall also need great quantities of all
- kinds of cattle for those who may wish to eat them, shall we not?’
-
- “‘Of course we shall.’
-
- “‘Then shall we not experience the need of medical men also to a
- much greater extent under this than under the former _régime_?’
-
- “‘Yes, indeed.’
-
- “‘The country, too, I presume, which was formerly adequate to
- the support of its then inhabitants, will be now too small, and
- adequate no longer. Shall we say so?’
-
- “‘Certainly.’
-
- “‘Then must we not cut ourselves a slice of our neighbours’
- territory, if we are to have land enough both for pasture and
- tillage? While they will do the same to ours if they, like us,
- permit themselves to overstep the limit of necessaries, and plunge
- into the unbounded acquisition of wealth.’
-
- “‘It must inevitably be so, Sokrates.’
-
- “‘Will our next step be to go to war, Glaukon, or how will it be?’
-
- “‘As you say.’
-
- “At this stage of our inquiry let us avoid asserting either that
- war does good or that it does harm, confining ourselves to this
- statement--that we have further traced the origin of war to causes
- which are the most fruitful sources of whatever evils befall a
- State, either in its corporate capacity or in its individual
- members.” (Book II.)[17]
-
-Justly holding that the best laws will be of little avail unless the
-administrators of them shall be just and virtuous, Sokrates, in the
-Third Book, proceeds to lay down rules for the education and diet of
-the magistrates or executive, whom he calls--in conformity with the
-Communistic system--_guardians_:--
-
- “‘We have already said,’ proceeds Sokrates, ‘that the persons in
- question must refrain from drunkenness; for a guardian is the last
- person in the world, I should think, to be allowed to get drunk,
- and not know where he is.’
-
- “‘Truly it would be ridiculous for a guardian to require a guard.’
-
- “‘But about eating: our men are combatants in a most important
- arena, are they not?’
-
- “‘They are.’
-
- “‘Then will the habit of body which is cultivated by the trained
- fighters of the Palæstra be suitable to such persons?’
-
- “‘Perhaps it will.’
-
- “‘Well, but this is a sleepy kind of regimen, and produces a
- precarious state of health; for do you not observe that men in the
- regular training sleep their life away, and, if they depart only
- slightly from the prescribed diet, are attacked by serious maladies
- in their worst form?’
-
- “‘I do.’
-
- * * * * *
-
- “‘In fact, it would not be amiss, I imagine, to compare this whole
- system of feeding and living to that kind of music and singing
- which is adapted to the panharmonicum, and composed in every
- variety of rhythm.’
-
- “‘Undoubtedly it would be a just comparison.’
-
- “‘Is it not true, then, that as in music variety begat
- dissoluteness in the soul, so here it begets disease in the body,
- while simplicity in gymnastic [diet] is as productive of health as
- in music it was productive of temperance?’
-
- “‘Most true.’
-
- “‘But when dissoluteness and diseases abound in a city, are not
- law courts and surgeries opened in abundance, and do not Law
- and Physic begin to hold their heads high, when numbers even
- of well-born persons devote themselves with eagerness to these
- professions?’
-
- “‘What else can we expect?’
-
- * * * * *
-
- “‘And do you not hold it disgraceful to require medical aid, unless
- it be for a wound, or an attack of illness incidental to the time
- of the year--to require it, I mean, owing to our laziness and the
- life we lead, and to get ourselves so stuffed with humours and
- wind, like quagmires, as to compel the clever sons of Asklepios to
- call diseases by such names as _flatulence_ and _catarrh_?’
-
- “‘To be sure, these are very strange and new-fangled names for
- disorders.’” (Book III.)
-
-Elsewhere, in a well-known passage (in _The Laws_), Plato pronounces
-that the springs of human conduct and moral worth depend principally
-on diet. “I observe,” says he, “that men’s thoughts and actions are
-intimately connected with the threefold need and desire (accordingly as
-they are properly used or abused, virtue or its opposite is the result)
-of eating, drinking, and sexual love.” He himself was remarkable for
-the extreme frugality of his living. Like most of his countrymen, he
-was a great eater of figs; and so much did he affect that frugal repast
-that he was called, _par excellence_, the “lover of figs” (φιλόσυκος).
-
-The Greeks, in general, were noted among the Europeans for their
-abstemiousness; and Antiphanes, the comic poet (in Athenæus), terms
-them “leaf-eaters” (φυλλοτρῶγες). Amongst the Greeks, the Athenians and
-Spartans were specially noted for frugal living. That of the latter is
-proverbial. The comic poets frequently refer, in terms of ridicule,
-to what seemed to them so unaccountable an indifferentism to the
-“good things” of life on the part of the witty and refined people of
-Attica. See the _Deipnosophists_ (dinner-philosophers) of Athenæus (the
-great repertory of the _bon-vivantism_ of the time), and Plutarch’s
-_Symposiacs_.
-
-It has been pointed out by Professor Mahaffy, in his recent work on
-old Greek life, that slaughter-houses and butchers are seldom, or
-never, mentioned in Greek literature. “The eating of [flesh] meat,” he
-observes, “must have been almost confined to sacrificial feasts; for,
-in ordinary language, butchers’ meat was called _victim_ (ἱερεῖον).
-The most esteemed, or popular, dishes were _madsa_, a sort of porridge
-of wheat or barley; various kinds of bread (see _Deipn._ iii.); honey,
-beans, lupines, lettuce and salad, onions and leeks. Olives, dates,
-and figs formed the usual fruit portion of their meals. In regard to
-non-vegetable food, fish was the most sought after and preferred to
-anything else; and the well-known term _opson_, which so frequently
-recurs in Greek literature, was specially appropriated to it.
-
-Contemporary with the great master of language was the great master of
-medicine, Hippokrates, (460-357) who is to his science what Homer is
-to poetry and Herodotus to history--the first historical founder of
-the art of healing. He was a native of Kōs, a small island of the S.W.
-coast of Lesser Asia, the traditional cradle and home of the disciples
-of Asklepios, or Æsculapius (as he was termed by the Latins), the
-semi-divine author and patron of medicine. And it may be remarked, in
-passing, that the College of Asklepiads of Kōs were careful to exercise
-a despotism as severe and exclusive as that which obtains, for the most
-part, with the modern orthodox schools.
-
-Amongst a large number of writings of various kinds attributed to
-Hippokrates is the treatise _On Regimen in Acute Diseases_ (περὶ
-Διαίτης Ὀξέων), which is generally received as genuine; and _On the
-Healthful Regimen_ (περὶ Διαίτης Ὑγιεινῆς), which belongs to the same
-age, though not to the _canonical_ writings of the founder of the
-school himself. He was the author, real or reputed, of some of the
-most valuable apophthegms of Greek antiquity. _Ars longa--Vita brevis_
-(education is slow; life is short) is the best known, and most often
-quoted. What is still more to our purpose is his maxim--“Over-drinking
-is _almost as bad_ as over-eating.” Of all the productions of this most
-voluminous of writers, his _Aphorisms_ (Ἀφορισμοί), in which these
-specimens of laconic wisdom are collected, and which consists of some
-four hundred short practical sentences, are the most popular.
-
-About a century after the death of Plato appeared a popular exposition
-of the Pythagorean teaching, in hexameters, which is known by the title
-given to it by Iamblichus--the _Golden Verses_. “More than half of
-them,” says Professor Clifford, “consist of a sort of versified ‘Duty
-to God and my Neighbour,’ except that it is not designed by the rich to
-be obeyed by the poor; that it lays stress on the laws of health; and
-that it is just such sensible counsel for the good and right conduct of
-life as an Englishman might now-a-days give to his son.”
-
-Hierokles, an eminent Neo-Platonist of the fifth century, A.D., gave
-a course of lectures upon them at Alexandria--which since the time of
-the Ptolemies had been one of the chief centres of Greek learning and
-science--and his commentary is sufficiently interesting. Suïdas, the
-lexicographer, speaks of his matter and style in the highest terms of
-praise. “He astonished his hearers everywhere,” he tells us, “by the
-calm, the magnificence, the width of his superlative intellect, and
-by the sweetness of his speech, full of the most beautiful words and
-things.” The Alexandrian lecturer quotes the old Pythagorean maxims:
-
- “You shall honour God best by becoming godlike in your thoughts.
- Whoso giveth God honour as to one that needeth it, that man in his
- folly hath made himself greater than God. The wise man only is a
- priest, is a lover of God, is skilful to pray; ... for that man
- only knows how to worship, who begins by offering himself as the
- victim, fashions his own soul into a divine image, and furnishes
- his mind as a temple for the reception of the divine light.”
-
-The following extracts will serve as a specimen of the religious or
-moral character of the _Golden Verses_:--
-
- “Let not sleep come upon thine eyelids till thou hast pondered thy
- deeds of the day.
-
- “Wherein have I sinned? What work have I done, what left undone
- that I ought to have done?
-
- “Beginning at the first, go through even unto the last, and then
- let thy heart smite thee for the evil deeds, but rejoice in the
- good work.
-
- “Work at these commandments and think upon them: these commandments
- shalt thou love.
-
- “They shall surely set thee in the way of divine righteousness:
- yea, by Him who gave into our soul the _Tetrad_,[18] well-spring of
- life everlasting.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “Know so far as is permitted thee, that Nature in all things is
- like unto herself:
-
- “That thou mayest not hope that of which there is no hope, nor be
- ignorant of that which may be.
-
- “Know thou also, that _the woes of men are the work of their own
- hands_.
-
- “Miserable are they, _because they see not and hear not the good
- that is very nigh them_: and the way of escape from evil few there
- be that understand it.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “Verily, Father Zeus, thou wouldst free all men from much evil, if
- thou wouldst teach all men what manner of spirit they are of.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “Keep from the meats aforesaid, using judgment both in cleansing
- and setting free the soul.
-
- “Give heed to every matter, and set reason on high, who best
- holdeth the reins of guidance.[19]
-
- “Then when thou leavest the body, and comest into the free æther,
- thou shalt be a god undying, everlasting, neither shall death have
- any more dominion over thee.”
-
-Referring to these verses, which inculcate that the human race is
-itself responsible for the evils which men, for the most part, prefer
-to regret than to remedy, Professor Clifford, to whom we are indebted
-for the above version of the _Golden Verses_, remarks on the merits of
-this teaching, that it reminds us that “men suffer from _preventible_
-evils, that the people perish for lack of knowledge.”[20] Thus we find
-that the principal obstructions, in all ages, to human progress and
-perfectibility may be ever found in IGNORANCE and SELFISHNESS.
-
-
-
-
-IV.
-
-OVID. 43 B.C.--18 A.D.
-
-
-The school of Pythagoras and of Plato, although it was not the
-fashionable or popular religion of Rome, counted amongst its disciples
-some distinguished Italians, and the name of Cicero, who belonged
-to the “New Academy,” is sufficiently illustrious. The Italians,
-however, who borrowed their religion as well as their literature from
-the Greeks, were never distinguished, like their masters, for that
-refinement of thought which might have led them to attach themselves
-to the Pythagorean teaching. Under the bloody despotism of the Empire,
-the philosophy which was most affected by the _literati_ and those who
-were driven to the consolations of philosophy was the _stoical_, which
-taught its disciples to consider _apathy_ as the _summum bonum_ of
-existence. This school of philosophy, whatever its other merits, was
-too much centred in self--paradoxical as the assertion may seem--to
-have much regard for the rest of mankind, much less for the non-human
-species. Nor, while they professed supreme contempt for the luxuries
-and even comforts of life, did the disciples of the “Porch,” in
-general, practice abstinence from any exalted motive, humanitarian or
-spiritual. They preached indifference for the “good things” of this
-life, not so much to elevate the spiritual and moral side of human
-nature as to show their contempt for human life altogether.
-
-That the Italian was essentially of a more barbarous nature than the
-Greek is apparent in the national spectacles and amusements. The
-savage scenes of gladiatorial and non-human combat and internecine
-slaughter of the Latin amphitheatres, of which the famous Colosseum
-in the capital was the model of many others in the provinces, were
-abhorrent to the more refined Greek mind.[21] In view of scenes so
-sanguinary--the “Roman holiday”--it is scarcely necessary to observe
-that humanitarianism was a creed unknown to the Italians; and it
-was not likely that a people, addicted throughout their career as
-a dominant race to the most bloody wars, not only foreign but also
-internecine, with whom fighting and slaughter of their own kind was an
-almost daily occupation, should entertain any feeling of pity (to say
-nothing of justice) towards their non-human dependants. Nevertheless,
-even they were not wholly inaccessible, on occasion, to the prompting
-of pity. Referring to a grand spectacle given by Pompeius at the
-dedication of his theatre (B.C. 55), in which a large number
-of elephants, amongst others, were forced to fight, the elder Pliny
-tells us:--
-
- “When they lost the hope of escape, they sought the compassion
- of the crowd with an appearance that is indescribable, bewailing
- themselves with a sort of lamentation so much to the pain of
- the populace that, forgetful of the imperator and the elaborate
- munificence displayed for their honour, they all rose up in tears
- and bestowed imprecations on Pompeius, of which he soon after
- experienced the effect.”[22]
-
-Cicero, who was himself present at the spectacle of the Circus, in a
-letter to a friend, Marcus Marius, writes:--
-
- “What followed, for five days, was successive combats between a
- man and a wild beast. (_Venationes binæ._) It was magnificent.
- No one disputes it. But what pleasure can it be to a person of
- refinement, when either a weak man is torn to pieces by a very
- powerful beast, or a noble animal is struck through by a hunting
- spear?... The last day was that of the elephants, in which there
- was great astonishment on the part of the populace and crowd, but
- no enjoyment. Indeed there followed a degree of compassion, and a
- certain idea that there is a sort of fellowship between that huge
- animal and the human race.” (Cicero, _Ep. ad Diversos_ vii., 1.)
-
-Testimonies which might induce one almost to think that, had not they
-been systematically and industriously accustomed to these horrible
-and gigantic butcheries by their rulers, even the Roman populace
-might have been susceptible of better feelings and desires than those
-inspired by their amphitheatres, though these savage exhibitions were
-perhaps hardly worse than the combats and slaughter in the bull-rings
-of Seville or Madrid, or at the courts of the Mohammedan princes of
-India recently sanctioned by the presence of English royalty. It is
-worth noting, in passing, that while the _gladiatorial_ slaughters were
-discontinued some years after the triumph of Christianity, the other
-part of the entertainment--the indiscriminate combats and slaughter
-of the _non-human_ victims--continued to be exhibited to a much later
-period.
-
-If we reflect that the rise of the humanitarian spirit in Christian
-Europe, or rather in the better section of it, is of very recent
-origin, it might appear unreasonable to look for any distinct
-exhibition of so exalted a feeling in the younger age of the
-world. Yet, to the shame of more advanced civilisations, we find
-manifestations of it in the writings of a few of the more refined
-minds of Greece and Italy; and Plutarch and Seneca--the former
-particularly--occupy a distinguished place amongst the first preachers
-of that sacred truth.[23]
-
-Publius Ovidius Naso, the Latin versifier of the Pythagorean
-philosophy, was born B.C. 43. He belonged to the equestrian
-order, a position in the social scale which corresponds with the
-“higher middle class” of modern days. Like so many other names eminent
-in literature, he was in the first instance educated for the law,
-for which, also like many other literary celebrities, he soon showed
-his genius to be unfitted and uncongenial. He studied at the great
-University of that age--Athens--where he acquired a knowledge of
-the Greek language, and probably of its rich literature. The most
-memorable event in his life--which, in accordance with the fashion of
-his contemporaries of the same rank, was for the most part devoted
-to “gallantry” and the accustomed amatory licence--is his mysterious
-banishment from Rome to the inhospitable and savage shores of the
-Euxine, where he passed the last seven years of his existence, dying
-there in the sixtieth year of his age. The cause of his sudden exile
-from the Court of Augustus, where he had been in high favour, is one
-of those secrets of history which have exercised the ingenuity of his
-successive biographers. According to the terms of the imperial edict,
-the freedom of the poet’s _Ars Amatoria_ was the offence. That this was
-a mere pretext is plain, as well from the long interval of time which
-had passed since the publication of the poem as from the character of
-the fashionable society of the capital. Ovid himself attributes his
-misfortune to the fact of his having become the involuntary witness of
-some secret of the palace, the nature of which is not divulged.
-
-His most important poems are (1) _The Metamorphoses_, in fifteen books,
-so called from its being a collection of the numerous transformations
-of the popular theology. It is, perhaps, the most _charming_ of Latin
-poems that have come down to us. Particular passages have a special
-beauty. (2) _The Fasti_, in twelve books, of which only six are extant,
-is the Roman Calendar in verse. Its interest, apart from the poetic
-genius of the author, is great, as being the grand repertory of the
-Latin feasts and their popular origin. Besides these two principal
-poems he was the author of the famous _Loves_, in three books; the
-_Letters of the Heroines_, _The Remedies of Love_, and _The Tristia, or
-Sad Thoughts_. He also wrote a tragedy--_Medea_--which, unfortunately
-has not come down to us. All his poems are characterised by elegance
-and a remarkable smoothness and regularity of versification, and in
-much of his productions there is an unusual beauty and picturesqueness
-of poetic ideas.
-
-The following passage from the fifteenth book of the _Metamorphoses_
-has been justly said by Dryden, his translator, to be the finest part
-of the whole poem. It is almost impossible to believe but that, in
-spite of his misspent life, he must have felt, in his better moments at
-least, something of the truth and beauty of the Pythagorean principles
-which he so exquisitely versifies. In the touching words which he puts
-into the mouth of the jealous Medea--the murderess of her children--he
-might have exclaimed in his own case--
-
- “Video meliora proboque
- Deteriora sequor.”[24]
-
- “He [Pythagoras], too, was the first to forbid animals to be served
- up at the table, and he was first to open his lips, indeed full
- of wisdom yet all unheeded, in the following words: ‘Forbear, O
- mortals! to pollute your bodies with such abominable food. There
- are the _farinacea_ (_fruges_), there are the fruits which bear
- down the branches with their weight, and there are the grapes
- swelling on the vines; there are the sweet herbs; there are those
- that may be softened by the flame and become tender. Nor is the
- milky juice denied you; nor honey, redolent of the flower of thyme.
- The lavish Earth heaps up her riches and her gentle foods, and
- offers you dainties without blood and without slaughter. The lower
- animals satisfy their ravenous hunger with flesh. And yet not
- all of them; for the horse, the sheep, the cows and oxen subsist
- on grass; while those whose disposition is cruel and fierce, the
- tigers of Armenia and the raging lions, and the wolves and bears,
- revel in their bloody diet.
-
- “‘Alas! what a monstrous crime it is (_scelus_) that entrails
- should be entombed in entrails; that one ravening body should grow
- fat on others which it crams into it; that one living creature
- should live by the death of another living creature! Amid so great
- an abundance which the Earth--that best of mothers--produces does,
- indeed, nothing delight you but to gnaw with savage teeth the sad
- produce of the wounds you inflict and to imitate the habits of
- the Cyclops? Can you not appease the hunger of a voracious and
- ill-regulated stomach unless you first destroy another being? Yet
- that age of old, to which we have given the name of _golden_, was
- blest in the produce of the trees and in the herbs which the earth
- brings forth, and the human mouth was not polluted with blood.
-
- “‘Then the birds moved their wings secure in the air, and the hare,
- without fear, wandered in the open fields. Then the fish did not
- fall a victim to the hook and its own credulity. Every place was
- void of treachery; there was no dread of injury--all things were
- full of peace. In later ages some one--a mischievous innovator
- (_non utilis auctor_), whoever he was--set at naught and scorned
- this pure and simple food, and engulfed in his greedy paunch
- victuals made from a carcase. It was he that opened the road to
- wickedness. I can believe that the steel, since stained with blood,
- was first dipped in the gore of savage wild beasts; and that was
- lawful enough. We hold that the bodies of animals that seek our
- destruction are put to death without any breach of the sacred laws
- of morality. But although they might be put to death they were
- not to be eaten as well. From this time the abomination advanced
- rapidly. The swine is believed to have been the first victim
- destined to slaughter, because it grubbed up the seeds with its
- broad snout, and so cut short the hopes of the year. For gnawing
- and injuring the vine the goat was led to slaughter at the altars
- of the avenging Bacchus. Its own fault was the ruin of each of
- these victims.
-
- “‘But how have you deserved to die, ye sheep, you harmless
- breed that have come into existence for the service of men--who
- carry nectar in your full udders--who give your wool as soft
- coverings for us--who assist us more by your life than by your
- death? Why have the oxen deserved this--beings without guile and
- without deceit--innocent, mild, born for the endurance of labour?
- Ungrateful, indeed, is man, and unworthy of the bounteous gifts of
- the harvest who, after unyoking him from the plough, can slaughter
- the tiller of his fields--who can strike with the axe that neck
- worn bare with labour, through which he had so often turned up the
- hard ground, and which had afforded so many a harvest.
-
- “‘And it is not enough that such wickedness is committed by men.
- They have involved the gods themselves in this abomination, and
- they believe that a Deity in the heavens can rejoice in the
- slaughter of the laborious and useful ox. The spotless victim,
- excelling in the beauty of its form (for its very beauty is the
- cause of its destruction), decked out with garlands and with gold
- is placed before their altars, and, ignorant of the purport of
- the proceedings, it hears the prayers of the priest. It sees the
- fruits which it cultivated placed on its head between its horns,
- and, struck down, with its life-blood it dyes the sacrificial knife
- which it had perhaps already seen in the clear water. Immediately
- they inspect the nerves and fibres torn from the yet living being,
- and scrutinise the will of the gods in them.
-
- “‘From whence such a hunger in man after unnatural and unlawful
- food? Do you dare, O mortal race, to continue to feed on flesh? Do
- it not, I beseech you, and give heed to my admonitions. And when
- you present to your palates the limbs of slaughtered oxen, know and
- feel that you are feeding on the tillers of the ground.’”--_Metam._
- xv., 73-142.
-
-
-
-
-V.
-
-SENECA. DIED 65 A.D.
-
-
-Lucius Annæus Seneca, the greatest name in the stoic school of
-philosophy, and the first of Latin moralists, was born at Corduba
-(Cordova) almost contemporaneously with the beginning of the Christian
-era. His family, like that of Ovid, was of the equestrian order. He was
-of a weakly constitution; and bodily feebleness, as with many other
-great intellects, served to intensify if not originate, the activity
-of the mind. At Rome, with which he early made acquaintance, he soon
-gained great distinction at the bar; and the eloquence and fervour he
-displayed in the Senate before the Emperor Caligula excited the jealous
-hatred of that insane tyrant. Later in life he obtained a prætorship,
-and he was also appointed to the tutorship of the young Domitius,
-afterwards the Emperor Nero. On the accession of that prince, at the
-age of seventeen, to the imperial throne, Seneca became one of his
-chief advisers.
-
-Unfortunately for his credit as a philosopher, while exerting his
-influence to restrain the vicious propensities of his old pupil, he
-seems to have been too anxious to acquire, not only a fair proportion
-of wealth, but even an enormous fortune, and his villas and gardens
-were of so splendid a kind as to provoke the jealousy and covetousness
-of Nero. This, added to his alleged disparagement of the prince’s
-talents, especially in singing and driving, for which Nero particularly
-desired to be famous, was the cause of his subsequent disgrace and
-death. The philosopher prudently attempted to anticipate the will of
-Nero by a voluntary surrender of all his accumulated possessions, and
-he sought to disarm the jealous suspicions of the tyrant by a retired
-and unostentatious life. These precautions were of no avail; his death
-was already decided. He was accused of complicity in the conspiracy of
-Piso, and the only grace allowed him was to be his own executioner. The
-despair of his wife, Pompeia Paulina, he attempted to mitigate by the
-reflection that his life had been always directed by the standard of a
-higher morality. Nothing, however, could dissuade her from sharing her
-husband’s fate, and the two faithful friends laid open their veins by
-the same blow.
-
-Advanced age and his extremely meagre diet had left little blood in
-Seneca’s veins, and it flowed with painful slowness. His tortures were
-excessive and, to avoid the intolerable grief of being witnesses of
-each other’s suffering, they shut themselves up in separate apartments.
-With that marvellous intrepid tranquillity which characterised some
-of the old sages, Seneca calmly dictated his last thoughts to his
-surrounding friends. These were afterwards published. His agonies being
-still prolonged, he took hemlock; and this also failing, he was carried
-into a vapour-stove, where he was suffocated, and thus at length ceased
-to suffer.
-
-In estimating the character of Seneca, it is just that we should
-consider all the circumstances of the exceptional time in which his
-life was cast. Perhaps there has never been an age or people more
-utterly corrupt and abandoned than that of the period of the earlier
-Roman Cæsars and that of Rome and the large cities of the empire.
-Allowing the utmost that his detractors have brought against him, the
-moral character of the author of the _Consolations_ and _Letters_
-stands out in bright relief as compared with that of the immense
-majority of his contemporaries of equal rank and position, who were
-sunk in the depths of licentiousness and of selfish indifference to
-the miseries of the surrounding world. That his public career was not
-of so exalted a character altogether as are his moral precepts, is
-only too patent to be denied and, in this shortcoming of a loftier
-_ideal_, he must share reproach with some of the most esteemed of the
-world’s luminaries. If, for instance, we compare him with Cicero or
-with Francis Bacon, the comparison would certainly be not unfavourable
-to Seneca. The darkest stigma on the reputation of the great Latin
-moralist is his connivance at the death of the infamous Agrippina, the
-mother of his pupil Nero. Although not to be excused, we may fairly
-attribute this act to conscientious, if mistaken, motives. His best
-apology is to be found in the fact that, so long as he assisted to
-direct the counsels of Nero, he contrived to restrain that prince’s
-depraved disposition from those outbreaks which, after the death of the
-philosopher, have stigmatised the name of Nero with undying infamy.
-
-The principal writings of Seneca are:--
-
-1. _On Anger._ His earliest, and perhaps his best known, work.
-
-2. _On Consolation._ Addressed to his mother, Helvia. An admirable
-philosophical exhortation.
-
-3. _On Providence; or, Why evils happen to good men though a divine
-Providence may exist._
-
-4. _On Tranquillity of Mind._
-
-5. _On Clemency._ Addressed to Nero Cæsar. One of the most meritorious
-writings of all antiquity. It is not unworthy of being classed with the
-humanitarian protests of Beccaria and Voltaire. The stoical distinction
-between clemency and pity (_misericordia_), in book ii., is, as Seneca
-admits, merely a dispute about words.
-
-6. _On the Shortness of Life._ In which the proper employment of time
-and the acquisition of wisdom are eloquently enforced as the best
-employment of a fleeting life.
-
-7. _On a Happy Life._ In which he inculcates that there is no happiness
-without virtue. An excellent treatise.
-
-8. _On Kindnesses._
-
-9. _Epistles to Lucilius._ 124 in number. They abound in lessons and
-precepts in morality and philosophy, and, excepting the _De Irâ_, have
-been the most read, perhaps, of all Seneca’s productions.
-
-10. _Questions on Natural History._ In seven books.
-
-Besides these moral and philosophic works, he composed several
-tragedies. They were not intended for the stage, but rather as moral
-lessons. As in all his works, there is much of earnest thought and
-feeling, although expressed in rhetorical and declamatory language.
-
-What especially characterises Seneca’s writings is their remarkably
-_humanitarian_ spirit. Altogether he is imbued with this, for the
-most part, very modern feeling in a greater degree than any other
-writer, Greek or Latin. Plutarch indeed, in his noble _Essay on Flesh
-Eating_, is more expressly denunciatory of the barbarism of the
-Slaughter House, and of the horrible cruelties inseparably connected
-with it, and evidently felt more deeply the importance of exposing
-its evils. The Latin moralist, however, deals with a wider range of
-ethical questions, and on such subjects, as, _e.g._, the relations of
-master and slave, is far ahead of his contemporaries. His treatment of
-_Dietetics_, in common with that of most of the old-world moralists, is
-rather from the spiritual and ascetic than from the purely humanitarian
-point of view. “The judgments on Seneca’s writings,” says the author
-of the article on Seneca in Dr. Smith’s _Dictionary of Greek and Latin
-Biography_, “have been as various as the opinions about his character,
-and both in extremes. It has been said of him that he looks best in
-quotations; but this is an admission that there is something worth
-quoting, which cannot be said of all writers. That Seneca possessed
-great mental powers cannot be doubted. He had seen much of human life,
-and he knew well what man is. His philosophy, so far as he adopted a
-system, was the stoical; but it was rather an eclecticism of stoicism
-than pure stoicism. His style is antithetical, and apparently laboured;
-and where there is much labour there is generally affectation. Yet his
-language is clear and forcible--it is not mere words--there is thought
-always. It would not be easy to name any modern writer, who has treated
-on morality and has said so much that is practically good and true, or
-has treated the matter in so attractive a way.”
-
-Jerome, in his _Ecclesiastical Writers_, hesitates to include him in
-the catalogue of his saints only because he is not certain of the
-genuineness of the alleged literary correspondence between Seneca and
-St. Paul. We may observe, in passing, on the remarkable coincidence
-of the presence of the two greatest teachers of the old and the new
-faiths in the capital of the Roman Empire at the same time; and it is
-possible, or rather highly probable, that St. Paul was acquainted with
-the writings of Seneca; while, from the total silence of the pagan
-philosopher, it seems that he knew nothing of the Pauline epistles
-or teaching. Amongst many testimonies to the superiority of Seneca,
-Tacitus, the great historian of the empire, speaks of the “splendour
-and celebrity of his philosophic writings,” as well as of his “amiable
-genius”--_ingenium amœnum_. (_Annals_, xii., xiii.) The elder Pliny
-writes of him as “at the very head of all the learned men of that
-time.” (xiv. 4.) Petrarch quotes the testimony of Plutarch, “that great
-man who, Greek though he was freely confesses ‘that there is no Greek
-writer who could be brought into comparison with him in the department
-of _morals_.’”
-
-The following passage is to be found in a letter to Lucilius, in which,
-after expatiating on the sublimity of the teaching of the philosopher
-Attalus in inculcating moderation and self-control in corporeal
-pleasures, Seneca thus enunciates his _dietetic_ opinions:--
-
- “Since I have begun to confide to you with what exceeding ardour
- I approached the study of philosophy in my youth, I shall not be
- ashamed to confess the affection with which Sotion [his preceptor]
- inspired me for the teaching of Pythagoras. He was wont to
- instruct me on what grounds he himself, and, after him, Sextius,
- had determined to abstain from the flesh of animals. Each had a
- different reason, but the reason in both instances was a grand
- one (_magnifica_). Sotion held that man can find a sufficiency
- of nourishment without blood shedding, and that cruelty became
- habitual when once the practice of butchering was applied to the
- gratification of the appetite. He was wont to add that ‘It is our
- bounden duty to limit the materials of luxury. That, moreover,
- variety of foods is injurious to health, and not natural to our
- bodies. If these maxims [of the Pythagorean school] are true, then
- to abstain from the flesh of animals is to encourage and foster
- _innocence_; if ill-founded, at least they teach us frugality
- and simplicity of living. And what loss have you in losing your
- cruelty? (Quod istic crudelitatis tuæ damnum est?) I merely deprive
- you of the food of lions and vultures.’
-
- “Moved by these and similar arguments, I resolved to abstain from
- flesh meat, and at the end of a year the habit of abstinence was
- not only easy but delightful. I firmly believed that the faculties
- of my mind were more active,[25] and at this day I will not take
- pains to assure you whether they were so or not. You ask, then,
- ‘Why did you go back and relinquish this mode of life?’ I reply
- that the lot of my early days was cast in the reign of the emperor
- Tiberius. Certain foreign religions became the object of the
- imperial suspicion, and amongst the proofs of adherence to the
- foreign cultus or superstition was that of abstinence from the
- flesh of animals. At the entreaties of my father, therefore, who
- had no real fear of the practice being made a ground of accusation,
- but who had a hatred of philosophy,[26] I was induced to return to
- my former dietetic habits, nor had he much difficulty in persuading
- me to recur to more sumptuous repasts....
-
- “This I tell,” he proceeds, “to prove to you how powerful are the
- early impetuses of youth to what is truest and best under the
- exhortations and incentives of virtuous teachers. We err partly
- through the fault of our guides, who teach us _how to dispute_, not
- _how to live_; partly by our own fault in expecting our teachers
- to cultivate not so much the _disposition of the mind_ as the
- faculties of the intellect. Hence it is that in place of a love
- of wisdom there is only a love of words (Itaque quæ _philosophia_
- fuit, facta _philologia_ est).”--_Epistola_ cviii.[27]
-
-Seneca here cautiously reveals the jealous suspicion with which the
-first Cæsars viewed all foreign, and especially quasi-religious,
-innovations, and his own _public_ compliance, to some extent, with the
-orthodox dietetic practices. Yet that in private life he continued
-to practise, as well as to preach, a radical dietary reformation
-is sufficiently evident to all who are conversant with his various
-writings. The refinement and gentleness of his ethics are everywhere
-apparent, and exhibit him as a man of extraordinary sensibility and
-feeling.
-
-As for _dietetics_, he makes it a matter of the first importance, on
-which he is never weary of insisting. “_We must so live, not as if we
-ought to live for, but as though we could not do without, the body._”
-He quotes Epikurus: “_If you live according to nature, you will never
-be poor; if according to conventionalism, you will never be rich.
-Nature demands little; fashion_ (opinio) _superfluity_.” In one of his
-letters he eloquently describes the riotous feasting of the period
-which corresponds to our festival of Christmas--another illustration of
-the proverb, “History repeats itself”:--
-
- “December is the month,” he begins his letter, “when the city
- [Rome] most especially gives itself up to riotous living
- (_desudat_). Free licence is allowed to the public luxury. Every
- place resounds with the gigantic preparations for eating and
- gorging, just as if,” he adds, “the whole year were not a sort of
- _Saturnalia_.”
-
-He contrasts with all this waste and gluttony the simplicity and
-frugality of Epikurus, who, in a letter to his friend Polyænus,
-declares that his own food does not cost him sixpence a day; while his
-friend Metrodorus, who had not advanced so far in frugality, expended
-the whole of that small sum:--
-
- “Do you ask if that can supply due nourishment? Yes; and pleasure
- too. Not, indeed, that fleeting and superficial pleasure which
- needs to be perpetually recruited, but a solid and substantial
- one. Bread and pearl-barley (_polenta_) certainly is not luxurious
- feeding, but it is no little advantage to be able to receive
- pleasure from a simple diet of which no change of fortune can
- deprive one.... Nature demands bread and water only: no one is poor
- in regard to those necessaries.”[28]
-
-Again, Seneca writes:--
-
- “How long shall we weary heaven with petitions for superfluous
- luxuries, as though we had not at hand wherewithal to feed
- ourselves? How long shall we fill our plains with huge cities? How
- long shall the people slave for us unnecessarily? How long shall
- countless numbers of ships from every sea bring us provisions for
- the consumption of a single month? An Ox is satisfied with the
- pasture of an acre or two: one wood suffices for several Elephants.
- Man alone supports himself by the pillage of the whole earth and
- sea. What! Has Nature indeed given us so insatiable a stomach,
- while she has given us so insignificant bodies? No: it is not the
- hunger of our stomachs, but insatiable covetousness (_ambitio_)
- which costs so much. The slaves of the belly (as says Sallust) are
- to be counted in the number of the lower animals, not of men. Nay,
- not of them, but rather of the dead.... You might inscribe on their
- doors, ‘These have anticipated death.’”--(_Ep._ lx.)
-
-The extreme difficulty of abstinence is oftentimes alleged:--
-
- “It is disagreeable, you say, to abstain from the pleasures of
- the customary diet. Such abstinence is, I grant, difficult at
- first. But in course of time the desire for that diet will begin
- to languish; the incentives to our unnatural wants failing, the
- stomach, at first rebellious, will after a time feel an aversion
- for what formerly it eagerly coveted. The desire dies of itself,
- and it is no severe loss to be without those things that you have
- ceased to long for. Add to this that there is no disease, no
- pain, which is not certainly intermitted or relieved, or cured
- altogether. Moreover it is possible for you to be on your guard
- against a threatened return of the disease, and to oppose remedies
- if it comes upon you.”--(_Ep._ lxxviii.)
-
-On the occasion of a shipwreck, when his fellow-passengers found
-themselves forced to live upon the scantiest fare, he takes the
-opportunity to point out how extravagantly superfluous must be the
-ordinary living of the richer part of the community:--
-
- “How easily we can dispense with these superfluities, which, when
- necessity takes them from us, we do not feel the want of....
- Whenever I happen to be in the company of richly-living people I
- cannot prevent a blush of shame, because I see evident proof that
- the principles which I approve and commend have as yet no sure
- and firm faith placed in them.... A warning voice needs to be
- published abroad in opposition to the prevailing opinion of the
- human race: ‘You are out of your senses (_insanitis_); you are
- wandering from the path of right; you are lost in stupid admiration
- for superfluous luxuries; you value no one thing for its proper
- worth.’”--(_Ep._ lxxxvii.)
-
-Again:--
-
- “I now turn to you, whose insatiable and unfathomable gluttony
- (_profunda et insatiabilis gula_) searches every land and every
- sea. Some animals it persecutes with snares and traps, with
- hunting-nets [the customary method of the _battue_ of that period],
- with hooks, sparing no sort of toil to obtain them. Excepting
- from mere caprice or daintiness, there is no peace allowed to any
- species of beings. Yet how much of all these feasts which you
- obtain by the agency of innumerable hands do you even so much as
- touch with your lips, satiated as they are with luxuries? How much
- of that animal, which has been caught with so much expense or
- peril, does the dyspeptic and bilious owner taste? Unhappy even in
- this! that you perceive not that you hunger more than your belly.
- Study,” he concludes his exhortation to his friend, “not to know
- _more_, but to know _better_.”
-
-Again:--
-
- “If the human race would but listen to the voice of reason, it
- would recognise that [fashionable] cooks are as superfluous as
- soldiers.... Wisdom engages in all useful things, is favourable to
- peace, and summons the whole human species to concord.”--(_Ep._ xc.)
-
- “In the simpler times there was no need of so large a supernumerary
- force of medical men, nor of so many surgical instruments or of
- so many boxes of drugs. Health was simple for a simple reason.
- Many dishes have induced many diseases. Note how _vast a quantity
- of lives one stomach absorbs_--devastator of land and sea.[29] No
- wonder that with so discordant diet disease is ever varying....
- Count the cooks: you will no longer wonder at the innumerable
- number of human maladies.”--(_Ep._ xcv.)
-
-We must be content with giving our readers only one more of Seneca’s
-exhortations to a reform in diet:--
-
- “You think it a great matter that you can bring yourself to live
- without all the apparatus of fashionable dishes; that you do not
- desire wild boars of a thousand pounds weight or the tongues of
- rare birds, and other portents of a luxury which now despises whole
- carcases,[30] and chooses only certain parts of each victim. I
- shall admire you then only when you scorn not plain bread, when
- you have persuaded yourself that herbs exist not for other animals
- only, but for man also--if you shall recognise that vegetables are
- sufficient food for the stomach into which we now stuff valuable
- lives, as though it were to keep them for ever. For what matters
- it what it receives, since it will soon lose all that it has
- devoured? The apparatus of dishes, containing the spoils of sea and
- land, gives you pleasure, you say.... The splendour of all this,
- heightened by art, gives you pleasure. Ah! those very things so
- solicitously sought for and served up so variously--no sooner have
- they entered the belly than one and the same foulness shall take
- possession of them all. Would you contemn the pleasures of the
- table? Consider their final destination” (_exitum specta_).[31]
-
-If Seneca makes _dietetics_ of the first importance, he at the same
-time by no means neglects the other departments of _ethics_, which, for
-the most part, ultimately depend upon that fundamental reformation; and
-he is equally excellent on them all. Space will not allow us to present
-our readers with all the admirable _dicta_ of this great moralist. We
-cannot resist, however, the temptation to quote some of his unique
-teaching on certain branches of humanitarianism and philosophy little
-regarded either in his own time or in later ages. Slaves, both in pagan
-and Christian Europe, were regarded very much as the domesticated
-non-human species are at the present day, as born merely for the will
-and pleasure of their masters. Such seems to have been the universal
-estimate of their _status_. While often superior to their lords,
-nationally and individually, by birth, by mind, and by education,
-they were at the arbitrary disposal of too often cruel and capricious
-owners:--
-
- “Are they slaves?” eloquently demands Seneca. “Nay, they
- are men. Are they slaves? Nay, they live under the same roof
- (_contubernales_). Are they slaves? Nay, they are humble friends.
- Are they slaves? Nay, they are fellow-servants (_conservi_), if
- you will consider that both master and servant are equally the
- creatures of chance. I smile, then, at the prevalent opinion
- which thinks it a disgrace for one to sit down to a meal with
- his servant. Why is it thought a disgrace, but because arrogant
- _Custom_ allows a master a crowd of servants to stand round him
- while he is feasting?”
-
-He expressly denounces their cruel and contemptuous treatment, and
-demands in noble language (afterwards used by Epictetus, himself a
-slave):--
-
- “Would you suppose that he whom you call a slave has the same
- origin and birth as yourself? has the same free air of heaven with
- yourself? that he breathes, lives, and dies like yourself?”
-
-He denounces the haughty and insulting attitude of masters towards
-their helpless dependants, and lays down the precept: “So live with
-your dependant as you would wish your superior to live with you.” He
-laments the use of the term “slaves,” or “servants” (_servi_), in place
-of the old “domestics” (_familiares_). He declaims against the common
-prejudice which judges by the _outward_ appearance:--
-
- “That man,” he asserts, “is of the stupidest sort who values
- another either by his dress or by his condition.” Is he a slave?
- He is, it may be, _free in mind_. He is the _true_ slave who is a
- slave to cruelty, to ambition, to avarice, to pleasure. “Love,”
- he declares, insisting upon humanity, “cannot co-exist with
- fear.”--(_Ep._ xlviii.)
-
-He is equally clear upon the ferocity and barbarity of the gladiatorial
-and other shows of the _Circus_, which were looked upon by his
-contemporaries as not only interesting spectacles, but as a useful
-school for war and endurance--much for the same reason as that on
-which the “sports” of the present day are defended. Cicero uses this
-argument, and only expresses the general sentiment. Not so Seneca. He
-speaks of a chance visit to the Circus (the gigantic Colosseum was
-not yet built), for the sake of mental relaxation, expecting to see,
-at the period of the day he had chosen, only innocent exercises. He
-indignantly narrates the horrid and bloody scenes of suffering, and
-demands, with only too much reason, whether it is not evident that such
-evil examples receive their righteous retribution in the deterioration
-of character of those who encourage them:--
-
- “Ah! what dense mists of darkness do power and prosperity cast
- over the human mind. He [the magistrate] believes himself to be
- raised above the common lot of mortality, and to be at the pinnacle
- of glory, when he has offered so many crowds of wretched human
- beings to the assaults of wild beasts; when he forces animals of
- the most different species to engage in conflict; when in the
- full presence of the Roman populace he causes torrents of blood
- to flow, a fitting school for the future scenes of still greater
- bloodshed.”[32]
-
-In his treatise _On Clemency_, dedicated to his youthful pupil Nero,
-he anticipates the very modern theory--_theory_, for the prevalent
-_practice_ is a very different thing--that _prevention_ is better than
-_punishment_, and he denounces the cruel and selfish policy of princes
-and magistrates, who are, for the most part, concerned only to punish
-the criminals produced by unjust and unequal laws:--
-
- “Will not that man,” he asks, “appear to be a very bad father
- who punishes his children, even for the slightest causes, with
- constant blows? Which preceptor is the worthier to teach--the one
- who scarifies his pupils’ backs if their memory happens to fail
- them, or if their eyes make a slight blunder in reading, or he
- who chooses rather to correct and instruct by admonition and the
- influence of shame?... You will find that those crimes are most
- often committed which are most often punished.... Many capital
- punishments are no less disgraceful to a ruler than are many deaths
- to a physician. Men are more easily governed by mild laws. The
- human mind is naturally stubborn and inclined to be perverse, and
- it more readily follows than is forced. The disposition to cruelty
- which takes delight in blood and wounds is the characteristic of
- wild beasts; it is to throw away the human character and to pass
- into that of a denizen of the woods.”
-
-Speaking of giving assistance to the needy, he says that the genuine
-philanthropist will give his money--
-
- “Not in that insulting way in which the great majority of those who
- wish to seem merciful disdain and despise those whom they help, and
- shrink from contact with them, but as one mortal to a fellow-mortal
- he will give as though out of a treasury that should be common to
- all.”[33]
-
-Next to the _De Clementiâ_ and the _De Irâ_ (“On Anger”), his treatise
-_On the Happy Life_ is most admirable. In the abundance of what is
-unusually good and useful it is difficult to choose. His warning (so
-unheeded) against implicit confidence in authority and tradition cannot
-be too often repeated:--
-
- “There is nothing against which we ought to be more on our guard
- than, like a flock of sheep, following the crowd of those who have
- preceded us--going, as we do, not where we ought to go, but where
- men have walked before. And yet there is nothing which involves
- us in greater evils than following and settling our faith upon
- authority--considering those dogmas or practices best which have
- been received heretofore with the greatest applause, and which have
- a multitude of great names. We live not according to reason, but
- according to mere fashion and tradition, from whence that enormous
- heap of bodies, which fall one over the other. It happens as in a
- great slaughter of men, when the crowd presses upon itself. Not
- one falls without dragging with him another. The first to fall are
- the cause of destruction to the succeeding ranks. It runs through
- the whole of human life. No-one’s error is limited to himself
- alone, but he is the author and cause of another’s error.... We
- shall recover our sound health if only we shall separate ourselves
- from the herd, for the crowd of mankind stands opposed to right
- reason--the defender of its own evils and miseries.[34] ... Human
- history is not so well conducted, that the better way is pleasing
- to the mass. The very fact of the approbation of the multitude is
- a proof of the badness of the opinion or practice. Let us ask what
- is _best_, not what is _most customary_; what may place us firmly
- in the possession of an everlasting felicity, not what has received
- the approbation of the vulgar--the worst interpreter of the
- truth. Now I call “the vulgar” _the common herd of all ranks and
- conditions_” (_Tam chlamydatos quam coronatos_).--(_De Vitâ Beatâ_
- i. and ii.)
-
-Again:--
-
- “I will do nothing for the sake of opinion; everything for the sake
- of conscience.”
-
-He repudiates the doctrines of Egoism for those of Altruism:--
-
- “I will so live, as knowing myself to have come into the world for
- others.... I shall recognise the _world_ as my proper country.
- Whenever nature or reason shall demand my last breath I shall
- depart with the testimony that I have loved a good conscience,
- useful pursuits--that I have encroached upon the liberty of no one,
- least of all my own.”
-
-Very admirable are his rebukes of unjust and insensate anger in regard
-to the non-human species:--
-
- “As it is the characteristic of a madman to be in a rage with
- lifeless objects, so also is it to be angry with dumb animals,[35]
- inasmuch as there can be no injury unless _intentional_. Hurt
- us they can--as a stone or iron--_injure_ us they cannot.
- Nevertheless, there are persons who consider themselves insulted
- when horses that will readily obey one rider are obstinate in
- the case of another; just as if they are more tractable to some
- individuals than to others of _set purpose_, not from custom or
- _owing to treatment_.”--(_De Irâ_ ii., xxvi.)
-
-Again, of anger, as between human beings:--
-
- “The faults of others we keep constantly before us; our own we hide
- behind us.... A large proportion of mankind are angry, not with the
- _sins_, but with the _sinners_. In regard to reported offences;
- _many speak falsely to deceive, many because they are themselves
- deceived_.”
-
-Of the use of self-examination, he quotes the example of his excellent
-preceptor, Sextius, who strictly followed the Pythagorean precept to
-examine oneself each night before sleep:--
-
- “Of what bad practice have you cured yourself to-day? What vice
- have you resisted? In what respect are you the better? Rash anger
- will be moderated and finally cease when it finds itself daily
- confronted with its judge. What, then, is more useful than this
- custom of thoroughly weighing the actions of the entire day?”
-
-He adduces the feebleness and shortness of human life as one of the
-most forcible arguments against the indulgence of malevolence:--
-
- “Nothing will be of more avail than reflections on the nature of
- mortality. Let each one say to himself, as to another, ‘What good
- is it to declare enmity against such and such persons, as though
- we were born to live for ever, and to thus waste our very brief
- existence? What profit is it to employ time which might be spent
- in honourable pleasures in inflicting pain and torture upon any of
- our fellow-beings?’ ... Why rush we to battle? Why do we provoke
- quarrels? Why, forgetful of our mortal weakness, do we engage in
- huge hatreds? Fragile beings as we are, why will we rise up to
- crush others?... Why do we tumultuously and seditiously set life
- in an uproar? Death stands staring us in the face, and approaches
- ever nearer and nearer. That moment which you destine for another’s
- destruction perchance may be for your own.... Behold! death comes,
- which makes us all equal. Whilst we are in this mortal life, let
- us cultivate humanity; let us not be a cause of fear or of danger
- to any of our fellow-mortals. Let us contemn losses, injuries,
- insults. Let us bear with magnanimity the brief inconveniences of
- life.”
-
-Again, in dealing with the weak and defenceless:--
-
- “Let each one say to himself, whenever he is provoked, ‘What right
- have I to punish with whips or fetters a slave who has offended me
- by voice or manner? Who am I, whose ears it is such a monstrous
- crime to offend? Many grant pardon to their enemies; shall I not
- pardon simply idle, negligent, or garrulous slaves?’ Tender years
- should shield childhood--their sex, women--individual liberty, a
- stranger--the common roof, a domestic. Does he offend now for the
- first time? Let us think how often he may have pleased us.”--(_De
- Irâ_ iii., passim.)
-
-As to the conduct of life:--
-
- “We ought so to live, as though in the sight of all men. We ought
- so to employ our thoughts, as though someone were able to inspect
- our inmost soul--and there is one able. For what advantages it that
- a thing is hidden from men; nothing is hidden from God. (_Ep._ 83.)
- ... Would you propitiate heaven? Be good. He worships the gods, who
- imitates [the higher ideal of] them. How do we act? What principles
- do we lay down? That we are to refrain from human bloodshed? Is it
- a great matter to refrain from injuring him to whom you are bound
- to do good? The whole of human and divine teaching is summed up in
- this one principle--we are all members of one mighty body. Nature
- has made us of one kin (_cognatos_), since she has produced us
- from the same elements and will resolve us into the same elements.
- She has implanted in us love one for another, and made us for
- living together in society. She has laid down the laws of right
- and justice, by which ordinance it is more wretched to injure than
- to be injured; and by her ordering, our hands are given us to help
- each the other.... Let us ask what things _are_, not what they _are
- called_. Let us value each thing on its own merits, without thought
- of the world’s opinion. Let us love temperance; let us, before all
- things, cherish justice.... Our actions will not be right unless
- the will is first right, for from that proceeds the act.”
-
-Again:--
-
- “The will will not be right unless the _habits_ of mind are right,
- for from these results the will. The habits of thought, however,
- will not be at the best unless they shall have been based upon _the
- laws of the whole of life_; unless they shall have tried all things
- by the test of truth.”--(_Ep._ xcv.)
-
-Excellent is his advice on the choice of books and of reading:--
-
- “Be careful that the reading of many authors, and of every sort of
- books, does not induce a certain vagueness and uncertainty of mind.
- We ought to linger over and nourish our minds with, writers of
- assured genius and worth, if we wish to extract something which may
- usefully remain fixed in the mind. A multitude of books distracts
- the mind. Read always, then, books of approved merit. If ever you
- have a wish to go for a time to other kinds of books, yet always
- return to the former.”[36]--(_Ep._ ii.)
-
-In his 88th Letter Seneca well exposes the folly of a learning which
-begins and ends in _mere words_, which has no real bearing on the
-conduct of life and the instruction of the _moral_ faculties:--
-
- “In testing the value of books and writers, let us see whether
- or no they teach _virtue_.... You inquire minutely about the
- wanderings of Ulysses rather than work for the prevention of error
- in your own case. We have no leisure to hear exactly how and where
- he was tossed about between Italy and Sicily.... The tempests of
- the soul are ever tossing us, and evildoing urges us into all the
- miseries of Ulysses.... Oh marvellously excellent education! By
- it you can measure circles and squares, and all the distances of
- the stars. There is nothing that is not within the reach of your
- geometry. Since you are so able a mechanician, measure the human
- mind. Tell me how great it is, how small it is (_pusillus_). You
- know what a straight line is. What does it profit you, if you
- know not what is straight (_rectum_) in life.”[37] What then? Are
- liberal studies of no avail? For other things much; for virtue
- nothing.... They do not lead the mind to virtue--they only clear
- the way.
-
- “Humanity forbids us to be arrogant towards our fellows; forbids us
- to be grasping; shows itself kind and courteous to all, in word,
- deed, and thought; thinks no evil of another, but rather loves its
- own highest good, chiefly because it will be of good to another.
- Do liberal studies [always] inculcate these maxims? No more than
- they do simplicity of character and moderation; no more than they
- do frugality and economy of living; no more than they do mercy,
- which is as sparing of another’s blood as it is of its own, and
- recognises that man is not to use the services of his fellows
- unnecessarily or prodigally.
-
- “Wisdom is a great, a vast subject. It needs all the spare time
- that can be given to it.... Whatever amount of natural and moral
- questions you may have mastered, you will still be wearied with the
- vast abundance of questions to be asked and solved. So many, so
- great, are these questions, all superfluous things must be removed
- from the mind, that it may have free scope for exercise. Shall I
- waste my life in mere words (_syllabis_)? Thus does it come about
- that the learned are more anxious to talk than to live. Mark what
- mischief _excessive_ subtlety of mind produces, and how dangerous
- it may be to truth.”--(_Ep._ lxxxviii.)
-
-Elsewhere he indignantly demands:--
-
- “What is more vile or disgraceful than a learning which catches at
- popular applause (_clamores_)?”--(_Ep._ lii.)
-
-Anticipating the ultimate triumph of Truth, he well says:--
-
- “No virtue is really lost--that it has to remain hidden for a time
- is no loss to itself. A day will come which will publish the truth
- at present neglected and oppressed by the malignity (_malignitas_)
- of its age. He who thinks the world to be of his own age only, is
- born for the few. Many thousands of years, many millions of people,
- will supervene. Look forward to that time. Though the envy of
- your own day shall have condemned you to obscurity, there will
- come those who will judge you without fear or favour. If there is
- any reward for virtue from fame, that is imperishable. The talk of
- posterity, indeed, will be nothing to us. Yet it will revere us,
- even though we are insensible to its praise; and it will frequently
- consult us.... What now deceives has not the elements of duration.
- Falsehood is thinly disguised; it is transparent, if only you look
- close enough.”--(_Ep._ lxix.)
-
-In his _Questions on Nature_, in which he often shows himself to have
-been much in advance of his contemporaries, and, indeed, of the whole
-mediæval ages, in scientific acumen, he takes occasion to reprobate the
-common practice of glorifying the lives and deeds of worthless princes
-and others, and exclaims in the modern spirit:--
-
- “How much better to try to extinguish the evils of our own age than
- to glorify the bad deeds of others to posterity! How much better
- to celebrate the works of Nature [_deorum_] than the piracies of
- a Philip or Alexander and of the rest who, become illustrious
- by the calamities of nations, have been no less the pests of
- mankind than an inundation which devastates a whole country, or a
- conflagration in which a large proportion of living creatures is
- consumed.”--(_Quæst. Nat._ iii.)
-
-It will be sufficiently apparent, from what we have presented to our
-readers, that Seneca, though nominally of the Stoic school, belonged in
-reality to no special sect or party. _Nullius addictus jurare in verba
-magistri._ Bound to the words of no one master, he sought for truth
-everywhere. The authority whom he most frequently quotes with approval
-is Epicurus, the arch-enemy of Stoicism. Wiser and more candid than
-the great mass of sectaries, he scorns the tactics of partisanship. He
-justly recognises the fact that the “luxurious egoists have not derived
-their impulse or sanction from Epicurus; but, abandoned to their vices,
-they disguise their selfishness in the name of his philosophy.” He
-professes his own conviction to be “against the common prejudice of
-the popular writers of my own school, that the teaching of Epicurus
-was just and holy, and, on a close examination, essentially grave
-and sober.... I affirm this, that he is ill-understood, defamed, and
-depreciated.” (_De Vitâ Beatâ_, xii, xiii.)
-
-It will also be sufficiently clear that the ethics of Seneca consist
-of no mere trials of skill in logomachy; in finely-drawn distinctions
-between words and names, as do so large a proportion both of modern
-and ancient dialectics. If so daring a heresy may possibly be forgiven
-us, we would venture to suggest that the authorities of our schools
-and universities might, with no inconsiderable advantage, substitute
-judicious excerpts from the _Morals_ of Seneca for the _Ethics_ of
-Aristotle; or, as Latin literature is now in question, even for the
-_De Officiis_ of Cicero. This, however, is perhaps to indulge Utopian
-speculation too greatly. The mediæval spirit of scholasticism is not
-yet sufficiently out of favour at the ancient schools of Aquinas and
-Scotus.
-
-
-
-
-VI.
-
-PLUTARCH. 40-120 A.D. (?)
-
-
-The years of the birth and death of the first of biographers and the
-most amiable of moralists are unknown. We learn from himself that he
-was studying philosophy at Athens under Ammonius, the Peripatetic, at
-the time when Nero was making his ridiculous progress through Greece.
-This was in 66 A.D., and the date of his birth may therefore
-be approximately placed somewhere about the year 40. He was thus a
-younger contemporary of Seneca. Chæronea, in Bœotia, claims the honour
-of giving him birth.
-
-He lived several years at Rome and in other parts of Italy, where,
-according to the fashion of the age and the custom of the philosophic
-rhetoricians (of whom, probably, he was one of the very few whose
-_prælections_ were of any real value), he gave public lectures,
-attended by the most eminent literary as well as social personages
-of the time, among whom were Tacitus, the younger Pliny, Quintilian,
-and perhaps Juvenal. These lectures may have formed the basis, if not
-the entire matter, of the miscellaneous essays which he afterwards
-published. When in Italy he neglected altogether the Latin language and
-literature, and the reason he gives proves the estimation in which he
-was held: “I had so many public commissions, and so many people came
-to me to receive instruction in philosophy.... it was, therefore, not
-till a late period in life that I began to read the Latin writers.” In
-fact, the very general indifference, or at least silence, of the Greek
-masters in regard to Latin literature is not a little remarkable.
-
-It is asserted, on doubtful authority (Suidas), that he was preceptor
-of Trajan, in the beginning of whose reign he held the high post
-of Procurator of Greece; and he also filled the honourable office
-of _Archon_, or Chief Magistrate of his native city, as well as of
-priest of the Delphic Apollo. He passed the later and larger portion
-of his life in quiet retirement at Chæronea. The reason he assigns
-for clinging to that dull and decaying provincial town, although
-residence there was not a little inconvenient for him, is creditable
-to his citizen-feeling, since he believed that by quitting it he,
-as a person of influence, might contribute to its ruin. In all the
-relations of social life Plutarch appears to have been exemplary,
-and he was evidently held in high esteem by his fellow-citizens. As
-husband and father he was particularly admirable. The death of a young
-daughter, one of a numerous progeny, was the occasion of one of his
-most affecting productions--the _Consolation_--addressed to his wife
-Timoxena. He himself died at an advanced age, in the reign of Hadrian.
-
-Plutarch’s writings are sufficiently numerous. The _Parallel Lives_,
-forty-six in number, in which he brings together a Greek and a Roman
-celebrity by way of comparison, is perhaps the book of Greek and Latin
-literature which has been the most widely read in all languages. “The
-reason of its popularity,” justly observes a writer in Dr. Smith’s
-_Dictionary_, “is that Plutarch has rightly conceived the business of a
-biographer--his biography is true portraiture. Other biography is often
-a dull, tedious enumeration of facts in the order of time, with perhaps
-a summing up of character at the end. The reflections of Plutarch are
-neither impertinent nor trifling; his sound good sense is always there;
-his honest purpose is transparent; his love of humanity warms the
-whole. His work is and will remain, in spite of all the fault that can
-be found with it by plodding collectors of facts and small critics, the
-book of those who can nobly think and dare and do.”
-
-His miscellaneous writings--indiscriminately classed under the title
-_Moralia_, or _Morals_, but including historical, antiquarian,
-literary, political, and religious disquisitions--are about eighty in
-number. As might be expected of so miscellaneous a collection, these
-essays are of various merit, and some of them are, doubtless, the
-product of other minds than Plutarch’s. Next to the _Essay on Flesh
-Eating_[38] may be distinguished as amongst the most important or
-interesting, _That the Lower Animals Reason_,[39] _On the Sagacity
-of the Lower Animals_--highly meritorious treatises, far beyond the
-ethical or intellectual standard of the mass of “educated” people even
-of our day--_Rules for the Preservation of Health_, _A Discourse on
-the Training of Children_, _Marriage Precepts, or Advice to the Newly
-Married_, _On Justice_, _On the Soul_, _Symposiacs_--in which he deals
-with a variety of interesting or curious questions--_Isis and Osiris_,
-a theological disquisition; _On the Opinions of the Philosophers_,
-_On the Face that Appears in the Moon_,[40] _Political Precepts_,
-_Platonic Questions_, and last, not least, his _Consolation_, addressed
-to Timoxena. Plutarch also wrote his autobiography. If it had come
-down to us it would have been one of the most interesting remains
-of Antiquity, dealing, as we may well imagine it did deal, with some
-of the most important phenomena of the age. Possibly we might have
-had the expression of his feeling and attitude in regard to the new
-religion (established some 200 years later), which, strangely enough,
-is altogether overlooked or ignored as well by himself as by the other
-eminent writers of Greece and Italy.[41]
-
-Plutarch was an especial admirer of Plato and his school, but he
-attached himself exclusively to no sect or system. He was essentially
-eclectic: he chose what his reason and conscience informed him to be
-the most good and useful from the various philosophies. As to the
-influence of his literary labours in instructing the world, it has been
-truly remarked by the author of the article in the _Penny Cyclopædia_
-that, “a kind, humane disposition, and a love of everything that is
-ennobling and excellent, pervades his writings, and gives the reader
-the same kind of pleasure that he has in the company of an esteemed
-friend, whose singleness of heart appears in everything that he says
-or does.” His personal character is, in fact, exactly reflected in his
-publications. That he was somewhat superstitious and of a conservative
-bias is sufficiently apparent;[42] but it is also equally clear, in his
-case, that the moral perceptions were not obscured by a selfishness
-which is too often the product of optimism, or self-complacent
-contentment with things as they are. In metaphysics, with all earnest
-minds oppressed by the terrible fact of the dominance of evil and
-error in the world, he vainly attempted to find a solution of the
-enigma in that prevalent Western Asiatic prejudice of a dualism of
-contending powers. He found consolation in the persuasion that the two
-antagonistic principles are not of _equal_ power, and that the Good
-must eventually prevail over the Evil.
-
-The _Lives_ has gone through numerous editions in all languages. Of the
-_Morals_, the first translation in this country was made by Philemon
-Holland, M.D., London, 1603 and 1657. The next English version was
-published in 1684-1694, “by several hands.” The fifth edition, “revised
-and corrected from the many errors of the former edition,” appeared
-in 1718. The latest English version is that of Professor Goodwin, of
-Harvard University (1870), with an introduction by R. W. Emerson. It
-is, for the most part, a reprint of the revision of 1718, and consists
-of five octavo volumes. It is a matter equally for surprise and
-regret that, in an age of so much literary, or at least publishing,
-enterprise, a judicious selection from the productions of so estimable
-a mind has never yet been attempted in a form accessible to ordinary
-readers.[43]
-
-In his _Symposiacs_, discussing (_Quest._ ii.), “whether the sea
-or land affords the better food,” and summing up the arguments, he
-proceeds:--
-
- “We can claim no great right over land animals which are nourished
- with the same food, inspire the same air, wash in and drink the
- same water that we do ourselves; and when they are slaughtered
- they make us ashamed of our work by their terrible cries; and
- then, again, by living amongst us they arrive at some degree of
- familiarity and intimacy with us. But sea creatures are altogether
- strangers to us, and are brought up, as it were, in another world.
- Neither does their voice, look, or any service they have done us
- plead for their life. This kind of animals are of no use at all to
- us, nor is there any obligation upon us that we should love them.
- The element we inhabit is a hell to them, and as soon as ever they
- enter upon it they die.”
-
-We may infer that Plutarch advanced gradually to the perfect knowledge
-of the truth, and it is probable that his essay on _Flesh-eating_
-was published at a comparatively late period in his life, since in
-some of his miscellaneous writings, in alluding to the subject,
-he speaks in less decided and emphatic terms of its barbarism and
-inhumanity: _e.g._, in his _Rules for the Preservation of Health_,
-while recommending moderation in eating, and professing abstinence from
-flesh, he does not so expressly denounce the prevalent practice. Yet he
-is sufficiently pronounced even here in favour of the reformed diet on
-the score of health:--
-
- “Ill-digestion,” says he, “is most to be feared after flesh-eating,
- for it very soon clogs us and leaves ill consequences behind it. It
- would be best to accustom oneself _to eat no flesh at all_, for the
- earth affords plenty enough of things fit not only for nourishment
- but for delight and enjoyment; some of which you may eat without
- much preparation, and others you may make pleasant by adding
- various other things.”
-
-That the non-Christian humanitarian of the first century was far
-ahead--we will not say of his contemporaries, but of the common crowd
-of writers and speakers of the present age in his estimate of the
-just rights and position of the innocent non-human races--will be
-sufficiently apparent from the following extract from his remarkable
-essay entitled, _That the Lower Animals Reason_, to which Montaigne
-seems to have been indebted. The essay is in the form of a dialogue
-between Odysseus (Ulysses) and Gryllus, who is one of the transformed
-captives of the sorceress Circe (see _Odyssey_ ix.) Gryllus maintains
-the superiority of the non-human races generally in very many
-qualities and in regard to many of their habits--_e.g._, in eating and
-drinking:--
-
- “Being thus wicked and incontinent in inordinate desires, it is no
- less easy to be proved that men are more intemperate than other
- animals even in those things which are necessary--_e.g._, in eating
- and drinking--the pleasures of which we [the non-human races]
- always enjoy with some benefit to ourselves. But you, pursuing
- the pleasures of eating and drinking beyond the satisfaction of
- nature, are punished with many and lingering diseases[44] which,
- arising from the single fountain of superfluous gormandising,
- fill your bodies with all manner of wind and vapours not easy for
- purgation to expel. In the first place, all species of the lower
- animals, according to their kind, feed upon one sort of food which
- is proper to their natures--some upon grass, some upon roots,
- and others upon fruits. Neither do they rob the weaker of their
- nourishment. But man, such is his voracity, _falls upon all_ to
- satisfy the pleasures of his appetite, tries all things, tastes all
- things; and, as if he were yet to seek what was the most proper
- diet and most agreeable to his nature, among all animals is the
- only _all-devourer_.[45] He makes use of flesh _not out of want
- and necessity_, seeing that he has the liberty to make his choice
- of herbs and fruits, the plenty of which is inexhaustible; but
- out of luxury and being cloyed with necessaries, he seeks after
- impure and inconvenient diet, purchased by the slaughter of living
- beings; by this showing himself more cruel than the most savage of
- wild beasts. For blood, murder, and flesh are proper to nourish
- the kite, the wolf, and the serpent: _to men they are superfluous
- viands_. The lower animals abstain from most of other kinds and are
- at enmity with only a few, and that only compelled by necessities
- of hunger; but neither fish, nor fowl, nor anything that lives upon
- the land escapes your tables, though they bear the name of humane
- and _hospitable_.”
-
-Reprobating the harshness and inhumanity of Cato the Censor, who is
-usually regarded as the type of old Roman virtue, Plutarch, with his
-accustomed good feeling, declares:--
-
- “For my part, I cannot but charge his using his servants like
- so many horses and oxen, or turning them off or selling them
- when grown old, to the account of a mean and ungenerous spirit,
- which thinks that the sole tie between man and man is interest or
- necessity. But goodness moves in a larger sphere than [so-called]
- justice. The obligations of law and equity reach only to mankind,
- but kindness and beneficence should be extended to beings of every
- species. And these always flow from the breast of a well-natured
- man, as streams that flow from the living fountain.
-
- A good man will take care of his horses and dogs, not only while
- they are young, but when old and past service. Thus the people of
- Athens, when they had finished the temple of _Hecatompedon_, set at
- liberty the lower animals that had been chiefly employed in that
- work, suffering them to pasture at large, free from any further
- service.... We certainly ought not to treat living beings like
- shoes or household goods, which, when worn out with use, we throw
- away; and _were it only to learn benevolence to human kind_, we
- should be compassionate to other beings. For my own part, I would
- not sell even an old ox that had laboured for me; much less would
- I remove, for the sake of a little money, a man, grown old in my
- service, from his accustomed place--for to him, poor man, it would
- be as bad as banishment, since he could be of no more use to the
- buyer than he was to the seller. But Cato, as if he took a pride
- in these things, tells us that, when Consul, he left his war-horse
- in Spain, to save the public the charge of his freight. Whether
- such things as these are instances of greatness or of littleness of
- soul, let the reader judge for himself.”[46]
-
-If we shall compare these sentiments of the pagan humanitarian with the
-every-day practices of modern christian society in the matter, _e.g._,
-of “knackers’ yards,” and other similar methods of getting rid of dumb
-dependants after a life-time of continuous hard labour--perhaps of bad
-usage, and even semi-starvation--the comparison scarcely will be in
-favour of christian ethics. From the essay _On Flesh-Eating_ we extract
-the principal and most significant passages:--
-
-
-PLUTARCH--ESSAY ON FLESH-EATING.
-
- “You ask me upon what grounds Pythagoras abstained from feeding
- on the flesh of animals. I, for my part, marvel of what sort of
- feeling, mind, or reason, that man was possessed who was the first
- to pollute his mouth with gore, and to allow his lips to touch the
- flesh of a murdered being: who spread his table with the mangled
- forms of dead bodies, and claimed as his daily food what were but
- now beings endowed with movement, with perception, and with voice.
-
- “How could his eyes endure the spectacle of the flayed and
- dismembered limbs? How could his sense of smell endure the horrid
- _effluvium_? How, I ask, was his taste not sickened by contact with
- festering wounds, with the pollution of corrupted blood and juices?
- ‘The very hides began to creep, and the flesh, both roast and
- raw, groaned on the spits, and the slaughtered oxen were endowed,
- as it might seem, with human voice.’[47] This is poetic fiction;
- but the actual feast of ordinary life is, of a truth, a veritable
- portent--that a human being should hunger after the flesh of oxen
- actually bellowing before him, and teach upon what parts one should
- feast, and lay down elaborate rules about joints and roastings and
- dishes. The first man who set the example of this savagery is the
- person to arraign; not, assuredly, that great mind which, in a
- later age, determined to have nothing to do with such horrors.
-
- “For the wretches who first applied to flesh-eating may justly be
- alleged in excuse their utter resourcelessness and destitution,
- inasmuch as it was not to indulge in lawless desires, or amidst the
- superfluities of necessaries, for the pleasure of wanton indulgence
- in unnatural luxuries that they [the primeval peoples] betook
- themselves to carnivorous habits.
-
- “If _they_ could now assume consciousness and speech they might
- exclaim, ‘O blest and God-loved men who live at this day! What a
- happy age in the world’s history has fallen to _your_ lot, you who
- plant and reap an inheritance of all good things which grow for
- you in ungrudging abundance! What rich harvests do you not gather
- in? What wealth from the plains, what innocent pleasures is it not
- in your power to reap from the rich vegetation surrounding you on
- all sides! _You_ may indulge in luxurious food without staining
- your hands with innocent blood. While as for us wretches, _our_
- lot was cast in an age of the world the most savage and frightful
- conceivable. _We_ were plunged into the midst of an all-prevailing
- and fatal want of the commonest necessaries of life from the period
- of the earth’s first genesis, while yet the gross atmosphere of the
- globe hid the cheerful heavens from view, while the stars were yet
- wrapped in a dense and gloomy mist of fiery vapours, and the sun
- [earth] itself had no firm and regular course. Our globe was then
- a savage and uncultivated wilderness, perpetually overwhelmed with
- the floods of the disorderly rivers, abounding in shapeless and
- impenetrable morasses and forests. Not for us the gathering in of
- domesticated fruits; no mechanical instrument of any kind wherewith
- to fight against nature. Famines gave us no time, nor could there
- be any periods of seed-time and harvest.
-
- “‘What wonder, then, if, contrary to nature, we had recourse to the
- flesh of living beings, when all our other means of subsistence
- consisted in wild corn [or a sort of grass--ἄγρωστιν], and the
- bark of trees, and even slimy mud, and when we deemed ourselves
- fortunate to find some chance wild root or herb? When we tasted
- an acorn or beech-nut we danced with grateful joy around the
- tree, hailing it as our bounteous mother and nurse. Such was the
- gala-feast of those primeval days, when the whole earth was one
- universal scene of passion and violence, engendered by the struggle
- for the very means of existence.
-
- “‘But what struggle for existence, or what goading madness has
- incited _you_ to imbrue your hands in blood--you who have, we
- repeat, a superabundance of all the necessaries and comforts of
- existence? Why do you belie the Earth [τὶ καταψεύοεσθε τῆς Γῆς]
- as though it were unable to feed and nourish you? Why do you
- do despite to the bounteous [goddess] Ceres, and blaspheme the
- sweet and mellow gifts of Bacchus, as though you received not a
- sufficiency from them?
-
- “‘Does it not shame you to mingle murder and blood with their
- beneficent fruits? Other _carnivora_ you call savage and
- ferocious--lions and tigers and serpents--while yourselves come
- behind them in no species of barbarity. And yet for them murder is
- the only means of sustenance; whereas to you it is a superfluous
- luxury and crime.’
-
- “For, in point of fact, we do not kill and eat lions and wolves,
- as we might do in self-defence--on the contrary, we leave them
- unmolested; and yet the innocent and the domesticated and helpless
- and unprovided with weapons of offence--these we hunt and kill,
- whom Nature seems to have brought into existence for their beauty
- and gracefulness....
-
- “Nothing puts us out of countenance [δυσωπεῖ], not the charming
- beauty of their form, not the plaintive sweetness of their voice
- or cry, not their mental intelligence [πανουργία ψυχῆς], not
- the purity of their diet, not superiority of understanding. For
- the sake of a part of their flesh only, we deprive them of the
- glorious light of the sun--of the life for which they were born.
- The plaintive cries they utter we affect to take to be meaningless;
- whereas, in fact, they are entreaties and supplications and prayers
- addressed to us by each which say, ‘It is not the satisfaction
- of your real necessities we deprecate, but the wanton indulgence
- [ὕβριν] of your appetites. Kill to eat, if you must or will, but do
- not slay me that you may feed _luxuriously_.’
-
- “Alas for our savage inhumanity! It is a terrible thing to see
- the table of rich men decked out by those layers out of corpses
- [νεκρόκοσμους], the butchers and cooks: a still more terrible sight
- is the same table _after_ the feast--for the wasted relics are even
- more than the consumption. These victims, then, have given up their
- lives uselessly. At other times, from mere niggardliness, the host
- will grudge to distribute his dishes, and yet he grudged not to
- deprive innocent beings of their existence!
-
- “Well, I have taken away the excuse of those who allege that they
- have the authority and sanction of Nature. For that man is not,
- by nature, carnivorous is proved, in the first place, by the
- external frame of his body--seeing that to none of the animals
- designed for living on flesh has the human body any resemblance. He
- has no curved beak, no sharp talons and claws, no pointed teeth,
- no intense power of stomach [κοιλίας εὐτονία] or heat of blood
- which might help him to masticate and digest the gross and tough
- flesh-substance. On the contrary, by the smoothness of his teeth,
- the small capacity of his mouth, the softness of his tongue, and
- the sluggishness of his digestive apparatus, Nature sternly forbids
- him [ἐξομνύται] to feed on flesh.
-
- “If, in spite of all this, you still affirm that you were intended
- by nature for such a diet, then, to begin with, kill _yourself_
- what you wish to eat--but do it yourself with your own _natural_
- weapons, without the use of butcher’s knife, or axe, or club. No;
- as the wolves and lions and bears themselves slay all they feed on,
- so, in like manner, do you kill the cow or ox with a gripe of your
- jaws, or the pig with your teeth, or a hare or a lamb by falling
- upon and rending them there and then. Having gone through all these
- preliminaries, _then_ sit down to your repast. If, however, you
- wait until the living and intelligent existence be deprived of
- life, and if it would disgust you to have to rend out the heart and
- shed the life-blood of your victim, why, I ask, in the very face
- of Nature, and in despite of her, do you feed on beings endowed
- with sentient life? But more than this--not even, after your
- victims have been killed, will you eat them just as they are from
- the slaughter-house. You boil, roast, and altogether metamorphose
- them by fire and condiments. You entirely alter and disguise the
- murdered animal by the use of ten thousand sweet herbs and spices,
- that your natural taste may be deceived and be prepared to take the
- unnatural food. A proper and witty rebuke was that of the Spartan
- who bought a fish and gave it to his cook to dress. When the latter
- asked for butter, and olive oil, and vinegar, he replied, ‘Why, if
- I had all these things, I should not have bought the fish!’
-
- “To such a degree do we make luxuries of bloodshed, that we call
- flesh ‘a delicacy,’ and forthwith require delicate sauces [ὄψων]
- for this same flesh-meat, and mix together oil and wine and honey
- and pickle and vinegar with all the spices of Syria and Arabia--for
- all the world as though we were embalming a human corpse. After all
- these heterogeneous matters have been mixed and dissolved and, in
- a manner, corrupted, it is for the stomach, forsooth, to masticate
- and assimilate them--if it can. And though this may be, for the
- time, accomplished, the natural sequence is a variety of diseases,
- produced by imperfect digestion and repletion.[48]
-
- “Diogenes (the Cynic) had the courage, on one occasion, to swallow
- a _polypus_ without any cooking preparation, to dispense with the
- time and trouble expended in the kitchen. In the presence of a
- numerous concourse of priests and others, unwrapping the morsel
- from his tattered cloak, and putting it to his lips, ‘For your
- sakes,’ cried he, ‘I perform this extravagant action and incur this
- danger.’ A self-sacrifice truly meritorious! Not like Pelopidas,
- for the freedom of Thebes, or like Harmodius and Aristogeiton,
- on behalf of the citizens of Athens, did the philosopher submit
- to this hazardous experiments; for _he_ acted thus that he might
- _unbarbarise_, if possible, the life of human kind.
-
- “Flesh-eating is not unnatural to our physical constitution only.
- The mind and intellect are made gross by gorging and repletion;
- for flesh-meat and wine may possibly tend to give robustness
- to the body, but it gives only feebleness to the mind. Not to
- incur the resentment of the prize-fighters [the _athletes_], I
- will avail myself of examples nearer home. The wits of Athens,
- it is well known, bestow on us Bœotians the epithets ‘gross,’
- ‘dull-brained,’ and ‘stupid,’ chiefly on account of our gross
- feeding. We are even called ‘hogs.’ Menander nicknames us the
- ‘jaw-people’ [οἱ γνάθους ἔχοντες]. Pindar has it that ‘mind is a
- very secondary consideration with them.’ ‘A fine understanding of
- clouded brilliancy’ is the ironical phrase of Herakleitus....
-
- “Besides and beyond all these reasons, does it not seem admirable
- to foster habits of philanthropy? Who that is so kindly and gently
- disposed towards beings of another species would ever be inclined
- to do injury to his own kind? I remember in conversation hearing,
- as a saying of Xenokrates, that the Athenians imposed a penalty
- upon a man for flaying a sheep alive, and he who tortures a living
- being is little worse (it seems to me) than he who needlessly
- deprives of life and murders outright. We have, it appears, clearer
- perceptions of what is contrary to propriety and custom than of
- what is contrary to nature....
-
- “Reason proves both by our thoughts and our desires that we are
- (comparatively) new to the reeking feasts [ἕωλα] of kreophagy. Yet
- it is hard, as says Cato, to argue with stomachs since they have
- no ears; and the inebriating potion of Custom[49] has been drunk,
- like Circe’s, with all its deceptions and witcheries. Now that men
- are saturated and penetrated, as it were, with love of pleasure,
- it is not an easy task to attempt to pluck out from their bodies
- the flesh-baited hook. Well would it be if, as the people of Egypt
- turning their back to the pure light of day disembowelled their
- dead and cast away the offal, as the very source and origin of
- their sins, we, too, in like manner, were to eradicate bloodshed
- and gluttony from ourselves and purify the remainder of our lives.
- If the irreproachable diet be impossible to any by reason of
- inveterate habit, at least let them devour their flesh as driven
- to it by hunger, not in luxurious wantonness, but with feelings of
- shame. Slay your victim, but at least do so with feelings of pity
- and pain, not with callous heedlessness and with torture. And yet
- that is what is done in a variety of ways.
-
- “In slaughtering swine, for example, they thrust red-hot irons into
- their living bodies, so that, by sucking up or diffusing the blood,
- they may render the flesh soft and tender. Some butchers jump upon
- or kick the udders of pregnant sows, that by mingling the blood and
- milk and matter of the _embryos_ that have been murdered together
- in the very pangs of parturition, they may enjoy the pleasure of
- feeding upon unnaturally and highly inflamed flesh![50] Again, it
- is a common practice to stitch up the eyes of cranes and swans, and
- shut them up in dark places to fatten. In this and other similar
- ways are manufactured their dainty dishes, with all the varieties
- of sauces and spices [καρυκείαις--Lydian sauces, composed of blood
- and spices]--from all which it is sufficiently evident that men
- have indulged their lawless appetites in the pleasures of luxury,
- not for necessary food, and from no necessity, but only out of the
- merest wantonness, and gluttony, and display....”[51]
-
-
-Among the illustrious earlier contemporaries of Plutarch who practised
-no less than preached rigid abstinence, Apollonius of Tyana, the
-Pythagorean, one of the most extraordinary men of any age, deserves
-particular notice. He came into the world in the same year with the
-founder of Christianity, B.C. 4. The facts and fictions of his life we
-owe to Philostratus, who wrote his memoirs at the express desire of the
-Empress Julia Domna, the wife of Severus.
-
-Apollonius, according to his biographer, came of noble ancestry. He
-early applied himself to severe study at the ever memorable Tarsus,
-where he may have known the great persecutor, and afterwards second
-founder, of Christianity. Disgusted with the luxury of the people, he
-soon exiled himself to a more congenial atmosphere, and applied himself
-to the examination of the various schools of philosophy--the Epicurean,
-the Stoic, the Peripatetic, &c.--finally giving the preference to the
-Pythagorean. He embraced the strictest ascetic life, and travelled
-extensively, visiting, in the first instance, Nineveh, Babylon, and, it
-is said, India, and afterwards Greece, Italy, Spain, and Roman Africa
-and Ethiopia. At the accession of Domitian, he narrowly escaped from
-the hands of that tyrant, after having voluntarily given himself up
-to his tribunal, by an exertion of his reputed supernatural power. He
-passed the last years of his life at Ephesus, where, according to the
-well-known story, he is said to have announced the death of Domitian
-at the very moment of the event at Rome. His alleged miracles were so
-celebrated, and so curiously resemble the Christian miracles, that they
-have excited an unusual amount of attention.[52]
-
-Unfortunately, the life by Philostratus, in accordance with the taste
-of a necessarily uncritical age, is so full of the preternatural and
-marvellous that the real fact that the pythagorean philosopher had
-acquired and possessed extraordinary mental as well as moral faculties,
-which might well be deemed supernatural at that period, is too apt to
-be discredited. The Life was composed long after the death of the hero,
-and thus a considerable amount of inventive license was possible to the
-biographer; but that it rested upon an undoubted substratum of actual
-occurrences will scarcely be disputed. There is one passage which
-deserves to be transcribed as of wider application. The people of a
-town in Pamphylia (in the Lesser Asia), where the great Thaumaturgist
-chanced to be staying, were starving in the midst of plenty by the
-selfish policy of the monopolists of grain, and, driven to desperation,
-were on the point of attacking the responsible authorities. Apollonius,
-at this crisis, wrote the following address, and gave it to the
-magistrates to read aloud:--
-
- “Apollonius to the Monopolists of Corn in Aspendos, greeting: The
- Earth is the common mother of all, for she is just.[53] You are
- unjust, for you have made her the mother of _yourselves only_.
- If you will not cease from acting thus, I will not suffer you to
- remain upon her.”
-
-Philostratus assures us that “intimidated by these indignant words they
-filled the market with grain, and the city recovered from its distress.”
-
-
-
-
-VII.
-
-TERTULLIAN. 160-240 (?) A.D.
-
-
-The earliest of the Latin Fathers extant is, also, one of the most
-esteemed by the Church,[54] notwithstanding the well-known heterodoxy
-of his later life, as the first Apologist of Christianity in the
-Western and Latin world. He was a native of Carthage, the son of an
-officer holding an important post under the imperial government. The
-facts of his life known to us are very few, nor is it ascertained at
-what period he became a convert to the new religion, or when he was
-ordained as _presbyter_. The ill-treatment to which he was subjected by
-his clerical brethren at Rome induced him, it seems, to throw in his
-lot with the Montanist sect, in whose defence he wrote several books.
-He lived to an advanced age.
-
-Of his numerous works the best known (by name at least) is his
-_Apologeticus_ (“An Apology for Christianity”). Amongst his other
-treatises we may enumerate _De Spectaculis_ (“On Shows”), _On
-Idolatry_, _On the Soldier’s Crown_ (in which Tertullian raises
-the question of the lawfulness of the “violent and sanguinary
-occupation” of the soldier, but rather, however, for the reason of
-the circumstances of the pagan ceremonial), _On Monogamy_, _On the
-Dress of Women_ (upon the extravagance of which the “Old Fathers” were
-eloquently denunciative), _Address to his Wife_. The treatise which
-here concerns us is his _De Jejuniis Adversus Psychicos_.[55]
-
-Tertullian sets himself to expose the subterfuge of a large
-proportion of the professing Christians in his day who appealed
-to the pretended authority of Christ and his Apostles for the
-lawfulness of flesh-eating. Especially does he refute the (supposed)
-defence of kreophagy in I. _Tim._ iv., 3.[56] As to the celebrated
-verse in _Genesis_ which solemnly enjoins the vegetable diet, the
-opponents of abstinence allege the permission afterwards given to the
-“post-diluvians.”
-
- “To this we reply,” says Tertullian, “that it was not proper that
- man should be burdened with an express command to abstain, who had
- not been able in fact, to support even so slight a prohibition as
- that of not to eat one single species of fruit; and, therefore,
- he was released from that stringency that, by the very enjoyment
- of freedom, he might learn to acquire strength of mind; and after
- the ‘flood,’ in the reformation of the human species, the simple
- command to abstain from blood sufficed, and the use of other things
- was freely left to his choice. Inasmuch as God had displayed
- his judgment through the ‘flood,’ and had threatened, moreover,
- exquisition of blood, whether at the hand of man or of beast,
- giving evident proof beforehand of the justice of his sentence,
- he left them liberty of choice and responsibility, supplying the
- material for discipline by the freedom of will, intending to enjoin
- abstinence by the very indulgence granted, in order, as we have
- said, that the primordial offence might be the better expiated
- by greater abstinence under the opportunity of greater license.”
- (_Quo magis, ut diximus, primordiale delictum expiaretur majoris
- abstinentiæ operatione in majoris licentiæ occasione._)
-
-He quotes the various passages in the Jewish Scriptures, in which the
-causes of the idolatrous proclivities and the crimes of the earlier
-Jews are connected by Jehovah and his prophets with flesh-eating and
-gross living:--
-
- “Whether or no,” he proceeds, “I have unreasonably explained the
- cause of the condemnation of the ordinary food by God, and of the
- obligation upon us, through the divine will, to denounce it, let us
- consult the common conscience of men. Nature herself will inform
- us whether, before gross eating and drinking, we were not of much
- more powerful intellect, of much more sensitive feeling, than
- when the entire domicile of men’s interior has been stuffed with
- meats, inundated with wines, and, fermenting with filth in course
- of digestion, turned into a mere preparatory place for the draught
- (_Præmeditatorium latrinarum_).[57]
-
- “I greatly mistake (_mentior_) if God himself, upbraiding the
- forgetfulness of himself by Israel, does not attribute it to
- fulness of stomach. In fine, in the book of Deuteronomy, bidding
- them to be on their guard against the same cause, he says, ‘Lest
- when thou hast eaten and art full--when thy flocks and thy herds
- multiply,’ &c. He makes the enormity of gluttony an evil superior
- to any other corrupting result of riches.... So great is the
- privilege (prerogative) of a circumscribed diet that it makes God
- a dweller with men (_contubernalem_--literally, ‘a fellow-guest’),
- and, indeed, to live (as it were) on equal terms with them. For if
- the eternal God--as he testifies through Isaiah--feels no hunger,
- man, too, may become equal to the Deity when he subsists without
- gross nourishment.”
-
-He instances Daniel and his countrymen, “who preferred vegetable
-food and water to the royal dishes and goblets, and so became more
-comely than the rest, in order that no one might fear for his personal
-appearance; while, at the same time, they were still more improved in
-understanding.” As to the priesthood:--
-
- “God said to Aaron, ‘Wine and strong liquor shall ye not drink,
- you and your sons after you,’ &c. So, also, he upbraids Israel:
- ‘And ye gave the Nazarites wine to drink.’ (Amos ii., 3.) Now this
- prohibition of drink is essentially connected with the vegetable
- diet. Thus, where abstinence from wine is required by God, or is
- vowed by man, there, too, may be understood suppression of gross
- feeding, _for as is the eating, so is the drinking_ (_qualis enim
- esus, talis et potus_). It is not consistent with truth that a man
- should sacrifice _half_ of his stomach (_gulam_) only to God--that
- he should be sober in drinking, but intemperate in eating.[58]
-
- “You reply, finally, that this [abstinence] is to be observed
- according to the will of each individual, not by imperious
- obligation. But what sort of thing is this, that you should allow
- to your arbitrary inclinations what you will not allow to the will
- of God? Shall more licence be conceded to the human inclinations
- than to the divine power? I, for my part, hold that, free from
- obligation to follow the fashions of the world, I am not free from
- obligation to God.”
-
-In regard to St. Paul’s well-known sentences (_Rom._ xiv., 1, &c.),
-Tertullian maintains that he refers to certain teachers of abstinence
-who acted from pride, not from a sense of right:--
-
- “And even if he has handed over to you the keys of the
- slaughter-house or butcher’s shop (_Macelli_) in permitting you
- to eat all things, excepting sacrifices to idols, at least he
- has not made the kingdom of heaven to consist in _butchery_;
- ‘for,’ says he, ‘eating and drinking is not the kingdom of God,
- and food commends us not to God.’ You are not to suppose it said
- of vegetable, but of gross and luxurious, food, since he adds,
- ‘Neither if we eat have we anything the more, nor if we eat not
- have we anything the less.’[59] How unworthily, too, do you press
- the example of Christ as having come ‘eating and drinking’ into the
- service of your lusts. I think that He who pronounced not the full
- but the hungry and thirsty ‘blessed,’ who professed His work to be
- (not as His disciples understood it) the completion of His Father’s
- will, I think that He was wont to abstain--instructing them to
- labour for that ‘meat’ which lasts to eternal life, and enjoining
- in their common prayers petition, not for rich and gross food, but
- for bread only.
-
- “And if there be One who prefers the works of justice, not,
- however, without sacrifice--that is to say, a spirit exercised by
- abstinence--it is surely that God to whom neither a gluttonous
- people nor priest was acceptable--monuments of whose concupiscence
- remain to this day, where was buried [a large proportion of] a
- people greedy and clamorous for flesh-meats, gorging quails even to
- the point of inducing jaundice.[60]
-
- “Your belly is your god,” [thus he indignantly reproaches the
- apologists of kreophagy,] “your liver is your temple, your paunch
- is your altar, the cook is your priest, and the fat steam is your
- Holy Spirit; the seasonings and the sauces are your chrisms,
- and your eructations are your prophesyings. I ever,” continues
- Tertullian with bitter irony, “recognise Esau the hunter as a man
- of taste (_sapere_), and as his were so are your whole skill and
- interest given to hunting and trapping--just like him you come in
- ‘from the field’ of your licentious chase. Were I to offer you
- ‘a mess of pottage,’ you would, doubtless, straightway sell all
- your ‘birthright.’ It is in the cooking-pots that your love is
- inflamed--it is in the kitchen that your faith grows fervid--it is
- in the flesh dishes that all your hope lies hid.... Who is held in
- so much esteem with you as the frequent giver of dinners, as the
- sumptuous entertainer, as the practised toaster of healths?
-
- “Consistently do you men of flesh reject the things of the spirit.
- But if your prophets are complacent towards such persons, they are
- not _my_ prophets. Why preach _you_ not constantly, ‘Let us eat
- and drink, _for_ to-morrow we die,’ just as _we_ preach, ‘Let us
- abstain, brothers and sisters, _lest_ to-morrow, perchance, we die’?
-
- “Let us openly and boldly vindicate our teaching. We are sure
- that they ‘who are in the flesh cannot please God.’[61] Not,
- surely, meaning ‘in the covering or substance of the flesh,’
- but in the care, the affection, the desire for it. As for us,
- less grossness (_macies_) of the body is no cause of regret, for
- neither does God give _flesh by weight_ any more than he gives
- _spirit by measure_.... Let prize-fighters and pugilists fatten
- themselves up (_saginentur_)--for them a mere corporeal ambition
- suffices. And yet even they become stronger by living on vegetable
- food (_xerophagia_--literally, ‘eating of dry foods’). But other
- strength and vigour is our aim, as other contests are ours, who
- fight not against flesh and blood. Against our antagonists we
- must fight--not by means of flesh and blood, but with faith and
- a strong mind. For the rest, a grossly-feeding Christian is akin
- (_necessarius_) to lions and bears rather than to God, although
- even as against wild beasts it should be our interest to practice
- abstinence.”[62]
-
-
-
-
-VIII.
-
-CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA. DIED 220 (?) A.D.
-
-
-The attitude of the first great Christian writers and apologists in
-regard to total abstinence was somewhat peculiar. Trained in the
-school of Plato, in the later development of neo-platonism, their
-strongest convictions and their personal sympathies were, naturally,
-anti-kreophagistic. The traditions, too, of the earliest period in the
-history of Christianity coincided with their pre-Christian convictions,
-since the immediate and accredited representatives of the Founder
-of the new religion, who presided over the first Christian society,
-were commonly held to have been, equally with their predecessors and
-contemporaries the Essenes, strict abstinents from flesh-eating.[63]
-
-Moreover, the very numerous party in the Church--the most diametrically
-opposed in other respects to the Jewish or Ebionite Christians--the
-Gnostics or philosophical Christians, “the most polite, the most
-learned, and the most wealthy of the Christian name,” for the most
-part agreed with their rivals for orthodox supremacy in aversion from
-flesh, and, as it seems, for nearly the same reason--a belief in the
-essential and inherent evil of matter, a persuasion, it may be said,
-however unscientific, not unnatural, perhaps, in any age, and certainly
-not surprising in an age especially characterised by the grossest
-materialism, selfishness, and cruelty. But the creed of the Christian
-church, which eventually became the prevailing and ruling dogma, like
-that of the English Church at the Revolution of the sixteenth century,
-was a compromise--a compromise between the two opposite parties of
-those who received and those who rejected the old Jewish revelation.
-
-On the one hand Christianity, in its later and more developed form,
-had insensibly cast off the rigid formalism and exclusiveness of
-Mosaism, and, on the other, had stamped with the brand of heresy the
-Greek infusion of philosophy and liberalism. Unfortunately, unable
-clearly to distinguish between the true and the false--between the
-accidental and fanciful and the permanent and real--timidly cautious
-of approving anything which seemed connected with heresy--the leaders
-of the dominant body were prone to seek refuge in a middle course, in
-regard to the question of flesh-eating, scarcely consistent with strict
-logic or strict reason. While advocating abstinence as the highest
-spiritual exercise or aspiration, they seem to have been unduly anxious
-to disclaim any motives other than _ascetic_--to disclaim, in fine,
-humanitarian or “secular” reason, such as that of the Pythagoreans.
-
-Such was the feeling, apparently, of the later orthodox church, at
-least in the West. While, however, we thus find, occasionally, a
-certain constraint and even contradiction in the _theory_ of the
-first great teachers of the Church, the _practice_ was much more
-consistent. That, in fact, during the first three or four centuries
-the most esteemed of the Christian heroes and saints were not only
-non-flesh-eaters but Vegetarians of the extremest kind (far surpassing,
-if we give any credit to the accounts we have of them, the _most
-frugal_ of modern abstainers) is well known to everyone at all
-acquainted with ecclesiastical and, especially, eremitical history--and
-it is unnecessary to further insist upon a notorious fact.[64]
-
-Titus Flavius Clemens, the founder of the famous Alexandrian school of
-Christian theology, and at once the most learned and most philosophic
-of all the Christian Fathers, is generally supposed to have been a
-native of Athens. His Latin name suggests some connexion with the
-family of Clemens, cousin of the emperor Domitian, who is said to have
-been put to death for the crime of _atheism_, as the new religion was
-commonly termed by the orthodox pagans.
-
-He travelled and studied the various philosophies in the East and West.
-On accepting the Christian faith he sought information in the schools
-of its most reputed teachers, of whom the name of Pantænus is the only
-one known to us. At the death of Pantænus, in 190, Clement succeeded
-to the chair of theology in Alexandria, and at the same time, perhaps,
-he became a presbyter. He continued to lecture with great reputation
-till the year 202, when the persecution under Severus forced him to
-retire from the Egyptian capital. He then took refuge in Palestine, and
-appears not to have returned to Alexandria. The time and manner of his
-death are alike unknown. He is supposed to have died in the year 220.
-Amongst his pupils by far the most famous, hardly second to himself
-in learning and ability, was Origen, his successor in the Alexandrian
-professorship.
-
-His three great works are: _A Hortatory Discourse Addressed to
-the Greeks_ (Λόγος Προτρεπτικὸς πρὸς Ἓλληνας), _The Instructor_
-(_Paidagogos_--strictly, _Tutor_, or Conductor to school), and the
-_Miscellanies_ (_Stromateis_, or _Stromata_--lit. “Patch-work”).[65]
-The three works were intended to form a graduated and complete
-initiation and instruction in Christian theology and ethics. The
-first is addressed to the pagan Greek world, the second to the recent
-convert, and in the last he conducts the initiated to the higher
-_gnosis_, or knowledge. The _Miscellanies_ originally consisted
-of eight books, the last of which is lost. The whole series is of
-unusual value, not only as the record of the opinions of the ablest
-and most philosophical of the mediators between Greek philosophy and
-the Christian creed, but also as containing an immense amount of
-information on Greek life and literature. Eloquence, earnestness, and
-erudition equally characterise the writings of Clement.
-
-He assumes the name and character of a _Gnostic_,[66] or philosophic
-Christian, not in the historical but in his own sense of the word,
-and professes himself an eclectic--as far as a liberal interpretation
-of his religion admitted. “By philosophy,” he says, “I do not mean
-the Stoic, the Platonic, the Epicurean, or the Aristotelian, but all
-that has been well said in each of those sects teaching righteousness
-with religious science--all this selected truth (τοῦτο σύμπαν τὸ
-ἐκλεκτικὸν) I call philosophy.” Again, he echoes the sentiments of
-Seneca in lamenting that “we incline more to beliefs that are in
-repute (τὰ ἔνδοξα), even when they are contradictory, than to the
-truth” (_Miscellanies_, i. and vii.). “It would have been well for
-Christianity if the principles, which he set forth with such an array
-of profound scholarship and ingenious reasoning, had been adopted
-more generally by those who came after him.... If anyone, even in a
-Protestant community, were to assert the liberal and comprehensive
-principles of the great Father of Alexandria, he would be told that he
-wished to compromise the distinctive claims of theology, and that he
-was little better than a heathen and a publican.”[67]
-
-It is in his second treatise, the _Instructor_ or _Tutor_, that Clement
-displays his opinions on the subject of flesh-eating:--
-
- “Some men live that they may eat, as the irrational beings ‘whose
- life is their belly and nothing else.’ But the Instructor enjoins
- us to eat that we may live. For neither is food our business,
- nor is pleasure our aim. Therefore discrimination is to be used
- in reference to food: it must be plain, truly simple, suiting
- precisely simple and artless children--as ministering to life
- not to luxury. And the life to which it conduces consists of two
- things, health and strength: to which plainness of fare is most
- suitable, being conducive both to digestion and lightness of
- body, from which come growth, and health, and right strength: not
- strength that is violent or dangerous, and wretched, as is that of
- the _athletes_ which is produced by artificial feeding.”
-
-Referring to the injunction of Jesus, “When thou makest an
-entertainment, call the poor,” for “whose sake chiefly a supper ought
-to be made,” Clement says of the rich:--
-
- “They have not yet learned that God has provided for his creature
- (man, I mean) food and drink for _sustenance_ not for pleasure:
- since the body derives no advantage from extravagance in viands. On
- the contrary, those _who use the most frugal fare are the strongest
- and the healthiest, and the noblest_: as domestics are healthier
- and stronger than their masters, and agricultural labourers than
- proprietors, and not only more vigorous but wiser than rich men.
- For they have not buried the mind beneath food. Wholly unnatural
- and inhuman is it for those who are of the earth, fattening,
- themselves like cattle, to _feed themselves up for death_.[68]
- Looking downwards on the earth, bending ever over tables, leading
- a life of gluttony, burying all the good of existence here in a
- life that by and by will end for ever: so that cooks are held in
- higher esteem than the tillers of the ground. We do not abolish
- social intercourse, but we look with suspicion on the snares of
- Custom and regard them as a fatal mischief. Therefore daintiness
- must be spurned, and we are to partake of few and necessary
- things.... Nor is it suitable to eat and drink simultaneously. For
- it is the very extreme of intemperance to confound the times whose
- uses are discordant. And ‘whether ye eat or drink, do all to the
- glory of God,’ aiming after true frugality, which Christ also seems
- to me to have hinted at when he blessed the loaves and the cooked
- fishes with which he feasted the disciples, introducing a beautiful
- example of simple diet. And the fish which, at the command of the
- Lord, Peter caught, points to digestible and God-given and moderate
- food....
-
- We must guard against those sorts of food which persuade us to
- eat when we are not hungry, bewitching the appetite. For is
- there not, within a temperate simplicity, a wholesome variety of
- eatables--vegetables, roots, olives, herbs, milk, cheese, fruits,
- and all kinds of dry food? ‘Have you anything here to eat?’ said
- the Lord to the disciples after the resurrection: and they, as
- taught by Him to practice frugality, ‘gave him a piece of broiled
- fish,’ and besides this, it is not to be overlooked that those who
- feed according to the Word are not debarred from dainties--such as
- honey combs. For of sorts of food those are the most proper which
- are fit for immediate use without fire, since they are readiest:
- and second to these _are those which are the simplest_, as we said
- before. But those who bend around inflammatory tables, nourishing
- their own diseases, are ruled by a most licentious disease which
- I shall venture to call the demon of the belly: and the worst and
- most vile of demons. It is far better to be happy than to have a
- devil dwelling in us: and happiness is found only in the practice
- of virtue. Accordingly the Apostle Matthew lived upon seeds and
- nuts, (Ακρόδρυα--hard-shelled fruits) and vegetables without the
- use of flesh. And John, who carried temperance to the extreme, ‘ate
- locusts and wild honey.’”
-
-
-As to the Jewish laws: “The Jews,” says Clement, “had frugality
-enjoined on them by the Law in the most systematic manner. For the
-Instructor, by Moses, deprived them of the use of innumerable things,
-adding reasons--the spiritual ones hidden, the carnal ones apparent--to
-which latter, indeed, they have trusted”:--
-
- “So that, altogether, but a few [animals] were left proper for
- their food. And of those which he permitted them to touch, he
- prohibited such as had died, or were offered to idols, or had been
- strangled: inasmuch as to touch these was unlawful.... Pleasure
- has often produced in men harm and pain, and full feeding begets
- in the soul uneasiness, and forgetfulness, and foolishness. It is
- said, moreover, that the bodies of children, when shooting up to
- their height, are made to grow right by abstinence in diet; for
- then the spirit which pervades the body, in order to its growth,
- is not checked by abundance of food obstructing the freedom of
- its course. Whence that truth-seeking philosopher, Plato, fanning
- the spark of the Hebrew philosophy, when condemning a life of
- luxury, says: ‘On my coming hither [to Syracuse] the life which
- is here called happy pleased me not by any means. For not one man
- under heaven, if brought up from his youth in such practices, will
- ever turn out a _wise_ man, with however admirable genius he may
- be endowed.’ For Plato was not unacquainted with David,[69] who
- placed the sacred ark in his city in the midst of the tabernacle,
- and bidding all his subjects rejoice ‘before the Lord, divided to
- the whole host of Israel, men and women, to each a loaf of bread,
- and baked bread, and a cake from the frying-pan.’[70] This was the
- _sufficient_ sustenance of the Israelites. But that of the Gentiles
- was over-abundant, and no one who uses it will ever study to
- become temperate, burying, as he does, his mind in his belly, very
- like the fish called _onos_ which, Aristotle says, alone of all
- creatures has its heart in its stomach. This fish Epicharmus, the
- comic poet, calls ‘monster-paunch.’ Such are the men who believe in
- their stomach, ‘whose God is their belly, whose glory is in their
- shame, who mind earthly things.’ To them the apostle predicted no
- good when he said ‘whose end is destruction.’”[71]
-
-In treating of the subject of sacrifices, upon which he uses a good
-deal of sarcasm (in regard to the _pagan_ sacrifices at least), Clement
-incidentally allows us to see, still further, his opinion respecting
-gross feeding. He quotes several of the Greek poets who ridicule the
-practice and pretence of sacrificial propitiation, _e.g._, Menander:--
-
- “the end of the loin,
- The gall, the bones uneatable, they give
- Alone to Heaven: the rest _themselves_ consume.”
-
-“If, in fact,” remarks Clement, “the savour is the special desire of
-the Gods of the Greeks, should they not first deify the _cooks_, and
-worship the Chimney itself which is still closer to the much-prized
-savour?”
-
- “If,” he justly adds, “the deity need nothing, what need has he
- of food? Now, if nourishing matters taken in by the nostrils
- are diviner than those taken in by the mouth, yet they imply
- respiration. What then do they say of God? Does He _exhale_, like
- the oaks, or does he only _inhale_, like the aquatic animals by the
- dilatation of the gills, or does he breathe all around like the
- insects?”
-
-The only innocent altar he asserts to be the one allowed by
-Pythagoras:--
-
- “The very ancient altar in Delos was celebrated for its purity, to
- which alone, as being undefiled by slaughter and death, they say
- that Pythagoras would permit approach. And will they not believe
- us when we say that the righteous soul is the truly sacred altar?
- But I believe that sacrifices were invented by men _to be a pretext
- for eating flesh_, and yet, without such idolatry, they might have
- partaken of it.”
-
-He next glances at the _popular_ reason for the Pythagorean abstinence,
-and declares:--
-
- “If any righteous man does not burden his soul by the eating
- of flesh, he has the advantage of a rational motive, not, as
- Pythagoras and his followers dream, of the transmigration of the
- soul. Now Xenokrates, treating of ‘Food derived from Animals,’[72]
- and Polemon in his work ‘On Life according to Nature,’[72] seem
- clearly to affirm that animal food is unwholesome. If it be said
- that the lower animals were assigned to man--and we partly admit
- it--yet it was not entirely for food; nor were all animals, but
- _such as do not work_. And so the comic poet, Plato, says not badly
- in the drama of _The Feasts_:--
-
- ‘For of the quadrupeds we should not slay
- In future aught but swine. For they have flesh
- Most delicate: and about the swine is nought
- For us: excepting bristles, dirt, and noise.’
-
- Some eat them as being useless, others as destructive of fruits,
- and others do not eat them because they are said to have strong
- propensity to coition. It is alleged that the greatest amount of
- fatty substance is produced by swine’s flesh: it may, then, be
- appropriate for those whose ambition is for the body; it is not so
- for those who cultivate the soul, by reason of the dulling of the
- faculties resulting from eating of flesh. The Gnostic, perhaps,
- too, will abstain for the sake of training, and that the body
- may not grow wanton in amorousness. ‘For wine,’ says Andokides,
- ‘and gluttonous feeds of flesh make the body strong, but the
- soul more sluggish.’ Accordingly such food, in order to a clear
- understanding, is to be rejected.”[73]
-
-In a chapter in his _Miscellanies_, discussing the comparative merits
-of the Pagan and of the Jewish code of ethics, he displays much
-eloquence in attempting to prove the superiority of the latter. In the
-course of his argument he is led to make some acknowledgment of the
-claims of the lower animals which, however incomplete, is remarkable
-as being almost unique in Christian theology. He quotes certain of the
-“Proverbs,” _e.g._, ‘The merciful man is long-suffering, and in every
-one who shows solicitude there is wisdom,’ and proceeds (assuming the
-indebtedness of the Greeks to the Jews):--
-
- “Pythagoras seems to me to have derived his mildness towards
- irrational animals from the Law. For instance, he interdicted the
- employment of the young of sheep and goats and cows for some time
- after their birth; not even on the pretext of sacrifice allowing
- it, on account both of the young ones and of the mother; training
- men to gentleness by their conduct towards those beneath them.
- ‘Resign,’ he says, ‘the young one to the mother for the proper
- time.’ For if nothing takes place without a cause, and milk is
- produced in large quantity in parturition for the sustenance of the
- progeny, he who tears away the young one from the supply of the
- milk and the breast of the mother, dishonours Nature.”
-
-Reverting to the Jewish religion, he asserts:--
-
- “The Law, too, expressly prohibits the slaying of such animals as
- are pregnant till they have brought forth, remotely restraining the
- proneness of men to do wrong to men; and thus also it has extended
- its clemency to the irrational animals, that by the exercise of
- humanity to beings of different races we may practise amongst those
- of the same species a larger abundance of it. Those too that kick
- the bellies of certain animals before parturition, in order to
- feast on flesh mixed with milk, make the womb created for the birth
- of the fœtus its grave, though the Law expressly commands ‘but
- neither shalt thou seethe a lamb in his mother’s milk.’[74] For the
- nourishment of the living animal, it is meant, may not be converted
- into sauce for that which has been deprived of life; and that which
- is the cause of life may not co-operate in the consumption of its
- flesh.”[75]
-
-
-
-
-IX.
-
-PORPHYRY. 233-306 (?) A.D.
-
-
-One of the most erudite, as well as one of the most spiritual, of the
-_literati_ of any age or people, and certainly the most estimable of
-all the extant Greek philosophers after the days of Plutarch, was
-born either at Tyre or at some neighbouring town. His original name,
-Malchus, the Greek form of the Syrian Melech (king), and the name by
-which he is known to us, Porphyrius (purple-robed), we may well take
-deservedly to mark his philosophic superiority. He was exceptionally
-fortunate in his preceptors--Longinus, the most eloquent and elegant
-of the later Greek critics, under whom he studied at Athens; Origen,
-the most independent and learned of the Christian Fathers, from whom,
-probably, he derived his vast knowledge of theological literature;
-and, finally, Plotinus, the famous founder of New-Platonism, who had
-established his school at Rome in the year 244.
-
-Upon first joining the school of Plotinus, he had ventured to contest
-some of the characteristic doctrines of his new teacher, and he even
-wrote a book to refute them. Amerius, his fellow-disciple, was
-chosen to reply to this attack. After a second trial of strength by
-each antagonist, Amerius, by weight of argument induced Porphyry to
-confess his errors, and to read his recantation before the assembled
-Platonists. Porphyry ever after remained an attached and enthusiastic
-follower of the beloved master, with the final revision and edition
-of whose voluminous works he was entrusted. He had lived with him
-six years when, becoming so far unsettled in his mind as even to
-contemplate suicide in order to free himself from the shackles of the
-flesh, by the persuasion of his preceptor he made a voyage to Sicily
-for the restoration of his health and serenity of mind. This was in
-270, in the thirty-seventh year of his age. Returning to the capital
-upon the death of his master, he continued the amiable but vain work
-of attempting the reform of the established religion, which had then
-sunk to its lowest degradation, and to this labour of love he may be
-said to have devoted his whole life. At an advanced age he married
-Marcella, the widow of one of his friends, who was a Christian and the
-mother of a rather numerous progeny, with the view, as he tells us, of
-superintending the education of her children.
-
-About sixty separate works of Porphyry are enumerated by Fabricius,
-published, unpublished, or lost; the last numbering some forty-three
-distinct productions. The most important of his writings are--
-
-(1) _On Abstinence from the Flesh of Living Beings_,[76] in four books,
-addressed to a certain Firmus Castricius, a Pythagorean, who for some
-reason or other had become a renegade to the principles, or at least to
-the practice, of his old faith. Next to the inculcation of abstinence
-as a spiritual or moral obligation, Porphyry’s “chief object seems to
-have been to recommend a more spiritual worship in the place of the
-sacrificial system of the pagan world, with all its false notions and
-practical abuses. This work,” adds Dr. Donaldson, “is valuable on many
-accounts, and full of information.”
-
-(2) His criticism on Christianity, which he entitled a _Treatise
-against the Christians_--his most celebrated production. It was divided
-into fifteen books. All our knowledge of it is derived from Eusebius,
-Jerome, and other ecclesiastical writers. Several years after its
-appearance the courtly Bishop of Cæsarea, the well-known historian of
-the first ages of Christianity, replied to it in a work extending to
-twenty-five books. More than a century later, Theodosius II. caused
-the obnoxious volume to be publicly burned, and Porphyry’s criticism
-shared the fate of those “many elaborate treatises which have since
-been committed to the flames” by the theological or political zeal of
-orthodox emperors and princes.[77]
-
-(3) _The Life of Pythagoras_--a fragment, but, as far as it goes, the
-most interesting of the Pythagorean biographies.
-
-(4) _On the Life of Plotinus and the Arrangement of his Works._ It is
-to this biography we are indebted for our knowledge of the estimable
-elaborator of New-Platonism. We learn that he was the pupil of
-Ammonius, who disputes with Numenius the fame of having originated
-the principles of the new school of thought of which Plotinus,
-however, was the St. Paul--the actual founder. Of a naturally feeble
-constitution, he had early betaken himself to the consolations of
-divine philosophy. After vainly seeking rest for his truth-loving and
-aspiring spirit in other systems, he at last found in Ammonius the
-teacher and teaching which his intellectual and spiritual sympathies
-demanded. His great ambition was to visit the country of Buddha and of
-Zerdusht or Zoroaster, and, for that purpose, he joined the expedition
-of the Emperor Gordian against the Persians. The defeat and death
-of that prince frustrated his plans. He then settled at Rome, where
-he established his school, and he remained in Italy until his death
-in 270. By the earnest solicitations of his disciples, Porphyry and
-Amerius, he was induced with much reluctance to publish his oral
-discourses, and eventually they appeared in fifty-four books, edited by
-Porphyry, who gave them the name of the _Enneads_, as being arranged in
-six groups of _nine_ treatises. Perhaps no teacher ever engaged to so
-unbounded an extent the admiration and affection of his followers.
-
- “During the long period of his residence at Rome, Plotinus enjoyed
- an estimation almost approaching to a belief in his superhuman
- wisdom and sanctity. His ascetic virtue, and the mysterious
- transcendentalism of his conversation, which made him the Coleridge
- of the day, seems to have carried away the minds of his associates,
- and raised them to a state of imaginative exaltation. He was
- regarded as a sort of prophet, divine himself, and capable of
- elevating his disciples to a participation in his divinity....
- These coincidences or collusions [his alleged miracles] show how
- sacred a character had attached to Plotinus. And we see the same
- evidenced in his social influence. Men and women of the highest
- rank crowded round him, and his house was filled with young persons
- of both sexes whom their parents when dying had committed to his
- care. Rogatian, a senator and prætor-elect, gave up his wealth
- and dignities, and lived as the humble bedesman of his friends,
- devoting himself to ascetic and contemplative philosophy. His
- self-denial obtained for him the approbation of Plotinus, who
- held him up as a pattern of philosophy; and he gained the more
- solid advantage of a perfect cure from the worst kind of rheumatic
- gout. The influence of Plotinus extended to the imperial throne
- itself. The weak-minded Gallienus, and his Empress Salonina, were
- so completely guided by the philosopher, that he had actually
- obtained permission to convert a ruined City of Campania into a
- _Platonopolis_, in which the laws of Plato’s _Republic_ were to be
- tested by a practical experiment; and the philosopher had promised
- to retire thither accompanied by his chief friends.”
-
-The “practical common sense” (which usually may be interpreted to mean
-cynical indifferentism), of the statesmen and politicians of the day
-interposed to prevent this attempt at a realisation of Plato’s great
-ideal; and, considering the prematurity of such ideas in the then
-condition of the world--and, it must be added, the extravagance of some
-of them--we can, perhaps, hardly regret that his “Republic” was never
-instituted. As to the essence and spirit of the teaching of Plotinus,
-
- “He cannot be termed, strictly or exclusively, a Neo-Platonist: he
- is equally a Neo-Aristotelian and a _Neo-Philosopher_ in general.
- He has himself one pervading idea, to which he is always recurring,
- and to which he accommodates, as far as he can, the reasonings of
- all his predecessors. It is his object to proclaim and exalt the
- immanent divinity of man, and to raise the soul to a contemplation
- of the good and the true, and to vindicate its independence of
- all that is sensuous, transitory, and special. With an enthusiasm
- bordering on fanaticism, he proclaims his philosophical faith in
- an unseen world: and, rejecting with indignation the humiliating
- attempt to make out that the spiritual world is no better than an
- essence or elixir drained off from the material--that thoughts
- are ‘merely the shadows and ghosts of sensations,’ he tells his
- disciples that the inward eyes of consciousness and conscience were
- to be purged and unsealed at the fountain of heavenly radiance,
- before they can discern the true form and colours and value of
- spiritual objects.”
-
-The personal humility of this sublime teacher, we may add, seems to
-have equalled the loftiness of his inspiration.
-
-Of the other writings of Porphyry, space allows us to refer only to
-his _Epistle to Anebo_--a critical refutation of some of the popular
-prejudices of Pagan theology, such as the grosser dæmonism, necromancy,
-and incantation,[78] and, above all, animal sacrifice, to which his
-keen spiritual sense was essentially antagonistic. It is known only by
-fragments preserved in Eusebius. As to the theological or metaphysical
-opinions of Porphyry, “it is clear,” remarks Dr. Donaldson, “that he
-had but little faith in the old polytheism of the Greeks. He expressly
-tells his wife (Letter to Marcella) that outward worship does neither
-good nor harm.” In truth, as regards the better parts of Christianity,
-he was nearer to the religion of Jesus than of Jupiter, although he
-found himself in opposition to what he considered the evils or errors
-of dogmatic Christian theology. In common with most of the principal
-expounders of Neo-Platonism,[79] his sympathies were with much that
-was contained in the Christian Scriptures, and, in particular, with
-the fourth Gospel, the sublime beginning of which, we are assured,
-the disciples of Plato regarded as “an exact transcript of their own
-opinions,” and which, as St. Augustin informs us (_De Civ. Dei_ x.,
-29), they declared to be worthy to be written in letters of gold, and
-inscribed in the most conspicuous place in every Christian church.
-
-As for the learning, as well as lofty ideas, of the author of the
-treatise _On Abstinence_, there has been a general consensus of opinion
-even from his theological opponents. Augustin, himself among the most
-learned of the Latin Fathers, styles him _doctissimus philosophorum_
-(“the most learned of the philosophers”), and, again, _philosophus
-nobilis_ (“a noble philosopher”), “a man of no common mind” (_De
-Civit. Dei_); and elsewhere he calls him “the great philosopher of the
-heathen.” Even Eusebius, his immediate antagonist, concedes to him
-the titles of “the noble philosopher,” “the wonderful theologian,”
-“the great prophet of ineffable doctrines” (ὁ τῶν ἀποῤῥητων μύστης).
-Donaldson, endorsing the common admiration of the moderns, describes
-his learning and erudition as “stupendous.”
-
-Amongst modern testimonies to the merits of Porphyry’s treatise,
-_On Abstinence_, the sympathising remarks of Voltaire are worth
-transcribing:--
-
- “It is well known that Pythagoras embraced this humane doctrine
- [of abstinence from flesh-eating] and carried it into Italy. His
- disciples followed it through a long period of time. The celebrated
- philosophers, Plotinus, Iamblichus, and Porphyry, recommended
- and practised it, although it is sufficiently rare to practice
- what one preaches. The work of Porphyry, written in the middle of
- our third century, and very well translated into our language by
- M. de Burigni, is much esteemed by the learned--but he has made
- no more converts amongst us than has the book of the physician
- Hecquet.[80] It is in vain that Porphyry alleges the example of
- the Buddhists and Persian Magi of the first class, who held in
- abhorrence the practice of engulfing the entrails of other beings
- in their own--he is followed at present only by the Fathers of La
- Trappe.[81] The treatise of Porphyry is addressed to one of his old
- disciples, named Firmus, who became a Christian, it is said, to
- recover his liberty to eat flesh and drink wine.
-
- “He remonstrates with Firmus, that in abstaining from flesh and
- from strong liquors the health of the soul and of the body is
- preserved; that one lives longer and with more innocence. All
- his reflections are those of a scrupulous theologian, of a rigid
- philosopher, and of a gentle and sensitive spirit. One might
- believe, in reading him, that this great enemy of the Church is a
- Father of the Church. He does not speak of the _Metempsychosis_,
- but he regards other animals as our brothers--_because_ they are
- endowed with life as we, _because_ they have the same _principles_
- of life, the same feelings, ideas, memory, industry, as we. Speech
- alone is wanting to them. If they had it, should we dare to kill
- and eat them? Should we dare to commit those fratricides? What
- barbarian is there who would cause a lamb to be slaughtered and
- roasted, if that lamb conjured him, by an affecting appeal, not to
- be at once assassin and cannibal?
-
- “This book, at least, proves that there were, among the ‘Gentiles,’
- philosophers of the strictest and purest virtue. Yet they could
- not prevail against the butchers and the _gourmands_. It is to
- be remarked that Porphyry makes a very beautiful eulogy on the
- Essenians. At that time the rivalship was who could be the most
- virtuous--Essenians, Pythagoreans, Stoics, Christians. When
- churches form but a small flock their manners are pure; they
- degenerate as soon as they get powerful.”[82]
-
-Of this famous treatise there is, it appears, only one English
-translation, that of Taylor (1851), long out of print; and there is
-a German version by Herr Ed. Baltzer, President of the Vegetarian
-Society of Germany; thus we have to lament for Porphyry, no less than
-for Plutarch, the indifferentism of the publishers, or rather of the
-public, which allows a production, of an inspiration far above that of
-the common herd of writers, to continue to be a sealed book for the
-community in general.
-
-It has been already stated that it consists of four Divisions. The
-first treats of Abstinence from the point of view of Temperance and
-Reason. In the second is considered the lawfulness or otherwise of
-animal sacrifice. In the third Porphyry treats the subject from the
-side of Justice. In the fourth he reviews the practice of some of
-the nations of antiquity and of the East--of the Egyptians, Hindus,
-and others. This last Book, by its abrupt termination, is evidently
-unfinished.
-
-Porphyry begins with an expression of surprise and regret at the
-apostasy of the Pythagorean renegade:--
-
- “For when I reflect with myself upon the cause of your change of
- mind [so he addresses his former associate], I cannot believe,
- as the vulgar herd will suppose, that it has anything to do
- with reasons of health or strength, inasmuch as you yourself
- were used to assert that the fleshless diet is more consonant
- to healthfulness and to an even and proportionate endurance of
- philosophic toils (σύμμετρον ὑπομονὴν τῶν περὶ φιλοσοφίαν πόνων),
- and experience fully proved the truth of your conviction. Whether
- then it was through some other fallacy or delusion, or through a
- later notion that this or that diet makes no difference to the
- intellectual powers, or whether it was from the fear of incurring
- odium by opposition to orthodox customs, or what the reason may
- have been, I am unable to conjecture.”
-
-He expresses his hope, or rather his belief, that, at least, the lapse
-was not due in this case to natural intemperance, or regret for the
-gluttonous habits (λαιμαργίας) of flesh-eating.
-
-He then proceeds to quote and refute the fallacies of the ordinary
-systems and sects, and, in particular, the objections of one Clodius,
-a Neapolitan, who had published a treatise against Pythagoreanism. He
-professes that he does not hope to influence those who are engaged in
-sordid and selfish, or in sanguinary, pursuits. Rather he addresses
-himself to the man
-
- “Who considers what he is, whence he came, and whither he ought
- to tend; and who, in what pertains to the nourishment of the body
- and other necessary concerns, is of really thoughtful and earnest
- mind--who resolves that he shall not be led astray and governed
- by his passions. And let such a man tell me whether a rich flesh
- diet is more easily procured, or incites less to the indulgence of
- irregular passions and appetites, than a light vegetable dietary.
- But if neither he, nor a physician, nor, indeed, any reasonable man
- whosoever, dares to affirm this, why do we persist in oppressing
- ourselves with gross feeding? And why do we not, together with that
- luxurious indulgence, throw off the encumbrances and snares which
- attend it?
-
- “It is not from those who have lived on innocent foods that
- murderers, tyrants, robbers, and sycophants have come, but from
- eaters of flesh. The necessaries of life are few and easily
- procured, without violation of justice, liberty, or peace of mind;
- whereas luxury obliges those ordinary souls who take delight in
- it to covet riches, to give up their liberty, to sell justice, to
- misspend their time, to ruin their health, and to renounce the
- satisfaction of an upright conscience.”
-
-In condemning animal sacrifice, he declares that “it is by means of
-an exalted and purified intellect alone that we can approximate to
-the Supreme Being, to whom nothing material should be offered.” He
-distinguishes four degrees of virtue, the lowest being that of the man
-who attempts to moderate his passions; the highest, the life of pure
-reason, by which man becomes one with the Supreme Existence.
-
-In the third book, maintaining that other animals are endowed with high
-degrees of reasoning and of mental faculties, and, in some measure,
-even with moral perception, Porphyry proceeds logically to insist that
-they are, _therefore_, the proper objects of Justice:--
-
- “By these arguments, and others which I shall afterwards adduce in
- recording the opinions of the old peoples, it is demonstrated that
- [many species of] the lower animals are rational. In very many,
- reason is imperfect indeed--of which, nevertheless, they are by no
- means destitute. Since then justice is due to rational beings, as
- our opponents allow, how is it possible to evade the admission also
- that we are bound to act justly towards the races of beings below
- us? We do not extend the obligations of justice to plants, because
- there appears in them no indication of reason; although, even in
- the case of these, while we eat the fruits we do not, with the
- fruits, cut away the trunks. We use corn and leguminous vegetables
- when they have fallen on the earth and are dead. But no one uses
- for food the flesh of dead animals, unless they have been killed by
- violence, so that there is in these things a radical injustice. As
- Plutarch says, it does not follow, because we are in need of many
- things, that we should therefore act unjustly towards _all beings_.
- Inanimate things we are allowed to injure to a certain extent, to
- procure the necessary means of existence--if to take anything from
- plants while they are growing can be said to be an injury--but to
- destroy living and conscious beings merely for luxury and pleasure
- is truly barbarous and unjust. And to refrain from killing them
- neither diminishes our sustenance nor hinders our living happily.
- If indeed the destruction of other animals and the eating of flesh
- were as requisite as air and water, plants and fruits, then there
- could be no injustice, as they would be necessary to our nature.”
-
-Porphyry, it is scarcely necessary to remark, by these arguments proves
-himself to have been, in moral as well as mental perception, as far
-ahead of the average thinkers of the present day as he was of his own
-times. He justly maintains that
-
- “Sensation and perception are the principle of the kinship of
- all living beings. And [he reminds his opponents] Zeno and
- his followers [the Stoics] admit that alliance or _kinship_
- (οἰκειώσις)[83] is the foundation of justice. Now, to the lower
- animals pertain perception and the sensations of pain and fear
- and injury. Is it not absurd, then, whereas we see that many of
- our own species live by brute sense alone, and exhibit neither
- reason nor intellect, and that very many of them surpass the most
- terrible wild beasts in cruelty, rage, rapine; that they murder
- even their own relatives; that they are tyrants and the tools of
- tyrants--seeing all this, is it not absurd, I say, to hold that
- we are obliged by nature to act leniently towards them, while no
- kindness is due from us to the Ox that ploughs, the Dog that is
- brought up with us, and those who nourish us with their milk and
- cover our bodies with their wool? Is not such a prejudice most
- irrational and absurd?”
-
-To the objection of Chrysippus (the second founder of the school of the
-Porch) that the gods made us for themselves and for the sake of each
-other, and that they made the non-human species for us--a convenient
-subterfuge by no means unknown to writers and talkers of our own
-times--Porphyry unanswerably replies:--
-
- “Let him to whom this sophism may appear to have weight
- or probability, consider how he would meet the dictum of
- Karneades[84] that ‘everything in nature is benefited, when it
- obtains the ends to which it is adapted and for which it was
- generated.’ Now, _benefit_ is to be understood in a more general
- way as meaning what the Stoics call _useful_. ‘The hog, however,’
- says Chrysippus, ‘was produced by nature for the purpose of being
- slaughtered and used for food, and when it undergoes this, it
- obtains the end for which it is adapted, and it is therefore
- benefited!’ But if God brought other animals into existence for the
- use of men, what use do we make of flies, beetles, lice, vipers,
- and scorpions? Some of these are hateful to the sight, defile the
- touch, are intolerable to the smell, while others are actually
- destructive to human beings who fall in their way.[85] With respect
- to the _cetacea_, in particular, which Homer tells us live by
- myriads in the seas, does not the Demiurgus[86] teach us that they
- have come into being for the good of things in general? And unless
- they affirm that all things were indeed made for us and on our
- sole account, how can they escape the imputation of wrong-doing in
- treating injuriously beings that came into existence according to
- the _general arrangement_ of Nature?
-
- “I omit to insist on the fact that, if we depend on the argument of
- necessity or utility, we cannot avoid admitting by implication that
- we ourselves were created only for the sake of certain destructive
- animals, such as crocodiles and snakes and other monsters, for
- we are not in the least _benefited_ by them. On the contrary,
- they seize and destroy and devour men whom they meet--in so doing
- acting not at all more cruelly than we. Nay, _they_ act thus
- savagely through want and hunger; _we_ from insolent wantonness
- and luxurious pleasure[87], amusing ourselves as we do also in the
- Circus and in the murderous sports of the chase. By thus acting,
- a barbarous and brutal nature becomes strengthened in us, which
- renders men insensible to the feeling of pity and compassion.
- Those who first perpetrated these iniquities fatally blunted the
- most important part of the civilised mind. Therefore it is that
- Pythagoreans consider kindness and gentleness to the lower animals
- to be an exercise of philanthropy and gentleness.”
-
-Porphyry unanswerably and eloquently concludes this division of his
-subject with the _à fortiori_ argument:--
-
- “By admitting that [selfish] pleasure is the legitimate end of our
- action, justice is evidently destroyed. For to whom must it not be
- clear that the feeling of justice is fostered by abstinence? He
- who abstains from injuring other species will be so much the more
- careful not to injure his own kind. For he who loves all animated
- Nature will not hate any one tribe of innocent beings, and by how
- much greater his love for the whole, by so much the more will he
- cultivate justice towards a part of them, and to that part to which
- he is most allied.”
-
-In fine, according to Porphyry, he who extends his sympathies to _all_
-innocent life is nearest to the Divine nature. Well would it have
-been for all the after-ages had this, the only sure foundation of any
-code of ethics worthy of the name, found favour with the constituted
-instructors and rulers of the western world. The fourth and final
-Book reviews the dietetic habits of some of the leading peoples of
-antiquity, and of certain of the philosophic societies which practised
-abstinence more or less rigidly. As for the Essenes, Porphyry describes
-their code of morals and manner of living in terms of high praise. We
-can here give only an abstract of his eloquent eulogium:--
-
- “They are despisers of mere riches, and the communistic principle
- with them is admirably carried out. Nor is it possible to find
- amongst them a single person distinguished by the possession of
- wealth, for all who enter the society are obliged by their laws
- to divide property for the common good. There is neither the
- humiliation of poverty nor the arrogance of wealth. Their managers
- or guardians are elected by vote, and each of them is chosen with
- a view to the welfare and needs of all. They have no city or town,
- but dwell together in separate communities.... They do not discard
- their dress for a new one, before the first is really worn out by
- length of time. There is no buying and selling amongst them. Each
- gives to each according to his or her wants, and there is a free
- interchange between them.... They come to their dining-hall as to
- some pure and undefiled temple, and when they have taken their
- seats quietly, the baker sets their loaves before them in order,
- and the cook gives them one dish each of one sort, while their
- priest first recites a form of thanksgiving for their pure and
- refined food (τροφῆς ἁγνῆς οὖσης καὶ καθαρᾶς).”
-
-The testimony of the national historian of the Jews, it is interesting
-to observe, is equally favourable to those pioneers of the modern
-communisms. “The Essenes, as we call a sect of ours,” writes
-Josephus, “pursue the same kind of life as those whom the Greeks call
-Pythagoreans. They are long-lived also, insomuch that many of them
-exist above a hundred years by means of their simplicity of diet and
-the regular course of their lives” (_Antiquities of the Jews._). Upon
-entering the society and partaking of the common meal (which, with
-baptism, was the outward and visible sign of initiation) three solemn
-oaths were administered to each aspirant:--
-
- “First, that he would reverence the divine ideal (τὸ θεῖον);
- second, that he would carefully practise justice towards his
- fellow-beings and refrain from injury, whether by his own or
- another’s will; that he would always hate the Unjust and fight
- earnestly on the side of (συναγωνιζεσθαι) the Just and lovers of
- justice; keep faith with all men; if in power, never use authority
- insolently or violently; nor surpass his subordinates in dress and
- ornaments; above all things always to love Truth.”
-
-As for their food, while they seem not to have been bound to total
-abstinence from every kind of flesh, they may be considered to have
-been almost Vegetarian in practice. To kill any innocent individual
-of the non-human species that had sought refuge or an asylum amongst
-them was a breach of the most sacred laws: to spare the domesticated
-races, or fellow-workers with man, even in an enemy’s country, was a
-solemn duty. For, says Porphyry, their founder had no groundless fear
-that there could be any overabundance of life productive of famine to
-ourselves, inasmuch as he knew, first, that those animals who bring
-forth many young at a time are short lived, and, secondly, that their
-too rapid increase is kept down by other hostile animals. “A proof of
-which is,” he continues, “that though we abstain from eating very many,
-such as dogs, wild beasts, rats, lizards, and others, there is yet no
-fear that we should ever suffer from famine in consequence of their
-excessive multiplication; and, again, it is one thing to have to kill,
-and another to eat, since we have to kill many ferocious animals whom
-we do not also eat.”
-
-He quotes the historians of Syria who allege that, in the earlier
-period, the inhabitants of that part of the world abstained from all
-flesh, and, therefore, from sacrifice; and that when, afterwards,
-to avert some impending misfortune they were induced to offer up
-propitiatory victims, the practice of flesh-eating was by no means
-general. And Asklepiades says, in his History of Cyprus and Phœnicia,
-that “no living being was sacrificed to heaven, nor was there even
-any express law on the subject, _since it was forbidden by the law
-of Nature_ (νομῷ φυσικῷ):” that, in course of time, they took to
-occasional propitiatory sacrifice: and that, at one of these times,
-the sacrificing priest happened to place his blood-smeared finger on
-his mouth, was tempted to repeat the action, and thus introduced
-the habit of flesh-eating, whence the general practice. As for the
-Persian _Magi_ (the successors of Zerdusht), we are informed that the
-principal and most esteemed of their order neither eat nor kill any
-living being, while those of the second class eat the flesh of some,
-but not of domesticated, animals; nor do even the third order eat
-indiscriminately. Instances are adduced of certain peoples who, being
-compelled by necessity to live upon flesh, have evidently deteriorated
-and been rendered savage and ferocious, “from which examples it is
-clearly unbecoming men of good disposition to belie their human nature
-(τῆς ἀνθρωπίνης καταψεύδεσθαι φύσεως).”
-
-Amongst individuals he instances the example of the traditionary
-Athenian legislator Triptolemus--
-
- “Of whom Hermippus, in his second book on the legislators, writes:
- Of his laws, according to Xenokrates the philosopher, the three
- following remain in force at Eleusis--‘to gratify Heaven with
- the offering of fruits,’ ‘to harass or harm no [innocent] living
- being.’ ... As to the third, he is in doubt for what particular
- reason Triptolemus charged them to abstain--whether from believing
- it to be criminal to kill those that have an identical origin with
- ourselves (ὁμογενὲς), or from a consciousness that the slaughter
- of all the most useful animals would be the inevitable consequence
- of addiction to it, and wishing to render human life mild and
- innocent, and to preserve those species that are tame and gentle
- and domesticated with man.”[88]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Somewhat later than Porphyry, the name of Julian (331-363), the
-Roman emperor, may here be fitly introduced. During his brief reign
-of sixteen months he proved himself, if not always a judicious, yet a
-sincere and earnest reformer of abuses of various kinds, and he may
-claim to be one of the very few virtuous princes, pagan or christian.
-Unfortunately the just blame attaching to his ill-judged attempt to
-suppress the religion of Constantine, from whose family his relatives
-and himself had suffered the greatest injury and insult, has enabled
-the lovers of party rather than of truth successfully to conceal from
-view his undoubted merits.
-
-In his manner of living, with which alone we are now concerned, he
-seems to have almost rivalled the most ascetic of the Platonists
-or of the Christian anchorets. One of his most intimate friends,
-the celebrated orator, Libanius, who had often shared the frugal
-simplicity of his table, has remarked that his “light and sparing diet,
-which was usually of the vegetable kind, left his mind and body always
-free and active for the various and important business of an author,
-a pontiff, a magistrate, a general, and a prince.” That his _frugal_
-diet had not impaired his powers, either physical or mental, may
-sufficiently appear from the fact that--
-
- “In one and the same day he gave audience to several ambassadors,
- and wrote or dictated a great number of letters to his generals,
- his civil magistrates, his private friends, and the different
- cities of his dominions. He listened to the memorials which had
- been received, considered the subject of the petitions, and
- signified his intentions more rapidly than they could be taken in
- shorthand by the diligence of his secretaries. He possessed such
- flexibility of thought, and such firmness of attention, that he
- could employ his hand to write, his ear to listen, and his voice to
- dictate, and pursue at once three several trains of ideas without
- hesitation and without error. While his ministers reposed, the
- prince flew with agility from one labour to another, and, after a
- hasty dinner, retired into his library till the public business,
- which he had appointed for the evening, summoned him to interrupt
- the prosecution of his studies. The supper of the emperor was
- still less substantial than the former meal; his sleep was never
- clouded by the fumes of indigestion.... He was soon awakened by
- the entrance of fresh secretaries who had slept the preceding day,
- and his servants were obliged to wait alternately, while their
- indefatigable master allowed himself scarcely any other refreshment
- than the change of occupation. The predecessors of Julian, his
- uncle, his brother, and his cousin, indulged their puerile taste
- for the games of the circus under the specious pretence of
- complying with the inclination of the people, and they frequently
- remained the greater part of the day as idle spectators.... On
- solemn festivals Julian, who felt and professed an unfashionable
- dislike to these frivolous amusements, condescended to appear
- in the Circus, and, after bestowing a careless glance on five
- or six of the races, he hastily withdrew with the impatience of
- a philosopher who considered every moment as lost that was not
- devoted to the advantage of the public, or the improvement of
- his own mind. By this avarice of time he seemed to protract the
- short duration of his reign, and, if the dates were less securely
- ascertained, we should refuse to believe that only _sixteen months_
- elapsed between the death of Constantius and the departure of his
- successor for the Persian war in which he perished.”[89]
-
-Following the principles of Platonism, “he justly concluded that the
-man who presumes to reign should aspire to the perfection of the divine
-nature--that he should purify his soul from her mortal and terrestrial
-part--that he should extinguish his appetites, enlighten his
-understanding, regulate his passions, and subdue the wild beast which,
-according to the lively metaphor of Aristotle, seldom fails to ascend
-the throne of a despot.” With all these virtues, unfortunately for his
-credit as a philosopher and humanitarian, the imperial Stoic allowed
-his natural goodness of heart to be corrupted by superstition and
-fanaticism. Conceiving himself to be the special and chosen instrument
-of the Deity for the restoration of the fallen religion, which he
-regarded as the true faith, he made it the foremost object of his
-pious but misdirected ambition to re-establish its sumptuous temples,
-priesthoods, and sacrificial altars with all their imposing ritual, and
-“he was heard to declare, with the enthusiasm of a missionary, that
-if he could render each individual richer than Midas and every city
-greater than Babylon, he should not esteem himself the benefactor of
-mankind, unless at the same time he could reclaim his subjects from
-their impious revolt against the immortal gods.”[90] Inspired by this
-religious zeal, he forgot the maxims of his master, Plato, so far as to
-rival, if not surpass, the ancient Jewish or Pagan ritual in the number
-of the sacrificial victims offered up in the name of religion and of
-the Deity. Happily for the future of the world, the fanatical piety of
-this youthful champion of the religion of Homer proved ineffectual to
-turn back the slow onward march of the Western mind, through fearful
-mazes of evil and error indeed, towards that “diviner day” which is yet
-to dawn for the Earth.
-
-
-
-
-X.
-
-CHRYSOSTOM. 347-407 A.D.
-
-
-The most eloquent, and one of the most estimable, of the “Fathers” was
-born at Antioch, the Christian city _par excellence_. His family held
-a distinguished position, and his father was in high command in the
-Syrian division of the imperial army. He studied for the law, and was
-instructed in oratory by the famous rhetorician Libanius (the intimate
-friend and counsellor of the young Emperor Julian), who pronounced
-his pupil worthy to succeed to his chair, if he had not adopted the
-Christian faith. He soon gave up the law for theology, and retired to a
-monastery, near Antioch, where he passed four years, rigidly abstaining
-from flesh-meat and, like the Essenes, abandoning the rights of private
-property and living a life of the strictest asceticism.
-
-Having submitted himself in solitude to the severest austerities during
-a considerable length of time, he entered the Church, and soon gained
-the highest reputation for his extraordinary eloquence and zeal. On the
-death of the Archbishop of Constantinople, he was unanimously elected
-to fill the vacant Primacy. The _nolo me episcopari_ seems, in his
-case, to have been no unmeaning formula. His beneficence and charity
-in the new position attracted general admiration. From the revenues of
-his See he founded a hospital for the sick--one of the very first of
-those rather modern institutions. The fame of the “Golden-mouthed” drew
-to his cathedral immense crowds of people, who before had frequented
-the theatre and the circus rather than the churches, and the building
-constantly resounded with their enthusiastic plaudits. He was, however,
-no mere popular preacher; he fearlessly exposed the corrupt and selfish
-life of the large body of the clergy. At one time he deposed, it is
-said, no less than thirteen bishops, in Lesser Asia, from their Sees;
-and in one of his _Homilies_ he does not hesitate to charge “the whole
-ecclesiastical body with avarice and licentiousness, asserting that the
-number of bishops who could be saved bore a very small proportion to
-those who would be damned.”[91]
-
-At length, his repeated denunciations of the too notorious scandals
-of the Court and the Church excited the bitter enmity of his
-brother-prelates, and, by their intrigues at the Imperial Court of
-Constantinople, he was deposed from his See and exiled to the wildest
-parts of the Euxine coasts, where, exposed to every sort of privation,
-he caught a violent fever and died. So far did the hostility of the
-Episcopacy extend, that one of his rivals, a bishop, named Theophilus,
-in a book expressly written against him, amongst other vituperative
-epithets had proceeded to the length of styling him “a filthy demon,”
-and of solemnly consigning his soul to Satan. With the poor, however,
-Chrysostom enjoyed unbounded popularity and esteem. His greatest fault
-was his theological intolerance--a fault, it is just to add, of the age
-rather than of the man.
-
-The writings of Chrysostom are exceedingly voluminous--700 homilies,
-orations, doctrinal treatises, and 242 epistles. Their “chief value
-consists in the illustrations they furnish of the manners of the
-fourth and fifth centuries--of the moral and social state of the
-period. The circus, spectacles, theatres, baths, houses, domestic
-economy, banquets, dresses, fashions, pictures, processions, tight-rope
-dancing, funerals--in fine, everything has a place in the picture of
-licentious luxury which it is the object of Chrysostom to denounce.”
-Next to his profession of faith in the efficacy and virtues of a
-non-flesh diet, amongst the most interesting of his productions is
-his _Golden Book_ on the education of the young. He recommends that
-children should be inured to habits of temperance, by abstaining, at
-least, twice a week from the ordinary grosser food with which they
-are supplied. As might be expected from the age, and from his order,
-the practice of Chrysostom, and of the numerous other ecclesiastical
-abstinents from the gross diet of the richer part of the community,
-reposed upon ascetic and traditionary principles, rather than on the
-more secular and modern motives of justice, humanity, and general
-social improvement. So, in fact, Origen, one of the most learned
-of the Fathers, expressly says (_Contra Celsum_, v.): “We [the
-Christian leaders] practise abstinence from the flesh of animals
-to buffet our bodies and treat them as slaves (ὑπωπιάζομεν καί
-δουλαγωγοῦμεν), and we wish to mortify our members upon earth,” &c.
-
-Accordingly, the _Apostolical Canons_ distinguished, as Bingham
-(_Antiquities of the Christian Church_) reports them, between
-abstinents, διὰ τὴν ἀσκησιν and διὰ τὴν βδελυπίαν, _i.e._, between
-those who abstained to exercise self-control, and those who did so from
-disgust and abhorrence of what, in ordinary and orthodox language,
-are too complacently and confidently termed “the good creatures of
-God.” This distinction, it must be added, holds only of the prevailing
-sentiment of the Orthodox Church as finally established. During several
-centuries--even so late as the Paulicians in the seventh, or even
-as the Albigeois of the thirteenth, century--_Manicheism_, as it is
-called, or a belief in the inherent evil of all matter, was widely
-spread in large and influential sections of the Christian Church--nor,
-indeed, were some of its most famous Fathers without suspicion of this
-heretical taint. According to the _Clementine Homilies_, “the unnatural
-eating of flesh-meat is of demoniacal origin, and was introduced by
-those giants who, from their bastard nature, took no pleasure in
-pure nourishment, and only lusted after blood. Therefore the eating
-of flesh is as polluting as the heathen worship of demons, with its
-sacrifices and its impure feasts; through participation in which, a man
-becomes a fellow-dietist (ὁμοδίαιτος) with demons.”[92] That
-superstition was often, in the minds of the followers both of Plato
-and of St. Paul, mixed up with, and, indeed, usually dominated over,
-the reasonable motives of the more philosophic advocates of the higher
-life, there can be no sort of doubt; nor can we claim a monopoly of
-rational motives for the mass of the adherents of either Christian or
-Pythagorean abstinence. Yet an impartial judgment must allow almost
-equal credit to the earnestness of mind and purity of motive which,
-mingled though they undoubtedly were with (in the pre-scientific
-ages) a necessary infusion of superstition, urged the followers of
-the better way--Christian and non-Christian--to discard the “social
-lies” of the dead world around them. At all events, it is not for the
-selfish egoists to sneer at the sublime--if error-infected--efforts of
-the earlier pioneers of moral progress for their own and the world’s
-redemption from the bonds of the prevailing vile materialism in life
-and dietary habits.
-
-We have already shown that the earliest Jewish-Christian communities,
-both in Palestine and elsewhere--the immediate disciples of the
-original Twelve--enjoined abstinence as one of the primary obligations
-of the New Faith; and that the earliest traditions represent the
-foremost of them as the strictest sort of Vegetarians.[93] If then we
-impartially review the history of the practice, the teaching, and the
-traditions of the first Christian authorities, it cannot but appear
-surprising that the Orthodox Church, ignoring the practice and highest
-ideal of the most sacred period of its annals, has, even within its own
-Order, deemed it consistent with its claim of being representative of
-the Apostolic period to substitute partial and periodic for total and
-constant abstinence.
-
-The following passages in the _Homilies_, or Congregational Discourses,
-of Chrysostom will serve as specimens of his feeling on the propriety
-of dietary reform. The eloquent but diffusive style of the Greek
-Bossuet, it must be noted, is necessarily but feebly represented in the
-literal English version:--
-
- “No streams of blood are among them [the ascetics]; no butchering
- and cutting up of flesh; no dainty cookery; no heaviness of head.
- Nor are there horrible smells of flesh-meats among them, or
- disagreeable fumes from the kitchen. No tumult and disturbance and
- wearisome clamours, but bread and water--the latter from a pure
- fountain, the former from honest labour. If, at any time, however,
- they may wish to feast more sumptuously, the sumptuousness consists
- in fruits, and their pleasure in these is greater than at royal
- tables. With this repast [of fruits and vegetables], even angels
- from Heaven, as they behold it, are delighted and pleased. For if
- over one sinner who repents they rejoice, over so many just men
- imitating them what will they not do? No master and servant are
- there. All are servants--all free men. And think not this a mere
- form of speech, for they are servants one of another and masters
- one of another. Wherein, therefore, are we different from, or
- superior to, Ants, if we compare ourselves with them? For as they
- care for the things of the body only, so also do we. And would
- it were for these alone! But, alas! it is for things far worse.
- For not for necessary things only do we care, but also for things
- superfluous. Those animals pursue an innocent life, while we follow
- after all covetousness. Nay, we do not so much as imitate the ways
- of Ants. _We follow the ways of Wolves, the habits of Tigers; or,
- rather, we are worse even than they. To them Nature has assigned
- that they should be thus_ [carnivorously] _fed, while God has
- honoured us with rational speech and a sense of equity. And yet we
- are become worse than the wild beasts._”[94]
-
-Again he protests:--
-
- “Neither am I leading you to the lofty peak of total renunciation
- of possessions [ἀκτημοσύνη]; but for the present I require you to
- cut off superfluities, and to desire a sufficiency alone. Now,
- the boundary of sufficiency is the using those things which it
- is impossible to live without. No one debars you from these, nor
- forbids you your daily food. I say ‘food,’ not ‘luxury’ [τροφὴν οὐ
- τρυφὴν λέγω]--‘raiment,’ not ‘ornament.’ Rather, this frugality--to
- speak correctly--is, in the best sense, luxury. For consider who
- should we say more truly feasted--he whose diet is herbs, and who
- is in sound health and suffered no uneasiness, or he who has the
- table of a Sybarite and is full of a thousand disorders? Clearly,
- the former. Therefore let us seek nothing more than these, if we
- would at once live luxuriously and healthfully. And let him who
- can be satisfied with pulse, and can keep in good health, seek for
- nothing more. But let him who is weaker, and needs to be [more
- richly] dieted with other vegetables and fruits, not be debarred
- from them.... We do not advise this for the harm and injury of men,
- but to lop off what is superfluous--and that is superfluous which
- is more than we need. When we are able to live without a thing,
- healthfully and respectably, certainly the addition of that thing
- is a superfluity.”--_Hom._ xix. 2 _Cor._
-
-Denouncing the grossness of the ordinary mode of living, he eloquently
-descants on the evil results, physical as well as mental:--
-
- “A man who lives in pleasure [_i.e._, in selfish luxury] is dead
- while he lives, for he lives only to his belly. In his other senses
- he lives not. He sees not what he ought to see; he hears not what
- he ought to hear; he speaks not what he ought to speak.... Look not
- at the superficial countenance, but examine the interior, and you
- will see it full of deep dejection. If it were possible to bring
- the soul into view, and to behold it with our bodily eyes, that of
- the luxurious would seem depressed, mournful, miserable, and wasted
- with leanness, for the more the body grows sleek and gross, the
- more lean and weakly is the soul. The more the one is pampered,
- the more is the other hampered [θάλπεται--θάπτεται: the latter
- meaning, literally, buried]. As when the pupil of the eye has the
- external envelope too thick, it cannot put forth the power of
- vision and look out, because the light is excluded by the dense
- covering, and darkness ensues; so when the body is constantly full
- fed, the soul must be invested with grossness. The dead, say you,
- corrupt and rot, and a foul pestilential humour distils from them.
- So in her who lives in pleasure may be seen rheums, and phlegm,
- and catarrh, hiccough, vomiting, eructations, and the like, which,
- as too unseemly, I forbear to name. For such is the despotism of
- luxury, it makes us endure things which we do not think proper even
- to mention....
-
- “‘She that lives in pleasure is dead while she lives.’ Hear this,
- ye women[95] who pass your time in revels and intemperance, and who
- neglect the poor, pining and perishing with hunger, whilst you are
- destroying yourselves with continual luxury. Thus you are the cause
- of two deaths--of those who are dying of want and of your own, both
- through ill-measure. If, out of your fulness, you tempered their
- want, you would save two lives. Why do you thus gorge your own body
- with excess, and waste that of the poor with want? Consider what
- comes of food--into what it is changed. Are you not disgusted at
- its being named? Why, then, be eager for such accumulations? The
- increase of luxury is but the multiplication of filth.[96] For
- Nature has her limits, and what is beyond these is not nourishment,
- but injury and the increase of ordure.
-
- “Nourish the body, but do not destroy it. Food is called
- nourishment, to show that its purpose is not to hurt, but to
- support us. For this reason, perhaps, food passes into excrement
- that we may not be lovers of luxury. If it were not so--if it were
- not useless and injurious to the body, we should hardly abstain
- from devouring one another. If the belly received as much as it
- pleased, digested it, and conveyed it to the body, we should see
- battles and wars innumerable. Even as it is, when part of our food
- passes into ordure, part into blood, part into spurious and useless
- phlegm, we are, nevertheless, so addicted to luxury that we spend,
- perhaps, whole estates on a meal. The more richly we live, the more
- noisome are the odours with which we are filled.”--_Hom._ xiii.
- _Tim._ v.[97]
-
- * * * * *
-
-From this period--the fifth century A.D. down to the
-sixteenth--Christian and Western literature contains little or
-nothing which comes within the purpose of this work. The merits of
-monastic asceticism were more or less preached during all those ages,
-although constant abstinence from flesh was by no means the general
-practice even with the inmates of the stricter monastic or conventual
-establishments--at all events in the Latin Church. But we look in vain
-for traces of anything like the humanitarian feeling of Plutarch or
-Porphyry. The mental intelligence as well as capacities for physical
-suffering of the non-human races--necessarily resulting from an
-organisation in all essential points like to our own--was apparently
-wholly ignored; their just rights and claims upon human justice were
-disregarded and trampled under foot. Consistently with the universal
-estimate, they were treated as beings destitute of all feeling--as
-if, in fine, they are the “automatic machines” they are alleged to
-be by the Cartesians of the present day. In those terrible ages of
-gross ignorance, of superstition, of violence, and of injustice--in
-which human rights were seldom regarded--it would have been surprising
-indeed if any sort of regard had been displayed for the _non-human_
-slaves. And yet an underlying and latent consciousness of the falseness
-of the general estimate sometimes made itself apparent in certain
-extraordinary and perverse fancies.[98] To Montaigne, the first to
-revive the humanitarianism of Plutarch, belongs the great merit of
-reasserting the natural rights of the helpless slaves of human tyranny.
-
-While Chrysostom seems to have been one of the last of Christian
-writers who manifested any sort of consciousness of the inhuman, as
-well as unspiritual nature of the ordinary gross foods, Platonism
-continued to bear aloft the flickering torch of a truer spiritualism;
-and “the golden chain” of the prophets of the dietary reformation
-reached down even so late as to the end of the sixth century.
-Hierokles, author of the commentary on the _Golden Verses_ of
-Pythagoras, to which reference has already been made, and who lectured
-upon them with great success at Alexandria; Hypatia, the beautiful and
-accomplished daughter of Theon the great mathematician, who publicly
-taught the philosophy of Plato at the same great centre of Greek
-science and learning, and was barbarously murdered by the jealousy
-of her Christian rival Cyril, Archbishop of Alexandria; Proklus,
-surnamed the Successor, as having been considered the most illustrious
-disciple of Plato in the latter times, who left several treatises
-upon the Pythagorean system, and “whose sagacious mind explored the
-deepest questions of morals and metaphysics”;[99] Olympiodorus, who
-wrote a life of Plato and commentaries on several of his dialogues,
-still extant, and lived in the reign of Justinian, by whose edict the
-illustrious school of Athens was finally closed, and with it the last
-vestiges of a sublime, if imperfect, attempt at the purification of
-human life--such are some of the most illustrious names which adorned
-the days of expiring Greek philosophy. Olympiodorus and six other
-Pythagoreans determined, if possible, to maintain their doctrines
-elsewhere; and they sought refuge with the Persian Magi, with whose
-tenets, or, at least, manner of living, they believed themselves
-to be most in accord. The Persian customs were distasteful to the
-purer ideal of the Platonists, and, disappointed in other respects,
-they reluctantly relinquished their fond hopes of transplanting the
-doctrines of Plato into a foreign soil, and returned home. The Persian
-prince, Chosroes, we may add, acquired honour by his stipulation with
-the bigoted Justinian, that the seven sages should be allowed to
-live unmolested during the rest of their days. “Simplicius and his
-companions ended their lives in peace and obscurity; and, as they left
-no disciples, they terminated the long list of Grecian philosophers who
-may be justly praised, notwithstanding their defects, as the wisest and
-most virtuous of their contemporaries. The writings of Simplicius are
-now extant. His physical and metaphysical commentaries on Aristotle
-have passed away with the fashion of the times, but his moral
-interpretation of Epiktetus is preserved in the library of nations as
-a classical book excellently adapted to direct the will, to purify the
-heart, and to confirm the understanding, by a just confidence in the
-nature both of God and Man.”[100]
-
-
-
-
-XI.
-
-CORNARO. 1465-1566.
-
-
-After the extinction of Greek and Latin philosophy in the fifth
-century, a mental torpor seized upon and, during some thousand years,
-with rare exceptions, dominated the whole Western world. When this
-torpor was dispelled by the influence of returning knowledge and
-reason evoked by the various simultaneous discoveries in science and
-literature--in particular by the achievements of Gutenberg, Vasco da
-Gama, Christopher Colon, and, above all, Copernik--the moral sense
-then first, too, began to show signs of life. The renascence of the
-sixteenth century, however, with all the vigour of thought and action
-which accompanied it, proved to be rather a revival of mere verbal
-learning than of the higher moral feeling of the best minds of old
-Greece and Italy. Men, fettered as they were in the trammels of
-theological controversy and metaphysical subtleties, for the most part
-expended their energies and their intellect in the vain pursuit of
-phantoms. With the very few splendid exceptions of the more enlightened
-and earnest thinkers, _Ethics_, in the real and comprehensive meaning
-of the word, was an unknown science; and a long period of time was
-yet to pass away before a perception of the universal obligations of
-Justice and of Right dawned upon the minds of men. In truth, it could
-not have been otherwise. Before the moral instincts can be developed,
-reason and knowledge must have sufficiently prepared the way. When
-attention to the importance of the neglected science of _Dietetics_ had
-been in some degree aroused, the interest evoked was little connected
-with the higher sentiments of humanity.
-
-Of all dietary reformers who have treated the subject from an
-exclusively sanitarian point of view, the most widely known and most
-popular name, perhaps, has been that of Luigi Cornaro; and it is as
-a vehement protester against the follies, rather than against the
-barbarism, of the prevailing dietetic habits that he claims a place
-in this work. He belonged to one of the leading families of Venice,
-then at the height of its political power. Even in an age and in a
-city noted for luxuriousness and grossness of living of the rich and
-dominant classes, he had in his youth distinguished himself by his
-licentious habits in eating and drinking, as well as by other excesses.
-His constitution had been so impaired, and he had brought upon himself
-so many disorders by this course of living, that existence became a
-burden to him. He informs us that from his thirty-fifth to his fortieth
-year he passed his nights and days in continuous suffering. Every sort
-of known remedy was exhausted before his new medical adviser, superior
-to the prejudices of his profession and of the public, had the courage
-and the good sense to prescribe a total change of diet. At first
-Cornaro found his enforced regimen almost intolerable, and, as he tells
-us, he occasionally relapsed.
-
-These relapses brought back his old sufferings, and, to save his life,
-he was driven at length to practise entire and uniform abstinence, the
-yolk of an egg often furnishing him the whole of his meal. In this way
-he assures us that he came to relish dry bread more than formerly he
-had enjoyed the most exquisite dishes of the ordinary table. At the
-end of the first year he found himself entirely freed from all his
-multiform maladies. In his eighty-third year he wrote and published his
-first exhortation to a radical change of diet under the title of _A
-Treatise on a Sober Life_,[101] in which he eloquently narrates his own
-case, and exhorts all who value health and immunity from physical or
-mental sufferings to follow his example. And his _exordium_, in which
-he takes occasion to denounce the waste and gluttony of the dinners of
-the rich, might be applied with little, or without any, modification of
-its language to the public and private tables of the present day:--
-
- “It is very certain,” he begins, “that Custom, with time, becomes
- a second nature, forcing men to use that, whether good or bad, to
- which they have been habituated; and we see custom or habit get
- the better of reason in many things.... Though all are agreed that
- intemperance (_la crapula_) is the offspring of gluttony, and sober
- living of abstemiousness, the former nevertheless is considered a
- virtue and a mark of distinction, and the latter as dishonourable
- and the badge of avarice. Such mistaken notions are entirely owing
- to the power of Custom, established by our senses and irregular
- appetites. These have blinded and besotted men to such a degree
- that, leaving the paths of virtue, they have followed those of
- vice, which lead them imperceptibly to an old age burdened with
- strange and mortal diseases....
-
- “O wretched and unhappy Italy! [thus he apostrophises his own
- country] can you not see that gluttony murders every year more of
- your inhabitants than you could lose by the most cruel plague or
- by fire and sword in many battles? Those truly shameful feasts (_i
- tuoi veramente disonesti banchetti_), now so much in fashion and
- so intolerably profuse that no tables are large enough to hold
- the infinite number of the dishes--those feasts, I say, are so
- many battles.[102] And how is it possible _to live_ amongst such a
- multitude of jarring foods and disorders? Put an end to this abuse,
- in heaven’s name, for there is not--I am certain of it--a vice more
- abominable than this in the eyes of the divine Majesty. Drive away
- this plague, the worst you were ever afflicted with--this new [?]
- kind of death--as you have banished that disease which, though it
- formerly used to make such havoc, now does little or no mischief,
- owing to the laudable practice of attending more to the goodness
- of the provisions brought to our markets. Consider that there are
- means still left to banish intemperance, and such means, too, that
- every man may have recourse to them without any external assistance.
-
- “Nothing more is requisite for this purpose than to live up to the
- simplicity, dictated by nature, which teaches us to be content with
- little, to pursue the practice of holy abstemiousness and divine
- reason, and _accustom ourselves to eat no more than is absolutely
- necessary to support life_; considering that what exceeds this
- is disease and death, and done merely to give the palate a
- satisfaction which, though but momentary, brings on the body a long
- and lasting train of disagreeable diseases, and at length kills it
- along with the soul. How many friends of mine--men of the finest
- understanding and most amiable disposition--have I seen carried off
- by this plague in the flower of their youth! who, were they now
- living, would be an ornament to the public, and whose company I
- should enjoy with as much pleasure as I am now deprived of it with
- concern.”
-
-He tells us that he had undertaken his arduous task of proselytising
-with the more anxiety and zeal that he had been encouraged to it by
-many of his friends, men of “the finest intellect” (_di bellissimo
-intelletto_), who lamented the premature deaths of parents and
-relatives, and who observed so manifest a proof of the advantages of
-abstinence in the robust and vigorous frame of the dietetic missionary
-at the age of eighty. Cornaro was a thorough-going hygeist, and he
-followed a reformed _diet_ in the widest meaning of the term, attending
-to the various requirements of a healthy condition of mind and body:--
-
- “I likewise,” he says with much candour, “did all that lay in my
- power to avoid those evils which we do not find it so easy to
- remove--melancholy, hatred, and other violent passions which appear
- to have the greatest influence over our bodies. However, I have not
- been able to guard so well against either one or the other kind of
- these disorders [passions] as not to suffer myself now and then to
- be hurried away by many, not to say all, of them; but I reaped one
- great benefit from my weakness--that of knowing by experience that
- these passions have, in the main, no great influence over bodies
- governed by the two foregoing rules of eating and drinking, and
- therefore can do them but very little harm, so that it may, with
- great truth, be affirmed that whoever observes these two capital
- rules is liable to very little inconvenience from any other excess.
- This Galen, who was an eminent physician, observed before me.
- He affirms that so long as he followed these two rules relative
- to eating and drinking (_perchè si guardava da quelli due della
- bocca_) he suffered but little from other disorders--so little that
- they never gave him above a day’s uneasiness. That what he says is
- true I am a living witness; and so are many others who know me, and
- have seen how often I have been exposed to heats and colds and such
- other disagreeable changes of weather, and have likewise seen me
- (owing to various misfortunes which have more than once befallen
- me) greatly disturbed in mind. For not only can they say of me that
- such mental disturbance has affected me little, but they can aver
- of many others who did not lead a frugal and regular life that such
- failure proved very prejudicial to them, among whom was a brother
- of my own and others of my family who, trusting to the goodness of
- their constitution, did not follow my way of living.”
-
-At the age of seventy a serious accident befel him, which to the vast
-majority of men so far advanced in life would probably have been fatal.
-His coach was overturned, and he was dragged a considerable distance
-along the road before the horses could be stopped. He was taken up
-insensible, covered with severe wounds and bruises and with an arm and
-leg dislocated, and altogether he was in so dangerous a state that his
-physicians gave him only three days to live. As a matter of course
-they prescribed bleeding and purging as the only proper and effectual
-remedies:--
-
- “But I, on the contrary, who knew that the sober life I had led
- for many years past had so well united, harmonised, and dispersed
- my humours as not to leave it in their power to ferment to such
- a degree [as to induce the expected high fever], refused to be
- either bled or purged. I simply caused my leg and arm to be set,
- and suffered myself to be rubbed with some oils, which they said
- were proper on the occasion. Thus, without using any other kind
- of remedy, I recovered, as I thought I should, without feeling
- the least alteration in myself or any other bad effects from the
- accident, a thing which appeared no less than miraculous in the
- eyes of the physicians.”
-
-It is, perhaps, hardly to be expected that “The Faculty” will endorse
-the opinions of Cornaro, that any person by attending strictly to
-his regimen “could never be sick again, as it removes every cause of
-illness; and so, for the future, would never want either physician or
-physic”:--
-
- “Nay, by attending duly to what I have said he would become his own
- physician, and, indeed, the best he could have, since, in fact, no
- man can be a perfect physician to anyone but himself. The reason of
- which is that any man may, by repeated trials, acquire a perfect
- knowledge of his own constitution and the most hidden qualities of
- his body, and what food best agrees with his stomach. Now, it is
- so far from being an easy matter to know these things perfectly
- of another that we cannot, without much trouble, discover them
- in ourselves, since a great deal of time and repeated trials are
- required for that purpose.”
-
-Cornaro’s second publication appeared three years later than his
-first, under the title of _A Compendium of a Sober Life_ and the
-third, _An Earnest Exhortation to a Sober and Regular Life_,[103] in
-the ninety-third year of his age. In these little treatises he repeats
-and enforces in the most earnest manner his previous exhortations
-and warnings. He also takes the opportunity of exposing some of the
-plausible sophisms employed in defence of luxurious living:--
-
- “Some allege that many, without leading such a life, have lived
- to a hundred, and that in constant health, although they ate a
- great deal and used indiscriminately every kind of viands and
- wine, and therefore flatter themselves that they shall be equally
- fortunate. But in this they are guilty of two mistakes. The first
- is, that it is not one in one hundred thousand that ever attains
- that happiness; the other mistake is, that such persons, in the
- end, most assuredly contract some illness which carries them off,
- nor can they ever be sure of ending their days otherwise, so that
- the safest way to obtain a long and healthy life is, at least after
- forty, to embrace abstinence. This is no difficult matter, since
- history informs us of very many who, in former times, lived with
- the greatest temperance, and I know that the present Age furnishes
- us with many such instances, reckoning myself one of the number.
- Now let us remember that we are human beings, and that man, being a
- rational animal, is himself master of his actions.”
-
-Amongst others:--
-
- “There are old gluttons (_attempati_) who say that it is necessary
- they should eat and drink a great deal to keep up their natural
- heat, which is constantly diminishing as they advance in years,
- and that it is therefore necessary for them to eat heartily and of
- such things as please their palates, and that were they to lead a
- frugal life it would be a short one. To this I answer that our kind
- mother, Nature, in order that old men may live to a still greater
- age, has contrived matters so that they should be able to subsist
- on little, as I do, for large quantities of food cannot be digested
- by old and feeble stomachs. Nor should such persons be afraid of
- shortening their lives by eating too little, _since when they are
- indisposed they recover by eating the smallest quantities_. Now,
- if by reducing themselves to a very small quantity of food they
- recover from the jaws of death, how can they doubt but that, with
- an increase of diet, still consistent, however, with sobriety, they
- will be able to support nature when in perfect health?
-
- “Others say that it is better for a man to suffer every year three
- or four returns of his usual disorders, such as gout, sciatica, and
- the like than to be tormented the whole year by not indulging his
- appetite, and eating everything his palate likes best, since by a
- good regimen alone he is sure to get the better of such attacks. To
- this I answer that, our natural heat growing less and less as we
- advance in years, no regimen can retain virtue enough to conquer
- the malignity with which disorders of repletion are ever attended,
- so that he must die at last of these periodical disorders, because
- they abridge life as health prolongs it. Others pretend that it is
- much better to live ten years less than not indulge one’s appetite.
- My reply is that longevity ought to be highly valued by men of
- genius and intellect; as to others it is of no great matter if it
- is not duly prized by them, since it is they who brutalise the
- world (_perchè questi fanno brutto il mondo_), so that _their_
- death is rather of service to mankind.”
-
-Cornaro frequently interrupts his discourse with apostrophes to the
-genius of Temperance, in which he seems to be at a loss for words to
-express his feeling of gratitude and thankfulness for the marvellous
-change effected in his constitution, by which he had been delivered
-from the terrible load of sufferings of his earlier life, and by which
-moreover he could fully appreciate, as he had never dreamed before,
-the beauties and charms of nature of the external world, as well as
-develope the mental faculties with which he had been endowed:--
-
- “O thrice holy Sobriety, so useful to man by the services thou
- renderest him! Thou prolongest his days, by which means he may
- greatly improve his understanding. Thou moreover freest him from
- the dreadful thoughts of death. How greatly is thy faithful
- disciple indebted to thee, since by thy assistance he enjoys this
- beautiful expanse of the visible world, which is really beautiful
- to such as know how to view it with a philosophic eye, as thou
- hast enabled me to do!... O truly happy life which, besides these
- favours conferred on an old man, hast so improved and perfected
- him that he has now a better relish for his dry bread than he had
- formerly for the most exquisite dainties. And all this thou hast
- effected by acting rationally, knowing that bread is, above all
- things, man’s proper food when seasoned by a good appetite.... It
- is for this reason that dry bread has so much relish for me; and
- I know from experience, and can with truth affirm, that I find
- such sweetness in it that I should be afraid of sinning against
- temperance were it not for my being convinced of the absolute
- necessity of eating of it, and that we cannot make use of a more
- natural food.”
-
-The fourth and last of his appearances in print was a “Letter to
-Barbaro, Patriarch of Aquileia,” written at the age of ninety-five.
-It describes in a very lively manner the health, vigour, and use
-of all his faculties of mind and body, of which he had the perfect
-enjoyment. He was far advanced in life when his daughter, his only
-child, was born, and he lived to see her an old woman. He informs us,
-at the age of ninety-one, with much eloquence and enthusiasm of the
-active interest and pleasure he experienced in all that concerned the
-prosperity of his native city: of his plans for improving its port;
-for draining, recovering, and fertilizing the extensive marshes and
-barren sands in its neighbourhood. He died, having passed his one
-hundredth year, calmly and easily in his arm-chair at Padua in the
-year 1566.[104] His treatises, forming a small volume, have been “very
-frequently published in Italy, both in the vernacular Italian and in
-Latin. It has been translated into all the civilised languages of
-Europe, and was once a most popular book. There are several English
-translations of it, the best being one that bears the date 1779.
-Cornaro’s system,” says the writer in the _English Cyclopædia_ whom we
-are quoting, “has had many followers.” Recounting his many dignities
-and honours, and the distinguished part he took in the improvement of
-his native city, by which he acquired a great reputation amongst his
-fellow-citizens, the Italian editor of his writings justly adds:--
-
- “But all these fine prerogatives of Luigi Cornaro would not have
- been sufficient to render his name famous in Europe if he had not
- left behind him the short treatises upon Temperance, composed at
- various times at the advanced ages of 85, 86, 91, and 95. The
- candour which breathes through their simplicity, the importance
- of the argument, and the fervour with which he urges upon all to
- study the means of prolonging our life, have obtained for them so
- great good fortune as to be praised to the skies by men of the
- best understanding. The many editions which have been published
- in Italy, and the translations which, together with an array of
- physiological and philological notes, have appeared out of Italy,
- at one time in Latin, at another in French, again in German, and
- again in English, prove their importance. These discourses, in
- fact, enjoyed all the reputation of a classical book, and, although
- occasionally somewhat unpolished, as ‘_Poca favilla gran fiamma
- seconda_,’ they have sufficed to inspire (_riscaldare_) a Lessio,
- a Bartolini, a Ramazzini, a Cheyne, a Hufeland, and so many others
- who have written works of greater weight upon the same subject.”
-
-Addison (_Spectator_ 195) thus refers to him:--
-
- “The most remarkable instance of the efficacy of temperance
- towards the procuring long life is what we meet with in a little
- book published by Lewis Cornaro, the Venetian, which I the rather
- mention because it is of undoubted credit, as the late Venetian
- Ambassador, who was of the same family, attested more than once in
- conversation when he resided in England.... After having passed
- his one hundredth year he died without pain or agony, and like one
- who falls asleep. The treatise I mention has been taken notice of
- by several eminent authors, and is written with such a spirit
- of cheerfulness, religion, and good sense as are the natural
- concomitants of temperance and sobriety. The mixture of the old man
- in it is rather a recommendation than a discredit to it.”
-
-In fact he has exposed himself, it must be confessed, to the taunts of
-the “devotees of the Table” often cast at the _abstinents_, that they
-are too much given to parading their health and vigour, and certainly
-if any one can be justly obnoxious to them it is Luigi Cornaro.
-
-
-
-
-XII.
-
-SIR THOMAS MORE. 1480-1535.
-
-
-During part of the period covered by the long life of Cornaro there
-is one distinguished man, all reference to whose opinions--intimately
-though indirectly connected as they are with dietary reform--it would
-be improper to omit--Sir Thomas More. His eloquent denunciation of the
-grasping avarice and the ruinous policy which were rapidly converting
-the best part of the country into grazing lands, as well as his
-condemnation of the slaughter of innocent life, commonly euphemised by
-the name of “sport,” are as instructive and almost as necessary for the
-present age as for the beginning of the sixteenth century.
-
-Son of Sir John More, a judge of the King’s Bench, he was brought up in
-the palace of the Cardinal Lord Chancellor Morton, an ecclesiastic who
-stands out in favourable contrast with the great majority of his order,
-and, indeed, of his contemporaries in general. In his twenty-first year
-he was returned to the House of Commons, where he distinguished himself
-by opposing a grant of a subsidy to the king (Henry VII.). In 1516 he
-published (in Latin) his world-famed _Utopia_--the most meritorious
-production in sociological literature since the days of Plutarch.
-In 1523 he was elected Speaker of the House of Commons, and again
-he displayed his courage and integrity in resisting an illegal and
-oppressive subsidy bill, by which he was not in the way to advance his
-interests with Henry VIII. and his principal minister, Wolsey. Seven
-years later, however, upon the disgrace of the latter personage, Sir
-Thomas More succeeded to the vacant Chancellorship, in which office he
-maintained his reputation for integrity and laborious diligence. When
-the amorous and despotic king had determined upon the momentous divorce
-from Catherine, he resigned the Seals rather than sanction that
-equivocal proceeding; and soon afterwards he was sent to the Tower for
-refusing the Oath of Supremacy. After the interval of a year he was
-brought to trial before the King’s Bench, and sentenced to the block
-(1535). In private life and in his domestic relations he exhibits a
-pleasing contrast to the ordinary harsh severity of his contemporaries.
-In learning and ability he occupies a foremost place in the annals of
-the period.
-
-Unfortunately for his reputation with after ages, as Lord Chancellor
-he seems to have forgotten the maxims of toleration (political and
-theological) of his earlier career, so well set forth in his _Utopia_;
-and he supplies a notable instance, not too rare, of retrogression with
-advancing years and dignities, and of “a head grown grey in vain.” In
-fact, he belonged, ecclesiastically, to the school of conservative
-sceptics, of whom his intimate friend Erasmus was the most conspicuous
-representative, rather than to the party of practical reform. Yet, in
-spite of so lamentable a failure in practical philosophy, More may
-claim a high degree of merit both for his courage and for his sagacity
-in propounding views far in advance of his time.
-
-In the _Utopia_ his ideas in regard to labour and to crime exhibit
-him, indeed, as in advance of the received dogmas even of the present
-day. As to the former he held that the labourer, as the actual basis
-and support of the whole social system, was justly entitled to some
-consideration, and to a more rational existence than usually allowed
-him by the policy of the ruling classes; and, in limiting the daily
-period of labour to nine hours, he anticipated by 350 years the tardy
-legislation on that important matter. In exposing the equal absurdity
-and iniquity of the criminal code he preached the despised doctrine
-of _prevention_ rather than punishment, and denounced the monstrous
-inequality of penalties by which thieving was placed in the same
-category with murder and crimes of violence:--
-
- “For great and horrible punishments be awarded to thieves, whereas
- much rather provision should have been made that there were some
- means whereby they might get their living, so that no man should
- be driven to this extreme necessity--first to steal and then to
- die.... By suffering your youth to be wantonly and viciously
- brought up and to be infected, even from their tender age, by
- little and little with vice--then, in God’s name, to be punished
- when they commit the same faults after being come to man’s state,
- which from their youth they were ever like to do--in this point,
- I pray you, _what other thing do you than make thieves and then
- punish them_.”[105]
-
-What we are immediately concerned with here is his feeling in regard to
-slaughter. The Utopians condemn--
-
- “Hunters also and hawkers (falconers), for what delight can there
- be, and not rather displeasure, in hearing the barking and howling
- of dogs? Or what greater pleasure is there to be felt when a dog
- follows a hare than when a dog follows a dog? For one thing is done
- by both--that is to say, running, if you have pleasure in that. But
- if the hope of slaughter and the expectation of tearing the victim
- in pieces pleases you, you should rather be moved with pity to see
- an innocent hare murdered by a dog--the weak by the strong, the
- fearful by the fierce, the innocent by the cruel and pitiless.[106]
- Therefore this exercise of hunting, as a thing unworthy to be used
- of free men, the Utopians have rejected to their butchers, to the
- which craft (as we said before) they appoint their bondsmen. For
- they count hunting the lowest, the vilest, and most abject part of
- butchery; and the other parts of it more profitable and more honest
- as bringing much more commodity, in that they (the butchers) kill
- their victims from necessity, whereas the hunter seeks nothing
- but pleasure of the seely [simple, innocent] and woful animal’s
- slaughter and murder. The which pleasure in beholding death, they
- say, doth rise in wild beasts, either of a cruel affection of mind
- or else by being changed, in continuance of time, into cruelty by
- long use of so cruel a pleasure. These, therefore, and all such
- like, which be innumerable, though the common sort of people do
- take them for pleasures, yet they, seeing that there is no natural
- pleasantness in them, plainly determine them to have no affinity
- with true and right feeling.”
-
-In telling us that his model people “permit not their free citizens to
-accustom themselves to the killing of ‘beasts’ through the use whereof
-they think clemency, gentlest affection of our nature, by little and
-little to decay and perish,”[107] More for ever condemns the immorality
-of the Slaughter-House, whether he intended to do so _in toto_ or no.
-In relegating the business of slaughter to their bondsmen (criminals
-who had been degraded from the rights of citizenship), the Utopians,
-we may observe, exhibit less of justice than of refinement. To devolve
-the trade of slaughter upon a pariah-class is not the least immoral of
-the necessary concomitants of the shambles. That the author of _Utopia_
-should feel an instinctive aversion from the coarseness and cruelty of
-the shambles is not surprising; that he should have failed to banish
-it entirely from his ideal commonwealth is less to be wondered at
-than to be lamented. That he had at least a _latent_ consciousness of
-the indefensibility of slaughter for food appears sufficiently clear
-from his remark upon the Utopian religion that “they kill no living
-animal in sacrifice, nor do they think that God has delight in blood
-and slaughter, _Who has given life to animals to the intent they should
-live_.”
-
-Wiser than ourselves, the ideal people do not waste their corn in the
-manufacture of alcoholic drinks:--
-
- “They sow corn only for bread. For their drink is either wine
- made of grapes, or else of apples or pears, or else it is clear
- water--and many times mead made of honey or liquorice sodden in
- water, for of that they have great store.”
-
-The selfish policy of converting arable into grazing land is
-emphatically denounced by More:--
-
- “They (the oxen and sheep) consume, destroy, and devour whole
- fields, houses, and cities. For look in what parts of the realm
- doth grow the finest and therefore the dearest wool. There noblemen
- and gentlemen, yea, and certain abbots, holy men no doubt, not
- contenting themselves with the yearly revenues and profits that
- were wont to grow to their forefathers and predecessors of their
- lands, nor being content that they live in rest and pleasure
- nothing profiting, yea, much annoying, the public weal, leave no
- land for tillage--they enclose all into pasture, they throw down
- houses, they pluck down towns and leave nothing standing, but only
- the church to be made a sheep house; and, as though you lost no
- small quantity of ground by forests, chases, lands, and parks,
- those good holy men turn dwelling-places and all glebe land into
- wilderness and desolation.... For one shepherd or herdsman is
- enough to eat up that ground with cattle, to the occupying whereof
- about husbandry many hands would be requisite. And this is also the
- cause why victuals be now in many places dearer; yea, besides this,
- the price of wool is so risen that poor folks, which were wont to
- work it and make cloth thereof, be now able to buy none at all,
- and by this means very many be forced to forsake work and to give
- themselves to idleness. For after that so much land was enclosed
- for pasture, an infinite multitude of sheep died of the rot, such
- vengeance God took of their inordinate and insatiable covetousness,
- sending among the sheep that pestiferous murrain which much more
- justly should have fallen on the sheep-masters’ own heads; and
- though the number of sheep increase never so fast, yet the price
- falleth not one mite, because there be so few sellers,” &c.
-
-These sagacious and just reflections upon the evil social consequences
-of carnivorousness may be fitly commended to the earnest attention
-of our public writers and speakers of to-day. The periodical cattle
-plagues and foot-and-mouth diseases, which, in theological language,
-are vaguely assigned to national sins, might be more ingenuously and
-truthfully attributed to the one sufficient cause--to the general
-indulgence of selfish instincts, which closes the ear to all the
-promptings at once of humanity and of reason, and is, in truth, a
-national sin of the most serious character.[108]
-
-The “wisdom of our ancestors,” which has been so often invoked, both
-before and since the days of More, and which Bentham has so mercilessly
-exposed, apparently did not subdue the reason of the author of
-_Utopia_; yet, with no little amount of applause it has been made to
-serve as a very conclusive argument against dietetic reformation, as
-against many other changes:--
-
- “‘These things,’ say they, ‘pleased our forefathers and
- ancestors--would to God we could be so wise as they were!’ And, as
- though they had wittily concluded the matter, and with this answer
- stopped every man’s mouth, they sit down again as who should say,
- ‘It were a very dangerous matter if a man in any point should be
- found wiser than his forefathers were.’ And yet be we content
- to suffer the best and wittiest [wisest] of their decrees to be
- unexecuted; but if in anything a better order might have been taken
- than by them was, there we take fast hold, finding therein many
- virtues.”[109]
-
-
-
-
-XIII.
-
-MONTAIGNE. 1533-1592.
-
-
-The modern Plutarch and the first of essayists deserves his place
-in this work, if not so much for express and explicit denunciation,
-_totidem verbis_, of the barbarism of the Slaughter-House, at least
-for a sort of argument which logically and necessarily arrives at
-the same conclusion. In truth, if he had not “seen and approved the
-better way” (even though, with too many others, he may not have had the
-courage of his convictions), he would be no true disciple of the great
-humanitarian. It is necessary to remember that the “perfect day” was
-not yet come; that a few rays only here and there enlightened the thick
-darkness of barbarism; that, in fine, not even yet, with the light of
-truth shining full upon us, have reason and conscience triumphed, as
-regards the mass of the community, either in this country or elsewhere.
-
-Michel de Montaigne descended from an old and influential house in
-Périgord (modern Périgeaux, in the department of the Dordogne). His
-youth was carefully trained, and his early inclination to learning
-fostered under his father’s diligent superintendence. He became a
-member of the provincial parliament, and, by the universal suffrage of
-his fellow-citizens, was elected chief magistrate of Bordeaux, from the
-official routine of whose duties he soon retired to the more congenial
-atmosphere of study and philosophic reflection. In his château, at
-Montaigne, his studious tranquillity was violently interrupted by the
-savage contests then raging between the opposing factions of Catholics
-and Huguenots, from both of whom he received ill-treatment and loss.
-To add to his troubles, the plague, which appeared in Guienne in 1586,
-broke up his household and compelled him, with his family, to abandon
-his home. Together they wandered through the country, exposed to the
-various dangers of a civil war; and he afterwards for some time settled
-in Paris. He had also travelled in Italy. Montaigne returned to his
-home when the disturbances and atrocities had somewhat subsided, and
-there he died with the philosophic calmness with which he had lived.
-
-The _Essais_--that book of “good faith,” “without study and artifice,”
-as its author justly calls it--appeared in the year 1580. It is a book
-unique in modern literature, and the only other production to which
-it may be compared is the _Moralia_ of Plutarch. “It is not a book we
-are reading, but a conversation to which we are listening.” “It is,”
-as another French critic observes, “less a book than a journal divided
-into chapters, which follow one another without connexion, which bear
-each a title without much regard to the fulfilment of their promise.”
-
-Montaigne treats of almost every phase of human thought and action; and
-upon every subject he has something original and worth saying. Living
-in a savagely sectarian and persecuting age, he kept himself aloof and
-independent of either of the two contending theological sections, and
-contents himself with the _rôle_ of a sceptical spectator. It must be
-admitted that he is not always satisfactory in this character, since
-he sometimes seems to give forth an “uncertain sound.” Considering
-the age, however, his assertion of the proper authority of Reason
-deserves our respectful admiration, and is in pleasing contrast with
-the attitude of most of his contemporaries. A few, like his friend De
-Thou, or the Italian Giordano Bruno--the latter of whom, indeed, had
-more of the martyr-spirit than Montaigne--contributed to keep alight
-the torch of Truth and Reason. But we have only to recollect that it
-was the age _par excellence_ of Diabolism in Catholic and Protestant
-theology alike, and of all the horrible superstitions and frightful
-tortures, both bodily and mental, of which the universal belief in the
-Devil’s actual reign on earth was the fruitful cause. About the very
-time of the appearance of the _Essais_, one of the most learned men of
-the period, the lawyer Jean Bodin published a work which he called the
-_Démonomanie des Sorciers_ (the “Diabolic Inspiration of Witches”), in
-which he protested his unwavering faith in the most monstrous beliefs
-of the creed, and vehemently called upon the judges, ecclesiastical and
-civil, to punish the reputed criminals (accused of an _impossible_
-crime) with the severest tortures. We have only to recognise this fact
-alone (the most astounding of all the astounding facts and phases in
-the history of Superstition) to do full justice to the reason and
-courage of this small band of protesters.
-
-As for the influence of Montaigne on the modes of thought of after
-times, and especially of his countrymen, it can scarcely be over
-estimated. He is the literary progenitor of the most famous French
-writers of the humanitarian eighteenth century. The most eminent of
-them, Voltaire, perhaps, most resembles him, but naturally the style of
-the eighteenth century philosopher is more concise and incisive, and
-his opinions are more pronounced. “Both,” says a French critic, “laugh
-at the human species; but the laughter of Voltaire is more bitter; his
-railleries are more terrible. Both, nevertheless, breathe the love
-of humanity. That of Voltaire is more ardent, more courageous, more
-unwearied. The hatred of both of them for charlatanism and hypocrisy
-is well known. Their morality has for its first principle benevolence
-towards others, without distinction of country, of manners, or of
-religious beliefs; warning us not to think that we alone hold the
-deposit of justice and of truth. It transports our soul, by contempt of
-mortal things and by enthusiasm for great truths.” It is to be lamented
-that the countrymen of Montaigne and of Voltaire have not profited
-to a larger extent by their humanitarian teaching and tendencies. In
-reference to the almost incredible atrocities of war, and especially of
-civil war, Montaigne protests:--
-
- “Scarcely could I persuade myself, before I had seen it with
- my own eyes, that there could be souls so ferocious as for the
- simple pleasure of murder to be ready to perpetrate it; to hack
- and dismember the limbs of others; to ransack their invention to
- discover unheard-of tortures and new kinds of deaths--and that
- without the incentive of enmity or of profit--with the mere view of
- enjoying the pleasant spectacle of pitiable actions and movements,
- of groans and lamentations, of a man dying in agony. For this is
- the climax to which cruelty can attain--‘for a man without anger,
- without fear, to kill another merely to witness his sufferings.’
-
- “For my part I have never been able to see, without displeasure, an
- innocent and defenceless animal, from whom we receive no offence
- or harm, pursued and slaughtered. And when a deer, as commonly
- happens, finding herself without breath and strength, without other
- resource, throws herself down and surrenders, as it were, to her
- pursuers, begging for mercy by her tears,
-
- ‘Questuque cruentus
- Atque imploranti similis.’[110]
-
- This has always appeared to me a very displeasing spectacle. I
- seldom, or never, take an animal alive whom I do not restore to the
- fields. Pythagoras was in the habit of buying their victims from
- the fowlers and fishermen for the same purpose.
-
- ‘Primâque a cæde ferarum
- Incaluisse puto maculatum sanguine ferrum.’[111]
-
- “Dispositions sanguinary in regard to other animals testify a
- natural inclination to cruelty towards their own kind. After they
- had accustomed themselves at Rome to the spectacle of the murders
- [_meurtres_] of other animals, they proceeded to those of men and
- gladiators. Nature has, I fear, herself attached some instinct
- of inhumanity to man’s disposition. No one derives any amusement
- from seeing other animals enjoy themselves and caressing one
- another; and no one fails to take pleasure in seeing them torn in
- pieces and dismembered. That I may not [he is cautious enough to
- add] be ridiculed for this sympathy which I have for them, even
- theology enjoins some respect for them,[112] and considering that
- one and the same Master has lodged us in this palatial world for
- his service, and that they are, as we, members of His family, it
- is right that it should enjoin some respect and affection towards
- them.”
-
-Quoting instances of the extreme respect in which some of the
-non-human races were held by people in Antiquity,[113] and Plutarch’s
-interpretation of the meaning of the divine honours sometimes paid to
-them--that they adored certain qualities in them as types of divine
-faculties--Montaigne declares for himself that:--
-
- “When I meet, amongst the more moderate opinions, arguments which
- go to prove our close resemblance to other animals, and how much
- they share in our greatest privileges, and with how much of
- probability they are compared to us, of a truth I abate much from
- our common presumption, and willingly abdicate that _imaginary_
- royalty which they assign us over other beings.”
-
-Wiser than the majority in later times, Montaigne well rebukes the
-arrogant presumption of the human animal who affects to hold all other
-life to be brought into being for his sole use and pleasure:--
-
- “Let him shew me, by the most skilful argument, upon what
- foundations he has built these excessive prerogatives which he
- supposes himself to have over other existences. Who has persuaded
- him that that admirable impulse of the celestial vault, the eternal
- brightness of those Lights rolling so majestically over our heads,
- the tremendous motions of that infinite sea of Globes, were
- established and have continued so many ages for his advantage and
- for his service. Is it possible to imagine anything so ridiculous
- as that this pitiful [_chétive_], miserable creature, who is not
- even master of himself, exposed to injuries of every kind, should
- call itself master and lord of the universe, of which, so far from
- being lord of it, he knows but the smallest part?... Who has given
- him this sealed charter? Let him shew us the ‘letters patent’ of
- this grand commission. Have they been issued [_octroyées_] in
- favour of the wise only? They affect but the few in that case. The
- fools and the wicked--are they worthy of so extraordinary a favour,
- and being the worst part of the world [_le pire pièce du monde_],
- do they deserve to be preferred to all the rest? Shall we believe
- all this?
-
- “Presumption is our natural and original disease. The most
- calamitous and fragile of all creatures is man, and yet the most
- arrogant.[114] It is through the vanity of this same imagination
- that he equals himself to a god, that he attributes to himself
- divine conditions, that he picks himself out and separates himself
- from the crowd of other creatures, curtails the just shares of
- other animals his brethren [_confrères_] and companions, and
- assigns to them such portions of faculties and forces as seems to
- him good. How does he know, by the effort of his intelligence, the
- interior and secret movements and impulses of other animals? By
- what comparison between them and us does he infer the stupidity
- [_la bétise_] which he attributes to them?”
-
-Montaigne quotes the example of his master, the just and benevolent
-Plutarch, who made it a matter of justice and conscience not to sell
-or send to the slaughter-house (according to the common selfish
-ingratitude) a Cow who had served him faithfully and profitably for so
-many years. With Plutarch and Porphyry he never wearies of denouncing
-the unreasoning opinions, or rather prejudices, prevalent amongst men
-as to the mental qualities of many of the non-human races, and, as we
-have already seen, insists that the difference between them and us is
-of _degree_ and not of _kind_:--
-
- “Plato, in his picture of the ‘Golden Age,’ reckons amongst the
- chief advantages of the men of that time the communication they had
- with other animals, by investigating and instructing themselves in
- whose nature they learned their true qualities and the differences
- between them, by which they acquired a very perfect knowledge and
- intelligence, and thus made their lives more happy than we can make
- ours. Is a better test needed by which to judge of human folly in
- regard to other species?
-
- “I have said all this in order to bring us back and reunite
- ourselves to the crowd [_presse_]. We are [in the accidents of
- mortality] neither above nor below the rest. ‘All who are under
- the sky,’ says the Jewish sage, ‘experience a like law and fate.’
- There is some difference, _there are orders and degrees_, but
- they are under the aspect of one and the same nature. Man must be
- constrained and ranged within the barriers of this police [_Il
- faut contraindre l’homme, et le ranger dans les barrières de cette
- police_]. The wretch has no right to encroach [_d’enjamber_]
- beyond these; he is fettered, entangled, he is subjected to like
- necessities with other creatures of his order, and in a very
- mean condition without any true and essential prerogative and
- pre-excellence. That which he confers upon himself by his own
- opinion and fancy has neither sense nor substance; and if it be
- conceded to him that he alone of all animals has that freedom of
- imagination and that irregularity of thought representing to him
- what he is, what he is not, and what he wants, the false and the
- true, it is an advantage which has been very dearly sold to him,
- and of which he has very little to boast, for from that springs the
- principal source of the evils which oppress him--crime, disease,
- irresolution, trouble, despair.”
-
-Rejecting the still received prejudice which will not allow our humble
-fellow-beings the privilege of reason, but invents an imaginary faculty
-called “instinct,” he repeats that--
-
- “There is no ground for supposing that other beings do by
- _natural and necessary inclination_ the same things that we do
- by choice, and while we are bound to infer from like effects
- like faculties--nay, from greater effects, greater faculties--we
- are forced to confess, consequently, that that same reason, that
- same method which we employ in action are also employed by the
- lower animals, or else that they have some still better reason
- or method. Why do we fancy in them that natural necessity or
- impulse [_contrainte_]--_we_ who have no experience of that sort
- ourselves.[115]
-
- “As for use in eating, it is with us as with them, natural
- and without instruction. Who doubts that a child, arrived at
- the necessary strength for feeding itself, could find its own
- nourishment? The earth produces and offers to him enough for his
- needs without artificial labour, and if not for all seasons,
- neither does she for the other races--witness the provisions
- which we observe the ants and others collecting for the sterile
- seasons of the year. Those nations whom we have lately discovered
- [the peoples of Hindustan and of parts of America], so abundantly
- furnished with natural meat and drink without care and without
- labour, have just instructed us that bread is not our sole food,
- and that without toil our mother Nature has furnished us with every
- plant we need, to shew us, as it seems, how superior she is to all
- our _artificiality_; while the extravagance of our appetite outruns
- all the inventions by which we seek to satisfy it.”[116]
-
-
-
-
-XIV.
-
-GASSENDI. 1592-1655.
-
-
-Gassendi, one of the most eminent men, and, what is more to the
-purpose, the most meritorious philosophic writer of France in
-the seventeenth century, claims the unique honour of being the
-first directly to revive in modern times the teaching of Plutarch
-and Porphyry. Other minds, indeed, of a high order, like More and
-Montaigne, had, as already shown, implicitly condemned the inveterate
-barbarism. But Gassendi is the writer who first, since the extinction
-of the Platonic philosophy, expressly and unequivocally attempted to
-enlighten the world upon this fundamental truth.
-
-He was born of poor parents, near Digne, in Provence. In his earliest
-years he gave promise of his extraordinary genius. At nineteen he was
-professor of philosophy at Aix. His celebrated “Essays against the
-Aristotleians” (_Exercitationes Paradoxicæ Adversus Aristoteleos_)
-was his first appearance in the philosophic world. Written some years
-earlier, it was first published, in part, in the year 1624. It divides
-with the _Novum Organon_ of Francis Bacon, with which it was almost
-contemporary, the honour of being the earliest effectual assault upon
-the old scholastic jargon which, abusing the name and authority of
-Aristotle, during some three or four centuries of mediæval darkness
-had kept possession of the schools and universities of Europe. It at
-once raised up for Gassendi a host of enemies, the supporters of the
-old orthodoxy, and, as has always been the case in the exposure of
-falsehood, he was assailed with a torrent of virulent invective. Five
-of the Books of the _Exercitationes_, by the advice of his friends,
-who dreaded the consequences of his courage, had been suppressed. In
-the Fourth Book, besides the heresy of Kopernik (which Bacon had not
-the courage or the penetration to adopt), the doctrine of the eternity
-of the Earth had been maintained, as already taught by Bruno; while
-the Seventh, according to the table of contents, contained a formal
-recommendation of the Epicurean theory of morals, in which Pleasure and
-Virtue are synonymous terms.
-
-In the midst of the obloquy thus aroused the philosopher devoted
-himself, by way of consolation, to the study of anatomy and astronomy,
-as well as to literary studies. “As the result of his anatomical
-researches he composed a treatise to prove that man was intended to
-live upon vegetables, and that animal food, as contrary to the human
-constitution, is baneful and unwholesome.”[117] He was the first to
-observe the transit of the planet Mercury over the Sun’s disc (1631),
-previously calculated by Kepler. He next appears publicly as the
-opponent of Descartes in his _Disquisitiones Anticartesianæ_ (1643)--a
-work justly distinguished, according to the remark of an eminent
-German critic, as a model of controversial excellence. The philosophic
-world was soon divided between the two hostile camps. It is sufficient
-to observe here that Descartes, whatever merit may attach to him in
-other respects, by his equally absurd and mischievous paradox that
-the non-human species are possessed only of unconscious sensation and
-perception, had done as much as he well could to destroy his reputation
-for common sense and common reason with all the really thinking part
-of the world. Yet this “animated machine” theory, incredible as it
-may appear, has recently been revived by a well-known physiologist
-of the present day, in the very face of the most ordinary facts and
-experience--a theory about which it needs only to be said that it
-deserves to be classed with some of the most absurd and monstrous
-conceptions of mediævalism. As though, to quote Voltaire’s admirable
-criticism, God had given to the lower animals reason and feeling to the
-end _that they might not feel and reason_. It was not thus, as the same
-writer reminds us, that Locke and Newton argued.[118]
-
-In 1646 Gassendi became Regius Professor of Mathematics in the
-University of Paris, where his lecture-room was crowded with listeners
-of all classes. His _Life and Morals of Epikurus_ (_De Vitâ et Moribus
-Epicuri_), his principal work, appeared in the year 1647. It is a
-triumphant refutation of the prejudices and false representations
-connected with the name of one of the very greatest and most virtuous
-of the Greek Masters, which had been prevalent during so many ages.
-Neither his European reputation, nor the universal respect extorted
-by his private as well as public merits, could corrupt the simplicity
-of Gassendi; and his sober tastes were little in sympathy with the
-luxurious or literary trifling of Paris:--
-
- “He had only with difficulty resolved to quit his southern home,
- and being attacked by a lung complaint, he returned to Digne, where
- he remained till 1653. Within this period falls the greater part
- of his literary activity and zeal in behalf of the philosophy of
- Epikurus, and simultaneously the positive extension of his own
- doctrines. In the same period Gassendi produced, besides several
- astronomical works, a series of valuable biographies, of which
- those of Kopernik and Tycho Brahe are especially noteworthy. He
- is, of all the most prominent representatives of Materialism,
- the only one gifted with a historic sense, and that he has in an
- eminent degree. Even in his _Syntagma Philosophicum_ he treats
- every subject, at first historically from all points of view....
- Gassendi did not fall a victim to Theology, because he was destined
- to fall a victim to Medicine. Being treated for a fever in the
- fashion of the time, he had been reduced to extreme debility. He
- long, but vainly, sought restoration in his southern home. On
- returning to Paris he was again attacked by fever, and thirteen
- fresh blood-lettings ended his life. He died October 24th, 1655.”
-
-Lange, from whom we have quoted this brief notice, proceeds to
-vindicate his position as a physical philosopher:--
-
- “The reformation of Physics and Natural Philosophy, usually
- ascribed to Descartes, was at least as much the work of Gassendi.
- Frequently, in consequence of the fame which Descartes owed to his
- Metaphysics, those very things have been credited to Descartes
- which ought properly to be assigned to Gassendi. It was also a
- result of the peculiar mixture of difference and agreement, of
- hostility and alliance, between the two systems that the influences
- resulting from them became completely interfused.”[119]
-
-Although of extraordinary erudition his learning did not, as too often
-happens, obscure the powers of original thought and reason. Bayle,
-writing at the end of the seventeenth century, has characterised him as
-“the greatest philosopher amongst scholars, and the greatest scholar
-amongst philosophers;” and Newton conceived the same high esteem for
-the great vindicator of Epikurus.[120]
-
-It is in his celebrated letter to his friend Van Helmont, that Gassendi
-deals with the irrational assertions of certain physiologists,
-apparently more devoted to the defence of the orthodox diet than to the
-discovery of unwelcome truth, as to the character of the human teeth:--
-
- “I was contending,” he writes to his medical friend, “that from
- the conformation of our teeth we do not appear to be adapted by
- Nature to the use of a flesh diet, since all animals (I spoke of
- terrestrials) which Nature has formed to feed on flesh have their
- teeth long, conical, sharp, uneven, and with intervals between
- them--of which kind are lions, tigers, wolves, dogs, cats, and
- others. But those who are made to subsist only on herbs and fruits
- have their teeth short, broad, blunt, close to one another, and
- distributed in even rows. Of this sort are horses, cows, deer,
- sheep, goats, and some others. And further--that men have received
- from Nature teeth which are unlike those of the first class, and
- resemble those of the second. It is therefore probable, since men
- are land animals, that Nature intended them to follow, in the
- selection of their food, not the carnivorous tribes, but those
- races of animals which are contented with the simple productions
- of the earth.... Wherefore, I here repeat that from the primæval
- institution of our nature, the teeth were destined to the
- mastication, not of flesh, but of fruits.
-
- As for flesh, true, indeed, it is that man is sustained on flesh.
- But _how many things_, let me ask, _does man do every day which are
- contrary to, or beside, his nature_? So great, and so general, is
- the perversion of his mode of life, which has, as it were, eaten
- into his flesh by a sort of deadly contagion (_contagione veluti
- quâdam jam inusta est_), that he appears to have put on another
- disposition. Hence, the whole care and concern of philosophy and
- moral instruction ought to consist in leading men back to the paths
- of Nature.”
-
-Helmont, it seems, had rested his principal argument for flesh-eating,
-not altogether in accordance with _Genesis_, and certainly not in
-accordance with Science, on the presumption that man was formed
-expressly for carnivorousness. To this Gassendi replied that, without
-ignoring theological argument, he still maintained comparative Anatomy
-to be a satisfactory and sufficient guide. He then applies himself to
-refute the physiological prejudice of Helmont about the teeth, &c.
-(as already quoted), and begins by warning his friend that he is not
-to wonder if the self-love of men is constantly viewed by him with
-suspicion.[121]
-
- “For, in fact, we all, with tacit consent, conspire to extol our
- own nature, and we do this commonly with so much arrogance that, if
- people were to divest themselves of this traditional and inveterate
- prejudice, and seriously reflect upon it, their faces must be
- immediately suffused with burning shame.”
-
-He repeats Plutarch’s unanswerable challenge:--
-
- “Man lives very well upon flesh, you say, but, if he thinks this
- food to be natural to him, why does he not use it as it is, as
- furnished to him by Nature? But, in fact, he shrinks in horror from
- seizing and rending living or even raw flesh with his teeth, and
- lights a fire to change its natural and proper condition. Well, but
- if it were the intention of Nature that man should eat _cooked_
- flesh, she would surely have provided him with ready-made cooks;
- or, rather, she would have herself cooked it as she is wont to
- do fruits, which are best and sweetest without the intervention
- of fire. Nature, surely, does not fail in providing necessary
- provision for her children, according to the common boast. But what
- is more necessary than to make food pleasurable? And, as she does
- in the case of sexual love by which she procures the preservation
- of the _species_, so would she procure the preservation of the
- _genus_.
-
- “Nor let anyone say that Nature in this is corrected, since, to
- pass over other things, that is tantamount to convicting her of
- a blunder. Consider how much more benevolent she would be proved
- to be, in that case, towards the savage beasts than towards us.
- Again, since our teeth are not sufficient for eating flesh, even
- when prepared by fire, the invention of knives seems to me to be
- a strong proof. Because, in fact, we have no teeth given us for
- rending flesh, and we are therefore forced to have recourse to
- those _non-natural_ organs, in order to accomplish our purpose. As
- if, forsooth, Nature would have left us destitute in so essential
- things! I divine at once your ready reply: ‘think that Nature
- has given man reason to supply defects of this kind.’ But this,
- I affirm, is always to accuse Nature, _in order to_ defend our
- unnatural luxury. So it is about dress--so it is about other things.
-
- “What is clearer [he sums up] than that man is not furnished for
- hunting, much less for eating, other animals? In one word, we seem
- to be admirably admonished by Cicero that man was destined for
- other things than for seizing and cutting the throats of other
- animals. If you answer that ‘that may be said to be an industry
- ordered by Nature, by which such weapons are invented,’ then,
- behold! it is by the very same artificial instrument that men make
- weapons for mutual slaughter. Do they this at the instigation of
- Nature? Can a use so noxious be called _natural_? Faculty is given
- by Nature, but it is our own fault that we make a perverse use of
- it.”
-
-He, finally, refutes the popular objection about the strength-giving
-properties of flesh-meat, and instances Horses, Bulls, and others.[122]
-
-In his _Ethics_ (affixed to his Books on _Physics_) he quotes and
-endorses the opinions of Epikurus on the slaughter of innocent life:--
-
- “There is no pretence,” he asserts, “for saying that any right has
- been granted us by law to kill any of those animals which are not
- destructive or pernicious to the human race, for there is no reason
- why the innocent species should be allowed to increase to so great
- a number as to be inconvenient to us. They may be restrained within
- that number which would be harmless, and useful to ourselves.”[123]
-
-With that Great Master he thus rebukes the fashionable “hospitality”:--
-
- “I, for my part, to speak modestly of myself, lived contented
- with the plants of my little garden, and have pleasure in that
- diet, and I wish inscribed on my doors: ‘Guest, here you shall
- have good cheer! here the _summum bonum_ is Pleasure. The guardian
- of this house, _humanely_ hospitable, is ready to entertain you
- with pearl-barley (_polenta_), and will furnish you abundantly
- with water. These little gardens do not increase hunger, but
- extinguish it; nor do they make thirst greater by the very
- potations themselves, but satisfy it by a natural and gratuitous
- remedy.’”[124]
-
-
-There is one name which, in reputation, occupies a pre-eminent
-position in philosophy, belonging to this period--Francis Bacon. But,
-for ourselves, for whom true ethical and humanitarian principles have
-a much deeper significance than mere mental force undirected to the
-highest aims of truth and of justice, the name of the modern assertor
-of the truths of Vegetarianism will challenge greater reverence than
-even that of the author of the _New Instrument_.
-
-That Bacon should exhibit himself in the character of an advocate
-of the rights of the lower races is hardly to be expected from the
-selfish and unscrupulous promoter of his own private interests at the
-expense at once of common gratitude and common feeling. His remarks on
-Vivisection (where he questions whether experiments on human beings
-are defensible, and suggests the limitation of scientific torture to
-the non-human races)[125] are, in fact, sufficient evidence of his
-indifferentism to so unselfish an object as the advocacy of the claims
-of our defenceless dependants. When we consider his unusual sagacity
-in exposing the absurd quasi-scientific methods of his predecessors,
-and of the prevailing (so-called) philosophical system and the many
-profound remarks to be found in his writings, it must be added that we
-are reluctantly compelled to believe that the opinions elsewhere which
-he publishes inconsistent with those principles were inspired by that
-notorious servility and courtiership by which he flattered the absurd
-and pedantic dogmatism of one of the most contemptible of kings.
-
-One passage there is, however, in his writings which seems to give us
-hope that this eminent compromiser was not altogether insensible to
-higher and better feeling:--
-
- “Nature has endowed man with a noble and excellent principle of
- compassion, which extends [? ought to extend] itself also to the
- dumb animals--whence this compassion has some resemblance to
- that of a prince towards his subjects. And it is certain that the
- noblest souls are the most extensively compassionate, for narrow
- and degenerate minds think that compassion belongs not to them; but
- a great soul, the noblest part of creation, is ever compassionate.
- Thus, under the old laws, there were numerous precepts (not merely
- ceremonial) enjoining mercy--for example, the not eating of
- flesh with the blood, &c. So, also, the sects of the Essenes and
- Pythagoreans totally abstained from flesh, as they do also to this
- day, with an inviolate religion, in some parts of the empire of the
- Mogul [Hindustan]. Nay, the Turks, though a savage nation, both in
- their descent and discipline, give alms to the dumb animals, and
- suffer them not to be tortured.”[126]
-
-If Bacon had lived longer (he died in 1626) we may entertain the hope
-that the powerful arguments of his illustrious contemporary might have
-inspired him with more sound and satisfactory ideas on Dietetics than
-the somewhat crude ones which he published in his _De Augmentis_ (iv.,
-2). As for Medicine, he had, reasonably enough, not conceived a high
-opinion of the methods of its ordinary professors. He says:--
-
- “Medicine has been more professed than laboured, and more laboured
- than advanced; rather circular than progressive; for I find great
- repetition, and but little new matter in the writers of Physic.”
-
-
-
-
-XV.
-
-RAY. 1627-1705.
-
-
-John Ray, the founder of Botanical and, only in little less degree, of
-Zoological Science, was an _alumnus_ of the University of Cambridge. He
-was elected Fellow of Trinity College in 1649, and Lecturer in Greek
-in the following year. While at Cambridge he formed a collection of
-plants growing in the neighbourhood, a catalogue of which he published
-in 1660. Three years later, with his friend Francis Willoughby, he
-travelled over a large part of Europe, as during his academical life
-he had traversed the greater part of these islands, in pursuit of
-botanical and zoological science--an account of which tour he published
-in 1673.
-
-He had been one of the first Fellows of the recently founded Royal
-Society. In 1682 appeared his _New Method of Plants_, which formed a
-new era in botany, or rather, which was the first attempt at making
-it a real science. It is the basis of the subsequent classification
-of Jussieu, which is still received; and its author was the first to
-propose the division of plants into _monocotyledons_ and _dicotyledons_.
-
-His principal work is the _Historia Plantarum_, 1686-1704. “In it
-he collected and arranged all the species of plants which had been
-described by botanists. He enumerated 18,625 species. Haller, Sprengel,
-Adamson, and others speak of this work as being the produce of immense
-labour, and as containing much acute criticism.”
-
-What, however, is more interesting to us is the fact that “in zoology
-Ray ranks almost as high as in botany, and his works on this subject
-are even more important, as they still, in great measure, preserve
-their utility. Cuvier says that ‘they may be considered as the
-foundation of modern zoology, for naturalists are obliged to consult
-them every instant for the purpose of clearing up the difficulties
-which they meet with in the works of Linnæus and his copyists.’”
-
-Between 1676-1686 appeared _Ornithologia_ and _Historia Piscium_,
-the materials of which had been left him by his friend Willoughby.
-To his extraordinary erudition and industry the world was indebted
-for _A Methodical Synopsis of Quadrupeds_ as well as a very valuable
-history of Insects. Conspicuous amongst his merits are his accuracy
-of observation and his philosophical method of classification. With
-others, Buffon is largely indebted to the most meritorious of the
-pioneers of zoological knowledge.
-
-Ray has delivered his profession of faith in the superiority and
-excellence of the non-flesh diet in the following eloquent passage
-which has been quoted with approval by his friend John Evelyn:--
-
- “The use of plants is all our life long of that universal
- importance and concern that we can neither live nor subsist with
- any decency and convenience, or be said, indeed, to live at
- all without them. Whatsoever food is necessary to sustain us,
- whatsoever contributes to delight and refresh us, is supplied and
- brought forth out of that plentiful and abundant store. And ah! [he
- exclaims] how much more innocent, sweet, and healthful is a table
- covered with those than with all the reeking flesh of butchered and
- slaughtered animals. Certainly man by nature was never made to be
- a carnivorous animal, nor is he armed at all for prey and rapine,
- with jagged and pointed teeth and crooked claws sharpened to rend
- and tear, but with gentle hands to gather fruit and vegetables, and
- with teeth to chew and eat them.”[127]
-
-
-
-
-XVI.
-
-EVELYN. 1620-1706.
-
-
-John Evelyn, the representative of the more estimable part of the
-higher middle life of his time, who has so eloquently set forth the
-praises of the vegetable diet, also claims with Ray the honour of
-having first excited, amongst the opulent classes of his countrymen,
-a rational taste for botanical knowledge. Especially meritorious and
-truly patriotic was his appeal to the owners of land, by growing trees
-to provide the country with useful as well as ornamental timber for the
-benefit of posterity. He was one of the first to treat gardening and
-planting in a scientific manner; and his own cultivation of exotic and
-other valuable plants was a most useful example too tardily followed by
-ignorant or selfish landlords of those and succeeding times. It would
-have been well indeed for the mass of the people of these islands,
-had the owners of landed property cared to develope the teaching
-of Evelyn by stocking the country with various fruit trees, and so
-supplied at once an easy and wholesome food. _O fortunatos nimium, sua
-si bona nôrint, Agricolas!... Fundit humo facilem victum justissima
-Tellus._[128]
-
-The family of Evelyn was settled at Wooton, in Surrey. During the
-struggle between the Parliament and the Court he went abroad, and
-travelled for some years in France and in Italy, where he seems to have
-employed his leisure in a more refined and useful way than is the wont
-of most of his travelling countrymen. He returned home in 1651. At the
-foundation of the Royal Society, some ten years later, Evelyn became
-one of its earliest Fellows. His first work was published in 1664,
-_Sylva; or, a Discourse of Forest Trees and the Propagation of Timber_.
-Its immediate cause was the application of the Naval Commissioners to
-the Royal Society for advice in view of the growing scarcity of timber,
-especially of oak, in England. A large quantity of the more valuable
-wood now existing is the practical outcome of his timely publication.
-
-In 1675, appeared his _Terra: a Discourse of the Earth Relating to the
-Culture and the Improvement of it, to Vegetation and the Propagation
-of Plants_. The book by which he is most popularly known is his _Diary
-and Correspondence_, one of the most interesting productions of the
-kind. Besides its value as giving an insight into the manner of life
-in the fashionable society of the greater part of the seventeenth
-century, it is of importance as an independent chronicle of the public
-events of the day. The work which has the most interest and value for
-us is his _Acetaria_ (Salads, or Herbs eaten with vinegar), in which
-the author professes his faith in the truth and excellence of the
-Vegetarian diet. Unfortunately, according to the usual perversity of
-literary enterprise, it is one of those few books which, representing
-some profounder truth, are nevertheless the most neglected by those who
-undertake to supply the mental and moral needs of the reading public.
-
-Evelyn held many high posts under the varying Governments of the day;
-and being, by tradition and connexion, attached to the monarchical
-party, he attracted (contrary to the general experience) the grateful
-recognition of the restored dynasty.
-
-Having adduced other arguments for abstinence from flesh, Evelyn
-continues:--
-
- “And now, after all we have advanced in favour of the herbaceous
- diet, there still emerges another inquiry, viz., whether the use of
- crude herbs and plants is so wholesome as is alleged? What opinion
- the prince of physicians had of them we shall see hereafter; as
- also what the sacred records of olden times seem to infer, before
- there were any flesh-shambles in the world; together with the
- reports of such as are often conversant among many nations and
- people, who, to this day, living on herbs and roots, arrive to
- an incredible age in constant health and vigour, which, whether
- attributable to the air and climate, custom, constitution, &c.,
- should be inquired into.”
-
-Cardan--the pseudo-savant of the sixteenth century--had written, it
-seems, in favour of flesh-meat. Evelyn informs us that:--
-
- “This, [the alleged superiority of flesh] his learned antagonist,
- utterly denies. Whole nations--flesh devourers, such as the
- farthest northern--become heavy, dull, inactive, and much more
- stupid than the southern; and such as feed more on plants are more
- acute, subtle, and of deeper penetration. Witness the Chaldeans,
- Assyrians, Egyptians, &c. And he further argues from the short
- lives of most carnivorous animals, compared with grass feeders, and
- the ruminating kind, as the Hart, Camel, and the longævus Elephant,
- and other feeders on roots and vegetables.
-
- “As soon as old Parr came to change his simple homely diet to
- that of the Court and Arundel House, he quickly sank and drooped
- away; for, as we have shewn, the stomach easily concocts plain and
- familiar food, but finds it a hard and difficult task to vanquish
- and overcome meats of different substances. Whence we so often see
- temperate and abstemious persons of a collegiate diet [of a distant
- age, we must suppose] very healthy; husbandmen and laborious
- people more robust and longer-lived than others of an uncertain,
- extravagant habit.”
-
-He appeals to the biblical reverence of his readers, and tells them:--
-
- “Certain it is, Almighty God ordaining herbs and fruit for the food
- of man, speaks not a word concerning flesh for two thousand years;
- and when after, by the Mosaic constitution, there were distinctions
- and prohibitions about the legal uncleanness of animals, plants
- of what kind soever were left free and indifferent for everyone
- to choose what best he liked. And what if it was held indecent
- and unbecoming the excellency of man’s nature, before sin entered
- and grew enormously wicked, that any creature should be put to
- death and pain for him who had such infinite store of the most
- delicious and nourishing fruit to delight, and the tree of life to
- sustain him? Doubtless there was no need of it. Infants sought the
- mother’s nipples as soon as born, and when grown and able to feed
- themselves, ran naturally to fruit, and still will choose to eat it
- rather than flesh, and certainly might so persist to do, did not
- Custom prevail even against the very dictates of Nature.[129]
-
- “And now to recapitulate what other prerogatives the hortulan
- provision has been celebrated for besides its antiquity, and the
- health and longevity of the antediluvians--viz., that temperance,
- frugality, leisure, ease, and innumerable other virtues and
- advantages which accompany it, are no less attributable to it. Let
- us hear our excellent botanist, Mr. Ray.”
-
-He then quotes the profession of faith of the father of English
-botany and zoology; and goes on eloquently to expatiate on the varied
-pleasures of a non-flesh and fruit diet:--
-
- “To this might we add that transporting consideration, becoming
- both our veneration and admiration, of the infinitely wise and
- glorious Author of Nature, who has given to plants such astonishing
- properties; such fiery heat in some to warm and cherish; such
- coolness in others to temper and refresh; such pinguid juice to
- nourish and feed the body; such quickening acids to compel the
- appetite, and grateful vehicles to court the obedience of the
- palate; such vigour to renew and support our natural strength; such
- ravishing flavours and perfumes to recreate and delight us; in
- short, such spirituous and active force to animate and revive every
- part and faculty to all kinds of human and, I had almost said,
- heavenly capacity.
-
- “What shall we add more? Our gardens present us with them all: and,
- while the Shambles are covered with gore and stench, our Salads
- escape the insults of the summer-fly, purify and warm the blood
- against winter rage. Nor wants there variety in more abundance than
- any of the former ages could show.”
-
-Evelyn produces an imposing array of the “Old Fathers”:--
-
- “In short, so very many, especially of the Christian profession,
- advocate it [the bloodless food] that some even of the ancient
- fathers themselves have thought that the permission of eating flesh
- to Noah and his sons was granted them no otherwise than repudiation
- of wives was to the Jews--namely--for the hardness of their hearts
- and to satisfy a murmuring generation.”[130]
-
-He is “persuaded that more blood has been shed between Christians”
-through addiction to the sanguinary food than by any other cause:--
-
- “Not that I impute it _only_ to our eating blood; but I
- sometimes wonder how it happened that so strict, so solemn, and
- famous a sanction--not upon a ceremonial account, but (as some
- affirm) a moral and perpetual one, for which also there seem
- to be fairer proofs than for most other controversies agitated
- amongst Christians--should be so generally forgotten, and give
- place to so many other impertinent disputes and cavils about
- superstitious fopperies which frequently end in blood and cutting
- of throats.”[131]
-
-
-It is opportune here to refer to the sentiments of Evelyn’s
-contemporary and political and ecclesiastical opposite--the great
-Puritan poet and patriot--one of the very greatest names in all
-literature. Milton’s feeling, so far as he had occasion to express
-it, is quite in unison with the principles of dietetic reform, and in
-sympathy with aspirations after the more spiritual life.
-
-In one of his earliest writings, on the eve of the production of one
-of the finest poems of its kind in the English language--the _Ode to
-Christ’s Nativity_, composed at the age of twenty-one--he thus writes
-in Latin verse to his friend Charles Deodati, recommending the purer
-diet at all events to those who aspired to the nobler creations of
-poetry:--
-
- “Simply let those, like him of Samos, live:
- Let herbs to them a _bloodless_ banquet give.
- In beechen goblets let their beverage shine,
- Cool from the crystal spring their sober wine!
- Their youth should pass in innocence secure
- From stain licentious, and in manners pure.
-
- * * * * *
-
- For these are sacred bards and, from above,
- Drink large infusions from the mind of Jove.”[132]
-
-To readers of his master-piece the _Paradise Lost_, it is perhaps a
-work of supererogation to point out the charming passages in which he
-sympathetically describes the food of the Age of Innocence:--
-
- “Savoury fruits, of taste to please
- True appetites.”
-
-In Raphael’s discourse with his terrestrial entertainers, the ethereal
-messenger utters a prophecy (as we may take it) of the future general
-adoption by our race of “fruit, man’s nourishment,” and we may
-interpret his intimation:--
-
- “time may come when men
- With angels may participate, and find
- No inconvenient diet, nor too light fare.
- And from those corporal nutriments perhaps
- Your bodies may at last turn all to spirit,
- Improved by tract of time, and winged ascend
- Ethereal as we; or may, at choice,
- _Here_, or in heavenly paradises, dwell,”
-
-as a picture of the true earthly paradise to be--“the Paradise of
-Peace.”
-
-With these exquisite pictures of the life of bloodless feasts and
-ambrosial food we may compare the fearful picture of the Court of
-Death, displayed in prospective vision before the terror-stricken
-gaze of the traditional progenitor of our species, where, amongst the
-occupants, the largest number are the victims of “intemperance in meats
-and drinks, which on the earth shall bring diseases dire.” In this
-universal lazar-house might be seen--
-
- “all maladies
- Of ghastly Spasm, or racking torture, Qualms
- Of heart-sick agony, all Feverous kinds,
- Convulsions, Epilepsies, fierce Catarrhs,
- Intestine Stone and Ulcer, Colic pangs,
- Demoniac Phrensy, moping Melancholy,
- And moon-struck Madness, pining Atrophy,
- Marasmus, and wide-wasting Pestilence,
- Dropsies and Asthmas, and joint-racking Rheums.”[133]
-
-Very different, in other respects, from those of the author of
-the _History of the Reformation in England_ the sentiments of his
-celebrated contemporary Bossuet, whose eloquence gained for him the
-distinguishing title of the “Eagle of Méaux,” as to the degrading
-character of the prevalent human nourishment in the Western world,
-are sufficiently remarkable to deserve some notice. The _Oraisons
-Funêbres_ and, particularly, his _Discours sur L’Histoire Universelle_
-have entitled him to a high rank in French literature. But a single
-passage in the last work, we shall readily admit, does more credit to
-his heart than his most eloquent efforts in oratory or literature do
-to his intellect. That, in common with other theologians, Catholic and
-Protestant, he has thought it necessary to assume the intervention of
-the Deity to sanction the sustenance of human life by the destruction
-of other innocent life, does not affect the weight of intrinsic
-evidence derivable from the natural feeling as to the debasing
-influence of the Slaughter-House. It is thus that he, impliedly at
-least, condemns the barbarous practice:--
-
- “Before the time of the Deluge the nourishment which without
- violence men derived from the fruits which fell from the trees
- of themselves, and from the herbs which also ripened with equal
- ease, was, without doubt, some relic of the first innocence and
- of the gentleness (_douceur_) for which we were formed. Now to
- get food we have to shed blood in spite of the horror which it
- naturally inspires in us; and all the refinements of which we avail
- ourselves, in covering our tables, hardly suffice to disguise
- for us the bloody corpses which we have to devour to support
- life. But this is but the least part of our misery. Life, already
- shortened, is still further abridged by the savage violences which
- are introduced into the life of the human species. Man, whom in
- the first ages we have seen spare the life of other animals,
- is accustomed henceforward to spare the life not even of his
- fellow-men. It is in vain that God forbade, immediately after the
- Deluge, the shedding of human blood; in vain, in order to save some
- vestiges of the first mildness of our nature, while permitting the
- feeding on flesh did he prohibit consumption of the blood. Human
- murders multiplied beyond all calculation.”
-
-Bossuet, a few pages later, arrives at the necessary and natural
-consequence of the murder of other animals, when he records that “the
-brutalised human race could no longer rise to the true contemplation of
-intellectual things.”[134]
-
-
-
-
-XVII.
-
-BERNARD DE MANDEVILLE. 1670-1733.
-
-
-The most paradoxical of moralists, born at Dort, in Holland. He was
-brought up to the profession of medicine, and took the degree of M.D.
-He afterwards settled and practised in London.
-
-It was in 1714 that he published his short poem called _The Grumbling
-Hive: or, Knaves Turned Honest_, to which he afterwards added long
-explanatory notes, and then republished the whole under the new and
-celebrated title of _The Fable of the Bees_. This work “which, however
-erroneous may be its views of morals and of society, is written in a
-proper style, and bears all the marks of an honest and sincere inquiry
-on an important subject, exposed its author to much obloquy, and met
-with answers and attacks.... It would appear that some of the hostility
-against this work, and against Mandeville generally, is to be traced to
-another publication, recommending the public licensing of ‘stews,’ the
-matter and manner of which are certainly exceptionable, though, at the
-same time, it must be stated that Mandeville earnestly and with seeming
-sincerity commends his plan as a means of diminishing immorality, and
-that he endeavoured, so far as lay in his power, by affixing a high
-price and in other ways, to prevent the work from having a general
-circulation.” In fact, Mandeville is one of those injudicious but
-well-meaning reformers who, by their propensity to perverse paradox,
-have injured at once their reputation and their usefulness for after
-times.
-
-A second part of _The Fable_ appeared at a later period. Amongst other
-numerous writings were two entitled, _Free Thoughts on Religion, the
-Church, and National Happiness_, and _An Enquiry into the Origin of
-Honour_, and the _Usefulness of Christianity in War_. He appears to
-have been enabled to pursue his literary career in great measure by the
-liberality of his Dutch friends, and he was a constant guest of the
-first Earl of Macclesfield. “_The Fable of the Bees; or, Private Vices
-Public Benefits_ may be received in two ways,” says the writer in the
-_Penny Cyclopædia_, whom we have already quoted, “as a satire on men,
-and as a theory of society and national prosperity. So far as it is a
-satire, it is sufficiently just and pleasant, but received in its more
-ambitious character of a theory of society, it is altogether worthless.
-It is Mandeville’s object to show that national greatness depends on
-the prevalence of fraud and luxury; and for this purpose he supposes
-‘a vast hive of bees’ possessing in all respects institutions similar
-to those of men; he details the various frauds, similar to those among
-men, practised by bees one upon another in various professions....
-His hive of bees having thus become wealthy and great, he afterwards
-supposes a mutual jealousy of frauds to arise, and Fraud to be, by
-common consent, dismissed; and he again assumes that wealth and luxury
-immediately disappear, and that the greatness of the society is gone.”
-For our part, in place of “greatness,” we should have rather written
-_misery_, as far as concerns the mass of communities.
-
-Strange, as it may appear, that views of this kind should be seriously
-put forth, “it is yet more so that they should come from one whose
-object always was, however strange the way in which he set about it, to
-promote good morals, for there is nothing in Mandeville’s writings to
-warrant the belief that he sought to encourage vice.”[135]
-
-Mandeville, like Swift, in the piece entitled _An Argument against
-Abolishing Christianity_; or like De Foe, in his _Shortest Way with the
-Dissenters_, which were taken _au sérieux_ almost universally at the
-time of their appearance, may have used the style of grave irony, so
-far as the larger portion of his Fable is concerned, for the purpose of
-making a stronger impression on the public conscience. If such were his
-purpose, the irony is so profound that it has missed its aim. Yet that
-his purpose was true and earnest is sufficiently evident in his opinion
-of the practice of slaughtering for food:--
-
- “I have often thought [writes Mandeville] if it was not for the
- tyranny which Custom usurps over us, that men of any tolerable
- good nature could never be reconciled to the killing of so many
- animals for their daily food, so long as the bountiful Earth so
- plentifully provides them with varieties of vegetable dainties. I
- know that Reason excites our compassion but faintly, and therefore
- I do not wonder how men should so little commiserate such imperfect
- creatures as cray-fish, oysters, cockles, and, indeed, all fish in
- general, as they are mute, and their inward formation, as well as
- outward figure, vastly different from ours: they express themselves
- unintelligently to us, and therefore ’tis not strange that their
- grief should not affect our understanding which it cannot reach;
- for nothing stirs us to pity so effectually as when the symptoms of
- misery strike immediately upon our senses, and I have seen people
- moved at the noise a live lobster makes upon the spit who could
- have killed half a dozen fowls with pleasure.
-
- “But in such perfect animals as Sheep and Oxen, in whom the heart,
- the brain, and the nerves differ so little from ours, and in whom
- the separation of the spirits from the blood, the organs of sense,
- and, consequently, feeling itself, are the same as they are in
- human creatures, I cannot imagine how a man not hardened in blood
- and massacre, is able to see a violent death, and the pangs of it,
- without concern.
-
- “In answer to this [he continues], most people will think it
- sufficient to say that things being allowed to be made for the
- service of man, there can be no cruelty in putting creatures to the
- use they were designed for,[136] but I have heard men make this
- reply, while the nature within them has reproached them with the
- falsehood of the assertion.
-
- “There is of all the multitude not one man in ten but will own
- (if he has not been brought up in a slaughter-house) that of all
- trades he could never have been a _butcher_; and I question whether
- ever anybody so much as killed a chicken without reluctancy the
- first time. Some people are not to be persuaded to taste of any
- creatures they have daily seen and been acquainted with while they
- were alive; others extend their scruples no further than to their
- own poultry, and refuse to eat what they fed and took care of
- themselves; yet all of them feed heartily and without remorse on
- beef, mutton, and fowls when they are bought in the market. In this
- behaviour, methinks, there appears something like a _consciousness
- of guilt_; it looks as if they endeavoured to save themselves from
- the imputation of a crime (which they know sticks somewhere) by
- removing the cause of it as far as they can from themselves; and I
- discover in it some strong marks of primitive pity and innocence,
- which all the arbitrary power of Custom, and the violence of
- Luxury, have not yet been able to conquer.”[137]
-
-
-
-
-XVIII.
-
-GAY. 1688-1732.
-
-
-The intimate friend of Pope and Swift is best known by his charming
-and instructive _Fables_. He was born at Barnstaple, in Devonshire,
-and belonged to the old family of the Le Gays of that county. His
-father, reduced in means, apprenticed him to a silk mercer in the
-Strand, London, in whose employment he did not long remain. The first
-of his poems, _Rural Sports_, appeared in 1711. In the following year
-he became secretary to the Duchess of Monmouth, and he served for a
-short time as secretary to the English embassy in Hanover. His next
-work was his _Shepherd’s Week, in Six Pastorals_, in which he ridicules
-the sentimentality of the “pastorals” of his own and preceding age. It
-contains much naturalness as well as humour, and it was the precursor
-of Crabbe’s rural sketches. In 1726 he published the most successful of
-his works, the _Beggars’ Opera_--the idea of which had been suggested
-to him by the Dean of St. Patrick’s. It was received with unbounded
-applause, and it originated the (so-called) English opera, which for a
-time supplanted the Italian.
-
-The _Fables_ first appeared in 1726. They were supplemented afterwards
-by others, and the volume was dedicated to the young Duke of
-Cumberland, famous in after years by his suppression of the Highland
-rising of 1745. Gay’s death, which happened suddenly, called forth the
-sincere laments of his devoted friends Swift and Pope. The former, in
-his letters, frequently refers to his loss with deep feeling; and Pope
-has characterised him as--
-
- “Of manners gentle, of affections mild--
- In wit a man, simplicity a child.”
-
-Of his _Fables_--the best in the language--one of the most interesting
-is the well-known _Hare and Many Friends_, in which he seems to record
-some of his own experiences. _The Court of Death_, suggested probably
-by Milton’s fine passage in the _Paradise Lost_, is one of his most
-forcible. When the principal Diseases have severally advanced their
-claims to pre-eminence, Death calls upon _Intemperance_:--
-
- “All spoke their claim, and hoped the wand.
- Now expectation hushed the band,
- When thus the monarch from the throne:
- Merit was ever modest known--
- What! no physician speak his right!
- None here? But fees their toils requite.
- Let then Intemperance take the wand,
- Who fills with gold their jealous hand.
- You, Fever, Gout, and all the rest
- (Whom wary men as foes detest)
- Forego your claim. No more pretend--
- Intemperance is esteemed a friend.
- He shares their mirth, their social joys,
- And as a courted guest destroys.
- The charge on him must justly fall
- Who finds employment for you all.”
-
-It is in the following fable that Gay especially satirises the
-sanguinary diet:--
-
- “Pythagoras rose at early dawn,
- By soaring meditation drawn;
- To breathe the fragrance of the day,
- Through flow’ry fields he took his way.
- In musing contemplation warm,
- His steps misled him to a farm:
- Where, on the ladder’s topmost round,
- A peasant stood. The hammer’s sound
- Shook the weak barn. ‘Say, friend, what care
- Calls for thy honest labour there?’
-
- “The clown, with surly voice, replies:
- ‘Vengeance aloud for justice cries.
- This kite, by daily rapine fed,
- My hens’ annoy, my turkeys’ dread,
- At length his forfeit life hath paid.
- See on the wall his wings displayed,
- Here nailed, a terror to his kind.
- My fowls shall future safety find,
- My yard the thriving poultry feed,
- And my barn’s refuse fat the breed.’
-
- “‘Friend,’ says the Sage, ‘the doom is wise--
- For public good the murderer dies.
- But if these tyrants of the air
- Demand a sentence so severe,
- _Think how the glutton, man, devours;
- What bloody feasts regale his hours!
- O impudence of Power and Might!_
- Thus to condemn a hawk or kite,
- When thou, perhaps, carnivorous sinner,
- Had’st pullets yesterday for dinner.’
-
- “‘Hold!’ cried the clown, with passion heated,
- ‘Shall kites and men alike be treated?
- When heaven the world with creatures stored,
- Man was ordained their sovereign lord.’
- ‘Thus tyrants boast,’ the Sage replied,
- ‘Whose murders spring from power and pride.
- Own then this man-like kite is slain
- _Thy greater luxury to sustain_--
- For petty rogues submit to fate
- That great ones may enjoy their state.’”[138]
-
-This is not the only apologue in which the rhyming moralist exposes
-at once the inconsistency and the injustice of the human animal who,
-himself choosing to live by slaughter, yet hypocritically stigmatises
-with the epithets “cruel” and “bloodthirsty” those animals whom Nature
-has evidently _designed_ to be predaceous. In _The Shepherd’s Dog and
-the Wolf_ he represents the former upbraiding the ravisher of the
-sheepfolds for attacking “a weak, defenceless kind”:--
-
- “‘Friend,’ says the Wolf, ‘the matter weigh:
- Nature designed _us_ beasts of prey.
- As such, when hunger finds a treat,
- ’Tis necessary wolves should eat.
- If, mindful of the bleating weal,
- Thy bosom burn with real zeal,
- Hence, and thy tyrant lord beseech--
- To _him_ repeat thy moving speech.
- A wolf eats sheep but now and then--
- _Ten thousands are devoured by men_!
- An open foe may prove a curse,
- But a pretended friend is worse.’”
-
-In _The Philosopher and the Pheasants_ the same truth is conveyed with
-equal force:--
-
- “Drawn by the music of the groves,
- Along the winding gloom he roves.
- From tree to tree the warbling throats
- Prolong the sweet, alternate notes.
- But where he passed he terror threw;
- The song broke short--the warblers flew:
- The thrushes chattered with affright,
- And nightingales abhorred his sight.
- All animals before him ran,
- To shun the hateful sight of man.
- ‘Whence is this dread of every creature?
- Fly they our figure or our nature?’
- As thus he walked, in musing thought,
- His ear imperfect accents caught.
- With cautious step, he nearer drew,
- By the thick shade concealed from view.
- High on the branch a Pheasant stood,
- Around her all her listening brood:
- Proud of the blessings of her nest,
- She thus a mother’s care expressed:--
- ‘No dangers here shall circumvent;
- Within the woods enjoy content.
- Sooner the hawk or vulture trust
- Than man, of animals the worst.
- In him ingratitude you find--
- A vice peculiar to the kind.
- The Sheep, whose annual fleece is dyed
- To guard his health and serve his pride,
- Forced from his fold and native plain,
- Is in the cruel shambles slain.
- The swarms who, with industrious skill,
- His hives with wax and honey fill,
- In vain whole summer days employed--
- Their stores are sold, their race destroyed.
- What tribute from the Goose is paid?
- Does not her wing all science aid?
- Does it not lovers’ hearts explain,
- And drudge to raise the merchant’s gain?
- What now rewards this general use?
- He takes the quills and eats the Goose!’”
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-In another parable Gay, in some sort, gives the victims of the Shambles
-their revenge:--
-
- “Against an elm a Sheep was tied:
- The butcher’s knife in blood was dyed--
- The patient flock, in silent fright,
- From far beheld the horrid sight.
- A savage Boar, who near them stood,
- Thus mocked to scorn the fleecy brood:--
- ‘All cowards should be served like you.
- See, see, your murderer is in view:
- With purple hands and reeking knife,
- He strips the skin yet warm with life.
- Your quartered sires, your bleeding dams,
- The dying bleat of harmless lambs,
- Call for revenge. O stupid race!
- The heart that wants revenge is base.’
- ‘I grant,’ an ancient Ram replies,
- ‘We bear no terror in our eyes.
- Yet think us not of soul so tame,
- Which no repeated wrongs inflame--
- Insensible of every ill,
- Because we want thy tusks to kill--
- Know, _those who violence pursue
- Give to themselves the vengeance due_,
- For in these massacres they find
- The two chief plagues that waste mankind--
- Our skin supplies the wrangling bar:
- It wakes their slumbering sons to war.
- And well Revenge may rest contented,
- Since drums and parchment were invented.’”[139]
-
-
-
-
-XIX.
-
-CHEYNE. 1671-1743.
-
-
-One of the most esteemed of English physicians, and one of the first
-medical authorities in this country who expressly wrote in advocacy of
-the reformed diet, descended from an old Scottish family. He studied
-medicine at Edinburgh--then and still a principal school of medicine
-and surgery--where he was a pupil of Dr. Pitcairn. At about the age of
-thirty he removed to London, was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society,
-and took his M.D. degree, commencing practice in the metropolis.
-
-The manner of life of a medical practitioner in the first half of
-the last century differed considerably from the present fashion. Not
-only personal inclination, but even professional interest, usually
-led him to frequent taverns and to indulge in all the excesses of
-“good living;” for in such boon companionship he most easily laid the
-foundation of his practice. Cheyne’s early habits of temperance thus
-gave way to the double temptation, and soon by this indulgence he
-contracted painful disorders which threatened his life. An enormous
-weight of flesh, intermittent fevers, shortness of breath, and lethargy
-combined to enfeeble and depress him.
-
-His first appearance in literature was the publication of his _New
-Theory of Fevers_, written in defence and at the suggestion of his old
-master Dr. Pitcairn, who was at war with his brethren on the nature of
-epidemics. The author, while in after life holding that it contained,
-though in a crude form, some valuable matter, wisely allowed it to fall
-into oblivion. The Mechanical or _Iatro-Mathematical_ Theory, as it was
-called, of which Cheyne was one of the earliest and most distinguished
-expounders, by which it was attempted to apply the laws of Mechanics to
-vital phenomena, had succeeded to the principles of the old Chemical
-School. On the Continent the new theory had the support of the eminent
-authority of Boerhaave, Borelli, Sauvages, Hoffman, and others. The
-natural desire to discover some definite and simple _formulæ_ of
-medical science lay at the root of this, as of many other hypotheses.
-Cheyne, himself, it is right to observe, ridiculed the notion that all
-vital processes can be explained on mechanical principles.
-
-In 1705 he published his _Philosophical Principles of Natural
-Religion_, a book which had some repute in its day, apparently, since
-it was in use in the Universities. Between this and his next essay in
-literature a long interval elapsed, during which he had to pay the
-penalty of his old habits in apoplectic giddiness, violent headaches,
-and depression of spirits. Happily, it became for him the turning-point
-in his life, and eventually rendered him so useful an instructor of
-his kind. He had now arrived at a considerable amount of reputation
-in the profession. He seems to have been naturally of agreeable
-manners and of an amiable disposition, as well as of lively wit which,
-improved by study and reading, made him highly popular; and amongst his
-scientific and professional friends he was in great esteem. He had now,
-however--not too soon--determined to abandon his _bon-vivantism_, and
-speedily “even those who had shared the best part of my profusions,”
-he tells us, “who, in their necessities had been relieved by my false
-generosity, and, in their disorders, been relieved by my care, did now
-entirely relinquish and abandon me.” He retired into solitude in the
-country and, almost momentarily expecting the termination of his life,
-set himself to serious and earnest reflection on the follies and vices
-of ordinary living.
-
-At this time it seems that, although he had reduced his food to
-the smallest possible amount, he had not altogether relinquished
-flesh-meat. He repaired to Bath for the waters and, by living in the
-most temperate way and by constant and regular exercise, he seemed to
-have regained his early health. At Bath he devoted himself to cases
-of nervous diseases which most nearly concerned his own state, and
-which were most abundant at that fashionable resort. About the year
-1712, or in the forty-second year of his age, his health was fairly
-re-established, and he began to relax in the milk and vegetable regimen
-which he had previously adopted.
-
-His next publication was _An Essay on the Gout and Bath Waters_ (1720),
-which passed through seven editions in six years. In it he commends the
-vegetable diet, although not so radically as in his latest writings.
-His relaxation of dietetic reform quickly brought back his former
-maladies, and he again suffered severely. During the next ten or
-twelve years he continued to increase in corpulency, until he at last
-reached the enormous weight of thirty-two stones, and he describes his
-condition at this time as intolerable.[140] In 1725 he left Bath for
-London, to consult his friend Dr. Arbuthnot, whose advice probably
-renewed and confirmed his old inclination for the rational mode of
-living. At all events, within two years, by a strict adherence to the
-milk and vegetable regimen his maladies finally disappeared; nor did he
-afterwards suffer by any relapse into dietetic errors.
-
-In the preceding year had appeared his first important and original
-work--his well-known _Essay of Health and a Long Life_. In the preface
-he declares that it is published for the benefit of those weakly
-persons who
-
- “are able and willing to abstain from everything hurtful, and to
- deny themselves anything their appetites craved, to conform to
- any rules for a tolerable degree of health, ease, and freedom
- of spirits. It is for these, and these only,” he proceeds, “the
- following treatise is designed. The robust, the luxurious, the
- pot-companions, &c., have here no business; their time is not yet
- come.”
-
-It is generally acknowledged to be one of the best books on the
-subject. Haller pronounced it to be “the best of all the works bearing
-upon the health of sedentary persons and invalids.” It went through
-several editions in the space of two years, and in 1726 was enlarged by
-the author and translated by his friend and pupil John Robertson M.A.
-into Latin, and three or four editions were quickly exhausted in France
-and Germany. In this book, while reducing flesh-meat to a _minimum_,
-and insisting upon the necessity of abstinence from grosser food and of
-the use of vegetables only, at the morning and evening meals, he had
-not advanced as yet so far as to preach the truth in its entirety. He
-arrived at it only by slow and gradual conviction. Expatiating on the
-follies and miseries of _bon-vivantism_, he proceeds to affirm that--
-
- “All those who have lived long, and without much pain, have lived
- abstemiously, poor, and meagre. Cornaro prolonged his life and
- preserved his senses by almost starving in his latter days; and
- some others have done the like. They have, indeed, thereby, in some
- measure, weakened their natural strength and qualified the fire
- and flux of their spirits, but they have preserved their senses,
- weakened their pains, prolonged their days, and procured themselves
- a gentle and quiet passage into another state.... All the rest
- will be insufficient without this [a frugal diet]; and this alone,
- without these [medicines, &c.], will suffice to carry on life as
- long as by its natural flame it was made to last, and will make the
- passage easy and calm, as a taper goes out for want of fuel.”
-
-While the _Essay of Health_ added greatly to his reputation with all
-thinking people, it also exposed him (as was to be expected) to a storm
-of small wit, ridicule, and misrepresentation:--
-
- “Some good-natured and ingenious retainers to the Profession,” he
- tells us, “on the publication of my book on _Long Life and Health_,
- proclaimed everywhere that I was turned mere enthusiast, advised
- people to turn monks, to run into deserts, and to live on roots,
- herbs, and wild fruits! in fine, that I was, at bottom, a mere
- leveller, and for destroying order, ranks, and property, everyone’s
- but my own. But that sneer had its day, and vanished into smoke.
- Others swore that I had eaten my book, recanted my _doctrine_ and
- _system_ (as they were pleased to term it), and was returned again
- to the devil, the world, and the flesh. This joke I have also
- stood. I have been slain again and again, both in prose and verse;
- but, I thank God, I am still alive and well.”
-
-His next publication was his _English Malady: or, a Treatise of Nervous
-Diseases of all kinds_, which was also well received, going through
-four editions in two years. The incessant ridicule with which the
-_gourmands_ had assailed his last work seems to have made him cautious
-in his next attempt to revolutionise dietetics; and he is careful to
-advertise the public that his milk and vegetable system was for those
-in weak health only. Denouncing the use of sauces and provocatives
-of unnatural appetite, “contrived not only to rouse a sickly stomach
-to receive the unnatural load, but to render a naturally good one
-incapable of knowing when it has enough,” he asks, “Is it any wonder
-then that the diseases which proceed from idleness and fulness of meat
-should increase in proportion?” He is bold enough by this time to
-affirm that, for the cure of many diseases, an entire abstinence from
-flesh is indisputably necessary:--
-
- “There are some cases wherein a vegetable and milk diet seems
- absolutely necessary, as in severe and habitual gouts, rheumatisms,
- cancerous, leprous, and scrofulous disorders; extreme nervous
- colics, epilepsies, violent hysteric fits, melancholy, consumptions
- (and the like disorders, mentioned in the preface), and towards the
- last stages of all chronic distempers. In such distempers _I have
- seldom seen such a diet fail of a good effect at last_.”
-
-Six years later, in 1740, appeared his _Essay on Regimen: together
-with Five Discourses Medical Moral and Philosophical, &c._ Since his
-last exhortation to the world Cheyne had evidently convinced himself,
-by long experience as well as reflection, of the great superiority of
-the vegetable diet for all--sound as well as sick; and, accordingly,
-he speaks in strong and clear language of the importance of a general
-reform. As a consequence of this plain speaking, his new book met with
-a comparatively cold reception. Perhaps, too, its mathematical and
-somewhat abstruse tone may have affected its popularity. As regards its
-moral tone it was a new revelation, doubtless, for the vast majority of
-his readers. He boldly asserts:--
-
- “The question I design to treat of here is, whether animal or
- vegetable food was, in the original design of the Creator, intended
- for the food of animals, and particularly of the human race. And I
- am almost convinced it _never was intended, but only permitted as
- a curse or punishment_.... At what time animal [flesh] food came
- first in use is not certainly known. He was a bold man who made the
- first experiment.
-
- _Illi robur et æs triplex
- Circa pectus erat._
-
- To see the convulsions, agonies, and tortures of a poor
- fellow-creature, whom they cannot restore nor recompense, dying to
- gratify luxury, and tickle callous and rank organs, must require a
- rocky heart, and a great degree of cruelty and ferocity. I cannot
- find any great difference, _on the foot of natural reason and
- equity only, between feeding on human flesh and feeding on brute
- animal flesh, except custom and example_.
-
- I believe some [more] rational creatures would suffer less in being
- fairly butchered than a strong Ox or red Deer; and, in natural
- morality and justice, the _degrees of pain_ here make the essential
- difference, for as to other differences, _they are relative only_,
- and can be of no influence with an infinitely perfect Being. Did
- not use and example weaken this lesson, and make the difference,
- reason alone could never do it.”--_Essay on Regimen, &c._ 8vo.
- 1740. Pages 54 and 70.
-
-Noble and courageous words! Courageous as coming from an eminent member
-of a profession--which almost rivals the legal or even the clerical,
-in opposition to all change in the established order of things. In Dr.
-Cheyne’s days such interested or bigoted opposition was even stronger
-than in the present time. From the period of the final establishment of
-his health, about 1728, little is known of his life excepting through
-his writings. Almost all we know is, that he continued some fifteen
-years to practise in London and in Bath with distinguished reputation
-and success. He had married a daughter of Dr. Middleton of Bristol by
-whom he had several children. His only son was born in 1712. Amongst
-his intimate friends was the celebrated Dr. Arbuthnot, a Scotchman like
-himself, and we find him meeting Sir Hans Sloane and Dr. Mead at the
-bedside of his friend and relative Bishop Burnet. Both Dr. Arbuthnot
-and Sir Hans Sloane, we may remark in passing, have given evidence
-in favour of the purer living. His own diet he thus describes in his
-_Author’s Case_, written towards the end of his life:--
-
- “My regimen, at present, is milk, with tea, coffee, bread and
- butter, mild cheese, salads, fruits and seeds of all kinds, with
- tender roots (as potatoes, turnips, carrots), and, in short,
- _everything that has not life_, dressed or not, as I like it, _in
- which there is as much or a greater variety than in animal foods_,
- so that the stomach need never be cloyed. I drink no wine nor any
- fermented liquors, and am rarely dry, most of my food being liquid,
- moist, or juicy.[141] Only after dinner I drink either coffee
- or green tea, but seldom both in the same day, and sometimes a
- glass of soft, small cider. The thinner my diet, the easier, more
- cheerful and lightsome I find myself; my sleep is also the sounder,
- though perhaps somewhat shorter than formerly under my full animal
- diet; but then I am more alive than ever I was. As soon as I wake I
- get up. I rise commonly at six, and go to bed at ten.”
-
-As for the effect of this regimen, he tells us that “since that
-time [his last lapse] I thank God I have gone on in one constant
-tenor of diet, and enjoy as good health as, at my time of life
-(being now sixty), I or any man can reasonably expect.” When we
-remember the complicity of maladies of which he had been the victim
-during his adhesion to the orthodox mode of living, such experience
-is sufficiently significant. Some ten years later he records his
-experiences as follows:--
-
- “It is now about sixteen years since, for the last time, I entered
- upon a milk and vegetable diet. At the beginning of this period,
- this light food I took as my appetite directed, without any
- measures, and found myself easy under it. After some time, I found
- it became necessary to lessen this quantity, and I have latterly
- reduced it to one-half, at most, of what I at first seemed to
- bear; and if it should please God to spare me a few years longer,
- in order to preserve, in that case, that freedom and clearness
- which by his presence I now enjoy, I shall probably find myself
- obliged to deny myself one-half of my present daily sustenance,
- which, precisely, is three Winchester pints of new milk, and six
- ounces of biscuit, made without salt or yeast, baked in a quick
- oven.”[142]--[_Natural Method of Curing Diseases_, &c., page 298;
- see also Preface to _Essay on Regimen_].
-
-The last production of Dr. Cheyne was his “_Natural Method of Curing
-the Diseases of the Body, and the Disorders of the Mind Depending
-on the Body_. In three parts. Part I.--General Reflections on the
-Economy of Nature in Animal Life. Part II.--The Means and Methods for
-Preserving Life and Faculties; and also Concerning the Nature and Cure
-of Acute, Contagious, and Cephalic Disorders. Part III.--Reflections
-on the Nature and Cure of Particular Chronic Distempers. 8vo. Strahan,
-London, 1742.” It is dedicated to the celebrated Lord Chesterfield, who
-records his grateful recognition of the benefits he had experienced
-from his methods. He writes: “I read with great pleasure your book,
-which your bookseller sent me according to your direction. The physical
-part is extremely good, and the metaphysical part _may be_ so too, for
-what I know, and I believe it is, for as I look upon all metaphysics
-to be guess work of imagination, I know no imagination likelier to hit
-upon the right than yours, and I will take your guess against any other
-metaphysician’s whatsoever. That part which is founded upon knowledge
-and experience I look upon as a work of public utility, and for which
-the present age and their posterity may be obliged to you, if they will
-be pleased to follow it.” Lord Chesterfield, it will be seen below,
-was one of those more refined minds whose better conscience revolted
-from, even if they had not the courage or self-control to renounce, the
-Slaughter House.
-
-The _Natural Method_ its author considers as a kind of supplement
-to his last book, containing “the practical inferences, and the
-conclusions drawn from [its principles], in particular cases and
-diseases, confirmed by forty years’ experience and observation.”
-It is the most practical of all his works, and is full of valuable
-observations. Very just and useful is his rebuke of that sort of
-John-Bullism which affects to hold “good living” not only as harmless
-but even as a sort of merit--
-
- “How it may be in other countries and religions I will not say, but
- among us good Protestants, abstinence, temperance, and moderation
- (at least in eating), are so far from being thought a virtue, and
- their contrary a vice, that it would seem that not eating the
- fattest and most delicious, and _to the top_, were the only vice
- and disease known among us--against which our parents, relatives,
- friends, and physicians exclaim with great vehemence and zeal. And
- yet, if we consider the matter attentively we shall find there is
- no such danger in abstinence as we imagine, but, on the contrary,
- the greatest abstinence and moderation nature and its external laws
- will suffer us to go into and practise for any time, will neither
- endanger our health, nor weaken our just thinking, be it ever so
- unlimited or unrestrained.... And it is a wise providence that
- Lent time falls out at that season which, if kept according to its
- original intention, in seeds and vegetables well dressed and not in
- rich high-dressed fish, would go a great way to preserve the health
- of the people in general, as well as dispose them to seriousness
- and reflection--so true it is that ‘godliness has the promise of
- this life, and of that which is to come,’ and it is very observable
- that in all civil and established religious worships hitherto
- known among polished nations Lents, days of abstinence, seasons of
- fasting and bringing down the brutal part of the rational being,
- have had a large share, and been reckoned an indispensable part
- of their worship and duty, except among a wrong-headed part of
- our Reformation, where it has been despised and ridiculed into a
- total neglect. And yet it seems not only natural and convenient for
- health, but strongly commended both in the Old and New Testament,
- and might allow time and proper disposition for more serious and
- weighty purposes. And this ‘Lent,’ or times of abstinence, is one
- reason of the cheerfulness or serenity of some Roman Catholic
- or Southern countries, which would be still more healthy and
- long-lived were it not for their excessive use of aromatics and
- opiates, which are the worst kind of dry drams, and the cause of
- their unnatural and unbridled lechery and shortness of life.”
-
-Denouncing the general practice of the Profession of encouraging their
-patients in indulging vitiated habits and tastes, he reminds them:--
-
- “That such physicians do not consider that they are accountable
- to the community, to their patients, to their conscience, and to
- their Maker, for every hour and moment they shorten and cut off
- their patients’ lives _by their immoral and murderous indulgence_:
- and the patients do not duly ponder that suicide (which this is
- in effect) is the most mortal and irremissible of all sins, and
- neither have sufficiently weighed the possibility that the patient,
- if not quickly cut off by both these preposterous means, may linger
- out miserably, and be twenty or thirty years a-dying, under these
- heart and wheel-breaking miseries thus exasperated; whereas, by the
- methods I propose, if they obtain not in time a perfect cure, yet
- they certainly lessen their pain, lengthen their days, and continue
- under the benign influence of ‘the Sun of Righteousness, who has
- healing in His wings,’ and, at worst, soften and lighten the
- anguish of their dissolution, as far as the nature of things will
- admit.”
-
-Not the least useful and instructive portions of his treatise are his
-references to the proper regimen for mental diseases and disordered
-brains, which, he reasonably infers, are best treated by the adoption
-of a light and pure dietary. He despairs, however, of the general
-recognition, or at least adoption, of so rational a method by the
-“faculty” or the public at large,
-
- “Who do not consider that _nine parts in ten_ of the whole mass
- of mankind are necessarily confined to this diet (of farinacea,
- fruits, &c.), or pretty nearly to it, and yet live with the use of
- their senses, limbs, and faculties, without diseases or with but
- few, and those from accidents or epidemical causes; and that there
- have been nations, and now are numbers of tribes, who voluntarily
- confine themselves to vegetables only, ... and that there are whole
- villages in this kingdom whose inhabitants scarce eat animal food
- or drink fermented liquors a dozen times a year.”
-
-In regard to all nervous and brain diseases, he insists that the
-reformed diet would
-
- “Greatly alleviate and render tolerable original distempers derived
- from diseased parents, and that it is absolutely necessary for the
- deep-thinking part of mankind, who would preserve their faculties
- ripe and pregnant to a green old age and to the last dregs of life;
- and that it is the true and real antidote and preservative from
- wrong-headedness, irregular and disorderly intellect and functions,
- from loss of the rational faculties, memory, and senses, as far
- as the ends of Providence and the condition of mortality will
- allow.”--(_Nat. Method_, page 90.)
-
-This benevolent and beneficent dietetic reformer, according to the
-testimony of an eye-witness, exemplified by his death the value of
-his principles--relinquishing his last breath easily and tranquilly,
-while his senses remained entire to the end. During his last illness
-he was attended by the famous David Hartley, noticed below. He was
-buried at Weston, near Bath. His character is sufficiently seen in his
-writings which, if they contain some metaphysical or other ideas which
-our reason cannot always endorse, in their _practical_ teaching prove
-him to have been actuated by a true and earnest desire for the best
-interests of his fellow-men. One of the merits of Cheyne’s writings is
-his discarding the common orthodox _esoteric_ style of his profession,
-who seem jealously to exclude all but the “initiated” from their sacred
-mysteries. One of his biographers has remarked upon this point that
-“there is another peculiarity about most of Dr. Cheyne’s writings
-which is worthy of notice. Although there are many passages that are
-quite unintelligible to the reader unless he possesses a considerable
-knowledge, not only of medicine but also of mathematics, yet there
-is no doubt but that the greater part of his works were intended for
-popular perusal, and in this undertaking he is one of the few medical
-writers who have been completely successful. His productions, which
-were much read and had an extensive influence in their day, procured
-him a considerable degree of reputation, not only with the public, but
-also with the members of his own profession. If they present to the
-reader no great discoveries (?) they possess the merit of putting more
-prominently forward some useful but neglected truths; and though now,
-probably, but little read, they contain much matter that is well worth
-studying, and have obtained for their author a respectable place in the
-history of medical literature.”[143]
-
-Our notice of the author of the _Essay on Regimen_, &c., would
-scarcely be complete without some reference to his friendship with
-two distinguished characters--John Wesley and Samuel Richardson,[144]
-the author of _Pamela_. It was to Dr. Cheyne that Wesley, as he tells
-us in his journals, was indebted for his conversion to those dietetic
-principles to which he attributes, in great measure, the invigoration
-of his naturally feeble constitution, and which enabled him to undergo
-an amount of fatigue and toil, both mentally and bodily, seldom or
-never surpassed. Of Cheyne’s friendship for Richardson there are
-several memorials preserved in his familiar letters to that popular
-writer; and his free and naïve criticisms of his novels are not a
-little amusing. The novelist, it seems, was one of his patients,
-and that he was not always a satisfactory one, under the abstemious
-regimen, appears occasionally from the remonstrances of his adviser.
-
-
-
-
-XX.
-
-POPE. 1688-1744.
-
-
-The most epigrammatic, and one of the most elegant, of poets. He was
-also one of the most precocious. His first production of importance
-was his _Essay on Criticism_, written at the age of twenty-one,
-although not published until two years later. But he had composed, we
-are assured, several verses of an Epic at the age of twelve; and his
-_Pastorals_ was given to the world by a youth of sixteen. Its division
-into the Four Seasons is said to have suggested to Thomson the title of
-his great poem. The MS. passed through the hands of some distinguished
-persons, who loudly proclaimed the merits of the boy-poet.
-
-In the same year with his fine mock-heroic _Rape of the Lock_ (1712)
-appeared _The Messiah_, in imitation of Isaiah and of Virgil (in his
-well-known _Eclogue_ IV.), both of whom celebrate, in similar strains,
-the advent of a “golden age” to be. The “Sybilline” prophecy, which
-Pope supposes the Latin poet to have read, existed, it need scarcely
-be added, only in the imagination of himself and of the authorities on
-whom he relied. _Windsor Forest_ (1713) deserves special notice as one
-of the earliest of that class of poems which derive their inspiration
-directly from Nature. It was the precursor of _The Seasons_, although
-the anti-barbarous feeling is less pronounced in the former. We find,
-however, the germs of that higher feeling which appears more developed
-in the _Essay on Man_; and the following verses, descriptive of the
-usual “sporting” scenes, are significant:--
-
- “See! from the brake the whirring Pheasant springs,
- And mounts exulting on triumphant wings:
- Short is his joy; he feels the fiery wound,
- Flutters in blood, and panting beats the ground.
- Ah, what avail his glossy, varying dyes,
- His purple crest and scarlet-circled eyes--
- The vivid green his shining plumes unfold,
- His painted wings, and breast that flames with gold?
-
- * * * * *
-
- To plains with well-breathed beagles they repair,
- And trace the mazes of the circling Hare.
- Beasts, urged by us, their fellow-beasts pursue,
- And learn of man each other to undo.
- With slaughtering guns the unwearied fowler roves,
- When frosts have whitened all the naked groves,
- Where Doves, in flocks, the leafless trees o’ershade,
- And lonely Woodcocks haunt the watery glade--
- He lifts the tube, and level with his eye,
- Straight a short thunder breaks the frozen sky.
- Oft, as in airy rings they skim the heath,
- The clamorous Lapwings feel the leaden death:
- Oft, as the mounting Larks their notes prepare,
- They fall and leave their little lives in air.”
-
-His _Epistle of Eloisa to Abelard_ (a romantic version of a very
-realistic story), _Temple of Fame_, _Imitations of Chaucer_,
-translation of the _Iliad_ (1713-1720)--characterised by Gibbon as
-having “every merit but that of likeness to its original”--an edition
-of Shakspere, _The Dunciad_ (1728), translation of the _Odyssey_, are
-some of the works which attest his genius and industry. But it is with
-his _Moral Essays_--and in particular the _Essay on Man_ (1732-1735),
-the most important of his productions--that we are especially concerned.
-
-As is pretty well known, these _Essays_ owe their conception, in great
-part, to his intimate friend St. John Bolingbroke. Although the author
-by birth and, perhaps, still more from a feeling of pride which might
-make him reluctant to abandon an unfashionable sect (such it was at
-that time), belonged nominally to the Old Church, the theology and
-metaphysics of the work display little of ecclesiastical orthodoxy. The
-pervading principles of the _Essay on Man_ are natural theology or,
-as Warburton styles it, “Naturalism” (_i.e._, the putting aside human
-assertion for the study of the attributes of Deity through its visible
-manifestations) and Optimism.[145]
-
-The merits of the _Essay_, it must be added, consist not so much in the
-philosophy of the poem as a whole as in the many fine and true thoughts
-scattered throughout it, which the author’s epigrammatic terseness
-indelibly fixes in the mind. Of the whole poem the most valuable
-part, undoubtedly, is its ridicule of the common arrogant (pretended)
-belief that all other species on the earth have been brought into
-being for the benefit of the human race--an egregious fallacy, by the
-way, which, ably exposed as it has been over and over again, still
-frequently reappears in our popular theology and morals. To the writers
-and talkers of this too numerous class may be commended the rebukes of
-Pope:--
-
- “Nothing is foreign--parts relate to whole:
- One all-extending, all-preserving soul
- Connects each being, greatest with the least--
- Made beast in aid of man, and man of beast:
- All served, all serving--nothing stands alone.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Has God, thou fool, worked solely for thy good,
- Thy joy, thy pastime, thy attire, thy food?
-
- * * * * *
-
- Is it for thee the Lark ascends and sings?
- Joy tunes his voice, joy elevates his wings.
- Is it for thee the Linnet pours his throat?
- Loves of his own and raptures swell the note.
- The bounding Steed you pompously bestride
- Shares with his lord the pleasure and the pride.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Know Nature’s children all divide her care,
- The fur that warms a monarch warmed a Bear.
- While Man exclaims, ‘See all things for my use!’
- ‘See Man for mine!’ replies a pampered Goose.
- And just as short of reason he must fall,
- Who thinks _all made for one, not one for all_.”
-
-He then paints the picture of the “Times of Innocence” of the Past, or
-rather (as we must take it) of the Future:--
-
- “_No murder clothed him, and no murder fed._
- In the same temple--the resounding wood--
- All vocal beings hymned their equal God.
- The shrine, with gore unstained, with gold undrest,
- Unbribed, unbloody, stood the blameless priest.
- Heaven’s attribute was universal care,
- And man’s prerogative to rule but spare.
- Ah, how unlike the man of times to come--
- _Of half that live the butcher and the tomb_!
- Who, foe to Nature, hears the general groan,
- Murders their species, and betrays his own.
- But just disease to luxury succeeds,
- And every death its own avenger breeds:
- The fury-passions from that blood began,
- And turned on man a fiercer savage, man.”
-
-Again, depicting the growth of despotism and superstition, and
-speculating as to--
-
- “Who first taught souls enslaved and realms undone
- The enormous faith of Many made for One?”
-
-he traces the gradual horrors of sacrifice beginning with other, and
-culminating in that of the human, species:--
-
- “She [Superstition] from the rending earth and bursting skies
- Saw gods descend, and fiends infernal rise:
- Here fixed the dreadful, there the blest, abodes--
- Fear made her devils and weak Hope her gods--
- Gods partial, changeful, passionate, unjust,
- Whose attributes were rage, revenge, or lust--
- Such as the souls of cowards might conceive,
- And, formed like tyrants, tyrants would believe.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Altars grew marble then, and reeked with gore;
- _Then first the Flamen tasted living food,
- Next his grim idol smeared with human blood_.
- With Heaven’s own thunders shook the earth below,
- And played the God an engine on his foe.”
-
-Whenever occasion arises, Pope fails not to stigmatise the barbarity of
-slaughtering for food; and the _sæva indignatio_ urges him to upbraid
-his fellows with the slaughter of--
-
- “The lamb thy riot dooms to bleed,
-
- * * * * *
-
- Who licks the hand just raised to shed his blood.”
-
-And, again, he expresses his detestation of the selfishness of our
-species who--
-
- “Destroy all creatures for their sport or gust.”
-
-That all this was no mere affectation of feeling appears from his
-correspondence and contributions to the periodicals of the time:--
-
- “I cannot think it extravagant,” he writes, “to imagine that
- mankind are no less, in proportion, accountable for the ill use
- of their dominion over the lower ranks of beings, than for the
- exercise of tyranny over their own species. The more entirely the
- inferior creation is submitted to our power, the more answerable
- we must be for our mismanagement of them; and the rather, as the
- very condition of Nature renders them incapable of receiving any
- recompense in another life for ill-treatment in this.”[146]
-
-Consistently with the expression of this true philosophy, he declares
-elsewhere that--
-
- “Nothing can be more shocking and horrid than one of our kitchens
- sprinkled with blood, and abounding with the cries of expiring
- victims, or with the limbs of dead animals scattered or hung up
- here and there. It gives one the image of a giant’s den in romance,
- bestrewed with scattered heads and mangled limbs.”[147]
-
-The personal character of Pope, we may add, has of late been subjected
-to minute and searching criticism. Some meannesses, springing from an
-extreme anxiety for fame with after ages, have undoubtedly tarnished
-his reputation for candour. His excessive animosity towards his public
-or private enemies may be palliated in part, if not excused, by his
-well-known feebleness of health and consequent mental irritability.
-For the rest, he was capable of the most sincere and disinterested
-attachments; and not his least merit, in literature, is that in an age
-of servile authorship he cultivated literature not for place or pay,
-but for its own sake.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Amongst Pope’s intimate friends were Dr. Arbuthnot, Dean Swift,
-and Gay. The first of these, best known as the joint author with
-Pope and Swift of _Martinus Scriblerus_, a satire on the useless
-pedantry prevalent in education and letters, and especially as the
-author of the _History of John Bull_ (the original of that immortal
-personification of beef, beer, and prejudice), published his _Essay
-Concerning Aliments_, in which the vegetable diet is commended as a
-preventive or cure of certain diseases, about the year 1730. Not the
-least meritorious of his works was an epitaph on the notorious Colonel
-Chartres--one of the few epitaphs which are attentive less to custom
-than to truth, and, we may add, in marked contrast with that typical
-one on his unhistorical contemporary Captain Blifil.
-
-In the _Travels of Lemuel Gulliver_ the reader will find the _sæva
-indignatio_ of Swift--or, at all events, of the Houyhnhnms--amongst
-other things, launched against the indiscriminating diet of his
-countrymen:--
-
- “I told him” [the Master-Horse], says Gulliver, “we fed on a
- thousand things which operated contrary to each other--that we
- eat when we are not hungry, and drink without the provocation of
- thirst ... that it would be endless to give him a catalogue of all
- diseases incident to human bodies, for they could not be fewer than
- five or six hundred, spread over every limb and joint--in short,
- every part, external and intestine, having diseases appropriated to
- itself--to remedy which there was a sort of people bred up among us
- in the profession or pretence of curing the sick.”
-
-Among the infinite variety of remedies and prescriptions, in the
-human _Materia Medica_, the astounded Houyhnhnm learns, are reckoned
-“serpents, toads, frogs, spiders, dead men’s flesh and bones, birds,
-beasts, fishes”--no mere travellers’ tales (it is perhaps necessary
-to explain), but sober fact, as any one may discover for himself by
-an examination of some of the received and popular medical treatises
-of the seventeenth century, in which the most absurd “prescriptions,”
-involving the most frightful cruelty, are recorded with all
-seriousness:--
-
- “My master, continuing his discourse, said there was nothing
- that rendered the Yahoos more odious than their undistinguishing
- appetite to devour everything that came in their way, whether
- herbs, roots, berries, the _corrupted flesh of animals, or all
- mingled together_; and that it was peculiar in their temper that
- they were fonder of what they could get by rapine or stealth at a
- greater distance than much better food provided for them at home.
- If their prey held out, they would eat till they were ready to
- burst.”
-
-Although unaccustomed to the better living, and finding it “insipid at
-first,” the human slave of the Houyhnhnm (a word which, by the way, in
-that language, means “the perfection of nature”) records as the result
-of his experience, in the first place, how little will sustain human
-life; and, in the second place, the fact of the superior healthfulness
-of the vegetable food.[148]
-
-About this period or a little earlier, Philippe Hecquet, a French
-physician, published his _Traité des Dispenses du Carême_ (“Treatise
-on Dispensations in Lent”), 1709, in which he gave in his adhesion
-to the principles of Vegetarianism--at all events, so far as health
-is concerned. He is mentioned by Voltaire, and is supposed to be the
-original of the doctor Sangrado of Le Sage.[149] If this conjecture
-have any truth, the author of _Gil Blas_ is open to the grave charge
-of misrepresentation, of sacrificing truth to effect, or (what is still
-worse and still more common) of pandering to popular prejudices.[150]
-
-
-
-
-XXI.
-
-THOMSON. 1700-1748.
-
-
-In the long and terrible series of the Ages the distinguishing glory of
-the eighteenth century is its _Humanitarianism_--not visible, indeed,
-in legislation or in the teaching of the ordinarily-accredited guides
-of the public faith and morals, but proclaimed, nevertheless, by the
-great prophets of that era. As far as ordinary life was concerned,
-the last age is only too obnoxious to the charge of selfishness and
-heartlessness. Callousness to suffering, as regards the non-human
-species in particular, is sufficiently apparent in the common
-amusements and “pastimes” of the various grades of the community.
-
-Yet, if we compare the tone of even the common-place class of writers
-with that of the authors of quasi-scientific treatises of the preceding
-century--in which the most cold-blooded atrocities on the helpless
-victims of human ignorance and barbarity are prescribed for the
-composition of their medical _nostrums_, &c., with the most unconscious
-audacity and ignoring of every sort of feeling--considerable advance is
-apparent in the slow onward march of the human race towards the goal of
-a true morality and religion.
-
-To the author of _The Seasons_ belongs the everlasting honour of being
-the first amongst modern poets earnestly to denounce the manifold
-wrongs inflicted upon the subject species, and, in particular, the
-savagery inseparable from the Slaughter-House--for Pope did not publish
-his _Essay on Man_ until four years after the appearance of _Spring_.
-
-James Thomson, of Scottish parentage, came to London to seek his
-fortune in literature, at the age of 25. For some time he experienced
-the poverty and troubles which so generally have been the lot of
-young aspirants to literary, especially poetic, fame. _Winter_--which
-inaugurated a new school of poetry--appeared in March, 1726. That the
-publisher considered himself liberal in offering three guineas for the
-poem speaks little for the taste of the time; but that a better taste
-was coming into existence is also plain from the fact of its favourable
-reception, notwithstanding the obscurity of the author. Three editions
-appeared in the same year. _Summer_, his next venture, was published
-in 1727, and the (Four) _Seasons_ in 1730, by subscription--387
-subscribers enrolling their names for copies at a guinea each.
-
-Natural enthusiasm, sympathy, and love for all that is really beautiful
-on Earth (a sort of feeling not to be appreciated by vulgar minds)
-forms his chief characteristic. But, above all, his sympathy with
-suffering in all its forms (see, particularly, his reflections after
-the description of the snowstorm in _Winter_), not limited by the
-narrow bounds of nationality or of species but extended to all innocent
-life--his indignation against oppression and injustice, are what most
-honourably distinguish him from almost all of his predecessors and,
-indeed, from most of his successors. _The Seasons_ is the forerunner
-of _The Task_ and the humanitarian school of poetry. _The Castle of
-Indolence_ in the stanza of Spenser, has claims of a kind different
-from those of _The Seasons_; and the admirers of _The Faerie Queen_
-cannot fail to appreciate the merits of the modern romance. Besides
-these _chefs-d’œuvre_ Thomson wrote two tragedies, _Sophonisba_ and
-_Liberty_, the former of which, at the time, had considerable success
-upon the stage. In the number of his friends he reckoned Pope and
-Samuel Johnson, both of whom are said to have had some share in the
-frequent revisions which he made of his principal production.
-
-It is with his _Spring_ that we are chiefly concerned, since it is in
-that division of his great poem that he eloquently contrasts the two
-very opposite diets. Singing the glories of the annual birth-time and
-general resurrection of Nature, he first celebrates
-
- “The living Herbs, profusely wild,
- O’er all the deep-green Earth, beyond the power
- Of botanist to number up their tribes,
- (Whether he steals along the lonely dale
- In silent search, or through the forest, rank
- With what the dull incurious weeds account,
- Bursts his blind way, or climbs the mountain-rock,
- Fired by the nodding verdure of its brow).
- With such a liberal hand has Nature flung
- Their seeds abroad, blown them about in winds,
- Innumerous mixed them with the nursing mould,
- The moistening current and prolific rain.
-
- But who their virtues can declare? Who pierce,
- With vision pure, into those secret stores
- Of health and life and joy--the food of man,
- While yet he lived in innocence and told
- A length of golden years, unfleshed in blood?
- A stranger to the savage arts of life--
- Death, rapine, carnage, surfeit, and disease--
- The Lord, and not the Tyrant, of the world.”
-
-And then goes on to picture the feast of blood:--
-
- “And yet the wholesome herb neglected dies,
- Though with the pure exhilarating soul
- Of nutriment and health, and vital powers
- Beyond the search of Art, ’tis copious blessed.
- For, with hot ravin fired, ensanguined Man
- Is now become the Lion of the plain
- And worse. The Wolf, who from the nightly fold
- Fierce drags the bleating Prey, ne’er drank her milk,
- Nor wore her warming fleece; nor has the Steer,
- At whose strong chest the deadly Tiger hangs,
- E’er ploughed for him. They, too, are tempered high,
- With hunger stung and wild necessity,
- Nor lodges pity in their shaggy breast.
-
- But Man, whom Nature formed of milder clay,
- With every kind emotion in his heart,
- And taught alone to weep; while from her lap
- She pours ten thousand delicacies--herbs
- And fruits, as numerous as the drops of rain
- Or beams that gave them birth--shall he, fair form,
- Who wears sweet smiles and looks erect on heaven,
- E’er stoop to mingle with the prowling herd
- And dip his tongue in gore? The beast of prey,
- Blood-stained, deserves to bleed. But you, ye Flocks,
- What have you done? Ye peaceful people, what
- To merit death? You who have given us milk
- In luscious streams, and lent us your own coat
- Against the winter’s cold? And the plain Ox,
- That harmless, honest, guileless animal,
- In what has he offended? He, whose toil,
- Patient and ever ready, clothes the land
- With all the pomp of harvest--shall he bleed,
- And struggling groan beneath the cruel hands
- E’en of the clowns he feeds, and that, perhaps,
- To swell the riot of the autumnal feast
- Won by his labour?”[151]
-
-And again in denouncing the _amateur_ slaughtering (euphemised by the
-mocking term of _Sport_) unblushingly perpetrated in the broad light of
-day:--
-
- “When beasts of prey retire, that all night long,
- Urged by necessity, had ranged the dark,
- As if their conscious ravage shunned the light,
- Ashamed. Not so [he reproaches] the steady tyrant Man,
- Who with the thoughtless insolence of Power,
- Inflamed beyond the most infuriate wrath
- Of the worst monster that e’er roamed the waste,
- For Sport alone pursues the cruel chase,
- Amid the beamings of the gentle days.
- Upbraid, ye ravening tribes, our _wanton_ rage,
- For hunger kindles _you_, and lawless want;
- But lavish fed, in Nature’s bounty rolled--
- To joy at anguish, and delight in blood--
- Is what your horrid bosoms never knew.”[152]
-
-We conclude these extracts from _The Seasons_ with the poet’s indignant
-reflection upon the selfish greed of Commerce, which barbarously
-sacrifices by thousands (as it does also the innocent mammalia of the
-seas) the noblest and most sagacious of the terrestrial races for the
-sake of a superfluous luxury:--
-
- “Peaceful, beneath primeval trees, that cast
- Their ample shade o’er Niger’s yellow stream,
- And where the Ganges rolls his sacred waves;
- Or mid the central depth of blackening woods,
- High raised in solemn theatre around,
- Leans the huge Elephant, wisest of _brutes_!
- O truly wise! with gentle might endowed:
- Though powerful, not destructive. Here he sees
- Revolving ages sweep the changeful Earth,
- And empires rise and fall: regardless he
- Of what the never-resting race of men
- Project. Thrice happy! could he ’scape their guile
- Who mine, from cruel avarice, his steps:
- Or with his towering grandeur swell their state--
- The pride of kings!--or else his strength pervert,
- And bid him rage amid the mortal fray,
- Astonished at the madness of mankind.”[153]
-
-
-
-
-XXII.
-
-HARTLEY. 1705-1757.
-
-
-Celebrated as the earliest writer of the utilitarian school of morals.
-At the age of fifteen he entered Jesus College, Cambridge, of which
-he was afterwards elected a Fellow. Scruples of conscience about the
-“Thirty-nine Articles” would not allow him to subscribe them and take
-orders, and he turned to the medical profession, in which he reached
-considerable eminence.
-
-His _Observations on Man: his Frame, his Duties, and his Expectations_,
-appeared in 1748. The principal interest in the book consists in the
-fact of its containing the germs of that school of moral philosophy of
-which Paley, Bentham, and Mill have been the most able expositors. He
-had imbibed the teaching of Locke upon the origin of ideas, which that
-first of English metaphysicians founded in Sensation and Reflection
-or Association, in contradiction to the old theory of _Innateness_.
-Although now universally received, it is hardly necessary to remark
-that at its first promulgation it met with as great opposition as all
-rational ideas experience long after their first introduction; and
-Locke’s controversy with the Bishop of Worcester is matter of history.
-
-It has already been stated that David Hartley was the friend of Dr.
-Cheyne, whom he attended in his last illness, and he numbered amongst
-his acquaintances some of the most eminent personages of the day. His
-character appears to have been singularly amiable and disinterested.
-His theology is, for the most part, of unsuspected orthodoxy. The
-following sentences reveal the bias of his mind in the matter of
-_kreophagy_:--
-
- “With respect to animal diet, let it be considered that taking
- away the lives of [other] animals in order to convert them into
- food, _does great violence to the principles of benevolence and
- compassion_. This appears from the frequent hard-heartedness and
- cruelty found among those persons whose occupations engage them
- in destroying animal life, as well as from the uneasiness which
- others feel in beholding the butchery of [the lower] animals. It
- is most evident, in respect to the larger animals and those with
- whom we have a familiar intercourse--such as Oxen, Sheep, and
- domestic Fowls, &c.--so as to distinguish, love, and compassionate
- individuals. They resemble us greatly in the make of the body in
- general, and in that of the particular organs of circulation,
- respiration, digestion, &c.; also in the formation of their
- intellects, memories, and passions, and in the signs of distress,
- fear, pain, and death. They often, likewise, win our affections by
- the marks of peculiar sagacity, by their instincts, helplessness,
- innocence, nascent benevolence, &c., &c., and, if there be any
- glimmering of hope of an hereafter for them--if they should
- prove to be our _brethren and sisters_ in this higher sense, in
- immortality as well as mortality--in the permanent principle of our
- minds as well as in the frail dust of our bodies--this ought to be
- still further reason for tenderness for them.
-
- “This, therefore, seems to be nothing else,” he concludes, “than an
- argument to stop us in our career, to make us sparing and tender
- in this article of diet, and put us upon consulting experience
- more faithfully and impartially in order to determine what is most
- suitable to the purposes of life and health, our compassion being
- made, by the foregoing considerations in some measure, a balance to
- our impetuous bodily appetites.”[154]
-
-Dr. Hartley is not the only theologian who has suggested the
-possibility or probability of a future life for all or some of the
-non-human races. This question we must leave to the theologians. All
-that we here remark is, that Hartley is one of the very few amongst his
-brethren who have had the consistency and the courage of their opinions
-to deduce the inevitable inference.
-
-
-
-
-XXIII.
-
-CHESTERFIELD. 1694-1773.
-
-
-Notwithstanding his strange self-deception as to the “general order
-of nature,” by which he attempted (sincerely we presume) to silence
-the better promptings of conscience, the remarkably strong feeling
-expressed by Lord Chesterfield gives him some right to notice here.
-His early _instinctive_ aversion for the food which is the product
-of torture and murder is much better founded, we shall be apt to
-believe, than the fallacious sophism by which he seems eventually to
-have succeeded in stifling the voices of Nature and Reason in seeking
-refuge under the shelter of a superficial philosophy. At all events
-his example is a forcible illustration of Seneca’s observation that
-the better feelings of the young need only to be evoked by a proper
-education to conduct them to a true morality and religion.[155]
-
-As it is we have to lament that he had not the greater light (of
-science) of the present time, if, indeed, the “deceitfulness of riches”
-would not have been for him, as for the mass of the rich or fashionable
-world, the shipwreck of just and rational feeling.
-
-Philip Dormer, Earl of Chesterfield, succeeded to the family title in
-1726. High in favour with the new king--George II.--he received the
-appointment of Ambassador-extraordinary to the Court of Holland in
-1728, and amongst other honours that of the knighthood of the Garter.
-In 1745 he was appointed Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, in which post,
-during his brief rule, he seemed to have governed with more success
-than some of his predecessors or successors. He was soon afterwards a
-Secretary of State: ill-health obliged him to relinquish this office
-after a short tenure. He wrote papers for _The World_--the popular
-periodical of the time--besides some poetical pieces, but he is
-chiefly known as an author by his celebrated _Letters to his Son_,
-which long served as the text-book of polite society. It contains some
-remarks in regard to the relations of the sexes scarcely consonant
-with the custom, or at least with the outward code of sexual morals of
-the present day. His sentiments upon the subject in question are as
-follow:--
-
- “I remember, when I was a young man at the University, being so
- much affected with that very pathetic speech which Ovid puts into
- the mouth of Pythagoras against the eating of the flesh of animals,
- that it was some time before I could bring myself to our college
- mutton again, with some inward doubt whether I was not making
- myself an accomplice to a murder. My scruples remained unreconciled
- to the committing of so horrid a meal, till upon serious reflection
- I became convinced of its legality[156] from the general order of
- Nature which has instituted the universal preying [of the stronger]
- upon the weaker as one of her first principles: though to me it has
- ever appeared an incomprehensible mystery that she, who could not
- be restrained by any want of materials from furnishing supplies for
- the support of her numerous offspring, should lay them under the
- necessity of devouring one another.[157]
-
- “I know not whether it is from the clergy having looked upon this
- subject as too trivial for their notice, that we find them more
- silent upon it than could be wished; for as slaughter is at present
- no branch of the priesthood, it is to be presumed that they have as
- much compassion as other men. The _Spectator_ has exclaimed against
- the cruelty of roasting lobsters alive, and of whipping pigs to
- death, but the misfortune is the writings of an Addison are seldom
- read by cooks and butchers. As to the _thinking_ part of mankind,
- it has always been convinced, I believe, that however conformable
- to the _general_ rule of nature our devouring animals may be,
- we are nevertheless under indelible obligation to prevent their
- suffering any degree of pain more than is absolutely unavoidable.
-
- “But this conviction lies in such heads that I fear _not one
- poor creature in a million has ever fared the better for it_,
- and, I believe, never will: since people of condition, the only
- source from whence [effectual] pity is to flow, are so far from
- inculcating it to those beneath them, that a very few years ago
- they suffered themselves to be entertained at a public theatre
- by the performances of an unhappy company of animals who could
- only have been made actors by the utmost energy of whipcord and
- starving.”[158]
-
-The writer might have instanced still more frightful results of this
-insensibility on the part of the influential classes of the community:
-nor indeed, the better few always excepted, were he living now could he
-present a much more favourable picture of the morals (in this the most
-important department of them) of the ruling sections of society.
-
-Ritson supplements the virtual adhesion of Lord Chesterfield to
-the principles of Humanity, with some remarks of Sir W. Jones, the
-eminent Orientalist, who (protesting against the selfish callousness
-of “Sportsmen” and even of “Naturalists” in the infliction of pain)
-writes: “I shall never forget the couplet of Ferdusi[159] for which
-Sadi,[160] who cites it with applause, pours blessings on his departed
-spirit:--
-
- “Ah! spare yon emmet, rich in hoarded grain:
- He lives with pleasure and he dies with pain.”
-
-To which creditable expression of feeling we would append a word
-of astonishment at that very common inconsistency, and failure in
-elementary logic, which permits men--while easily and hyperbolically
-commiserating the fate of an emmet, a beetle, or a worm--to ignore
-the necessarily infinitely greater sufferings of the highly-organised
-victims of the _Table_.”
-
-
-
-
-XXIV.
-
-VOLTAIRE. 1694-1778.
-
-
-Of the life and literary productions of the most remarkable name in
-the whole history of literature--if at least we regard the extent and
-variety of his astonishing genius, as well as the immense influence,
-contemporary and future, of his writings--only a brief outline can
-be given here. Yet, as the most eminent humanitarian prophet of the
-eighteenth century, the principal facts of his life deserve somewhat
-larger notice than within the general scope of this work.
-
-François Marie Arouet--commonly known by his assumed name of
-Voltaire--on his mother’s side of a family of position recently
-ennobled, was born at Chatenay, near Paris. He was educated at the
-Jesuits’ College of Louis XIV., where, it is said, the fathers already
-foretold his future eminence. Like many other illustrious writers he
-was originally destined for the “Law,” which was little adapted to his
-genius, and, like his great prototype, Lucian, and others, he soon
-abandoned all thought of that profession for letters and philosophy.
-He had the good fortune, at an early age, to gain the favour of the
-celebrated Ninon de Lenclos, who left him a legacy of 2,000 livres for
-the purchase of a library--an important event which was doubtless the
-means of confirming his intellectual bias.
-
-Voltaire’s first literary conceptions were formed in the Bastile, that
-infamous representative of despotic caprice, to which some verses of
-which he was the reputed author, satirising the licentious extravagance
-of the Court of the late king, Louis XIV., had consigned him at the age
-of twenty. Soon afterwards appeared the tragedy of _Ædipe_ (founded
-upon the well-known dramas of Sophocles), the first modern drama in
-which the universal and traditional love scenes were discarded. This
-contempt for the conventionalities, however, excited the indignation
-of the play-goers, and the _Ædipe_ was, at its first representation,
-hissed off the stage. The author found himself forced to sacrifice
-to the popular tastes, and his tragedy was received with applause.
-Two memorable verses indicated the bias of the future antagonist of
-ecclesiastical orthodoxy, and naturally provoked the hostility of the
-profession which he had dared so openly to assail:--
-
- “Nos prêtres ne sont pas ce qu’un vain peuple pense:
- Notre credulité fait toute leur science.”
-
-It was during this imprisonment, too, that he formed the first idea
-of the _Henriade_ (or _The League_, as it was originally called),
-the only epic poem worthy of the name in the French language. A
-chance quarrel with an insolent courtier was the cause of Voltaire’s
-second incarceration in the Bastile with, at the end of six months, a
-peremptory order to absent himself from the capital. These experiences
-of despotic caprice and of sophisticated society he long afterwards
-embodied in two of his best romances, _L’Ingénu_ and _Micro-mégas_ (the
-“Little-Big Man”), one of the most exquisite productions of Satire.
-
-The youthful victim of these malicious persecutions determined upon
-seeking refuge in England, whose freer air had already inspired
-Newton, Locke, Shaftesbury, and other eminent leaders of Thought. A
-flattering welcome awaited him--and subscriptions to the _Henriade_,
-better received here than in France, gratified his pride and filled
-his purse. During his sojourn of three years in this country, he made
-the most of his time in studying its best literature, and cultivating
-the acquaintance of its most eminent living writers. His tragedy of
-_Brutus_ was followed by _La Mort de César_ which, from its taint of
-liberalism, was not allowed to be printed in France. Upon his return
-to Paris he published his _Zaïre_--finished in eighteen days--the first
-tragedy in which, deserting the footsteps of Corneille and Racine, he
-ventured to follow the bent of his own genius. The plan of _Zaïre_ has
-been pronounced to be one of the most perfect ever contrived for the
-stage.
-
-More important, by its influence upon contemporary thought, was
-his famous _Letters on the English_--a work designed to inform his
-countrymen generally of the literature, thought, and political and
-theological parties of the rival nation, and, more especially, of the
-discoveries of Newton and Locke. Descartes, at this moment supreme
-in France, had succeeded to the vacant throne of the so-called
-Aristotelian Schoolmen. His system, a great advance upon the old,
-broached some errors in physics, amongst others the theory of
-“Vortices” to explain the planetary movements. A much more pernicious
-and reprehensible error was his absurd denial of conscious feeling
-and intelligence to the lower races, which was admirably exposed by
-Voltaire in his _Elémens de Newton_ and elsewhere. In England, Newton’s
-extraordinary discoveries had already made Descartes obsolete, as far
-as the _savans_ were concerned at least, but the French scientific
-world still clung, for the most part, to the Cartesian principles. As
-for Locke, he had overturned the orthodox creed of “innate ideas,”
-supplying instead sensation and reflection. This advocacy of the new
-philosophy, added to the success of his tragedies for the theatre,
-
- “Drew [says Voltaire in his _Mémoires_] a whole library of
- pamphlets down upon me, in which they proved I was a bad poet,
- an atheist, and the son of a peasant. A history of my life was
- printed in which this genealogy was inserted. An industrious German
- took care to collect all the tales of that kind which had been
- crammed into the libel, they had published against me. They imputed
- adventures to me with persons I never knew, and with others who
- never existed. I have found while writing this a letter from the
- Maréchal de Richelieu which informed me of an impudent lampoon
- where it was proved his wife had given me an elegant couch, with
- something else, at a time when he had no wife. At first I took
- some pleasure in making collections of these calumnies, but they
- multiplied to such a degree I was obliged to leave off. Such are
- the fruits I gathered from my labours. I, however, easily consoled
- myself, sometimes in my retreat at Cirey, and at other times in
- mixing with the best society.”
-
-Amongst other subjects the _Lettres_ (a masterpiece of criticism and
-sort of essays, since often imitated but seldom or never, perhaps,
-equalled in their kind) contains an admirable essay upon the Quakers,
-to whom he did justice. He introduces one of them in conversation with
-him, thus apologising for his _eccentricities_:
-
- “Confess that thou hast had some trouble to prevent thyself from
- laughing when I answered all thy civilities with my hat upon my
- head and with thouing and thee-ing thee (_en te tutoyant_). Yet
- thou seemest to me too well informed to be ignorant that, in
- the time of Christ, no nation fell into the ridiculousness of
- substituting the _plural_ for the singular. They used to say to
- Cæsar-Augustus: ‘I love thee,’ ‘I pray thee,’ ‘I thank thee.’ He
- would not allow himself to be called ‘Monsieur’ (_dominus_). It was
- only a long time after him that men thought of causing themselves
- to be addressed as _you_ in place of _thou_, as though they
- were double, and of usurping impertinent titles of grandeur, of
- eminence, of holiness, of divinity even, which earthworms give to
- other earthworms, while assuring them with a profound respect (and
- with an infamous falseness), they are their _very humble and very
- obedient servants_. It is in order to be upon our guard against
- this unworthy commerce of lies and of flatteries that we ‘thee’ and
- ‘thou’ equally kings and kitchen-maids: that we give the ordinary
- compliments to no one, having for men only charity, and reserving
- our respect for the laws. We wear a dress a little different from
- other men, in order that it may be for us a continual warning not
- to resemble them. Others wear marks of their dignities, we those
- of Christian humility. We never use _oaths_, not even in law
- courts: we think that the name of the _Most High_ ought not to be
- pronounced in the miserable debates of men. When we are forced to
- appear before the magistrates on others’ business (for we never
- have law suits ourselves), we affirm the truth by a ‘yes’ or a
- ‘no,’ and the judges believe us upon our simple word, while so many
- other Christians perjure themselves upon the _Gospel_. We never
- go to war. It is not that we fear death, but it is because we are
- neither tigers, nor wolves, nor dogs, but men, but Christians. Our
- God, who has told us to love our enemies and to suffer without a
- murmur, doubtless would not have us cross the sea to go and cut
- the throats of our brothers, because assassins, clothed in red
- and in hats of two feet high, enrol citizens to the accompaniment
- of a noise produced by two little sticks upon the dried skin of
- an ass. And when, after battles won, all London is brilliant with
- illuminations, when the sky is in flames with musket shots, when
- the air re-echoes with sounds of thanksgiving, with bells, with
- organs, with cannons, we groan in silence over the murders which
- cause the public light-heartedness.” (_Lettre II._)
-
-About this period, frequenting less the fashionable and trifling
-society of the capital, and contenting himself with the company of a
-few congenial minds, he formed amongst others a sympathetic friendship
-with the Marquise de Châtelet, a lady of extraordinary talents.
-
- “I was tired [thus he begins his unfinished _Mémoires_], I was
- tired of the lazy and noisy life led at Paris, of the multitude
- of _petit-maîtres_, of bad books printed with the approbation
- of censors and the privilege of the king, of the cabals and
- parties among the learned, and of the mean arts of plagiarism and
- book-making which dishonour Literature.”
-
-The lady was the equal of Madame Dacier in knowledge of the Greek
-and Latin languages, and she was familiar with all the best modern
-writers. She wrote a commentary on Leibnitz. She also translated the
-_Principia_. Her favourite pursuits, however, were mathematics and
-metaphysics.
-
- “She was none the less fond of the world and those amusements
- familiar to her age and sex. She determined to leave them all and
- bury herself in an old ruinous château on the borders of Champagne
- and Lorraine, situated in a barren and unhealthy soil. This old
- château she ornamented with sufficiently pretty gardens. I built
- a gallery, and formed a very good collection of natural history,
- added to which we had a library not badly furnished. We were
- visited by several of the _savans_, who came to philosophise in our
- retreat.... I taught English to Madame de Châtelet, who, in about
- three months understood it as well as I did, and read Newton, and
- Locke, and Pope, with equal ease. We read all the works of Tasso
- and Ariosto together, so that when Algerotti came to Cirey, where
- he finished his _Newtonianism for Women_, he found her sufficiently
- skilful in his own language to give him some very excellent
- information by which he profited.”
-
-Voltaire had already (1741) given to the world his _Elémens de
-Newton_--a work which, in conjunction with other parts of his writings,
-proves that had he chosen to apply himself wholly to natural philosophy
-or to mathematics he might have reached the highest fame in those
-departments of science. It is in the _Elémens_ that Voltaire records
-his noble protest at the same time against the monstrous hypothesis of
-Descartes, to which we have already referred, and against the selfish
-cruelty of our species.
-
- “There is in man a disposition to compassion as generally diffused
- as his other instincts. Newton had _cultivated_ this sentiment of
- humanity, and he extended it to the lower animals. With Locke he
- was strongly convinced that God has given to them a proportion
- of ideas, and the same feelings which he has to us. He could not
- believe that God, who has made nothing in vain, would have given to
- them organs of feeling _in order that they might have no feeling_.
-
- “He thought it a very frightful inconsistency to believe that
- animals feel and _at the same time to cause them to suffer_. On
- this point his morality was in accord with his philosophy. _He
- yielded but with repugnance to the barbarous custom of supporting
- ourselves upon the blood and flesh of beings like ourselves_, whom
- we caress, and he never permitted in his own house the putting them
- to death by slow and exquisite [_recherchées_] modes of killing for
- the sake of making the food more delicious. This compassion, which
- he felt for other animals, culminated in true charity for men. In
- truth, _without humanity, a virtue which comprehends all virtues_,
- the name of philosopher would be little deserved.”[161]
-
-At Cirey some of his best tragedies were composed--_Alzire_, _Mérope_,
-and _Mehemet_; the _Discours sur l’Homme_, a moral poem in the style of
-Pope’s Essays, pronounced to be one of the finest monuments of French
-poetry; an _Essay on Universal History_, (for his friend’s use, to
-correct as well as supplement Bossuet’s splendid but little philosophic
-history), the foundation of perhaps his most admirable production the
-_Essai sur les Mœurs et l’Esprit des Nations_, and many lesser pieces,
-including a large correspondence. Besides these literary works, he
-engaged in mathematical and scientific studies, which resulted in some
-_brochures_ of considerable value.
-
-About this time (1740) news arrived of the death of Friedrich Wilhelm
-of Prussia. Most readers know the extraordinary character of this
-strange personage, who caned the women and his clergy in the streets
-of his capital, and who was with difficulty dissuaded from ordering
-his son’s execution. Narrowly escaping with his life the prince had
-devoted himself to literary pursuits, and had kept up a correspondence
-with the leading men of letters of France, and above all with the
-author of _Zaïre_ whom he regarded as little less than divine. The new
-king set about inspecting his territories, and proceeded _incognito_ to
-Brussels, where the first interview between the two future most eminent
-persons in Europe took place. Repairing to his majesty’s quarters--
-
- “One soldier was the only guard I found. The Privy-Councillor
- and Minister of State was walking in the court-yard blowing his
- fingers. He had on a large pair of coarse ruffles, a hat all
- in holes, and a judge’s old wig, one side of which hung into
- his pocket and the other scarcely touched his shoulder. They
- informed me that this man was charged with a state affair of
- great importance, and so indeed he was. I was conducted into his
- majesty’s apartments, in which I found nothing but four bare walls.
- By the light of a taper I perceived a small truckle-bed two feet
- and a half wide in a closet, upon which lay a little man wrapped in
- a morning dressing-gown of blue cloth. It was his majesty who lay
- perspiring and shaking beneath a miserable coverlet in a violent
- ague fit. I made my bow, and began my acquaintance by feeling his
- pulse, as if I had been his first physician. The fit left him, and
- he rose, dressed himself, and sat down to table with Algerotti,
- Maupertuis, the ambassador of the States-general, and myself. At
- supper he treated most profoundly of the soul, natural liberty,
- and the _Androgynes_ of Plato. I soon found myself attached to
- him, for he had wit, an agreeable manner, and moreover was a king,
- which is a circumstance of seduction hardly to be vanquished by
- human weakness. Generally speaking, it is the employment of men of
- letters to flatter kings, but in this instance I was praised by
- a king from the crown of my head to the soles of my feet at the
- same time that I was libelled at least once a week by the Abbé
- Desfontaines and other Grub-street poets of Paris.”
-
-Voltaire received a pressing invitation to Berlin.
-
- “But I had before given him to understand I could not come to stay
- with him; that I deemed it a duty to prefer friendship to ambition;
- that I was attached to Mdlle. de Châtelet, and that, between
- philosophers, I loved a lady better than a king. He approved of the
- liberty I took, though, for his part, he did not love the ladies.
- I went to pay him a visit in October, and the Cardinal de Fleury
- [the French premier] wrote me a long letter, full of praises of the
- _Anti-Machiavel_, and of the author [Friedrich], which I did not
- forget to let him see.”
-
-The French court wished to secure the alliance of Friedrich. No one
-seemed a more fitting mediator than his early counsellor, who was
-induced to accept the mission, and to set out for Berlin, where an
-enthusiastic welcome awaited him, apartments in the palace being
-placed at his disposal. Yet, in spite of the success of this and other
-public services, his enemies in Paris remained in full possession of
-the field. For the second time Voltaire sought admission into the
-_Académie_--an empty honour, the granting or refusal of which could
-neither add to nor detract from his fame. The prestige of that society,
-however, he seemed to consider essential to his safety against the
-increasing violence and formidable array of his enemies, who were bent
-on crushing him, by whatever means. It was only by submitting to the
-mortification of qualifying some of his opinions that he at length
-succeeded in his object. Notwithstanding the address with which he
-manages his language, it were better, as his biographer--the Marquis de
-Condorcet--justly remarks, he had renounced the _Académie_ than have
-had the weakness to submit to so evident a farce.
-
-On succeeding to a vacant chair it was customary, besides a eulogy
-upon the deceased member, to speak in set terms of praise of Richelieu
-and Louis XIV. This traditional and servile practice the new
-Academician was the first to break through. Philosophy and literature
-were treated of in unaccustomed strains of freedom, and his good
-example has been influential on after generations.
-
- “I was deemed worthy [writes Voltaire] to be one of the forty
- useless members of the _Académie_, was appointed historiographer of
- France, and created by the king one of the gentlemen in ordinary
- of his chamber. From this I concluded it was better, in order to
- make the most trifling fortune, to speak four words to a king’s
- mistress, than to write a hundred volumes.”
-
-A sort of experience he has finely illustrated in his romance of
-_Zadig_.
-
-Stanislaus, the ex-king of Poland, was keeping his Court at Luneville,
-not far from Cirey, where he divided his time between his mistress and
-his confessor. To this royal retreat the friends of Cirey were invited,
-and the whole of the year 1749 was passed there. Meanwhile Madame de
-Châtelet died, and Voltaire, much affected by his loss, returned to
-Paris. Friedrich redoubled his solicitation with new hope.
-
- “I was destined to run from king to king, although I loved liberty
- to idolatry.... He was well assured that in reality his verse and
- prose were superior to my verse and prose; though as to the former,
- he thought there was a certain something that I, in quality of
- academician, might give to his writings, and there was no kind of
- flattery, no seduction, he did not employ to engage me to come.”
-
-The philosopher at length set out for Berlin, and his reception must
-have reached his highest expectations. We have no intention to repeat
-the account of this singular episode in his life, which has been
-so often narrated. Evenings of the most agreeable kind, abundance
-of wit, unrestrained conversation, the society of some of the most
-distinguished men of science of the time, the unbounded adoration
-of a royal host, eager, above all things, to retain so brilliant a
-guest--such were the pleasures of this palace of Alcina, as he calls
-it. But the imperious tempers of the two unequal friends soon proved
-the impossibility of a lasting _entente_, and rivalries amongst the
-literary courtiers hastened, if they did not effect, the final rupture.
-
-After his escape from Berlin Voltaire passed a few weeks with the
-Duchess of Saxe-Gotha, “the best of princesses, full of gentleness,
-discretion, and equanimity, and who, God be thanked, did not make
-verses” (alluding to his late host’s proclivities), and some days with
-the Landgrave of Hesse on his way to Frankfort. Literature had not
-suffered during the life at Berlin. Finishing touches were put to many
-of the tragedies--the _Âge de Louis XIV._ was completed, part of the
-_Essai sur les Mœurs et l’Esprit des Nations_ written, _La Pucelle_
-(the least worthy of all his productions) corrected, and a poem, _Sur
-la Loi Naturelle_, composed (a work of a far better inspiration than
-the poem just mentioned, but which was publicly burned at Paris by the
-misdirected zeal of the bigots). In a later poem on the destruction of
-Lisbon, as well as in the romance of _Candide_, fired with indignation
-at the hypocrisies and mischiefs of the easy-going creed of Optimism
-(as generally understood), so welcome to self-complacent orthodoxy,
-he displayed all his vast powers of sarcasm in exposing its fatal
-absurdities. Leibnitz had been one of its most strenuous apologists.
-In the person of the wretched Pangloss the theory of “the best of
-all possible worlds,” and of the “eternal fitness of things,” is
-overwhelmed, indeed, with an excess of ridicule. It is to be lamented
-that the satirist allowed his _sæva indignatio_ to overpower a
-proper sense of the proprieties of language and expression.
-
-Voltaire was now become a potentate more dreaded than a
-sovereign-prince on his throne, an object of hatred and terror to
-political and other oppressors. After some hesitation he had chosen
-for his retreat the ever-memorable Ferney--a place within French
-territory, on the borders of Switzerland--and also a spot near Geneva,
-where he alternately resided, escaping at pleasure either from Catholic
-intolerance or from Puritanic rigour, with his niece--Madame Denis,
-who had anxiously attended him during a recent illness. From these
-retreats he made himself heard over all Europe in defence of reason and
-humanity. It was about this time (1756) that he employed his eloquence
-to save Admiral Byng, a victim to ministerial necessities, who was
-nevertheless condemned, as his advocate expresses it in _Candide_,
-“pour encourager les autres.” A like philanthropic effort, equally
-vain, was made on behalf of the still more unfortunate Comte de Lally.
-
-The year 1757 is memorable in literature as that in which he gave
-to the world an accurate edition of his already published works,
-enriched by one of his most meritorious productions, the _Essai sur
-les Mœurs et l’Esprit des Nations_, which now appeared in its complete
-form. History, the author justly complained, had hitherto been but a
-uniform chronicle of kings, courts, and court intrigues. The history
-of legislation, arts, sciences, commerce, morals, had been always, or
-almost always, neglected.
-
- “We imagine [says Condorcet], while we read such histories, that
- the human race was created only to exhibit the political or
- military talents of a few individuals, and that the object of
- society is not the happiness of the Species but the pleasure of the
- Few.”
-
-If the best historical works of the present day are a considerable
-improvement upon those which were in fashion before Voltaire’s
-_critiques_, the remarks of Condorcet are not altogether inapplicable
-to the popular and school manuals still in vogue. At all events this
-style of composing “history,” ridiculed by the wit of Lucian sixteen
-centuries before, was the universal method down to the appearance of
-the celebrated _Essai_.
-
-Beginning with Charlemagne, it presents, in a rapid, concise, and
-philosophic style, the most important and interesting features, not
-only of European but of the world’s history, adorned with all the grace
-and ease of which he was always so consummate a master. Many there
-always are who conceive of philosophy and erudition only as enveloped
-in verbosity and obscurity. Dulness and learning in the common mind
-are convertible terms. The very transparency and clearness of his
-style were reproached to him as a sign of superficiality and want
-of exactness--the last faults which could be justly imputed to him.
-However, the influence of Voltaire became apparent in the productions
-of the English historical school, till then unknown, which soon
-afterwards arose. The Italian Vico, and Beaufort, in France, in the
-particular branch of Roman antiquity, and Bayle in general, had already
-contributed in some degree towards the founding of a critical school;
-but these attempts were partial only. To Voltaire belongs the honour
-of having applied the principles of criticism at once universally and
-popularly.
-
-In reviewing the history and manners of the Hindus he repeatedly
-expresses his sympathy, more or less directly, with their aversion from
-the coarser living of the West:--
-
- “The Hindus, in embracing the doctrine of the _Metémpsychosis_, had
- one restraint the more. The dread of killing a father or mother, in
- killing men and other animals, inspired in them a terror of murder
- and every other violence, which became with them a second nature.
- Thus all the peoples of India, whose families are not allied either
- to the Arabs or to the Tartars, are still at this day the mildest
- of all men. Their religion and the temperature of their climate
- made these peoples entirely resemble those peaceful animals whom we
- bring up in our sheep pens and our dove cotes for the purpose of
- cutting their throats at our good will and pleasure....
-
- “The Christian religion, which these _primitives_ [the Quakers]
- alone follow out to the letter, is as great an enemy to bloodshed
- as the Pythagorean. But the Christian peoples have never practised
- _their_ religion, and the ancient Hindu castes have always
- practised theirs. It is because Pythagoreanism is the only religion
- in the world which has been able to educe a religious feeling from
- the horror of murder and slaughter....
-
- “Some have supposed the cradle of our race to be Hindustan,
- alleging that the feeblest of all animals must have been born in
- the softest climate, and in a land which produces without culture
- the _most nourishing and most healthful fruits_, like dates and
- cocoa nuts. The latter especially easily affords men the means
- of existence, of clothing and of housing themselves--and of what
- besides has the inhabitant of that Peninsula need?... Our Houses of
- Carnage, which they call Butcher-Shops [_boucheries_], where they
- sell so many carcases to feed our own, would import the plague into
- the climate of India.
-
- “These peoples need and desire pure and refreshing foods. Nature
- has lavished upon them forests of citron trees, orange trees, fig
- trees, palm trees, cocoa-nut trees, and plains covered with rice.
- The strongest man can need to spend but one or two sous a day for
- his subsistence.[162] Our workmen spend more in one day than a
- Malabar native in a month....
-
- “In general, the men of the South-East have received from Nature
- gentler manners than the people of our West. Their climate
- disposes them to abstain from strong liquors and from the flesh
- of animals--foods which excite the blood and often provoke
- ferocity--and, although superstition and foreign irruptions have
- corrupted the goodness of their disposition, nevertheless all
- travellers agree that the character of these peoples has nothing of
- that irritability, of that caprice, and of that harshness which it
- has cost much trouble to keep within bounds in the countries of the
- North.”
-
-In noticing the comparative progress of the various foreign religions
-in India, Voltaire observes that--
-
- “The Mohammedan religion alone has made progress in India,
- especially amongst the richer classes, because it is the religion
- of the Prince, and because it teaches but the divine unity
- conformably to the ancient teaching of the first Brahmins.
- Christianity [he adds, only too truly] has not had the same
- success, notwithstanding the large establishments of the
- Portuguese, of the French, of the English, of the Dutch, of the
- Danes. It is, in fact, the conflict of these nations which has
- injured the progress of our Faith. As they all hate each other,
- and as several of them often make war one upon the other in their
- climates, what they teach is naturally hateful to the peaceful
- inhabitants. Their customs, besides, revolt the Hindus. Those
- people are scandalised at seeing us drinking wine and eating flesh,
- which they themselves abhor.”[163]
-
-This--one of the chief obstacles to the spread of Christian
-civilisation in the East, and especially in India, viz., the eating of
-flesh and the drinking of alcohol, its legitimate attendant--has been
-acknowledged by Christian missionaries themselves of late years.
-
-Employed as he was in various literary undertakings he had been
-watching with great interest, not, perhaps, without a secret wish
-for vengeance, the important political and military complications of
-Europe. After some brilliant successes the Prussian king had been
-reduced to the last extremity. At this juncture the former friends
-agreed to forget, as far as possible, their old quarrel, and Voltaire
-enjoyed the satisfaction of having succeeded in dissuading Friedrich
-from suicide. The victories of Rosbach and Breslau not long afterwards
-changed the condition of things once again. From this time the prince
-and the philosopher resumed the name, if not the cordiality, of
-friends. A curious accident put the arbitrament of peace and war
-for some weeks into the hands of Voltaire. The Prussian king, while
-inactive in his fortified camp, wrote, as his custom was, a quantity
-of verse and sent the packet to Ferney. Amongst the mass--good, bad,
-and indifferent--was a satire on Louis and his mistress. The packet had
-been opened before reaching its destination.
-
- “Had I been inclined to amuse myself, it depended only on me to
- set the King of France and the King of Prussia to war in rhyme,
- which would have been a novel farce on earth. But I enjoyed another
- pleasure--that of being more prudent than Friedrich. I wrote him
- word that his Ode was beautiful, but that he ought not to publish
- it.... To make the pleasantry complete I thought it possible to lay
- the foundation of the peace of Europe on these poetical pieces.
- My correspondence with the Duc de Choiseul [the French Premier]
- gave birth to that idea, and it appeared so ridiculous, so worthy
- of the transactions of the times, that I indulged it, and had the
- satisfaction of proving on what weak and invisible pivots the
- destinies of nations turn.”
-
-Several letters passed between the three before the danger was averted.
-
-The limited space at our disposal will allow us only rapidly to notice
-some of the remaining _chefs-d’œuvre_ of Voltaire. The celebrated
-_Encyclopédie_, under the auspices of D’Alembert and Diderot, had been
-lately commenced. To this great work, to which he looked with some hope
-as promising a severe assault on ignorance and prejudice, Voltaire
-contributed a few articles. It is not the place here to narrate the
-history of the fierce war of words to which the _Encyclopédie_ gave
-birth. It was completed in about fifteen years, in 1775--a memorable
-year in literature.
-
- “Several men of letters [thus Voltaire briefly describes the
- project], most estimable by their learning and character, formed
- an association to compose an immense Dictionary of whatever could
- enlighten the human mind, and it became an object of commerce with
- the booksellers. The Chancellor, the Ministry, all encouraged so
- noble an enterprise. Seven volumes had already appeared, and were
- translated into English, German, Dutch, and Italian. This treasure,
- opened by the French to all nations, may be considered as what did
- us most honour at the time, so much were the excellent articles in
- the _Encyclopédie_ superior to the bad, which also were tolerably
- numerous. One had little to complain of in the work, except too
- many puerile declamations unfortunately adopted by the editors, who
- seized whatever came to hand to swell the work. But all which those
- editors wrote themselves was good.”
-
-The article which was particularly selected by the prosecution was
-that on the Soul, “one of the worst in the work, written by a poor
-doctor of the Sorbonne, who killed himself with declaiming, rightly
-or wrongly, against materialism.” The writers, as “encyclopédistes”
-and “philosophers” were long marked by those titles for the public
-opprobrium. This general persecution had the effect of uniting that
-party for common defence. For Voltaire himself an important advantage
-was secured. Most of the principal men of letters and science, up to
-this time either avowed enemies or coldly-distant friends, henceforward
-enrolled themselves under his undisputed leadership.
-
-About the same period he published a number of pieces, prose and
-verse, directed against his enemies of various kinds, theatrical as
-well as theological. Amongst the latter, conspicuous by their attacks,
-but still more so by their punishment, were Fréron and Desfontaines,
-whose chastisement was such that, according to Macaulay’s hyperbolic
-expression, “scourging, branding, pillorying would have been a trifle
-to it.” It is more pleasing, however, to turn from this fierce war of
-retaliation, in which neither party was free from blame, to proofs
-of the real benevolence of his disposition. We can merely note the
-strenuous efforts he made, unsolicited, on behalf of Admiral Byng and
-the Comte de Lally, and the still more meritorious labours in the
-less well-known histories of Calas and Serven. Not by these public
-acts alone did the man, who has been accused of malignity, discover
-the humanity of his character: to whose ready assistance in money, as
-well as in counsel, the unfortunate of the literary tribe and others
-acknowledged their obligations.
-
-His _Philosophie de l’Histoire_, the prototype of its successors
-in name at least, was designed to expose that long-established and
-prevailing idolatry of Antiquity, which received everything bequeathed
-by it with astounding credulity. The _Philosophie_ called forth a
-numerous host of small critics, to which men who knew, or ought to
-have known better, allied themselves. Their curious way of maintaining
-the credit of Antiquity afforded, as may be imagined, the author of
-the _Defence of my Uncle_, under which title Voltaire chose to defend
-himself, full scope for the exercise of his unrivalled powers of irony.
-Warburton, the pedant Bishop of Gloucester, with his odd theories about
-the “Divine Legation,” comes in for a share of this Dunciad sort of
-immortalisation.
-
-A work of equal merit with the _Philosophie_ are the _Questions_,
-addressed to the lovers of science, upon the _Encyclopædia_, wherein,
-in the form of a dictionary, he treats, as the Marquis de Condorcet
-eloquently describes,
-
- “Successively of theology, grammar, natural philosophy, and
- literature. At one time he discusses subjects of Antiquity; at
- another questions of policy, legislation, and public economy.
- His style, always animated and seductive, clothed these various
- subjects with a charm hitherto known to himself alone, and which
- springs chiefly from the licence with which, yielding to his
- successive emotions, adapting his style less to his subject than
- to the momentary disposition of his mind, sometimes he spreads
- ridicule over objects which seem capable of inspiring only
- horror, and almost instantaneously hurried away by the energy and
- sensibility of his soul, he vehemently and eloquently exclaims
- against abuses which he had just before treated with mockery. His
- anger is excited by false taste; he quickly perceives that his
- indignation ought to be reserved for interests more important, and
- he finishes by laughing in his usual way. Sometimes he abruptly
- leaves a moral or political discussion for a literary criticism,
- and in the midst of a lesson on taste he pronounces abstract maxims
- of the profoundest philosophy, or makes a sudden and terrible
- attack on fanaticism and tyranny.”
-
-It is with his romances that we are here chiefly concerned, since it is
-in those lighter productions of his genius that he has most especially
-allowed us to see his opinions upon flesh-eating. In the charming tale
-of _The Princess of Babylon_, her attendant _Phœnix_ thus accounts to
-his mistress for the silence of his brethren of the inferior races:--
-
- “It is because men fell into the practice of eating us in place of
- holding converse with and being instructed by us. The barbarians!
- Ought they not to have convinced themselves that, having the same
- organs as they, the same power of feeling, the same wants, the same
- desires, we have what they call _soul_ as well as themselves, that
- we are their brethren, and that only the wicked and bad deserve to
- be cooked and eaten? We are to such a degree your brethren that the
- Great Being, the Eternal and Creative Being, having made a covenant
- with men[164], expressly comprised us in the treaty. He forbad
- _you_ to feed yourselves upon our blood, and _us_ to suck yours.
- The fables of your Lokman, translated into so many languages, will
- be an everlasting witness of the happy commerce which you formerly
- had with us. It is true that there are many women among you who are
- always talking to their Dogs; but they have resolved never to make
- any answer, from the time that they were forced by blows of the
- whip to go hunting and to be the accomplices of the murder of our
- old common friends, the Deer and the Hares and the Partridges. You
- have still some old poems in which Horses talk and your coachmen
- address them every day, but with so much grossness and coarseness,
- and with such infamous words, that Horses who once loved you now
- detest you.... The shepherds of the Ganges, born all equal, are
- the owners of innumerable flocks who feed in meadows that are
- perpetually covered with flowers. They are never slaughtered there.
- It is a horrible crime in the country of the Ganges to kill and eat
- one’s fellows [_semblables_]. Their wool, finer and more brilliant
- than the most beautiful silk, is the greatest object of commerce in
- the Orient.”
-
-A certain king had the temerity to attack this innocent people:--
-
- “The king was taken prisoner with more than 600,000 men. They
- bathed him in the waters of the Ganges; they put him on the
- salutary _régime_ of the country, which consists in vegetables,
- which are lavished by Nature for the support of all human beings.
- Men, fed upon carnage and drinking strong drinks, have all an
- empoisoned and acrid blood, which drives them mad in a hundred
- different ways. Their principal madness is that of shedding the
- blood of their brothers, and of devastating fertile plains to reign
- over cemeteries.”
-
-Her admirable instructor caused the princess to enter
-
- “A dining-hall, whose walls were covered with orange-wood. The
- under-shepherds and shepherdesses, in long white dresses girded
- with golden bands, served her in a hundred baskets of simple
- porcelain, with a hundred delicious meats, among which was seen
- no disguised corpse. The feast was of rice, of sago, of semolina,
- of vermicelli, of maccaroni, of omelets, of eggs in milk, of
- cream-cheeses, of pastries of every kind, of vegetables, of fruits
- of perfume and taste of which one has no idea in other climates,
- and a profusion of refreshing drinks superior to the best wines.”
-
-Having occasion to visit the land _par excellence_ of flesh-eaters, and
-being entertained at the house of a certain English lord, the hero, the
-amiable lover of the princess, is questioned by his host
-
- “Whether they ate ‘good roast beef’ in the country of the people
- of the Ganges. The Vegetarian traveller replied to him with his
- accustomed politeness that they did not eat their brethren in that
- part of the world. He explained to him the system and diet which
- was that of Pythagoras, of Porphyry, of Iamblichus; whereupon
- _milord_ went off into a sound slumber.”[165]
-
-Amabed, a young Hindu, writes from Europe to his affianced mistress
-his impressions of the Christian sacred books and, in particular, of
-Christian carnivorousness:--
-
- “I pity those unfortunates of Europe who have, at the most, been
- created only 6,940 years; while our era reckons 115,652 years [the
- Brahminical computation]. I pity them more for wanting pepper, the
- sugar-cane, and tea, coffee, silk, cotton, incense, aromatics, and
- everything that can render life pleasing. But I pity them still
- more for coming from so great a distance, among so many perils, to
- ravish from us, arms in hand, our provisions. It is said at Calicut
- they have committed frightful cruelties only to procure pepper.
- It makes the Hindu nature, which is in every way different from
- theirs, shudder; their stomachs are carnivorous, they get drunk on
- the fermented juices of the vine, which was planted, they say, by
- their Noah. Father Fa-Tutto [one of the missionaries], polished
- as he is, has himself cut the throats of two little chickens; he
- has caused them to be boiled in a cauldron, and has devoured them
- without pity. This barbarous action has drawn upon him the hatred
- of all the neighbourhood, whose anger we have appeased only with
- much difficulty. May God pardon me! I believe that this stranger
- would have eaten our sacred Cows, who give us milk, if he had
- been allowed to do so. A promise has been extorted from him that
- he will commit no more murders of Hens, and that he will content
- himself with fresh eggs, milk, rice, and our excellent fruits
- and vegetables--pistachio nuts, dates, cocoa nuts, almond cakes,
- biscuits, ananas, oranges, and with everything which our climate
- produces, blessed be the Eternal!”
-
-In another letter to his old Hindu teacher from Rome, whither he had
-been induced to go by the missionaries, speaking of the feasts in that
-“citadel of the faith,” he writes:--
-
- “The dining-hall was grand, convenient, and richly ornamented. Gold
- and silver shone upon the sideboards. Gaiety and wit animated the
- guests. But, meantime, in the kitchens blood and fat were streaming
- in one horrible mass; skins of quadrupeds, feathers of birds and
- their entrails, piled up pell-mell, oppressed the heart, and spread
- the infection of fevers.”[166]
-
-That one who hated and denounced injustice of all kinds, and who
-sympathised with the suffering of all innocent life, should thus
-characterise the cruelty of the Slaughter-House is what we might
-naturally look for; as also that he should denounce the kindred and
-even worse atrocity of the physiological Laboratory. And it is a
-strange and unaccountable fact that, amongst the humanitarians of
-his time, he stands apparently alone in condemnation of the secret
-tortures of the vivisectionists and pathologists--although, perhaps,
-the almost universal silence may be attributable, in part, to the
-very secresy of the experiments which only recent vigilance has fully
-detected. Exposing the equally absurd and arrogant denial of reason and
-intelligence to other animals, and instancing the dog, he proceeds:--
-
- “There are barbarians who seize this dog, who so prodigiously
- surpasses man in friendship, and nail him down to a table, and
- dissect him alive to shew you the mezaraic veins. You discover
- in him all the same organs of feeling as in yourself. Answer me,
- Machinist [_i.e._, supporter of the theory of mere mechanical
- action], has Nature really arranged all the springs of feeling in
- this animal _to the end that he might not feel_? Has he nerves
- _that he may be incapable_ of suffering? Do not suppose that
- impertinent contradiction in Nature.”[167]
-
-To the final triumph which in Paris awaited this champion of the weak,
-at the advanced age of 84, and the unexampled enthusiasm of the people,
-and the closing act of his eventful life, we can here merely refer.
-In Berlin, Friedrich ordered a solemn mass in the cathedral church in
-commemoration of his genius and virtues. A more enduring monument than
-any conventional mark of human vanity is the legacy which he left to
-posterity, which will last as long as the French language, and, still
-more, the humanity embodied in one of his later verses:--
-
- “J’ai fait un peu de bien, c’est mon meilleur ouvrage.”
-
-The faults of his character and writings which, for the most part, lie
-on the surface (one of the most regretable of which was his sometimes
-servile flattery of men in power, and the only excuse for which was his
-eagerness to gain them over to moderation and justice) will be deemed
-by impartial criticism to have been more than counterbalanced by his
-real and substantial merits. That he allowed his ardent indignation to
-overmaster the sense of propriety in too many instances, in dealing
-with subjects which ought to be dealt with in a judicial and serious
-manner, is that fault in his writings which must always cause the
-greatest regret. In his discourse at his reception by the French
-Academy he remarks that “the art of instruction, when it is perfect, in
-the long run, succeeds better than the art of sarcasm, because Satire
-dies with those who are the victims of it; while Reason and Virtue are
-eternal.” It would have been well, in many instances, had he practised
-this principle. But, however objectionably his convictions were
-sometimes expressed, his ardent love of truth and hatred of injustice
-have secured for him an imperishable fame; while Göthe’s estimate of
-his intellectual pre-eminence--that he has the greatest name in all
-Literature--is not likely soon to be disputed by Posterity.
-
-
-
-
-XXV.
-
-HALLER. 1708-1777.
-
-
-The founder of Modern Physiology was born at Berne. In 1723 he went
-to Tübingen to study medicine, afterwards to Leyden, where the famous
-Boerhaave was at the height of his reputation. Twelve years later he
-received the appointment of physician to the hospital at Berne; but
-soon afterwards he was invited by George II., as Elector of Hanover, to
-accept the professorship of anatomy and surgery at the University of
-Göttingen.
-
-His scientific writings are extraordinarily numerous. From 1727 to 1777
-he published nearly 200 treatises. His great work is his _Elements
-of the Physiology of the Human Body_ (in Latin), 1757-1766--the most
-important treatise on medical science--or at least on anatomy and
-surgery--up to that time produced. The _Icones Anatomicæ_ (“Anatomical
-Figures”) is “a marvellously accurate, well-engraved representation of
-the principal organs of the human body.” His writings are marked by
-unusual clearness of meaning, as well as by accurate and deep research.
-
-We wish that we could here stop; but the force of truth compels us
-to affirm that, for us at least, his reputation, great as it is in
-science, has been for ever tarnished by his sacrifices--with frightful
-torture--of innocent victims on the altars of a selfish and sanguinary
-science.
-
-One plea in extenuation of this callousness in regard to the suffering
-of other animals, and only one, can be offered in his defence. At this
-very moment, after all the humanitarian doctrine that has been preached
-during the century since the death of Haller, tortures of the most
-cold-blooded kind are being inflicted on tens of thousands of horses,
-deer, dogs, rabbits, and others, in all the “laboratories” of Europe;
-while he had neither the prolonged experience of the uselessness of
-all such unnatural experimentation, of which the vivisectors and
-pathologists of our day are in possession, nor the same indoctrination
-of a higher morality, which has been the heritage of these latter days.
-The scientific barbarity of Haller does not affect the nature of his
-physiological testimony, which, it might be presumed, ought to be of
-some weight with his disciples and representatives of the present day.
-He asserts:--
-
- “This food, then, that I have hitherto described, in which flesh
- has no part, is salutary; inasmuch as it fully nourishes a man,
- protracts life to an advanced period, and prevents or cures such
- disorders as are attributable to the acrimony or the grossness of
- the blood.”[168]
-
-
-
-
-XXVI.
-
-COCCHI. 1695-1758.
-
-
-It might justly provoke expression of feeling stronger than that of
-astonishment, when we have to record that in South Europe (where
-climate and soil unite to recommend and render a _humane_ manner of
-living[169] still more easy than in our colder regions) the followers,
-or, at all events, the prophets of the Reformed Diet have been
-conspicuously few. Since, by the _à fortiori_ argument, if abundant
-experience and teaching have proved it to be more conducive to health
-in higher latitudes, much more is it evident that it must be fitting
-for the people of those parts of the globe nearer to the Equator.
-
-Italy, which has produced Seneca, Cornaro, and Cocchi, is
-less obnoxious to the reproach of indifferentism in this most
-vitally-important branch of ethics than the western peninsula. But the
-“paradise of Europe” has yet to deserve the more glorious title of
-“the paradise of Peace,” and to atone (if, indeed, it be possible) for
-the cruel shedding of innocent, and in an especial degree superfluous,
-blood.
-
-An eminent professor of medicine and of surgery, Antonio Cocchi
-distinguished himself also as a philologist. He was born at Benevento.
-Before giving himself up to the practice of medicine he devoted several
-years to the study of the old and the modern languages of Europe. His
-knowledge of English helped to bring him into contact with many men
-of science in England, some of whom he met on his visit to London.
-Returning to Italy he was named Professor of Medicine at Pisa. He
-soon left that University for Florence, where he held the chair of
-Anatomy as well as of Philosophy. To him Florence was indebted for its
-Botanical Society, with which, in conjunction with Micheli, he endowed
-it.
-
-He was a voluminous writer.[170] His _Greek Surgical Books_[171]
-contain valuable extracts from the Greek writers on medicine
-and surgery not before published. Amongst other writings may
-be distinguished his _Treatise on the Use of Cold Baths by the
-Ancients_.[172] The treatise which gives him a place in this work was
-published at Florence under the title of _The Pythagorean Diet: for the
-Use of the Medical Faculty_.[173]
-
-Dr. Cocchi begins his little treatise with a eulogy and defence of the
-great reformer of Samos, and of his radical revolution in food. He
-cites the Greek and Latin writers, and especially the earlier Roman
-Laws, the Fannian and the Licinian. He proceeds:--
-
- “True and constant vigour of body is the effect of health, which
- is much better preserved with watery, herbaceous, frugal, and
- tender food, than with _vinous_, abundant, hard, and gross flesh
- (_che col carneo vinoso ed unto abundante e duro_). And in a sound
- body, a clear intelligence, and desire to suppress the mischievous
- inclinations (_voglie dannose_), and to conquer the irrational
- passions, produces true worth.”
-
-Cocchi cites the examples of the Greeks and of the Romans as proof that
-the non-flesh diet does not diminish courage or strength:--
-
- “The vulgar opinion, then, which, on health reasons, condemns
- vegetable food and so much praises animal food, being so
- ill-founded, I have always thought it well to oppose myself to it,
- moved both by experience and by that refined knowledge of natural
- things which some study and conversation with great men have given
- me. And perceiving now that such my constancy has been honoured by
- some learned and wise physicians with their authoritative adhesion
- (_della autorevole sequela_), I have thought it my duty publicly
- to diffuse the reasons of the Pythagorean diet, regarded as useful
- in medicine, and, at the same time, as full of innocence, of
- temperance, and of health. And it is none the less accompanied with
- a certain delicate pleasure, and also with a refined and splendid
- luxury (_non è privo nemmeno d’una certa delicate voluttà e d’un
- lusso gentile e splendido ancora_), if care and skill be applied in
- selection and proper supply of the best vegetable food, to which
- the fertility and the natural character of our beautiful country
- seem to invite us. For my part I have been so much the more induced
- to take up this subject, because I have persuaded myself that I
- might be of service to intending diet-reformers, there not being,
- to my knowledge, any book of which this is the sole subject, and
- which undertakes exactly to explain the origin and the reasons of
- it.”
-
-His special motive to the publication of his treatise, however, was to
-vindicate the claims of the reformer of Samos upon the gratitude of
-men:--
-
- “I wished to show that Pythagoras, the first founder of the
- vegetable regimen, was at once a very great physicist and a very
- great physician; that there has been no one of a more cultured
- and discriminating humanity; that he was a man of wisdom and of
- experience; that his motive in commending and introducing the new
- mode of living was derived not from any extravagant superstition,
- but from the desire to improve the health and the manners of
- men.”[174]
-
-
-
-
-XXVII.
-
-ROUSSEAU. 1712-1778.
-
-
-Few lives of writers of equal reputation have been exposed to our
-examination with the fulness and minuteness of the life of this the
-most eloquent name in French literature. With the exception of the
-great Latin father, St. Augustine, no other leader of thought, in
-fact, has so entirely revealed to us his inner life, his faults and
-weaknesses (often sufficiently startling), no less than the estimable
-parts of his character, and we remain in doubt whether more to lament
-the infirmities or to admire the candour of the autobiographer.
-
-Jean Jacques Rousseau, son of a Genevan tradesman, had the misfortune
-to lose his mother at a very early age. It is to this want of maternal
-solicitude and fostering care that some of the errors in his after
-career may perhaps be traced. After a short experience of school
-discipline he was apprenticed to an engraver, whose coarse violence
-must injuriously have affected the nervous temperament of the sensitive
-child. Ill-treatment forced him to run away, and he found refuge with
-Mde. de Warens, a Swiss lady, a convert to Catholicism, who occupies a
-prominent place in the first period of his _Confessions_. Influenced
-by her kindness, and by the skilful arguments of his preceptors at the
-college at Turin, where she had placed him, the young Rousseau (like
-Bayle and Gibbon, before and after him, though from a different motive)
-abjured Protestantism, and, for the moment, accepted, or at least
-professed, the tenets of the old Orthodoxy. Dismissed from the college
-because he refused to take orders, he engaged himself as a domestic
-servant or valet. He did not long remain in this position, and he
-resought the protection of his friend Mde. de Warens at Chambéry. His
-connexion with his too indulgent patroness terminated in the year 1740.
-For some years after this his life was of a most erratic, and not
-always edifying, kind. We find him employed in teaching at Lyons, and
-at another time acting as secretary to the French Embassy at Venice. In
-1745 he came to Paris. There he earned a living by copying music. About
-this time he met with Therèse Levasseur, the daughter of his hostess,
-with whom he formed a lasting but unhappy connexion.
-
-It was in 1748, at the age of 36, that he made the acquaintance, at
-the house of Mde. d’Epinay, of the editors of the _Encyclopédie_,
-D’Alembert and Diderot, who engaged him to write articles on music
-and upon other subjects in that first of comprehensive dictionaries.
-His first independent appearance in literature was in his essay on
-the question, “Whether the progress of science and of the arts has
-been favourable to the morals of mankind,” in which paradoxically he
-maintains the negative. It was the eloquence, we must suppose, rather
-than the reasoning, which gained him the prize awarded by the Académie
-of Dijon. His next production--a more important one--was his _Discours
-sur l’Inegalité parmi les Hommes_ (“Discourse upon Inequality amongst
-Men”). In this treatise--the prelude to his more developed _Contrat
-Social_--Rousseau affirms the paradox of the _natural_ school, as it
-may be termed, which alleged the state of nature--the life of the
-uncivilised man--to be the ideal condition of the species. His thesis
-that all men are born with equal rights takes a much more defensible
-position. In this _Discours_ diet is assigned its due importance in
-relation to the welfare of communities.
-
-The romance of _Julie: ou la Nouvelle Héloise_, which excited
-an unusual amount of interest, appeared in 1759. _Emile: ou de
-l’Education_, was given to the world three years later. It is the most
-important of his writings. In the education of Emile, or Emilius, he
-propounds his ideas upon one of the most interesting subjects which
-can engage attention--the right training of the young. The earlier
-part of the book is almost altogether admirable and useful. The later
-portion is more open to criticism, although not upon the grounds upon
-which was founded the hostility of the authorities of the day who
-unjustly condemned the book as irreligious and immoral. Rousseau begins
-with laying down the principles of a new and more rational method of
-rearing infants, agreeing, in many particulars, with the system of
-his predecessor, Locke. At least some of his protests against the
-unnatural treatment of children were not altogether in vain. Mothers
-in fashionable ranks of life began to recognise the mischief arising
-from the common practice of putting their infants out to nurse in
-place of suckling them themselves. They began also to abandon the
-absurd custom of confining their limbs in mummy-like bandages. Nor,
-though long in bearing adequate fruit, were his denunciations of the
-barbarous severity of parents and schoolmasters without some result. He
-insists upon the incalculable evils of inoculating the young, according
-to the almost universal custom, with superstitious beliefs and fancies
-which grow with the growth of the recipient until they become radically
-fixed in the mind as by a natural development. Most important of all
-his innovations in education, and certainly the most heretical, is his
-recommendation of a pure dietary.
-
-The publication of his treatise on education brought down a storm
-of persecution and opprobrium upon the author. The _Contrat Social_
-(in which he seemed to aim at subverting the political and social
-traditions, as he had in _Emile_ the educational prejudices of the
-venerated Past) appearing soon afterwards added fuel to the flames.
-Rousseau found himself forced to flee from Paris, and he sought shelter
-in the territory of Geneva. But the authorities, unmindful of the old
-reputation of the land of freedom, refusing him an asylum, he proceeded
-to Neuchâtel, then under Prussian rule, where he was well received.
-From this retreat he replied to the attacks of the Archbishop of Paris,
-and addressed a letter to the magistrates of Geneva renouncing his
-citizenship. He also published _Letters Written from the Mountain_,
-severely criticising the civil and church government of his native
-canton. These acts did not tend to conciliate the goodwill of the
-rulers of the people with whom he had taken refuge. At this moment an
-object of dislike to all the Continental sovereign powers, he gladly
-embraced the offer of David Hume to find him an asylum in England. The
-social and political revolutionist arrived in London in 1766, and took
-up his residence in a village in Derbyshire. He did not remain long in
-this country, his irritable temperament inducing him too hastily to
-suspect the sincerity of the friendship of his host.
-
-The next eight years of his life were passed in comparative obscurity,
-and in migrating from one place to another in the neighbourhood of
-Paris. In his solitude gardening and botanising occupied a large part
-of his leisure hours. It was at this period he made the acquaintance of
-Bernardin St. Pierre, his enthusiastic disciple, and immortalised as
-the author of _Paul et Virginie_. His end came suddenly. He had been
-settled only a few months in a cottage given him by one of his numerous
-aristocratic friends and admirers, when one morning, feeling unwell, he
-requested his wife to open the window that he “might once more look on
-the lovely verdure of the fields,” and as he was expressing his delight
-at the exquisite beauty of the scene and of the skies he fell forward
-and instantly breathed his last. At his special request his place of
-burial was chosen on an island in a lake in the Park of Ermondville, a
-fitting resting-place for one of the most eloquent of the high priests
-of Nature.
-
-His character (as we have already remarked) is revealed in his
-_Confessions_--which was written, in part, during his brief exile
-in England. It, as well as his other productions, shews him to us
-as a man of extraordinary sensibility, which, in regard to himself,
-occasionally degenerated into a sort of disease or, in popular
-language, _morbidness_ (a word, by the way, constantly abused by the
-many who seem to excuse their own insensibility to surrounding evils
-by stigmatising with that vague expression the acuter feeling of the
-few), which sometimes assumed the appearance of partial unsoundness of
-mind. This it was that caused him to suspect and quarrel with his best
-friends, and which, we may suppose, led him, in his minute dissection
-of himself, to exaggerate his real moral infirmities.
-
-In summing up his personal character we shall perhaps impartially judge
-him to have been, on the whole, amiable rather than admirable, of good
-impulses, and of a naturally humane disposition, cultivated by reading
-and reflection, but to have been wanting in firmness of mind and in
-that virtue so much esteemed in the school of Pythagoras--self control.
-His philosophy is distinguished rather by refinement than by vigour or
-depth of thought.
-
-It is in the education of the young that Rousseau exerts his eloquence
-to enforce the importance of a non-flesh diet:--
-
- “One of the proofs that the taste of flesh is not natural to man
- is the indifference which children exhibit for that sort of meat,
- and the preference they all give to vegetable foods, such as
- milk-porridge, pastry, fruits, &c. It is of the last importance
- not to _denaturalise_ them of this primitive taste (_de ne pas
- dénaturer ce goût primitif_), and not to render them carnivorous,
- if not for health reasons, at least _for the sake of their
- character_. For, however the experience may be explained, it is
- certain that great eaters of flesh are, in general, more cruel and
- ferocious than other men. This observation is true of all places
- and of all times. English coarseness is well known.[175] The
- Gaures, on the contrary, are the gentlest of men. All savages are
- cruel, and it is not their morals that urge them to be so; this
- cruelty proceeds _from their food_. They go to war as to the chase,
- and treat men as they do bears. Even in England the butchers are
- not received as legal witnesses any more than surgeons.[176] Great
- criminals harden themselves to murder by drinking blood.[177] Homer
- represents the _Cyclopes_, who were flesh-eaters, as frightful
- men, and the Lotophagi [Lotus-eaters] as a people so amiable that
- as soon as one had any dealing with them one straightway forgot
- everything, even one’s country, to live with them.”
-
-Rousseau, in a free translation, here quotes a considerable part of
-Plutarch’s _Essay_. He insists, especially, that children should be
-early accustomed to the pure diet:--
-
- “The further we remove from a natural mode of living the more
- do we lose our natural tastes; or rather habit makes a _second_
- nature, which we substitute to such a degree for the first that
- none among us any longer knows what the latter is. It follows from
- this that the most simple tastes must also be the most natural,
- for they are those which are most easily changed, while by being
- sharpened and by being irritated by our whims they assume a form
- which never changes. The man who is yet of no country will conform
- himself without trouble to the customs of any country whatever,
- but the man of one country never becomes that of another. This
- appears to me true in every sense, and still more so applied to
- taste properly so-called. Our first food was milk. We accustom
- ourselves only by degrees to strong flavours. At first they are
- repugnant to us. Fruits, vegetables, kitchen herbs, and, in fine,
- often broiled dishes, without seasoning and without salt, composed
- the feasts of the first men. The first time a savage drinks wine
- he makes a grimace and rejects it; and even amongst ourselves,
- whoever has lived to his twentieth year without tasting fermented
- drinks, cannot afterwards accustom himself to them. We should all
- be abstinents from alcohol if we had not been given wines in our
- early years. In fine, the more simple our tastes are the more
- universal are they, and the most common repugnance is for made-up
- dishes. Does one ever see a person have a disgust for water or
- bread? Behold here the impress of nature! Behold here, then, our
- rule of life. Let us preserve to the child as long as possible his
- primitive taste; let its nourishment be common and simple; let not
- its palate be familiarised to any but natural flavours, and let
- no exclusive taste be formed.... I have sometimes examined those
- people who attached importance to _good living_, who thought, upon
- their first awaking, of what they should eat during the day, and
- described a dinner with more exactitude than Polybius would use
- in describing a battle. I have thought that all these so-called
- men were but children of forty years without vigour and without
- consistence--_fruges consumere nati_.[178] Gluttony is the vice of
- souls that have no solidity (_qui n’ont point d’étoffe_). The soul
- of a gourmand is in his palate. He is brought into the world but to
- devour. In his stupid incapacity he is at home only at his table.
- His powers of judgment are limited to his dishes. Let us leave him
- in his employment without regret. Better that for him than any
- other, as much for our own sakes as for his.”[179]
-
-In the _Julie: ou la Nouvelle Heloise_ he describes his heroine as
-preferring the innocent feast:--
-
- “Although luxurious in her repasts she likes neither flesh-meat nor
- ragoûts. Excellent vegetable dishes, eggs, cream, fruits--these
- constitute her ordinary food; and, excepting fish, which she likes
- as much, she would be a true Pythagorean.”[180]
-
-Although he was not a thorough or consistent abstainer, Rousseau speaks
-with enthusiasm of the pleasures of his frugal repasts, in which,
-it seems, when he was not seduced by the sumptuous dinners of his
-fashionable admirers, flesh, as a rule, had no part:--
-
- “Who shall describe, who shall understand, the charm of these
- repasts, composed of a quartern loaf, of cherries, of a little
- cheese, and of a half-pint of wine, which we drank together.
- Friendship, confidence, intimacy, sweetness of soul, how delicious
- are your seasonings!”[181]
-
-
-
-
-XXVIII.
-
-LINNÉ. 1707-1778.
-
-
-Karl von Linné, or (according to the antiquated fashion of _Latinising_
-eminent names still retained) Linnæus, the distinguished Swedish
-naturalist, and the most eminent name in botanical literature, in a
-notable manner arrived at his destined immortality in spite of friends
-and fortune. Prophecies do not always fulfil themselves, and the
-estimate of his teachers that he was a hopeless “blockhead,” and the
-prediction that he would be of no intellectual worth in the world (they
-had advised his parents to apprentice him to a handicraft trade), are
-a conspicuous instance of the falsification of prophecy. After one
-year’s course of study at the University of Lund--where he had access
-to a good library and collections of natural history--he proceeded to
-the University of Upsala. There, upon an allowance by his father of £8
-a year to meet all his expenses of living, he struggled desperately
-against the almost insuperable obstacles of extreme poverty, which
-forced him often to reduce his diet to one meal during the day. He was
-then at the age of 20. At length, by the hospitable friendship of the
-professor of botany, and a small income derived from a few pupils,
-Linné found himself free to devote himself to the great labour of his
-life. It was in the house of his host (Rudbeck) that he sketched the
-subject-matter of the important works he afterwards published. In 1731
-he was commissioned by his university to explore the vegetable life
-of Lapland. Within the space of five months he traversed alone, and
-with slender provision, some 4,000 miles. The result of this laborious
-expedition was his _Flora Laponica_.
-
-Three years later, with the sum of fifteen pounds, which he had with
-great difficulty gathered together, he set out in search of some
-university where he might obtain the necessary degree of doctor in
-medicine at the least outlay, in order to gain a living by the practice
-of physic. He found the object of his search in Holland. In that
-country he met with a hospitable reception. During his residence in
-Holland he came over to England, and visited the botanical collections
-at Oxford and Eltham, with which the Swedish _savant_, it seems, had
-not much reason to be satisfied. Returning to Sweden, he began practice
-as a physician at the age of 31, and he lectured, by Government
-appointment, upon botany and mineralogy at Stockholm. His fame had now
-become European. He was in correspondence with some of the most eminent
-scientific men throughout the world. Books and collections were sent to
-him from every quarter, and his pupils supplied him with the results
-of their explorations in the three continents. He was elected to the
-Professorship of Medicine at Upsala, and (a vain addition to his real
-titles) he was soon afterwards “ennobled.”
-
-The productions of his genius and industry during the twenty years
-from 1740 were astonishingly numerous. Besides his _Systema Naturæ_
-and _Species Plantarum_, his two most considerable works, he wrote a
-large number of dissertations, afterwards collected under the title of
-_Amœnitates Academicæ_--“Academic Delights.” Everything he wrote was
-received with the greatest respect by the scientific world. Upon his
-death the whole University of Upsala united in showing respect to his
-memory; sixteen doctors of medicine, old pupils, bearing the “pall,”
-and a general mourning was ordered throughout the land of his birth.
-
-The scientific merits of Linné are his exactness and conciseness in
-classification. He reduced to something like order the chaotic and
-pedantic systems of his predecessors, which were prolix and overladen
-with names and classes. If the science still labours under the stigma
-of needless pedantry, the fault lies not with himself, but with his
-successors. Linné’s evidence to the scientific truth of Vegetarianism
-is brief but _pregnant_:--
-
- “This species of food [fruits and farinacea] is that which _is most
- suited_ to man, as is proved by the series of quadrupeds, analogy,
- wild men, apes, the structure of the mouth, of the stomach, and of
- the hands.”[182]
-
-
-
-
-XXIX.
-
-BUFFON. 1707-1788.
-
-
-An eminent instance of perversity of logic--of which, by the way, the
-history of human thought supplies too many examples--is that of the
-well-known author of the _Histoire Naturelle_, a work which (highly
-interesting as it is, and always will be, by reason of the detailed
-and generally accurate delineation of the characters and habits of the
-various forms of animated nature, and by reason of the graces of style
-of that French classic) is, from a strictly scientific point of view,
-of not always the most reliable authority. Although Buffon has depicted
-as forcibly as well can be conceived the low position in Nature of
-the carnivorous tribes, and not a few of the evils arising from human
-addiction to carnivorousness, yet, by a strange perversion of the facts
-of comparative physiology, he has chosen to enlist himself amongst the
-apologists of that degenerate mode of living. But facts are stronger
-than prejudices, and his very candid _admissions_, which we shall here
-quote, speak sufficiently for themselves:--
-
- “Man [says he] knows how to use, as a master, his power over
- [other] animals. He has selected those whose flesh _flatters his
- taste_. He has made domestic slaves of them. He has multiplied them
- more than Nature could have done. He has formed innumerable flocks,
- and by the cares which he takes in propagating them he _seems_[183]
- to have acquired the right of sacrificing them for himself. But he
- extends that right _much beyond_ his needs. For, independently of
- those species which he has subjected, and of which he disposes at
- his will, he makes war also upon wild animals, upon birds, upon
- fishes. He does not even limit himself to those of the climate
- he inhabits. He seeks at a distance, even in the remotest seas,
- new meats, and entire Nature seems scarcely to suffice for his
- intemperance and the inconsistent variety of his appetites.
-
- “_Man alone consumes and engulfs more flesh than all other animals
- put together. He is, then, the greatest destroyer, and he is
- so more by abuse than by necessity._ Instead of enjoying with
- moderation the resources offered him, in place of dispensing them
- with equity, in place of repairing in proportion as he destroys,
- of renewing in proportion as he annihilates, the rich man makes
- all his boast and glory in _consuming_, all his splendour in
- destroying, in one day, at his table, more material (_plus de
- biens_) than would be necessary for the support of several
- families. He abuses equally other animals and his own species, the
- rest of whom live in famine, languish in misery, and work only
- to satisfy the immoderate appetite and the still more insatiable
- vanity of this human being who, _destroying others by want,
- destroys himself by excess_.
-
- “And yet Man might, like other animals, live upon vegetables.
- _Flesh is not a better nourishment than grains or bread._ What
- constitutes true nourishment, what contributes to the nutrition,
- to the development, to the growth, and to the support of the body,
- is not that brute matter which, to our eyes, composes the texture
- of flesh or of vegetables, but it is those organic molecules which
- both contain; since the ox, in feeding on grass, acquires as much
- flesh as man or as animals who live upon flesh and blood.... The
- essential source is the same; it is the same matter, it is the same
- organic molecules which nourish the Ox, Man, and all animals....
- It results from what we have just said that Man, whose stomach
- and intestines are not of a very great capacity relatively to the
- volume of his body, could not live simply upon grass. Nevertheless
- _it is proved by facts that he could well live upon bread,
- vegetables, and the grains of plants_, since we know entire nations
- and classes of men to whom religion forbids to feed upon anything
- that has life.”
-
-To the ordinary apprehension all this might seem _primâ facie_
-conclusive evidence of the non-necessariness of the food of the
-richer classes of the community. But, unhappily, Buffon seems to have
-considered himself as holding a brief to defend his clients, the
-flesh-eaters, in the last resort, and, accordingly, in spite of these
-admissions, which to an unbiassed mind might appear conclusive argument
-for the relinquishment of flesh as food, he proceeds to contradict
-himself by adding:--
-
- “But these examples, supported even by the authority of Pythagoras
- [and he might have added many later names of equal authority], and
- recommended by some physicians too friendly to a reformed diet
- (_trop amis de diète!_), appear to me not sufficient to convince us
- that it would be for the advantage of human health (_qu’il y eût à
- gagner pour la santè des hommes_) and for the multiplication of the
- human species to live upon vegetables and bread only, for so much
- the stronger reason, that the poor country people, whom the luxury
- of the cities and towns and the extravagant waste of tables reduce
- to this mode of living, languish and die off sooner than persons
- of the middle class, to whom inanition and excess are equally
- unknown!”[184]
-
-In stigmatising, in the following sentence, the cruel rapacity of the
-lower carnivorous tribes, Buffon consciously or unconsciously stamps
-the same stigma upon the carnivorous human animal:--
-
- “_After Man_, the animals who live only upon flesh are the greatest
- destroyers. They are at once the enemies of Nature and the rivals
- of Man.”[185]
-
-
-
-
-XXX.
-
-HAWKESWORTH. 1715-1773.
-
-
-Best known as the editor of _The Adventurer_--a periodical in imitation
-of the _Spectator_, _Rambler_, &c.--which appeared twice a week during
-the years 1752-54. Johnson, Warton, and others assisted him in this
-undertaking, which has the honour of being one of the first periodicals
-which have ventured to denounce the cruel barbarism of “Sport,” and the
-papers by Hawkesworth upon that subject are in striking contrast with
-the usual tone and practice of his contemporaries and, indeed, of our
-own times.
-
-In 1761 he published an edition of Swift’s writings, with a life which
-received the praise of Samuel Johnson (in his _Lives of the Poets_),
-and it is a passage in that book which entitles him to a place here.
-In 1773 he was entrusted by the Government of the day with the task
-of compiling a history of the recent voyages of Captain Cook. He also
-translated the _Aventures de Télémaque_ of Fénélon. The coarseness
-and repulsiveness of the dishes of the common diet seldom have been
-stigmatised with greater force than by Dr. Hawkesworth. His expressions
-of abhorrence are conceived quite in the spirit of Plutarch:--
-
- “Among other dreadful and disgusting images which Custom has
- rendered familiar, are those which arise from eating animal food.
- He who has ever turned with abhorrence from the skeleton of a
- beast which has been picked whole by birds or vermin, must confess
- that _habit_ alone could have enabled him to endure the sight of
- the mangled bones and flesh of a dead carcase which every day
- cover his table. And he who reflects on the _number_ of lives that
- have been sacrificed to sustain his own, should enquire by _what_
- the account has been balanced, and whether his life is become
- proportionately of more value by the exercise of virtue and by the
- superior happiness which he has communicated to [more] reasonable
- beings.”[186]
-
-
-
-
-XXXI.
-
-PALEY. 1743-1805.
-
-
-With the exception of Joseph Butler, perhaps the ablest and most
-interesting of English orthodox theologians. As one of the very few
-of this numerous class of writers who seem seriously to be impressed
-with the difficulty of reconciling orthodox _dietetics_ with the higher
-moral and religious instincts, Paley has for social reformers a title
-to remembrance, and it is as a moral philosopher that he has a claim
-upon our attention.
-
-The son of a country curate, Paley began his career as tutor in an
-academy in Greenwich. He had entered Christ’s College, Cambridge,
-as “sizar.” Being senior wrangler of his year, he was afterwards
-elected a Fellow of his college. His lectures on moral philosophy at
-the University contained the germs of his most useful writing. After
-the usual previous stages, finally he received the preferment of the
-Archdeaconry of Carlisle. The failure of the most eminent of the modern
-apologists of dogmatic Christianity to attain the highest rewards of
-ecclesiastical ambition, and the refusal of George III. to promote
-“pigeon” Paley when it was proposed to that reactionary prince to make
-so skilful a controversialist a bishop--a refusal founded on the famous
-apology for monarchy in the _Moral and Political Philosophy_--is well
-known.
-
-The most important, by far, of his writings, is the _Elements of
-Moral and Political Philosophy_ (1785). He founds moral obligation
-upon principles of utility. In politics he asserts the grounds of the
-duties of rulers and ruled to be based upon the same far-reaching
-consideration, and upon this principle he maintains that as soon
-as any Government has proved itself corrupt or negligent of the
-public good, whatever may have been the alleged legitimacy of its
-original authority, the right of the governed to put an end to it is
-established. “The final view of all national politics,” he affirms,
-“is [ought to be] to produce the greatest quantity of happiness.”
-The comparative boldness, indeed, of certain of his disquisitions
-on Government alarmed not a little the political and ecclesiastical
-dignitaries of the time. His adhesion to the programme of Clarkson and
-the anti-slavery “fanatics” (as that numerically insignificant band of
-reformers was styled) did not tend, it may be presumed, to counteract
-the damaging effects of his political philosophy.
-
-In his _Natural Theology_ (1802), his best theological production, he
-labours to establish the fact of benevolent design from observation
-of the various phenomena of nature and life. Whatever estimate may be
-formed of the success of this undertaking, there can be no question
-of the ability and eloquence of the accomplished pleader; and the
-book proves him, at least, to have acquired a surprising amount
-of physiological and anatomical knowledge. It is justly described
-by Sir J. Mackintosh as “the wonderful work of a man who, after
-sixty, had studied anatomy in order to write it.” Of the _Evidences_
-(1790-94)--the most popularly known of his writings--the considerable
-literary merit is in somewhat striking contrast, in regard to clearness
-and simplicity of style, with the ordinary productions of the
-evidential school.
-
-We are concerned now with the _Moral and Political Philosophy_. It
-has been already stated that it is based upon the principles of
-utilitarianism. As for personal moral conduct, he justly considered it
-to be vastly influenced by early custom; or, as he expresses it, the
-art of life consists in the right “setting of our habits.”
-
-On the subjoined examination of the question of the lawfulness or
-otherwise of flesh-eating, his ultimate refuge in an alleged biblical
-authority (forced upon him, apparently, by the necessity of his
-position rather than by personal inclination) confirms rather than
-weakens his preceding candid _admissions_, which sufficiently establish
-our position:--
-
- “A right to the flesh of animals. This is a _very different claim_
- from the former [‘a right to the fruits or vegetable produce of
- the earth’]. _Some_ excuse seems necessary for the pain and loss
- which we occasion to [other] animals by restraining them of their
- liberty, mutilating their bodies, and, at last, putting an end to
- their lives for our pleasure or convenience.
-
- “The reasons alleged in vindication of this practice are the
- following--that the several species of animals being created to
- prey upon one another[187] affords a kind of analogy to prove that
- the human species were intended to feed upon them; that, if let
- alone, they would overrun the earth, and exclude mankind from the
- occupation of it;[188] that they are requited for what they suffer
- at our hands by our care and protection.
-
- “Upon which reasons I would observe that the analogy contended
- for _is extremely lame_, since [the carnivorous] animals have no
- power to support life by any other means, and _since we have, for
- the whole human species might subsist entirely upon fruit, pulse,
- herbs, and roots, as many tribes of Hindus[189] actually do_. The
- two other reasons may be valid reasons, as far as they go, for,
- no doubt, if men had been supported entirely by vegetable food a
- great part of those animals who die to furnish our tables would
- never have lived[190] but they by no means justify our right over
- the lives of other animals to the extent to which we exercise it.
- What danger is there, _e.g._, of fish interfering with us in the
- occupation of their element, or what do we contribute to their
- support or preservation?
-
- “_It seems to me that it would be difficult to defend this right
- by any arguments which the light and order of Nature afford_, and
- that we are beholden for it to the permission recorded in Scripture
- (_Gen._ ix., 1, 2, 3). To Adam and his posterity had been granted,
- at the creation, ‘every green herb for meat,’ and nothing more.
- In the last clause of the passage now produced the old grant is
- recited and extended to the flesh of animals--‘even as the green
- herb, have I given you all things.’ But this was not until after
- the Flood. The inhabitants of the antediluvian world had therefore
- no such permission that we know of. Whether they actually refrained
- from the flesh of animals is another question. Abel, we read, was
- a keeper of sheep, and for what purpose he kept them, except for
- food, is difficult to say (unless it were sacrifice). Might not,
- however, some of the stricter sects among the antediluvians be
- scrupulous as to this point? And might not Noah and his family
- be of this description? For, it is not probable that God should
- publish a permission to authorise a practice which had never been
- disputed.”[191]
-
-Thus far as regards the _moral_ aspect of the subject. Dealing with the
-social and economical view, Paley, untrammelled by professional views,
-is more decided. In his chapter, _Of Population and Provision, &c._, he
-writes:--
-
- “The natives of Hindustan being confined, by the laws of their
- religion, to the use of vegetable food, and requiring little except
- rice, which the country produces in plentiful crops; and food, in
- warm climates, composing the only want of life, these countries are
- populous under all the injuries of a despotic, and the agitations
- of an unsettled, Government. If any revolution, or what would be
- called perhaps _refinement of manners (!)_, should generate in
- these people a taste for the flesh of animals, similar to what
- prevails amongst the Arabian hordes--should introduce flocks and
- herds into grounds which are now covered with corn--should teach
- them to account a certain portion of this species of food amongst
- the necessaries of life--the population from this single change
- would suffer in a few years a great diminution, and this diminution
- would follow in spite of every effort of the laws, or even of any
- improvement that might take place in their civil condition. In
- Ireland the simplicity of living alone maintains a considerable
- degree of population under great defects of police, industry,
- and commerce.... Next to the mode of living, we are to consider
- ‘the quantity of provision suited to that mode, which is either
- raised in the country or imported into it,’ for this is the order
- in which we assigned the causes of population and undertook to
- treat of them. Now, if we measure the quantity of provision by the
- number of human bodies it will support in due health and vigour,
- this quantity, the extent and quality of the soil from which it
- is raised being given, will depend greatly upon the _kind_. For
- instance, a piece of ground capable of supplying animal food
- sufficient for the subsistence of ten persons _would sustain, at
- least, the double of that number with grain, roots, and milk_.
-
- “The first resource of savage life is in the flesh of wild animals.
- Hence the numbers amongst savage nations, compared with the tract
- of country which they occupy, are universally small, because this
- species of provision is, of all others, supplied in the slenderest
- proportion. The next step was the invention of pasturage, or the
- rearing of flocks and herds of tame animals. This alteration
- added to the stock of provision much. But the last and _principal
- improvement was to follow, viz., tillage, or the artificial
- production of corn, esculent plants, and roots_. This discovery,
- whilst it changed the quality of human food, augmented the quantity
- in a vast proportion.
-
- “So far as the state of population is governed and limited by
- the quantity of provision, perhaps there is no single cause that
- affects it so powerfully as the kind and quality of food which
- chance or usage hath introduced into a country. In England,
- notwithstanding the produce of the soil has been of late
- considerably increased by the enclosure of wastes and the adoption,
- in many places, of a more successful husbandry, yet we do not
- observe a corresponding addition to the number of inhabitants, the
- reason of which appears to me to be the more general consumption
- of animal food amongst us. Many ranks of people whose ordinary
- diet was, in the last century, prepared almost entirely from milk,
- roots, and vegetables, now require every day a considerable portion
- of the flesh of animals. _Hence a great part of the richest lands
- of the country are converted to pasturage._ Much also of the
- bread-corn, which went directly to the nourishment of human bodies,
- now only contributes to it by fattening the flesh of sheep and
- oxen. _The mass and volume of provisions are hereby diminished_,
- and what is gained in the amelioration of the soil is lost in the
- quality of the produce.
-
- “This consideration teaches us that tillage, as an object of
- national care and encouragement, is universally preferable to
- pasturage, because the kind of provision which it yields goes
- much farther in the sustentation of human life. Tillage is also
- recommended by this additional advantage--that it _affords
- employment to a much more numerous peasantry_. Indeed pasturage
- seems to be the art of a nation, either imperfectly civilised, as
- are many of the tribes which cultivate it in the internal parts
- of Asia, or of a nation, like Spain, declining from its summit by
- luxury and inactivity.”[192]
-
-Elsewhere Paley asserts that “luxury in dress or furniture is
-universally preferable to luxury _in eating_, because the articles
-which constitute the one are more the production of human art and
-industry than those which supply the other.”
-
-
-
-
-XXXII.
-
-ST. PIERRE. 1737-1814.
-
-
-Principally known as the author of the most charming of all idyllic
-romances--_Paul et Virginie_. Beginning his career as civil engineer
-he afterwards entered the French army. A quarrel with his official
-superiors forced him to seek employment elsewhere, and he found it
-in the Russian service, where his scientific ability received due
-recognition.
-
-Encouraged by the esteem in which he was held, he formed the project
-of establishing a colony on the Caspian shores, which should be under
-just and equal laws. St. Pierre submitted the scheme to the Russian
-Minister, who, as we should be apt to presume, did not receive it too
-favourably. He then went to Poland in the vain expectation of aiding
-the people of that hopelessly distracted country in throwing off the
-foreigners’ yoke. Failing in this undertaking, and despairing, for
-the time, of the cause of freedom, we next find him in Berlin and
-in Vienna. He had also previously visited Holland, in which great
-refuge of freedom he had been received with hospitality. In Paris,
-upon his return to France, his project of a free colony found better
-reception than in St. Petersburg--owing, perhaps, to the not altogether
-disinterested sympathy of the Government with the recently revolted
-American colonies. To further his plans he accepted an official post in
-the Ile de France, intending eventually to proceed to Madagascar, where
-was to be realised his long-cherished idea. On the voyage he discovered
-that his associates had formed a very different design from his
-own--to engage in the slave traffic. Separating from these nefarious
-speculators, he landed in the Ile de France, where he remained two
-years. It is to the experiences of this part of his life that we owe
-his _Paul et Virginie_, the scenes of which are laid in that tropical
-island.
-
-Returning home once again, he made the acquaintance of D’Alembert
-and of other leading men of letters in Paris, and, particularly,
-of Rousseau, his philosophical master. At the period of the Great
-Revolution of 1789, St. Pierre lost his post as superintendent of the
-Royal Botanical Gardens under the old Bourbon Government, and he found
-himself reduced to poverty; and although his sympathies were with the
-party of constitutional, though not of radical, reform, the supremacy
-of the extreme revolutionists (1792-1794) exposed him to some hazard by
-reason of his known deistic convictions. Upon the establishment of the
-reactionary revolution of the Empire, St. Pierre recovered his former
-post, and, with the empty honour of the Imperial Cross, he received the
-more solid benefit of a pension and other emoluments.
-
-His writings have been collected and published in two quarto volumes
-(Paris, 1836). Of these, after his celebrated romance, perhaps the most
-popular is _La Chaumière Indienne_ (“The Indian or Hindu Cottage”). His
-principal productions are _Etudes de la Nature_ (“Studies of Nature”),
-_Vœux d’un Solitaire_ (“Aspirations of a Recluse”), _Voyage à L’Ile
-de France_ (“Voyage to Mauritius”), and _L’Arcadie_ (“Arcadia”).
-His merits consist in a certain refinement of feeling, in charming
-eloquence in description of natural beauty, and in the humane spirit
-which breathes in his writings. Of the _Paul et Virginie_ he tells us--
-
- “I have proposed to myself great designs in that little work....
- I have desired to reunite to the beauty of Nature, as seen in the
- tropics, the moral beauty of a small society of human beings. I
- proposed to myself thereby to demonstrate several great truths;
- amongst others this--that our happiness consists in living
- according to Nature and Virtue.”
-
-He assures us that the principal characters and events he describes
-are by no means only the imaginings of romance. In truth, it seems
-difficult to believe that the genius of the author alone could have
-impressed so wonderful an air of reality upon merely fictitious scenes.
-The popularity of the story was secured at once in the author’s own
-country, and it rapidly spread throughout Europe. _Paul et Virginie_
-was successively translated into English, Italian, German, Dutch,
-Polish, Russian, and Spanish. It became the fashion for mothers to give
-to their children the names of its hero and heroine, and well would
-it have been had they also adopted for them that method of innocent
-living which is the real, if too generally unrecognised, secret of the
-fascinating power of the book.
-
-It is thus that he eloquently calls to remembrance the _natural_ feasts
-of his young heroine and hero:--
-
- “Amiable children! thus in innocence did you pass your first days.
- How often in this spot have your mothers, pressing you in their
- arms, thanked Heaven for the consolation you were preparing for
- them in their old age, and for the happiness of seeing you enter
- upon life under so happy auguries! How often, under the shadow
- of these rocks, have I shared, with them, your out-door repasts
- _which had cost no animals their lives_. Gourds full of milk, of
- newly-laid eggs, of rice cakes upon banana leaves, baskets laden
- with potatoes, with mangoes, with oranges, with pomegranates,
- with bananas, with dates, with ananas, offered at once the most
- wholesome meats, the most beautiful colours, and the most agreeable
- juices. The conversation was as refined and gentle as their food.”
-
-The humaneness of their manners had attracted to the charming arbour,
-which they had formed for themselves, all kinds of beautiful birds,
-who sought there their daily meals and the caresses of their human
-protectors. Our readers will not be displeased to be reminded of this
-charming scene:--
-
- “Virginie loved to repose upon the slope of this fountain, which
- was decorated with a pomp at once magnificent and wild. Often
- would she come there to wash the household linen beneath the shade
- of two cocoa-nut trees. Sometimes she led her goats to feed in this
- place; and, while she was preparing cheese from their milk, she
- pleased herself in watching them as they browsed the herbage upon
- the precipitous sides of the rocks, and supported themselves in
- mid-air upon one of the jutting points as upon a pedestal. Paul,
- seeing that this spot was loved by Virginie, brought from the
- neighbouring forest the nests of all sorts of birds. The fathers
- and mothers of these birds followed their little ones, and came
- and established themselves in this new colony. Virginie would
- distribute to them from time to time grains of rice, maize, and
- millet. As soon as she appeared, the blackbirds, the _bengalis_,
- whose flight is so gentle, the cardinals, whose plumage is of the
- colour of fire, quitted their bushes; parroquets, green as emerald,
- descended from the neighbouring lianas, partridges ran along under
- the grass--all advanced pell-mell up to her feet like domestic
- hens. Paul and she delighted themselves with their transports of
- joy, with their eager appetites, and with their loves.”
-
-In his views upon national education, St. Pierre invites the serious
-attention of legislators and educators to the importance of accustoming
-the young to the nourishment prescribed by Nature:--
-
- “They [the true instructors of the people] will accustom children
- to the vegetable _régime_. The peoples living upon vegetable foods,
- are, of all men, the handsomest, the most vigorous, the least
- exposed to diseases and to passions, and they whose lives last
- longest. Such, in Europe, are a large proportion of the Swiss. The
- greater part of the peasantry who, in every country, form the most
- vigorous portion of the people, eat very little flesh-meat. The
- Russians have multiplied periods of fasting and days of abstinence,
- from which even the soldiers are not exempt; and yet they resist
- all kinds of fatigues. The negroes, who undergo so many hard blows
- in our colonies, live upon manioc, potatoes, and maize alone. The
- Brahmins of India, who frequently reach the age of one hundred
- years, eat only vegetable foods. It was from the Pythagorean sect
- that issued Epaminondas, so celebrated by his virtues; Archytas,
- by his genius for mathematics and mechanics; Milo of Crotona, by
- his strength of body. Pythagoras himself was the finest man of his
- time, and, without dispute, the most enlightened, since he was the
- father of philosophy amongst the Greeks. Inasmuch as the non-flesh
- diet introduces many virtues and excludes none, it will be well to
- bring up the young upon it, since it has so happy an influence upon
- the beauty of the body and upon the tranquility of the mind. This
- regimen prolongs childhood, and, by consequence, human life.[193]
-
- “I have seen an instance of it in a young Englishman aged fifteen,
- and who did not appear to be twelve years of age. He was of a most
- interesting figure, of the most robust health, and of the most
- sweet disposition. He was accustomed to take very long walks. He
- was never put out of temper by any annoyance that might happen. His
- father, Mr. Pigott, told me that he had brought him up entirely
- upon the Pythagorean regimen, the good effects of which he had
- known by his own experience. He had formed the project of employing
- a part of his fortune, which was considerable, in establishing
- in English America a society of dietary reformers who should be
- engaged in educating, under the same regimen, the children of
- the colonists in all the arts which bear upon agriculture. Would
- that this educational scheme, worthy of the best and happiest
- times of Antiquity, might succeed! Physically, it suits a warlike
- people no less than an agricultural one. The Persian children, of
- the time of Cyrus, and by his orders, were nourished upon bread,
- water, and vegetables.... It was with these children, become men,
- that Cyrus made the conquest of Asia. I observe that Lycurgus
- introduced a great part of the physical and moral regimen of the
- Persian children into the education of those of the Lacedemonians.”
- (_Etudes._)[194]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of the many practical witnesses of this period, more or less
-interesting, for the sufficiency, or rather superiority, of the
-reformed regimen, four names stand out in prominent relief--Franklin,
-Howard, Swedenborg, Wesley--prominent either for scientific ability or
-for philanthropic zeal. To his early resolution to betake himself to
-frugal living, Benjamin Franklin, then in a printer’s office in Boston,
-attributes mainly his future success in life.[195]
-
-It was to his pure dietary that the great Prison Reformer assigns
-his immunity, during so many years, from the deadly jail-fever, to
-the infection of which he fearlessly exposed himself in visiting
-those hotbeds of _malaria_--the filthy prisons of this country and of
-continental Europe. (See the correspondence of John Howard--_passim_.)
-Equally significant is the testimony of the eminent founder of
-Methodism whose almost unexampled energy and endurance, both of mind
-and body, during some fifty years of continuous persecution, both legal
-and popular, were supported (as he informs us in his _Journals_) mainly
-by abstinence from gross foods; while, in regard to Emanuel Swedenborg,
-if abstinence does not assume so prominent a place in his theological
-or other various writings as might have been expected from his special
-opinions, the cause of such silence must be referred not to personal
-addiction to an _anti-spiritualistic_ nourishment (for he himself was
-notably frugal) but to preoccupation of mental faculties which seem to
-have been absorbed in the elaboration of his well-known spiritualistic
-system.
-
-The limits of this work do not permit us to quote all the many writers
-of the eighteenth century whom philosophy, science, or profounder
-feeling urged _incidentally_ to question the necessity or to suspect
-the barbarism of the Slaughter-House. But there are two names, amongst
-the highest in the whole range of English philosophic literature, whose
-expression of opinion may seem to be peculiarly noteworthy--the author
-of the _Wealth of Nations_ and the historian of the _Decline and Fall
-of the Roman Empire_.
-
- “It may, indeed, be doubted [writes the founder of the science of
- Political Economy] whether butchers’ meat is _anywhere_ a necessary
- of life. Grain and other vegetables, with the help of milk, cheese,
- and butter, or oil (where butter is not to be had), it is known
- from experience, can, _without any butchers’ meat, afford the most
- plentiful, the most wholesome, the most nourishing, and the most
- invigorating diet_.”[196]
-
-As for the reflections of the first of historians, who seems always
-carefully to guard himself from the expression of any sort of
-emotion not in keeping with the character of an impartial judge and
-unprejudiced spectator, but who, on the subject in question, cannot
-wholly repress the _natural_ feeling of disgust, they are sufficiently
-significant. Gibbon is describing the manners of the Tartar tribes:--
-
- “The thrones of Asia have been repeatedly overturned by the
- shepherds of the North, and their arms have spread terror and
- devastation over the most fertile and warlike countries of Europe.
- On this occasion, as well as on many others, the sober historian is
- forcibly awakened from a pleasing vision, and is compelled, with
- some reluctance, to confess that the pastoral manners, which have
- been adorned with the fairest attributes of peace and innocence,
- are much better adapted to the fierce and cruel habits of a
- military life.
-
- “To illustrate this observation, I shall now proceed to consider a
- nation of shepherds and of warriors in the three important articles
- of (1) their diet, (2) their habitations, and (3) their exercises.
- 1. The corn, or even the rice, which constitutes the ordinary
- and wholesome food of a civilised people, can be obtained only
- by the patient toil of the husbandman. Some of the happy savages
- who dwell between the tropics are plentifully nourished by the
- liberality of Nature; but in the climates of the North a nation
- of shepherds is reduced to their flocks and herds. The skilful
- practitioners of the medical art will determine (if they are able
- to determine) how far the temper of the human mind may be affected
- by the use of animal or of vegetable food; and whether the common
- association of carnivorous and cruel deserves to be considered
- in any other light than that of an innocent, perhaps a salutary,
- prejudice of humanity. Yet if it be true that the sentiment of
- compassion is imperceptibly weakened by the sight and practice of
- domestic cruelty, we may observe that _the horrid objects which
- are disguised by the arts of European refinement_ are exhibited in
- their naked and most disgusting simplicity in the tent of a Tartar
- shepherd. The Oxen or the Sheep are slaughtered by the same hand
- from which they were accustomed to receive their daily food, and
- the bleeding limbs are served, with very little preparation, on the
- table of their unfeeling murderers.”[197]
-
-To the poets, who claim to be the interpreters and priests of
-Nature, we might, with justness, look for celebration of the
-anti-materialist living. Unhappily we too generally look in vain.
-The prophet-poets--Hesiod, Kalidâsa, Milton, Thomson, Shelley,
-Lamartine--form a band more noble than numerous. Of those who, not
-having entered the very sanctuary of the temple of humanitarianism,
-have been content to officiate in its outer courts, Burns and Cowper
-occupy a prominent place. That the latter, who felt so keenly
-
- “The persecution and the pain
- That man inflicts on all inferior kinds
- Regardless of their plaints,”
-
-and who has denounced with so eloquent indignation the pitiless wars
-“waged with defenceless innocence,” and the protean shapes of human
-selfishness, should yet have stopped short of the _final_ cause of
-them all, would be inexplicable but for the blinding influence of
-habit and authority. Nevertheless, his picture of the savagery of
-the Slaughter-House, and of some of its associated cruelties, is too
-forcible to be omitted:
-
- “To make him sport,
- To justify the phrensy of his wrath,
- _Or his base gluttony_, are causes good
- And just, in his account, why bird and beast
- Should suffer torture, and the stream be dyed
- With blood of their inhabitants impaled.
- Earth groans beneath the burden of a war
- Waged with defenceless Innocence: while he,
- _Not satisfied to prey on all around,
- Adds tenfold bitterness to death by pangs
- Needless, and first torments ere he devours_.
- Now happiest they who occupy the scenes
- The most remote from his abhorred resort.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Witness at his feet
- The Spaniel dying for some venial fault,
- Under dissection of the knotted scourge:
- _Witness the patient Ox, with stripes and yells
- Driven to the slaughter, goaded as he runs
- To madness, while the savage at his heels
- Laughs at the frantic sufferer’s fury spent
- Upon the heedless passenger o’erthrown_.
- He, too, is witness--noblest of the train
- Who waits on Man--the flight-performing Horse:
- With unsuspecting readiness he takes
- His murderer on his back, and, pushed all day,
- With bleeding sides, and flanks that heave for life,
- To the far-distant goal arrives, and dies!
- So little mercy shows, who needs so much!
- Does Law--so jealous in the cause of Man[?]--
- Denounce no doom on the delinquent? None.”[198]
-
-
-
-
-XXXIII.
-
-OSWALD. 1730-1793.
-
-
-Amongst the less known prophets of the new Reformation the author
-of the _Cry of Nature_--one of the most eloquent appeals to justice
-and right feeling ever addressed to the conscience of men--deserves
-an honourable place. Of the facts of his life we have scanty record.
-He was a native of Edinburgh. At an early age he entered the English
-army as a private soldier, but his friends soon obtained for him
-an officer’s commission. He went to the East Indies, where he
-distinguished himself by his remarkable courage and ability. He did not
-long remain in the military life; and, having sold out, he travelled
-through Hindustan to inform himself of the principles of the Brahmin
-and Buddhist religions of the peninsula, whose dress as well as milder
-manners he assumed upon his return to England.
-
-During his stay in this country he uniformly abstained from all
-flesh meats, and so great, we are told, was his abhorrence of the
-Slaughter-House, that, to avoid it or the butcher’s shop, he was
-accustomed to make a long _détour_. His children were brought up in
-the same way. In 1790, like some others of the more enthusiastic
-class of his countrymen, he espoused the cause of the Revolution, and
-went to Paris. By introducing some useful military reforms he gained
-distinction amongst the Republicans, and he received an important post.
-He seems to have fallen, with his sons, fighting in La Vendée for the
-National Cause.
-
-The author, in his preface, tells us that--
-
- “Fatigued with answering the inquiries and replying to the
- objections of his friends with respect to the singularity of his
- mode of life, he conceived that he might consult his ease by
- making, once for all, a public apology for his opinions.... The
- author is very far from entertaining a presumption that his slender
- labours (crude and imperfect as they are now hurried to the press)
- will ever operate an effect on the public mind; and yet, when
- he considers the natural bias of the human heart to the side of
- mercy,[199] and observes, on all hands, the barbarous governments
- of Europe giving way to a better system of things, he is inclined
- to hope that the day is beginning to approach when the growing
- sentiment of peace and goodwill towards men will also embrace, in a
- wide circle of benevolence, the lower orders of life.
-
- “At all events, the pleasing persuasion that his work may have
- contributed to _mitigate_ the ferocities of prejudice, and to
- _diminish_, in some degree, the great mass of misery which
- oppresses the lower animal world, will, in the hour of distress,
- convey to the author’s soul a consolation which the tooth of
- calumny will not be able to empoison.”
-
-A noble and true inspiration nobly and eloquently used! The arguments,
-by which he attempts to reach the better feeling of his readers, are
-drawn from the deepest source of morality. Having given a beautiful
-picture of the tempting and alluring character of Fruits, he exclaims
-in his poetic-prose:--
-
- “But far other is the fate of animals. For, alas! when they are
- plucked from the tree of Life, suddenly the withered blossoms of
- their beauty shrink to the chilly hand of Death. Quenched in his
- cold grasp expires the lamp of their loveliness, and struck by
- the livid blast of loathed putrefaction, their comely limbs are
- involved in ghastly horror. Shall we leave the living herbs to
- seek, in the den of death, an obscene aliment? Insensible to the
- blooming beauties of Pomona--unallured by the fragrant odours that
- exhale from her groves of golden fruits--unmoved by the nectar of
- Nature, by the ambrosia of innocence--shall the voracious vultures
- of our impure appetites speed along those lovely scenes and alight
- in the loathsome sink of putrefaction to devour the remains of
- other creatures, to load with cadaverous rottenness a wretched
- stomach?”
-
-He repeats Porphyry’s appeal to the consideration of human interests
-themselves--
-
- “And is not the human race itself highly interested to prevent the
- habit of spilling blood? For, will the man, habituated to violence,
- be nice to distinguish the vital tide of a quadruped from that
- which flows from a creature with two legs? Are the dying struggles
- of a Lamb less affecting than the agonies of any animal whatever?
- Or, will the ruffian who beholds unmoved the supplicatory looks
- of innocence itself, and, reckless of the Calf’s infantine cries,
- pitilessly plunges in her quivering side the murdering knife, will
- he turn, I say, with horror from human assassination?
-
- ‘What more advance can mortals make in sin,
- So near perfection, who with blood begin?
- Deaf to the calf who lies beneath the knife,
- Looks up, and from the butcher begs her life.
- Deaf to the harmless kid who, ere he dies,
- All efforts to procure thy pity tries,
- And imitates, in vain, thy children’s cries.
- Where will he stop?’
-
- “From the practice of slaughtering an innocent animal of another
- species to the murder of man himself the steps are neither many nor
- remote. This our forefathers perfectly understood, who ordained
- that, in a cause of blood, no butcher should be permitted to sit in
- jury....
-
- “But from the nature of the very human heart arises the strongest
- argument in behalf of the persecuted beings. Within us there
- exists a rooted repugnance to the shedding of blood, a repugnance
- which yields only to Custom, and which even the most inveterate
- custom can seldom entirely overcome. Hence the ungracious task of
- shedding the tide of life (for the gluttony of the table) has, in
- every country, been committed to the lowest class of men, and their
- profession is, in every country, an object of abhorrence.
-
- “They feed on the carcass without remorse, because the dying
- struggles of the butchered victim are secluded from their
- sight--because his cries pierce not their ears--because his
- agonising shrieks sink not into their souls. But were they forced,
- with their own hands, to assassinate the beings whom they devour,
- who is there among us who would not throw down the knife with
- detestation, and, rather than embrue his hands in the murder of
- the lamb, consent for ever to forego the accustomed repast? What
- then shall we say? Vainly planted in our breast is this abhorrence
- of cruelty--this sympathetic affection for innocence? Or do
- the feelings of the heart point to the command of Nature more
- unerringly than all the elaborate subtlety of a set of men who, at
- the shrine of science, have sacrificed the dearest sentiments of
- humanity?”
-
-This eloquent vindicator of the rights of the oppressed of the
-non-human races here addresses a scathing rebuke to the torturers
-of the vivisection-halls, as well as to those who abuse Science by
-attempting to enlist it in the defence of slaughter.
-
- “You, the sons of modern science, who court not Wisdom in her
- walks of silent meditation in the grove--who behold her not in
- the living loveliness of her works, but expect to meet her in the
- midst of obscenity and corruption--you, who dig for knowledge in
- the depths of the dunghill, and who expect to discover Wisdom
- enthroned amid the fragments of mortality and the abhorrence of
- the senses--you, that with cruel violence interrogate trembling
- Nature, who plunge into her maternal bosom the butcher-knife, and,
- in quest of your nefarious science, delight to scrutinise the
- fibres of agonising beings, you dare also to violate the human
- form, and holding up the entrails of men, you exclaim, ‘Behold the
- bowels of a carnivorous animal!’ Barbarians! to these very bowels
- I appeal against your cruel dogmas--to these bowels which Nature
- hath sanctified to the sentiments of pity and of gratitude, to the
- yearnings of kindred, to the melting tenderness of love.
-
- ‘Mollissima corda
- Humano generi dare se Natura fatetur,
- Quæ _lachrymas_ dedit: hæc nostri pars optima sensus.’[200]
-
- “Had Nature intended man to be an animal of prey, would she have
- implanted in his breast an instinct so adverse to her purpose?...
- Would she not rather, in order to enable him to brave the piercing
- cries of anguish, have wrapped his ruthless heart in ribs of brass,
- and with iron entrails have armed him to grind, without shadow of
- remorse, the palpitating limbs of agonising life? But has Nature
- winged the feet of men with fleetness to overtake the flying prey?
- And where are his fangs to tear asunder the beings destined for
- his food? Does the lust of carnage glare in his eye-balls? Does he
- scent from afar the footsteps of his victim? Does his soul pant for
- the feast of blood? Is the bosom of men the rugged abode of bloody
- thoughts, and from the den of Death rush forth, at sight of other
- animals, his rapacious desires to slay, to mangle, and to devour?
-
- “But come, men of scientific subtlety, approach and examine with
- attention this dead body. It was late a playful Fawn, who skipping
- and bounding on the bosom of parent Earth, awoke in the soul of
- the feeling observer a thousand tender emotions. But the butcher’s
- knife has laid low the delight of a fond mother, and the darling
- of Nature is now stretched in gore upon the ground. Approach, I
- say, men of scientific subtlety, and tell me, does this ghastly
- spectacle whet your appetite? But why turn you with abhorrence?
- Do you then yield to the combined evidence of your senses, to
- the testimony of conscience and common sense; or with a show of
- rhetoric, pitiful as it is perverse, will you still persist in your
- endeavour to persuade us that to murder an innocent being is not
- cruel nor unjust, and that to feed upon a corpse is neither filthy
- nor unfitting?”
-
-Amid the dark scenes of barbarism and cold-blooded indifferentism
-to suffering innocence, there are yet the glimmers of a better
-nature, which need but the life-giving impulse of a true religion and
-philosophy:--
-
- “And yet those channels of sympathy for inferior animals, long--a
- very long--custom has not been able altogether to stifle. Even now,
- notwithstanding the narrow, joyless, and hard-hearted tendency of
- the prevailing superstitions; even now we discover, in every corner
- of the globe, some good-natured _prejudice_ in behalf of [certain
- of] the persecuted animals; we perceive, in every country, certain
- privileged animals, whom even the ruthless jaws of gluttony dare
- not to invade. For, to pass over unnoticed the vast empires of
- India and of China, where the lower orders of life are considered
- as relative parts of society, and are protected by the laws and
- religion of the natives,[201] the Tartars abstain from several
- kinds of animals; the Turks are charitable to the very dog, whom
- they abominate; and even the English peasant pays towards the
- _red-breast_ an inviolable respect to the rights of hospitality.
-
- “Long after the perverse practice of devouring the flesh of animals
- had grown into inveterate habit among peoples, there existed still
- in almost every country, and of every religion, and of every sect
- of philosophy, a wiser, a purer, and more holy class of men who
- preserved by their institutions, by their precepts, and by their
- example, the memory of primitive innocence [?] and simplicity. The
- Pythagoreans abhorred the slaughter of any animal life; Epicurus
- and the worthiest part of his disciples bounded their delights with
- the produce of their garden; and of the first Christians several
- sects abominated the feast of blood, and were satisfied with the
- food which Nature, unviolated, brings forth for our support....
-
- “Man, in a state of nature, is not, apparently, much superior to
- other animals. His organisation is, without doubt, extremely happy;
- but then the dexterity of his figure is counterpoised by great
- advantages in other beings. Inferior to the Bull in force, and in
- fleetness to the Dog, the _os sublime_, or erect front, a feature
- he bears in common with the Monkey, could scarcely have inspired
- him with those haughty and magnificent ideas which the pride of
- human refinement thence endeavours to deduce. Exposed, like his
- fellow-creatures, to the injuries of the air, urged to action by
- the same physical necessities, susceptible of the same impressions,
- actuated by the same passions, and equally subject to the pains of
- disease and to the pangs of dissolution, the simple savage never
- dreams that his nature was so much more noble, or that he drew his
- origin from a purer source or more remote than the other animals in
- whom he saw a resemblance so complete.
-
- “Nor were the simple sounds by which he expressed the singleness
- of his heart at all fitted to flatter him into that fond sense
- of superiority over the beings whom the unreasoning insolence of
- cultivated ages absurdly styles _mute_. I say absurdly styles
- _mute_; for with what propriety can that name be applied, for
- example, to the little sirens of the groves, to whom Nature has
- granted the strains of ravishment--the soul of song? Those charming
- warblers who pour forth, with a moving melody which human ingenuity
- vies with in vain, their loves, their anxiety, their woes. In
- the ardour and delicacy of his amorous expressions, can the most
- impassioned, the most respectful, human lover surpass the ‘glossy
- kind,’ as described by the most beautiful of all our poets?
-
- “And, indeed, has not Nature given to almost every being the same
- spontaneous signs of the various affections? Admire we not in other
- animals whatever is most eloquent in man--the tremor of desire, the
- tear of distress, the piercing cry of anguish, the pity-pleading
- look--expressions which speak to the soul with a feeling which
- words are feeble to convey?”
-
-The whole of the little book of which the above extracts are properly
-representative, breathes the spirit of a true religion. We shall only
-add that it exhibits almost as much learning and valuable research as
-it exhibits justness of thought and sensibility--enriched, as it is, by
-copious illustrative notes.[202]
-
-
-
-
-XXXIV.
-
-HUFELAND. 1762-1836.
-
-
-Not entitled to rank among the greater prophets who have had the
-penetration to recognise the _essential_ barbarism, no less than the
-unnaturalness, of Kreophagy (disguised, as it is, by the arts of
-civilisation), this most popular of all German physicians, with the
-Cornaros and Abernethys, may yet claim considerable merit as having, in
-some degree, sought to stem the tide of unnatural living, which, under
-less gross forms indeed than those of the darker ages of dietetics,
-and partially concealed in the refinements of Art, is more difficult
-to be resisted by reason of its very disguise. If the renaissance of
-Pythagorean dietetics had already dawned for the deeper thinkers,
-the age of science and of reason, as regards the mass of accredited
-teachers, was yet a long way off; and to all pioneers, even though they
-failed to clear the way entirely, some measure of our gratitude is due.
-
-Christian Wilhelm Hufeland is one of the most prolific of medical
-writers. Having studied medicine at Jena and at Gottingen he took the
-degree of doctor in 1783. At Jena he occupied a professorial chair
-(1793), and came to Berlin five years later, where he was entrusted
-with the superintendence of the Medical College. Both as practical
-physician and as professor, Hufeland attained a European reputation.
-The French Academy of Sciences elected him one of its members. His
-numerous writings have been often reprinted in Germany. Among the most
-useful are: (1) _Popular Dissertations upon Health_ (Leipsig, 1794);
-(2) _Makrobiotik: oder die Kunst das Menschliche Leben zu Verlängern_
-(Jena, 1796), a celebrated work which has been translated into all
-the languages of Europe[203]; (3) _Good Advice to Mothers upon the
-most Important Points of the Physical Education of Children in the
-First Years_ (Berlin, 1799); (4) _History of Health, and Physical
-Characteristics of our Epoch_ (Berlin, 1812)[204]. Of Hufeland’s
-witness to the general superiority of the _Naturgemässe Lebensweise_
-the following sentences are sufficiently representative:
-
- “The more man follows Nature and obeys her laws the longer will he
- live. The further he removes from them (_je weiter er von ihnen
- abweicht_) the shorter will be his duration of existence....
- Only inartificial, simple nourishment promotes health and long
- life, while mixed and rich foods but shorten our existence.... We
- frequently find a very advanced old age amongst men who from youth
- upwards have lived, for the most part, upon the vegetable diet,
- and, perhaps, have never tasted flesh.”[205]
-
-
-
-
-XXXV.
-
-RITSON. 1761-1830.
-
-
-Known to the world generally as an eminent antiquarian and, in
-particular, as one of the earliest and most acute investigators of
-the sources of English romantic poetry, for future times his best and
-enduring fame will rest upon his at present almost forgotten Moral
-Essay upon Abstinence--one of the most able and philosophical of the
-ethical expositions of anti-kreophagy ever published.
-
-His birthplace was Stockton in the county of Durham. By profession a
-conveyancer, he enjoyed leisure for literary pursuits by his income
-from an official appointment. During the twenty years from 1782 to 1802
-his time and talents were incessantly employed in the publication of
-his various works, antiquarian and critical. His first notable critique
-was his _Observations_ on Warton’s _History of English Poetry_, in the
-shape of a letter to the author (1782), in which his critical zeal
-seems to have been in excess of his literary amenity. Of other literary
-productions may be enumerated his _Remarks on the Commentators of
-Shakspere_; _A Select Collection of English Songs, with a Historical
-Essay on the Origin and Progress of National Songs_ (1783); _Ancient
-Songs from the Time of King Henry III. to the Revolution_ (1790),
-reprinted in 1829--perhaps the most valuable of his archæological
-labours; _The English Anthology_ (1793); _Ancient English Metrical
-Romances_, and _Bibliographia Poetica_, a catalogue of English poets
-from the 12th to the 16th century, inclusive, with short notices of
-their works. These are only some of the productions of his industry and
-genius.
-
-We give the origin of his adhesion to the Humanitarian Creed as
-recorded by himself in one of the chapters of his Essay, in which,
-also, he introduces the name of an ardent and well-known humanitarian
-reformer:--
-
- “Mr. Richard Phillips,[206] the publisher of this compilation, a
- vigorous, healthy, and well-looking man, has desisted from animal
- food for upwards of twenty years; and the compiler himself, induced
- to serious reflection by the perusal of Mandeville’s _Fable of the
- Bees_, in the year 1772, being the 19th year of his age, has ever
- since, to the revisal of these sheets [1802], firmly adhered to a
- milk and vegetable diet; having, at least, never tasted, during the
- whole course of those thirty years, any flesh, fowl, or fish, or
- anything, to his knowledge, prepared in or with those substances
- or any extract from them, unless, on one occasion, when tempted
- by wet, cold, and hunger in the south of Scotland, he ventured
- to eat a few potatoes dressed under roasted flesh, nothing less
- repugnant to his feelings being obtainable; or, except by ignorance
- or imposition, unless, it may be, in eating eggs, which, however,
- deprives no animal of life, although it may prevent some from
- coming into the world to be murdered and devoured by others.”[207]
-
-Ritson begins his Essay with a brief review of the opinions of some of
-the old Greek and Italian philosophers upon the origin and constitution
-of the world, and with a sketch of the position of man in Nature
-relatively to other animals. Amongst others he cites Rousseau’s Essay
-_Upon Inequality Amongst Men_. He then demonstrates the unnaturalness
-of flesh-eating by considerations derived from Physiology and Anatomy,
-and from the writings of various authorities; the fallacy of the
-prejudice that flesh-meats are necessary or conducive to strength of
-body, a fallacy manifest as well from the examples of whole nations
-living entirely, or almost entirely, upon non-flesh food, as from
-those of numerous individuals whose cases are detailed at length. He
-quotes Arbuthnot, Sir Hans Sloane, Cheyne, Adam Smith, Volney, Paley,
-and others. Next he insists upon the ferocity or coarseness of mind
-directly or indirectly engendered by the diet of blood:--
-
- “That the use of animal food disposes man to cruel and ferocious
- actions is a fact to which the experience of ages gives ample
- testimony. The Scythians, from drinking the blood of their cattle,
- proceeded to drink that of their enemies. The fierce and cruel
- disposition of the wild Arabs is supposed chiefly, if not solely,
- to arise from their feeding upon the flesh of camels: and as
- the gentle disposition of the natives of Hindustan is probably
- owing, in great degree, to temperance and abstinence from animal
- food, so the common use of this diet, with other nations, has, in
- the opinion of M. Pagès, intensified the natural tone of their
- passions; and he can account, he says, upon no other principle,
- for the strong, harsh features of the Mussulmen and the Christians
- compared with the mild traits and placid aspect of the Gentoos.
- ‘Vulgar and uninformed men,’ it is observed by Smellie, ‘when
- pampered with a variety of animal food, are much more choleric,
- fierce, and cruel in their tempers, than those who live chiefly
- upon vegetables.’ This affection is equally perceptible in other
- animals--‘An officer, in the Russian service, had a bear whom
- he fed with bread and oats, but never gave him flesh. A young
- hog, however, happening to stroll near his cell, the bear got
- hold of him and pulled him in; and, after he had once drawn
- blood and tasted flesh, he became unmanageable, attacking every
- person who came near him, so that the owner was obliged to kill
- him.’--[_Memoirs of P. H. Bruce._] It was not, says Porphyry,
- from those who lived on vegetables that robbers, or murderers, or
- tyrants have proceeded, but from flesh-eaters.[208] Prey being
- almost the sole object of quarrel amongst carnivorous animals,
- while the frugivorous live together in constant peace and harmony,
- it is evident that if men were of this latter kind, they would find
- it much more easy to subsist happily.”
-
- “The barbarous and unfeeling sports (as they are called) of the
- English--their horse-racing, hunting, shooting, bull and bear
- baiting, cock-fighting,[209] prize-fighting, and the like, all
- proceed from their immoderate addiction to animal food. Their
- natural temper is thereby corrupted, and they are in the habitual
- and hourly commission of crimes against nature, justice, and
- humanity, from which a feeling and reflective mind, unaccustomed
- to such a diet, would revolt, but in which they profess to take
- delight. The kings of England have from a remote period, been
- devoted to hunting; in which pursuit one of them, and the son
- of another lost his life. James I., according to Scaliger, was
- merciful, except at the chase, where he was cruel, and was very
- much enraged when he could not catch the Stag. ‘God,’ he used
- to say, ‘is enraged against me, so that I shall not have him.’
- Whenever he had caught his victim, he would put his arm all entire
- into his belly and entrails. This anecdote may be paralleled with
- the following of one of his successors: ‘The hunt on Tuesday last,
- (March 1st, 1784), commenced near Salthill, and afforded a chase
- of upwards of fifty miles. His Majesty was present at the death of
- the stag near Tring, in Herts. It is the first deer that has been
- ran to death for many months; and when opened, the heart strings
- were found to be quite rent, as is supposed, with the force of
- running.’[210] _Siste, vero, tandem carnifex!_ The slave trade,
- that abominable violation of the rights of Nature, is most probably
- owing to the same cause, as well as a variety of violent acts,
- both national and personal, which usually are attributed to other
- motives. In the sessions of Parliament, 1802, a majority of the
- members voted for the continuance of bull-baiting, and some of them
- had the confidence to plead in favour of it.”[211]
-
-Ritson enforces his observations upon this head by citing Plutarch,
-Cowper, and Pope (in the _Guardian, No. 61_--a most forcible
-and eloquent protest against the cruelties of “sport” and of
-gluttony).[212] In his fifth chapter he traces the origin of human
-sacrifices to the practice of flesh eating:--
-
- “Superstition is the mother of Ignorance and Barbarity. Priests
- began by persuading people of the existence of certain invisible
- beings, whom they pretended to be the creators of the world and
- the dispensers of good and evil; and of whose wills, in fine,
- they were the sole interpreters. Hence arose the necessity of
- sacrifices [ostensibly] to appease the wrath or to procure the
- favour of imaginary gods, but in reality to gratify the gluttonous
- and unnatural appetites of _real_ demons. Domestic animals were
- the first victims. These were immediately under the eye of the
- priest, and he was pleased with their taste. This satisfied for a
- time; but he had eaten of the same things so repeatedly, that his
- luxurious appetite called for variety. He had devoured the sheep,
- and he was now desirous of devouring the shepherd. The anger of
- the gods--testified by an opportune thunderstorm, was not to be
- assuaged but by a sacrifice of uncommon magnitude. The people
- tremble, and offer him their enemies, their slaves, their parents,
- their children, to obtain a clear sky on a summer’s day, or a
- bright moon by night. When, or upon what particular occasion, the
- first human being was made a sacrifice is unknown, nor is it of
- any consequence to enquire. Goats and bullocks had been offered up
- already, and the transition was easy from the ‘brute’ to the man.
- The practice, however, is of remote antiquity and universal extent,
- there being scarcely a country in the world in which it has not, at
- some time or other, prevailed.”
-
-He supports this probable thesis by reference to Porphyry, the most
-erudite of the later Greeks, who repeats the accounts of earlier
-writers upon this matter, and by a comparison of the religious rites
-of various nations, past and present. Equally natural and easy was the
-step from the use of non-human to that of human bodies:--
-
- “As human sacrifices were a natural effect of that superstitious
- cruelty which first produced the slaughter of other animals, so is
- it equally natural that those accustomed to eat the ‘brute’ should
- not long abstain from the man. More especially as, when roasted or
- broiled upon the altar, the appearance, savour, and taste of both,
- would be nearly, if not entirely the same. But, from whatever cause
- it may be deduced, nothing can be more certain than that the eating
- of human flesh has been a practice in many parts of the world from
- a very remote period, and is so, in some countries, at this day.
- That it is a consequence of the use of other animal food there can
- be no doubt, as it would be impossible to find an instance of it
- among people who were accustomed solely to a vegetable diet. The
- progress of cruelty is rapid. Habit renders it familiar, and hence
- it is deemed _natural_.
-
- “The man who, accustomed to live on roots and vegetables, first
- devoured the flesh of the smallest mammal, committed a greater
- violence to his own nature than the most beautiful and delicate
- woman, accustomed to other animal flesh, would feel in shedding
- the blood of her own species for sustenance; possessed as they are
- of exquisite feelings, a considerable degree of intelligence, and
- even, according to her own religious system, of a _living soul_.
- That this is a principle in the social disposition of mankind,
- is evident from the deliberate coolness with which seamen, when
- their ordinary provisions are exhausted, sit down to devour such
- of their comrades as chance or contrivance renders the victim of
- the moment; a fact of which there are but too many, and those too
- well-authenticated instances. Such a crime, which no necessity
- can justify, would never enter the mind of a starving Gentoo,
- nor, indeed, of anyone who had not been previously accustomed to
- other animal flesh. Even among the Bedouins, or wandering Arabs
- of the desert--according to the observation of the enlightened
- Volney--though they so often experience the extremity of hunger,
- the practice of devouring human flesh was never heard of.”
-
-In the two following chapters Ritson traces a large proportion of human
-diseases and suffering, physical and mental, to indulgence in unnatural
-living. He cites Drs. Buchan, Goldsmith, Cheyne, Stubbes (_Anatomy of
-Abuses_, 1583), and Sparrman the well-known pupil of Linné (_Voyages_).
-
-In his ninth chapter, he gives a copious catalogue of “nations and of
-individuals, past and contemporary, subsisting entirely upon vegetable
-foods”--not the least interesting part of his work. Some of the most
-eminent of the old Greek and Latin philosophers and historians are
-quoted, as well as various modern travellers, such as Volney and
-Sparrman. Especially valuable are the enquiries of Sir F. M. Eden
-(_State of the Poor_), who, in a comparison of the dietary of the
-poor, in different parts of these islands, proves that flesh has, or
-at all events _had_, scarcely any share in it--a fact which is still
-true of the agricultural districts, manifest not only by the commonest
-observation, but also by scientific and official enquiries of late
-years.
-
-Of individual cases, two of the most interesting are those of John
-Williamson of Moffat, the discoverer of the famous chalybeate spring,
-who lived almost to the age of one hundred years, having abstained
-from all flesh-food during the last fifty years of his life,[213] and
-of John Oswald, the author of _The Cry of Nature_. It is in this part
-of his work that Ritson narrates the history of his own conversion and
-dietetic experiences, and of his well-known publisher, Mr. R. Phillips.
-
-
-
-
-XXXVI.
-
-NICHOLSON. 1760-1825.
-
-
-Among the least known, but none the less among the most estimable,
-of the advocates of the rights of the oppressed species and the
-heralds of the dawn of a better day, the humble Yorkshire printer, who
-undertook the unpopular and unremunerative work of publishing to the
-world the sorrows and sufferings of the non-human races, claims our
-high respect and admiration. He has also another title (second only to
-his humanitarian merit) to the gratitude of posterity as having been
-the originator of cheap literature of the best class, and of the most
-instructive sort, which, alike by the price and form, was adapted for
-wide circulation.
-
-George Nicholson was born at Bradford. He early set up a printing
-press, and began the publication of his _Literary Miscellany_,
-“which is not, as the name might lead one to suppose, a magazine,
-but a series of choice anthologies, varied by some of the gems of
-English literature. The size is a small 18mo., scarcely too large for
-the waistcoat pocket. The printing was a beautiful specimen of the
-typographic art, and for the illustrations he sought the aid of the
-best artists. He was one of the patrons of Thomas Bewick, some of whose
-choicest work is to be found in the pamphlets issued by Nicholson.
-He also issued 125 cards, on which were printed favourite pieces,
-afterwards included in the _Literary Miscellany_. This ‘assemblage of
-classical beauties for the parlour, the closet, the carriage, or the
-shade,’ became very popular, and extended to twenty volumes. The plan
-of issuing them in separate numbers enabled individuals to make their
-own selection, and they are found bound up in every possible variety.
-Complete sets are now rare, and highly prized by collectors.”
-
-Of his many useful publications may be enumerated--_Stenography:
-The Mental Friend and Rational Companion, consisting of Maxims and
-Reflections relating to the Conduct of Life_. 12mo. _The Advocate and
-Friend of Woman._ 12mo. _Directions for the Improvement of the Mind._
-12mo. _Juvenile Preceptor._ Three vols., 12mo. The books which concern
-us now are--_On the Conduct of Man to Inferior Animals_ (Manchester,
-1797: this was adorned by a woodcut from the hand of Bewick). And his
-_magnum opus_, which appeared in the year 1801, under the title of
-_The Primeval Diet of Man: Arguments in Favour of Vegetable Food; with
-Remarks on Man’s Conduct to [other] Animals_ (Poughnill, near Ludlow).
-
-The value of _The Primeval Diet_ was enhanced by the addition, in a
-later issue, of a tract _On Food_ (1803), in which are given recipes
-for the preparation of “one hundred perfectly palatable and nutritious
-substances, which may easily be procured at an expense much below the
-price of the limbs of our fellow animals.... Some of the recipes, on
-account of their simple form, will not be adopted even by those in
-the middle rank of life. Yet they may be valuable to many of scanty
-incomes, who desire to avoid the evils of want, or to make a reserve
-for the purchasing of books and other mental pleasures.” He also
-published a tract _On Clothing_, which contains much sensible and
-practical advice on an important subject.
-
-Nicholson resided successively in Manchester, Poughnill, and Stourport,
-and died at the last-named place in the year 1825. “He possessed,” says
-a writer in _The Gentleman’s Magazine_ (xcv.), “in an eminent degree,
-strength of intellect, with universal benevolence and undeviating
-uprightness of conduct.” The learned bibliographer, to whom we are
-indebted for this brief notice, thus sums up the character of his
-labours: “In all his writings the purity and benevolence of his
-intentions are strikingly manifest. Each subject he took in hand was
-thought out in an independent manner, and without reference to current
-views or prejudices.”[214]
-
-In his brief preface the author thus expresses his sad conviction of
-the probable futility of his protests:--
-
- “The difficulties of removing deep-rooted prejudices, and the
- inefficiency of reason and argument, when opposed to habitual
- opinions established on general approbation, are fully apprehended.
- Hence the cause of humanity, however zealously pleaded, will
- not be materially promoted. Unflattered by the hope of exciting
- an impression on the public mind, the following compilation is
- dedicated to the sympathising and generous Few, whose opinions
- have not been founded on implicit belief and common acceptation:
- whose habits are not fixed by the influence of false and pernicious
- maxims or corrupt examples: who are neither deaf to the cries of
- misery, pitiless to suffering innocence, nor unmoved at recitals of
- violence, tyranny, and murder.”
-
-In the whole literature of humanitarianism, nothing can be more
-impressive for the sympathising reader than this putting on record
-by these nobler spirits their profound consciousness of the moral
-torpor of the world around them, and their sad conviction of the
-prematureness of their attempt to regenerate it. In both his principal
-works, he judiciously chooses, for the most part, the method of
-compilation, and of presenting in a concise and comprehensive form
-the opinions of his humane predecessors, of various minds and times,
-rather than the presentation of his own individual sentiments. He
-justly believed that the large majority of men are influenced more by
-the authority of great names than by arguments addressed simply to
-their conscience and reason. He intersperses, however, philosophic
-reflections of his own, whenever the occasion for them arises. Thus,
-under the head of “Remarks on Defences of Flesh-eating,” he well
-disposes of the common excuses:--
-
- “The reflecting reader will not expect a formal refutation of
- common-place objections, which _mean nothing_, as, ‘There would be
- more unhappiness and slaughter among animals did we not keep them
- under proper regulations and government. Where would they find
- pasture did we not manure and enclose the land for them? &c.’ The
- following objection, however, may deserve notice:--‘Animals must
- die, and is it not better for them to live a short time in plenty
- and ease, than be exposed to their enemies, and suffered in old
- age to drag on a miserable life?’ The lives of animals in _a state
- of nature_ are very rarely miserable, and it argues a barbarous
- and savage disposition to cut them _prematurely_ off in the midst
- of an agreeable and happy existence; especially when we reflect
- on the _motives_ which induce it. Instead of a friendly concern
- for promoting their happiness, your aim is the gratification of
- your own sensual appetites. How inconsistent is your conduct with
- the fundamental principle of pure morality and true goodness
- (which some of you ridiculously profess)--_whatsoever you would
- that others should do to you, do you even so to them_. No man
- would willingly become the food of other animals; he ought not
- therefore to prey on _them_. Men who consider themselves members
- of universal nature, and links in the great chain of Being, ought
- not to usurp power and tyranny over others, beings naturally free
- and independent, however such beings may be inferior in intellect
- or strength.... It is argued that ‘man has a permission, proved by
- the practice of mankind, to eat the flesh of other animals, and
- consequently to kill them; and as there are many animals which
- subsist wholly on the bodies of other animals, the practice is
- sanctioned among mankind.’ By reason of the at present very low
- state of morality of the human race, there are many evils which
- it is the duty and business of enlightened ages to eradicate. The
- various refinements of civil society, the numerous improvements in
- the arts and sciences, and the different reformations in the laws,
- policy, and government of nations, are proofs of this assertion.
- That mankind, in the present stage of _polished_ life, act in
- direct violation of the principles of justice, mercy, tenderness,
- sympathy, and humanity, in the practice of eating flesh, is
- obvious. To take away the life of any happy being, to commit
- acts of depredation and outrage, and to abandon every refined
- feeling and sensibility, is to degrade the human kind beneath its
- professed dignity of character; but to _devour_ or eat any animal
- is an additional violation of those principles, because it is the
- _extreme_ of brutal ferocity. Such is the conduct of the most
- savage of wild beasts, and of the most uncultivated and barbarous
- of our own species. Where is the person who, with calmness, can
- hear himself compared in disposition to a lion, a hyæna, a tiger or
- a wolf? And yet, how exactly similar is his disposition.
-
- “Mankind affect to revolt at murders, at the shedding of blood, and
- yet eagerly, and without remorse, feed on the corpse after it has
- undergone the culinary process. What mental blindness pervades the
- human race, when they do not perceive that every feast of blood
- is a _tacit encouragement_ and licence to the very crime their
- pretended delicacy abhors! I say _pretended_ delicacy, for that
- it is pretended is most evident. The profession of sensibility,
- humanity, &c., in such persons, therefore, is egregious folly. And
- yet there are respectable persons among everyone’s acquaintance,
- amiable in other dispositions, and advocates of what is commonly
- termed the cause of humanity, who are weak or prejudiced enough to
- be satisfied with such arguments, on which they ground apologies
- for their practice! Education, habit, prejudice, fashion, and
- interest, have blinded the eyes of men, and seared their hearts.
-
- “Opposers of compassion urge: ‘If we should live on vegetable food,
- what shall we do with our _cattle_? What would become of them? They
- would grow so numerous they would be prejudicial to us--they would
- eat us up if we did not kill and eat them.’ But there is abundance
- of animals in the world whom men do not kill and eat; and yet we
- hear not of their injuring mankind, and sufficient room is found
- for their abode. Horses are not usually killed to be eaten, and yet
- we have not heard of any country overstocked with them. The raven
- and redbreast are seldom killed, and yet they do not become too
- numerous. If a decrease of cows, sheep, and others were required,
- mankind would readily find means of reducing them. Cattle are at
- present an article of trade, and their numbers are _industriously_
- promoted. If cows are kept solely for the sake of milk, and if
- their young should become too numerous, let the evil be nipped in
- the bud. Scarcely suffer the innocent young to feel the pleasure
- of breathing. Let the least pain possible be inflicted; let its
- body be deposited entire in the ground, and let a sigh have vent
- for the calamitous necessity that induced the painful act....
- Self-preservation justifies a man in putting noxious animals to
- death, yet cannot warrant the least act of cruelty to any being.
- By suddenly despatching one when in extreme misery, we do a kind
- office, an office which reason approves, and which accords with our
- best and kindest feelings, but which (such is the force of custom)
- we are denied to show, though solicited, to our own species. When
- they can no longer enjoy happiness, they may perhaps be deprived
- of life. Do not suppose that in this reasoning an intention is
- included of _perverting_ nature. No! some animals are savage and
- unfeeling; but let not _their_ ferocity and brutality be the
- standard and pattern of the conduct of _man_. Because _some_ of
- them have no compassion, feeling, or reason, are _we_ to possess no
- compassion, feeling, or reason?”
-
-In another section of his book Nicholson undertakes to expose the
-inconsistencies of flesh-eaters, and the strange illogicalness of the
-position of many protestors against various forms of cruelty, who
-condone the greatest cruelty of all--the (necessary) savagery of the
-butchers:--
-
- “The inconsistencies of the conduct and opinions of mankind in
- general are evident and notorious; but when ingenious writers fall
- into the same glaring errors, our regret and surprise are justly
- and strongly excited. Annexed to the impressive remarks by Soame
- Jenyns, to be inserted hereafter, in examining the conduct of man
- to [other] animals, we meet with the following passage:--
-
- “‘God has been pleased to create numberless animals intended for
- our sustenance, and that they are so intended, the agreeable
- flavour of their flesh to our palates, and the wholesome nutriment
- which it administers to our stomachs, are sufficient proofs; these,
- as they are formed for our use, propagated by our culture, and fed
- by our care, we have certainly a right to deprive of life, because
- it is given and preserved to them on that _condition_.’
-
- “Now, it has already been argued that the bodies of animals are
- _not_ intended for the sustenance of man; and the decided opinions
- of several eminent medical writers and others sufficiently
- disprove assertions in favour of the wholesomeness of the flesh
- of animals. The _agreeable taste_ of food is not always a proof
- of its _nourishing_ or _wholesome_ properties. This truth is too
- frequently experienced in mistakes, ignorantly or accidentally
- made, particularly by children, in eating the fruit of the deadly
- nightshade, the taste of which resembles black currants, and is
- extremely inviting by the beauty of its colour and shape.[215]
-
- “That we have a right to make attacks on the existence of any being
- _because_ we have assisted and fed such being, is an assertion
- opposed to every established principle of justice and morality. A
- ‘condition’ cannot be made without the mutual consent of parties,
- and, therefore, what this writer terms ‘a condition,’ is nothing
- less than an unjust, arbitrary, and deceitful imposition. ‘Such is
- the deadly and stupifying influence of habit or custom,’ says Mr.
- Lawrence, ‘of so poisonous and brutalising a quality is prejudice,
- that men, perhaps no way inclined by nature to acts of barbarity,
- may yet live insensible of the constant commission of the most
- flagrant deeds.’ ... A cook-maid will weep at a tale of woe, while
- she is skinning a living eel; and the devotee will mock the Deity
- by asking a blessing on food supplied by murderous outrages against
- nature and religion! Even women of education, who readily weep
- while reading an affecting moral tale, will clear away clotted
- blood, still warm with departed life, cut the flesh, disjoint
- the bones, and tear out the intestines of an animal, without
- sensibility, without sympathy, without fear, without remorse.
- What is more common than to hear this _softer_ sex talk of, and
- assist in, the cookery of a deer, a hare, a lamb or a calf (those
- acknowledged emblems of innocence) with perfect composure? Thus
- the female character, by nature soft, delicate, and susceptible of
- tender impressions, is debased and sunk. It will be maintained that
- in other respects they still possess the characteristics of their
- sex, and are humane and sympathising. The inconsistency then is the
- more glaring. To be virtuous in some instances does not constitute
- the moral character, but to be uniformly so.”
-
-We can allow ourselves space only for one or two further quotations
-from this excellent writer. The remarks upon the common usage of
-language, by which it is vainly thought to conceal the true nature of
-the dishes served up upon the tables of the rich, are particularly
-noteworthy, because the inaccurate expression condemned is almost
-universal, and that even, from force of habit, amongst reformed
-dietists themselves:--
-
- “There is a natural horror at the shedding of blood, and some
- have an aversion to the practice of devouring the carcase of an
- innocent sufferer, which bad habits improper education, and silly
- prejudices have not overcome. This is proved by their affected and
- absurd refinement of calling the dead bodies of animals _meat_. If
- the meaning of words is to be regarded, this is a gross mistake;
- for the word _meat_ is a universal term, applying equally to all
- nutritive and palatable substances. If it be intended to express
- that all other kinds of food are comparatively not meat, the
- intention is ridiculous. The truth is that the proper expression,
- _flesh_, conveys ideas of murder and death. Neither can it easily
- be forgotten that, in grinding the body of a fellow animal,
- substances which constitute _human_ bodies are masticated. This
- reflection comes somewhat home, and is recurred to by eaters of
- flesh in spite of themselves, but recurred to _unwillingly_. They
- attempt, therefore, to pervert language in order to render it
- agreeable to the ear, as they disguise animal flesh by cookery in
- order to render it pleasing to the taste.”
-
-His reflections upon the essential injustice (to use no stronger term)
-of delegating the work of butchering to a particular class of men (to
-which frequent reference has already been made in these pages) are
-equally admirable:--
-
- “Among butchers, and those who qualify the different parts of an
- animal into food, it would be easy to select persons much further
- removed from those virtues which should result from reason,
- consciousness, sympathy, and animal sensations, than any savages
- on the face of the earth! In order to avoid all the generous and
- spontaneous sympathies of compassion, the office of shedding
- blood is committed to the hands of a set of men who have been
- educated in inhumanity, and whose sensibility has been blunted and
- destroyed by early habits of barbarity. Thus men _increase_ misery
- in order to avoid the sight of it, and because they cannot endure
- being obviously cruel themselves, or commit actions which strike
- painfully on their senses, they commission those to commit them who
- are formed to delight in cruelty, and to whom misery, torture, and
- shedding of blood is an amusement! They appear not once to reflect
- that _whatever we do by another we do ourselves_.”
-
- “When a large and gentle Ox, after having resisted a ten times
- greater force of blows than would have killed his murderers, falls
- stunned at last, and his armed head is fastened to the ground with
- cords; as soon as the wide wound is made, and the jugular veins
- are cut asunder, what mortal can, without horror and compassion,
- hear the painful bellowings, intercepted by his flow of blood,
- the bitter sighs that speak the sharpness of his anguish, and the
- deep-sounding groans with loud anxiety, fetched from the bottom of
- his strong and palpitating heart. Look on the trembling and violent
- convulsions of his limbs; see, whilst his reeking gore streams from
- him, his eyes become dim and languid, and behold his strugglings,
- gasps, and last efforts for life.
-
- “When a being has given such convincing and undeniable proofs of
- terror and of pain and agony, is there a disciple of Descartes
- so inured to blood, as not to refute, by his commiseration, the
- philosophy of that vain reasoner?”[216]
-
-In his previous essay, _On the Conduct of Men to Inferior Animals_,
-Nicholson has collected from various writers, both humane and
-inhumane, a fearful catalogue of atrocities of different kinds
-perpetrated upon his helpless dependants by the being who delights to
-boast himself (at least in civilised countries) to be made “in the
-image and likeness of God.” Among these the hellish tortures of the
-vivisectionists and “pathologists” hold, perhaps, the bad pre-eminence,
-but the cruel tortures of the Slaughter-House come very near to them in
-wanton atrocity.
-
-
-
-
-XXXVII.
-
-ABERNETHY. 1763-1831.
-
-
-Distinguished as a practical surgeon and as a physiologist, Abernethy
-has earned his lasting reputation as having been one of the first
-to attack the old prejudice of the profession as to the origin of
-diseases, and as having sought for such origin, not in mere local and
-accidental but, in general causes--in the constitution and habits of
-the body.
-
-A pupil of John Hunter, in 1786 he became assistant surgeon at St.
-Bartholomew’s Hospital, and shortly afterwards he lectured on anatomy
-and surgery at that institution, which to his ability and genius owes
-the fame which it acquired as a school of surgery. As a lecturer he
-had a reputation and popularity seldom or perhaps never before so well
-earned in the medical schools--founded, as they were, upon a rare
-penetration and logical method, united with clearness and perspicuity
-in communicating his convictions. In honesty, integrity, and in the
-domestic virtues his character was unimpeachable, but the gentleness
-of deportment for which he was noted in his home he was far from
-exhibiting in public and towards his patients. His roughness and even
-coarseness of manner in dealing with capricious valetudinarians,
-indeed, became notorious.
-
-_The Constitutional Origin and Treatment of Local Diseases_--his
-principal work--in comparison with the vast mass of medical literature
-up to that time put forth, stands out in favourable relief. In it two
-great principles are laid down--that “local diseases are symptoms of
-a disordered constitution, not primary and independent maladies, and
-that they are to be cured by remedies calculated to make a salutary
-impression on the _general frame_, not by local treatment, nor by
-any mere manipulations of surgery.” This single principle changed
-the aspect of the entire field of surgery, and elevated it from a
-manual art into the rank of a science. And to this first principle
-he added a second, the range of which is, perhaps, less extensive,
-but the practical importance of which is scarcely inferior to that of
-the first--namely, that “this disordered state of the constitution
-either originates from, or is rigorously allied with, derangement of
-the stomach and bowels, and that it can only be reached by remedies
-which first exercise a curative influence upon these organs.” It will
-not detract from the merit of Abernethy to add to this account that
-his predecessor, Dr. Cheyne, and his contemporary, Dr. Lambe, have
-most satisfactorily and radically carried out into practice these just
-principles; or to remark that great public reputations ought not to
-be allowed, as too often is the fact, to overwhelm less known but not
-therefore less meritorious labours.
-
-As to _dietetics_, the theory of Abernethy seems to have been better
-than his practice. When reproached with the inconsistency that the
-reformed diet which he so forcibly commended to others he himself
-failed to follow, he is related to have used the well-known simile of
-the sign-post with his usual readiness of repartee.
-
-It was while Dr. Lambe was at the Aldersgate Street Dispensary that
-Abernethy formed the acquaintance of that unostentatious but true
-reformer--an acquaintance which was destined to have no unimportant
-influence upon the medical theories of the great surgeon. Abernethy
-was at that time writing his _Observations on Tumours_, and he had
-intrusted to his friend one of his cancer patients to be treated by
-the non-flesh and distilled water regimen. He carefully watched the
-effects, and he has thus given us the results of his observations:--
-
- “There can be no subject which I think more likely to interest
- the mind of a surgeon than that of an endeavour to amend and
- alter the state of a cancerous constitution. The best timed and
- best conducted operation brings with it nothing but disgrace if
- the diseased propensities of the constitution are active and
- powerful. It is after an operation that, in my opinion, we are
- most particularly concerned to regulate the constitution, lest
- the disease should be revived or renewed by its disturbance. In
- addition to that attention, to tranquillise and invigorate the
- nervous system, and keep the digestive organs in as healthy a
- state as possible (which I have recommended in my first volume),
- I believe general experience sanctions the recommendation of a
- more vegetable because less stimulating diet, with the addition of
- so much milk, broth, and eggs, as seems necessary to prevent any
- declension of the patient’s strength.
-
- “Very recently Dr. Lambe has proposed a method of treating
- cancerous diseases, which is _wholly_ dietetic. He recommends
- the adoption of a strict vegetable regimen, to avoid the use of
- fermented liquors, and to substitute water purified by distillation
- in the place of common water as a beverage, and in all parts of
- diet in which common water is used, as tea, soups, &c. The grounds
- upon which he founds his opinion of the propriety of this advice,
- and the prospects of benefit which it holds out, may be seen in his
- _Reports on Cancer_, to which I refer my readers.
-
- “My own experience on the effects of this regimen is of course
- very limited. Nor does it authorise me to speak decidedly on the
- subject. But I think it right to observe that, in one case of
- cancerous ulceration in which it was used, the symptoms of the
- disease were, in my opinion, rendered more mild, the erysipelatous
- inflammation surrounding the ulcer was removed, and the life
- of the patient was, in my judgment, considerably prolonged. The
- more minute details of the facts constitute the sixth case of Dr.
- Lambe’s _Reports_. It seems to me very proper and desirable that
- the powers of the regimen recommended by Dr. Lambe should be fairly
- tried, for the following reasons:--
-
- “Because I know some persons who, whilst confined to such diet,
- have enjoyed very good health; and further, I have known several
- persons, who did try the effects of such a regimen, declare that
- it was productive of considerable benefit. They were not, indeed,
- afflicted with cancer, but they were induced to adopt a change of
- diet to allay a state of nervous irritation and correct disorder of
- the digestive organs, upon which medicine had but little influence.
-
- “Because _it appears certain, in general, that the body can be
- perfectly nourished by vegetables_.
-
- “Because all great changes of the constitution are more likely
- to be effected _by alterations of diet and modes of life than by
- medicine_.
-
- “Because it holds out a source of hope and consolation to the
- patient in a disease in which medicine is known to be unavailing,
- and in which surgery affords no more than a temporary relief.”[217]
-
-“The above opinion of Mr. Abernethy,” remarks an experienced authority
-upon the subject, “is most valuable, for he watched the case for three
-and a half years under Dr. Lambe’s regimen, which is directly opposed
-to the system of diet which he had advocated, before he met Dr. Lambe,
-in the first volume of his work on _Constitutional Diseases_, and from
-his rough honesty there is no doubt that had Dr. Abernethy lived to
-publish a second edition he would have corrected his mistake.” As it
-is, the candour by which so distinguished an authority was impelled to
-alter or modify opinions already put forth to the world, claims our
-respect as much as the too general want of it deserves censure.
-
-
-
-
-XXXVIII.
-
-LAMBE. 1765-1847.
-
-
-One of the most distinguished of the hygeistic and scientific promoters
-of the reformed regimen, Dr. Lambe, occupies an eminent position in
-the medical literature of vegetarianism, and he divides with his
-predecessor, Dr. Cheyne, the honour of being the founder of scientific
-_dietetics_ in this country.
-
-His family had been settled some two hundred years in the county of
-Hereford, in which they possessed an estate that descended to Dr.
-William Lambe, and is now held by his grandson. He early gave promise
-of his future mental eminence. Head boy of the Hereford Grammar School,
-he proceeded, in due course, to St. John’s College, Cambridge. In
-1786, being then in the twenty-first year of his age, he graduated
-as fourth wrangler of his year. As a matter of course, he soon was
-elected a Fellow of his college, where he continued to reside until his
-marriage in 1794. During this period of learned leisure he devoted his
-time to the study of medicine, and the MS. notes in the possession of
-his biographer, Mr. Hare, “prove the diligence with which he studied
-his profession, and there we see the origin of his enlarged views
-of the causes of disease, so much insisted on by these fathers of
-medicine, and so much neglected by modern physicians in their search
-for chemical remedies.” After his marriage he went to reside and
-practise in Warwick, where he was the intimate friend of Parr, the
-well-known Greek critic, and of Walter Savage Landor, who writes of him
-as “very communicative and good humoured. I had enough talk with Lambe
-to assure myself that he is no ordinary man.” It was to the discoveries
-of Dr. Lambe, and to his publications reporting the curative value of
-its mineral waters, that Leamington owed its fame and popularity; and
-Dr. Jefferson, in his address to the British Medical Association a few
-years ago, thus eulogises him:--
-
- “It was not until the end of the last century that any really
- scientific research ever was recorded on this subject [impure
- water]. About this period Dr. Lambe was engaged in practice in
- Warwick. Somewhat eccentric in some of his practical views, Dr.
- Lambe was not the less a scientific man, an intelligent observer
- of nature, and an accomplished physician, and was, moreover,
- one of the most elegant medical writers of his day. The springs
- of the neighbouring village of Leamington did not escape his
- observation, and, having carefully studied and analysed the waters,
- he published an account of them, in 1797, in the fifth volume of
- the _Transactions of the Philosophical Society of Manchester_,
- a society embracing the respected names of Priestley, Dalton,
- Watt, and others, and not inferior, perhaps, to any contemporary
- association in Europe.”
-
-Like many other seceders from orthodox dietetics both before and after
-him, Dr. Lambe found himself impelled to experiment in the non-flesh
-diet by ill-health. His bodily disorders, indeed, were so complicated
-and of such a nature, as to excite astonishment that not only he
-greatly mitigated their violence, but that also he survived to an
-advanced age. In an exceedingly minute and conscientious narrative of
-his own case in his _Additional Reports_ (writing in the third person),
-he informs us, that having during several years--from his eighteenth
-year--suffered greatly and with constantly aggravated symptoms:--
-
- “He resolved, therefore, finally to execute what he had been
- contemplating for some time--to abandon animal food altogether,
- and everything analogous to it, and to confine himself wholly to
- vegetable food. This determination he put in execution the second
- week of February, 1806, and he has adhered to it with perfect
- regularity to the present time. His only subject of repentance with
- regard to it has been that it had not been adopted much earlier in
- life. He never found the smallest real ill-consequence from this
- change. He sank neither in strength, flesh, nor in spirits. He
- was at all times of a very thin and slender habit, and so he has
- continued to be, but upon the whole he has rather gained than lost
- flesh. He has experienced neither indigestion nor flatulence even
- from the sort of vegetables which are commonly thought to produce
- flatulence, nor has the stomach suffered from any vegetable matter,
- though unchanged by culinary art or uncorrected by condiments. The
- only unpleasant consequence of the change was a sense of emptiness
- of stomach, which continued many months. In about a year, however,
- he became fully reconciled to the new habit, and felt as well
- satisfied with his vegetable meal as he had been formerly with his
- dinner of flesh. He can truly say that since he has acted upon
- this resolution no year has passed in which he has not enjoyed
- better health than in that which preceded it. But he has found
- that the changes introduced into the body by a vegetable regimen
- take place with extreme slowness; that it is in vain to expect
- any _considerable_ amendment in successive weeks or in successive
- months. We are to look rather to the intervals of _half-years or
- years_.”
-
-With extreme candour as well as carefulness, this patient and
-philosophic experimentalist details every particular circumstance of
-his own _diagnosis_. After a minute report of the various symptoms of
-his maladies and his gradual subjugation of them, he deduces the only
-just inference:--
-
- “Granting this representation of facts to be correct, and the
- nature of this case to, be truly determined, I must be permitted
- to ask, What other method than that which has been adopted would
- have produced the same benefit? If such methods exist, I confess
- my ignorance of them.... But though these pains [in the head]
- still recur in a trifling degree, the relief given to the brain in
- general has been decided and most essential. It has appeared in
- an increased sensibility of all the organs, particularly of the
- senses--the touch, the taste, and the sight, in greater muscular
- activity, in greater freedom and strength of respiration, greater
- freedom of all the secretions, and in increased intellectual power.
- It has been extended to the night as much as to the day. The sleep
- is more tranquil, less disturbed by dreams, and more refreshing.
- Less sleep, upon the whole, appears to be required; but the loss
- of quantity is more than compensated by its being sound and
- uninterrupted....
-
- “The hypochondriacal symptoms continued to be occasionally very
- oppressive during the second year, particularly during the earlier
- part of it, but they afterwards very sensibly declined, and at
- present he enjoys more uniform and regular spirits than he had
- done for many years upon the mixed diet. From the whole of these
- facts it follows that all the organs, and indeed every fibre of
- the body, are simultaneously affected by the matters habitually
- conveyed into the stomach, and that it is the incongruity of these
- matters to the system, which gradually forms that morbid diathesis,
- which exists alike both in apparent health and in disease. I might
- illustrate this fact still more minutely by observations on the
- teeth, on the hair, and on the skin. I might show that by a steady
- attention to regimen, the skin of the palm of the hand becomes of a
- firmer and stronger texture, that even an excrescence which had for
- twenty years and upwards been growing more fixed, firm, and deep,
- had, first, its habitudes altered, and, finally, was softened and
- disappeared. But, perhaps, enough has been said already to give
- a pretty clear idea both of the kind of change introduced into
- the habit by diet, and of the extent to which it may be carried.
- I proceed, therefore, to relate some new phenomena which took
- place during the course of this regimen, which are both curious in
- themselves and lead to important conclusions.”
-
-The author then goes on to record further gradual diminution of painful
-symptoms. From long and careful observation of himself, amongst other
-important deductions, Dr. Lambe infers that:--
-
- “We may conclude that it is the property of this regimen, and, in
- particular, of the vegetable diet, to transfer diseased action from
- the _viscera_ to the exterior parts of the body--from the central
- parts of the system to the periphery. Vegetable diet has often been
- charged with causing cutaneous diseases; in common language, they
- are, in these cases, said to proceed from poorness of blood.[218]
- In some degree the charge is probably just, and the observation I
- have already made may give us some insight into the causes of it.
- But this charge, instead of being a just cause of reproach, is
- _a proof of the superior salubrity of vegetable diet_. Cutaneous
- eruptions appear, because disease is translated from the internal
- organs to the skin.”
-
-For all brain disease abandonment of the gross and stimulating
-flesh-meats is shown to be of the first importance. At the same time,
-that it involves any loss of actual bodily strength is a fallacy:--
-
- “We see, then, how ill-founded is the notion that inaction and
- loss of power are induced by a vegetable diet. In fact, all the
- observations that have been made have shewn the very reverse to be
- the truth. Symptoms of plenitude and oppression have continued in
- considerable force for at least five years; and the consequence of
- this peculiar regimen has been an increase of strength and power,
- and not a diminution. In the subject of this case the pulse, which
- may be deemed, perhaps, the best idea of the condition of all the
- other functions, is at present much more strong and full than under
- the use of animal food. It is also perfectly calm and regular.”
-
-His personal experience of satisfaction derivable from vegetables
-and fruits as affording, for the most part, sufficient liquids in
-themselves, without use of extraneous drinks, is of importance:--
-
- “He had, when living on the common diet, been habitually thirsty,
- and, like most persons inclined to studious and sedentary habits,
- was much attached to tea-drinking. But for the last two or three
- years he has almost wholly relinquished the use of liquids, and by
- the substitution of fruit and recent vegetables he has found that
- the sensation of thirst has been in a manner abolished. Even tea
- has lost its charms, and he very rarely uses it. He is therefore
- certain, from his own experience, that the habit of employing
- liquids is an artificial habit, and not necessary to any of the
- functions of the animal economy.”
-
-Whatever may be thought of the theory of the possibility of entire
-abstinence from all _extraneous_ liquids, there is not the least doubt
-that a judicious use of vegetable foods reduces to a _minimum_ the
-feeling of thirst and craving for artificial drinks, an experience, we
-imagine, almost universal with abstinents from flesh-dishes.
-
-Dr. Lambe concludes the first part of his valuable _diagnosis_ with
-the assurance, “that if those for whose service these labours are
-principally designed, I mean persons suffering under habitual and
-chronic illness, are able to go along with me in my argument to form a
-general correct notion of what they are to expect from [a reformed]
-regimen, and, above all, to arm their minds with firmness, patience,
-and perseverance, I shall not readily be induced to think that I have
-written one superfluous line.”[219]
-
-In 1805, at the age of forty, we find him established in practice in
-London. Five years later he was physician to the General Dispensary,
-Aldersgate Street. He was also elected Fellow and Censor of the College
-of Physicians, whose meetings he regularly attended. His peculiar
-opinions did not tend to secure popularity for him, and the adhesion
-of such men as Dr. Abernethy, Dr. Pitcairn, Lord Erskine, and of
-Mr. Brotherton, M.P. (one of the earliest members of the Vegetarian
-Society), served only to make the indifference of the mass of the
-community more conspicuous.
-
-Not the least interesting fact in his life is his share in the
-conversion of Shelley, and his friendship with J. F. Newton and his
-interesting family, at whose house these earlier pioneers of the New
-Reformation were accustomed to meet, and celebrate their charming
-_réunions_ with vegetarian feasts. A cardinal part of the dietetic
-system of Dr. Lambe was his insistance upon the use of _distilled_
-water. In his _Reports on Regimen_ he writes of the Newton family: “I
-am well acquainted with a family of young children who have scarcely
-ever touched animal food, and who now for three years have drunk only
-distilled water. For clearness and beauty of complexion, muscular
-strength, fulness of habit free from grossness, hardiness, healthiness,
-and ripeness of intellect these children are unparalleled.”[220]
-
-We have already mentioned Lord Erskine as one of the many eminent
-friends of Dr. Lambe. That more humane and distinguished lawyer, in
-a letter to his friend acknowledging the receipt of the _Reports_,
-writes as follows: “I am of opinion that both this work and the other
-referred to in it are deserving of the highest consideration. I read
-them both with more interest and attention from the abuse of the
-_British Critic_ [one of the periodicals of the day] mentioned in the
-preface, as no periodical criticism ever published in this country is
-so uniformly unjust, ignorant, and impudent.” Dr. Abernethy’s testimony
-to the efficacy of abstinence in cases of cancer will be found in
-the notice of that eminent practitioner. Amongst the most interesting
-correspondence of his later years is his interchange of ideas with
-Sylvester Graham--the first of the American prophets of the reformed
-regimen. The letter to the celebrated American vegetarian is, as Dr.
-Lambe’s latest biographer justly observes, “a most valuable relic,
-because it continues the result of Dr. Lambe’s diet up to September,
-1837--twenty-three years after the last notice of his health in the
-account of his own case, which he published in November, 1814. It is,
-besides, an admirable proof of his truthful and philosophic mind, which
-was slow to arrive at conclusions, and willing rather to exaggerate
-than otherwise the traces of disease which he still felt.” He proves,
-also, in this letter, how slow and yet sure are the effects of diet,
-and it supplies an answer to those objectors who complain that they
-have tried the diet (perhaps for a few weeks only) without any good
-result. After complimenting his transatlantic fellow-worker in the
-cause of truth upon his zeal and industry, Dr. Lambe proceeds:--
-
- “My book, entitled _Additional Reports on Regimen_, has now been
- before the world three and twenty years. That it has attracted
- little notice, and still less popular favour--though it may have
- excited in the writer some mortification--has not occasioned
- much surprise. The doctrine it seeks to establish is in direct
- opposition to popular and deep-rooted prejudice. It is thought
- (most erroneously) to attack the best enjoyments and most solid
- comforts of life; and, moreover, it has excited the bitter
- hostility of a numerous and influential body in society--I mean
- that body of medical practitioners who exercise their profession
- for the sake of its profits merely, and who appear to think that
- disease was made for the profession and not the profession for
- disease.
-
- “To drop, however, all idle complaints of public neglect, let
- us go to the more useful inquiry whether or not the principles
- propounded in these _Reports_ have been confirmed by subsequent and
- more extensive experience. To this inquiry I answer directly and
- fearlessly, that in the interval between the present time and the
- year 1815 (the date of that publication) the practice recommended
- has succeeded in cases very numerous and of extreme variety, and
- I can promise the practitioner who will try it fairly and judge
- with candour that he will experience no disappointment. I say,
- _let him try it fairly_. I do not assert that it will succeed
- in cases where the powers of life are sunk, in confirmed hectic
- fever, in ulcerated cancer, in established chronic disease, or in
- the decrepitude of old age. I may have attempted the relief of
- such cases in an early stage of my experiments, but experience
- speedily demonstrated the hopelessness of such attempts. But let
- subjects be taken not far advanced in life, let them be _tabid_
- children (for example) with tumid abdomen, swelled joints, and
- depraved appetites, or with obstinate cutaneous diseases, erythema,
- _scabus_, rickets, epileptic convulsions (not grown habitual by
- long continuance). But a practitioner in moderate practice will
- find no difficulty in selecting proper subjects, if he is himself
- actuated by a regard to humanity united to principles of honour.
-
- “Moreover, let not the patient, particularly if arrived at
- mature age, expect to receive a perfect cure. In many cases the
- consequences are rather preventive than curative. This I hold to
- be no objection. It is enough, surely, if a disease which, from
- its nature, might be expected to be continually on the increase,
- is obviously checked in its progress, if the symptoms become more
- and more mild, and if a human being is preserved in comfortable
- existence who would otherwise have been consigned to the grave.”
-
-He devoted his great medical knowledge and experience particularly to
-the cure or mitigation of cancer. In the letter, from which we have
-already quoted, he informs his correspondent of this interesting fact:--
-
- “My most ardent wish was to attempt the relief of cases of cancer.
- This object I have steadily pursued (from the year 1803) to the
- present day. The case--the particulars of which I briefly mentioned
- to you in my former communication--has hitherto succeeded so
- perfectly that I should myself suspect an error in the _diagnosis_,
- if it were not for the strongly-marked constitutional symptoms,
- which are such as, in my mind, put it out of doubt. There does not
- now remain what I expected, and what I have called a _nucleus_,
- for the resolution is _complete_. Now, this is contrary to most
- of my former observations, and would furnish, as I have said,
- some ground of suspicion. But still it is not wholly unsupported
- by corroborative facts. I have observed, particularly in one
- case, that the whole extreme edge of a schirrous tumour has
- been restored, whilst the portion has remained unchanged; not,
- indeed, speedily as in the former case, but after having used the
- diet for a very considerable time. Now, if a portion of a true
- schirrous tumour can be resolved, there can be no reason why a
- resolution of the whole--taken very early and under favourable
- circumstances--shall be deemed impossible. The truth is, that at
- present we are not advanced enough to form general conclusions, but
- ought to content ourselves with _accumulating_ facts for the use of
- our successors.”
-
-If the experience of the benefits of a reasonable living in the cases
-of his patients was thus satisfactory, he himself afforded, in his own
-person, perhaps the best testimony to its revivifying and invigorating
-qualities. One of his visitors gives his impressions of the now famous
-_doctor_ (a title, in the present instance, of real meaning) as follow:
-“Agreeably to your request, I submit to your perusal a short account of
-the friendly interview I had with Dr. Lambe in London. I first called
-on him in February. I found him to be very gentlemanly in manners and
-venerable in appearance. He is rather taller than the middle height.
-His hair is perfectly white, for he is now seventy-two years of age.
-He told me he had been on the vegetable diet thirty-one years, and
-that his health was better now than at forty, when he commenced his
-present system of living. He considers himself as likely to live
-thirty years longer as to have lived to his present age.... Although
-he is seventy-two years of age he walks into town, a distance of three
-miles from his residence, every morning, and back at night. Dr. Lambe,
-I am told, has spent large sums of money in making experiments and
-publishing their results to the world.” In his earlier life he had
-been conspicuously thin and attenuated. In later years he seems to
-have acquired even a certain amount of robustness, and he is described
-as being active and strong at an advanced age. Some instances of
-extraordinary energy and endurance have been put on record by his
-family; and his feats of pedestrianism, when he was verging on his
-eightieth year, are, we imagine, rarely to be paralleled.
-
-His hope of attaining the age of one hundred years, unhappily, was
-not to be fulfilled. “Our bodies,” his biographer justly remarks,
-“are but machines adapted to perform a definite amount of work, and
-Dr. Lambe’s originally weak constitution had been severely tried by
-sickness and wrong diet during the first forty years of his life. At
-the age of eighty his strength began to fail, but his grandson writes,
-‘up to a very short time before his death there were no outward signs
-of ill-health, only the marks of old age.’”[221] Existence had its
-enjoyment for him up to almost the last days, and his intellectual
-powers remained to the end. He calmly expired in his eighty-third year.
-
-Of contemporary and posthumous eulogies of his personal, as well as
-scientific, worth, the following may suffice: “A man of learning, a
-man of science, a man of genius, a man of distinguished integrity
-and honour.” Such is the testimony of his friend Dr. Parr, as quoted
-by Samuel Johnson. In the Anniversary Harveian Oration before the
-College of Physicians, by Dr. Francis Hawkins, in the year 1848, the
-representative of the Faculty thus recalls his memory: “Nor can I pass
-over in silence the loss we have sustained in Dr. William Lambe--an
-excellent chemist, a learned man, and a skilful physician. His manners
-were simple, unreserved, and most modest. His life was pure. Farewell,
-therefore, gentle spirit, than whom no one more pure and innocent has
-passed away!”
-
-
-
-
-XXXIX.
-
-NEWTON. 1770-1825.
-
-
-John Frank Newton, the friend and associate of Dr. Lambe, Shelley,
-and the little band who met at the house of the former to share his
-vegetarian repasts, appears to have been one of the earliest converts
-of Dr. Lambe, to whom he dedicated his _Return to Nature_, in gratitude
-for the recovery of his health through the adoption of the reformed
-regimen.
-
-He published his little work, as he informs us in his preface, to
-impart to others the benefits which he himself had experienced; and
-especially to make known to the heads of households the fact that his
-whole family of himself, wife, and four children under nine years of
-age, with their nurse, had been living, at the date of his publication,
-for two years upon a non-flesh diet, during which time the apothecary’s
-bill, he tells us, had amounted to the sum of sixpence; and that charge
-had been incurred by himself.
-
-The ever-memorable meetings of the reformers at the house of Newton,
-where Shelley was a constant guest, have been thus recorded by one of
-the biographers of the great poet:--“Shelley was intimate with the
-Newton family, and was converted by them in 1813, and he began then a
-strict vegetable diet. His intimate association with the amiable and
-accomplished votaries of a _Return to Nature_ was perhaps the most
-pleasing portion of his poetical, philosophical, and lovely life....
-For some years I was in the thick of it; for I lived much with a
-select and most estimable society of persons (the Newtons), who had
-‘returned to Nature,’ and I heard much discussion on the topic of
-vegetable diet. Certainly their vegetable dinners were delightful,
-elegant, and excellent repasts; flesh, fowl, fish, and ‘game’ never
-appeared--nor eggs nor butter _bodily_, but the two latter were
-admitted into cookery, but as sparingly as possible, and under protest,
-as not approved of and soon to be dispensed with. We had soups in great
-variety, that seemed the more delicate from the absence of flesh-meat.
-
-“There were vegetables of every kind, plainly stewed or scientifically
-disguised. Puddings, tarts, confections and sweets abounded. Cheese
-was excluded. Milk and cream might not be taken unreservedly, but they
-were allowed in puddings, and sparingly in tea. Fruits of every kind
-were welcomed. We luxuriated in tea and coffee, and sought variety
-occasionally in cocoa and chocolate. Bread and butter, and buttered
-toast were eschewed; but bread, cakes, and plain seed-cakes were
-liberally divided among the faithful.”[222]
-
-The cause of the publication of his book Newton thus states:--
-
- “Having for many years been an habitual invalid, and having at
- length found that relief from regimen which I had long and vainly
- hoped for from drugs, I am anxious, from sympathy with those
- afflicted, to impart to others the knowledge of the benefit I have
- experienced, and to dispel, as far as in me lies, the prejudices
- under which I conceive mankind to labour on points so nearly
- connected with their health and happiness.
-
- “The particulars of my case I have already related at the
- concluding pages of Dr. Lambe’s _Reports on Cancer_. To the account
- there given I have little to add, but that, by continuing to
- confine myself to the regimen advised in that work, I continue to
- experience the same benefit; that the winter which has just elapsed
- has been passed much more comfortably than that which preceded it,
- and that, if my habitual disorder is not completely eradicated, it
- is so much subdued as to give but little inconvenience; that I have
- suffered but a single day’s confinement for several months; and,
- upon the whole, that I enjoy an existence which many might envy who
- consider themselves to be in full possession of the blessings of
- health.
-
- “All that I have to regret in my present undertaking is the
- imperfect way in which it is executed. The adepts in medicine
- have gained their knowledge originally from the experience of the
- sick. I have taken my own sensations for my guide, and am myself
- alone responsible for the conclusions which I have drawn from
- them, the manuscript of this volume having been neither corrected
- nor looked over by any individual. While I make no pretensions to
- medical science, I cannot consent to be reasoned or ridiculed out
- of my feelings; nor to believe that to be an illusion, the truth
- of which has been confirmed to me by long-continued and repeated
- observation.”
-
-The use of distilled water was a cardinal article in the dietary creed
-of his friend Dr. Lambe, and upon this point Newton particularly
-insists. He appeals with much fervour, as we have just stated, to
-parents to have recourse to the natural means of prevention and
-cure, in place of vainly trying every available _artificial_ method
-by medicine and drugs. He instances, with minute particularity, the
-regimen of his children, whom he asserts to have been, up to the moment
-of his writing, perfectly free from any sort of malady or disorder, and
-to be--
-
- “So remarkably healthy that several medical men who have seen
- and examined them with a scrutinizing eye, all agreed in the
- observation that they knew nowhere a whole family which equals
- them in robustness. Should the success of this experiment, now of
- three years’ standing, proceed as it has begun, there is little
- doubt, [he ventures to flatter himself] that it must at length
- have some influence with the public, and that every parent who
- finds the illness of his family both afflicting and expensive, will
- say to himself ‘Why should I any longer be imprudent or foolish
- enough to have my children sick?’ All hail to the resolution which
- that sentiment implies! But until it becomes general, I feel it
- necessary to exhort, in the warmest language I can think of, those
- who have the young in their charge to institute an experiment
- which I have made before them with the completest success. To
- those parents especially do I address myself who, aware that
- temperance in enjoyment is the best warrant of its duration, feel
- how dangerous and how empty are all the feverous amusements of
- our assemblies, our dinners, and our theatres, compared with the
- genuine and tranquil pleasures of a happy circle at home.”
-
-He presents an alluring picture of the health-producing results for the
-young of the natural regimen. He promises that
-
- “They will become not only more robust but more beautiful;
- that their carriage will be erect, their step firm; that their
- development at a critical period of youth, the prematurity of which
- has been considered an evil, will be retarded; that, above all,
- the danger of being deprived of them will in every way diminish;
- while by these light repasts their hilarity will be augmented, and
- their intellects cleared in a degree which shall astonishingly
- illustrate the delightful effects of this regimen.... I will
- beg here to attempt an answer in this place to that trite and
- specious objection to Dr. Lambe’s opinions that ‘what is suitable
- to one constitution may be not so to another.’ If there be a
- single person existing, whose health would not be improved by the
- vegetable diet and distilled water, then the whole system falls
- at once to the ground. The question is simply, whether fruits and
- other vegetables be not the natural sustenance of man, who would
- have occasion for no other drink than these afford, and whose
- thirst is at present excited by an unnatural flesh diet, which
- causes his disorders bodily and mentally.... Another objection
- sometimes urged is this: ‘If children, brought up on a vegetable
- regimen, should at a future period of their lives adopt a flesh
- diet, they will certainly suffer more from the change than they
- otherwise would have done.’ The very contrary of this, I conceive,
- would happen. The stomach is so fortified by the general increase
- of health, that a person thus nourished is enabled to bear what
- one whose humours are less impaired would sink under. The children
- of our family can each of them eat a dozen or eighteen walnuts for
- supper without the most trifling indigestion, an experiment which
- those who feed their children in the usual manner would consider
- it adventurous to attempt. So also the Irish porters in London
- bear these alterations of diet successfully, and owe much of their
- actual vigour to the vegetable food of their forefathers, and
- to their own, before they emigrated from Ireland, where, in all
- probability, they did not taste flesh half-a dozen times in the
- year.”
-
-As to another well-known pretext, that the propensity to flesh-eating,
-and the relish with which it is evidently enjoyed by the majority
-of flesh eaters, is proof of its fitness, Newton justly objects the
-various unnatural and disgusting foods of many savage peoples which are
-eaten with equal relish, so that “the argument of the agreeable flavour
-proves nothing, I apprehend, by proving too much.” He exhorts the
-medical faculty generally, and those members of it who are in charge of
-hospitals, infirmaries, or workhouses, to try the effect of the pure
-regimen on the sufferers and patients--in particular, in the cases of
-the victims of cancer. Amongst others of his personal acquaintance who
-had derived the greatest benefit from the regimen, he instances Dr.
-Adam Ferguson, the historian of the Roman Republic, who lived strictly
-on a vegetable diet. He was in the habit of accompanying Mr. Newton,
-in the year 1794, in rides through the environs of Rome. He was still
-living in 1811, and he died, in fact, at the age of ninety, holding a
-professorship in the University of Edinburgh.
-
-
-
-
-XL.
-
-GLEÏZÈS. 1773-1843.
-
-
-Of all the enlightened and humane spirits to which the philosophic
-eighteenth century gave birth, and who were quickened into activity
-by the great movement which originated in France in its last quarter,
-not one, assuredly, was actuated by a purer and more exalted feeling
-than Jean Antoine Gleïzès--the most _enthusiastic_, perhaps, of all
-the apostles of humanity and of refinement. He was born at Dourgne,
-in the (present) department of the Tarn. His father was advocate to
-the old provincial parliament. His mother’s name was Anna Francos.
-After attending preliminary schools, he applied himself to the study
-of medicine--urged, says his biographer, more by love of his species
-than by predilection for the profession. His intense horror of the
-vivisectional experiments in the physiological torture-dens soon
-compelled him to abandon his intended career: the experience, however,
-gained during his brief medical course he was able to utilize more than
-once in his after life for the benefit of his neighbours.
-
-The earlier period of the Revolution had been hailed by him, still
-very young as he then was, as the hopeful beginning of a new era; when
-its direction, unhappily, fell into the hands of fanatical leaders,
-who, following too much the examples of the old _régimes_, thought,
-by wholesale executions, to clear the way for the establishment of a
-universal republic and of lasting peace. The youthful enthusiast, whose
-whole soul revolted from the very idea of bloodshed and of suffering,
-withdrew despairing into solitude, and devoted himself to scientific
-and literary studies, and to calm contemplation of Nature.
-
-In 1794, at the age of 21, Gleïzès married Aglae de Baumelle, daughter
-of a writer of some repute. At this time he seems to have entertained
-the hope of instructing his countrymen, by engaging in public teaching;
-but, disappointed in a scheme for the inauguration of a course of
-historical lectures in the central school of his department, he retired
-altogether from the active business of the world, and settled down in
-a happy and peaceful home, in a small château belonging to his wife,
-at the foot of the Pyrenees near Mezières. It was here, amidst the
-magnificent solitudes of Nature, that in 1798, in his twenty fifth
-year, he determined upon abandoning for ever the diet of blood and
-slaughter. Until the moment of his death, forty-five years later, his
-diet consisted solely of milk, fruits, and vegetables.
-
-So great was his scrupulousness, that there might be no possibility or
-mistake Gleïzès prepared his own food; and he always ate alone (his
-wife being unable or unwilling to follow his loftier aims), since he
-could not endure either the smell or the sight of the ordinary dishes.
-And this intense aversion it was, indeed, that compelled him to forego
-in great measure his intercourse with the world, or, at all events, to
-shun the ordinary celebrations of social “festivity.”
-
-Full of enthusiastic belief that the transparent truth and sublimity of
-his creed could not fail to commend themselves to the better spirits
-of the age amongst his countrymen, Gleïzès addressed himself to some
-of the more thoughtful of his contemporaries; amongst others to
-Lamartine, Lamennais, and Chateâubriand. Lamartine--the author of the
-_Fall of an Angel_, in which he gives expression to his akreophagistic
-sympathies--responded, if not with the enthusiasm that might justly
-have been expected from the author of that poem, at least in a friendly
-spirit. The others kept silence. This indifferentism of those who
-should have been the first to lend the support of their names naturally
-affected him; and made much more sensible the intellectual and moral
-isolation of his existence. He was not left quite alone, however.
-There were found three or four minds of a loftier reach who had the
-courage of their convictions, and followed them out to their logical
-conclusion. These were Anquetil (the author of _Recherches sur les
-Indes_), Charles Nodier, Girod de Chantrans, and Cabantous, dean of the
-Faculty of Letters at Toulouse. His brother, Colonel Gleïzès, a member
-of the Academy of Sciences of the same university, also declared for
-the reformation. It is superflous to say that these converts were all
-men of superior moral calibre to their contemporaries, however high
-they might be exalted by popular estimates of worth.
-
-Deeply sensible as he was of the profound selfishness and
-indifferentism of the world surrounding him upon the subject which
-to him had all the interest and importance of a new religion, he yet
-constantly displayed the benevolence of his disposition, and the
-beneficence of his morality, in his efforts for the good of all with
-whom he came in contact, and particularly in respect to his domestics
-and his tenants, amongst whom his memory was long held in reverence.
-“His exalted nature,” states his brother, “glowed with enthusiasm for
-everything true and good.” His “life-sorrow” seems to have been the
-want of sympathy on the part of his wife, to whom, nevertheless, he
-proved an indulgent husband.
-
-His first book, _Les Mélancolies d’un Solitaire_, appeared in the
-year 1794, in 1800 his _Nuits Elysiennes_, and four years later
-his _Agrestes_; all more or less advocating the truth. A long
-interval elapsed before he again essayed an appeal to the world.
-His _Christianisme Expliqué: ou l’Unité de Croyance pour tous les
-Chrétiens_ (Christianity Explained: or, Unity of Belief for all
-Christians) was published in 1830. Seven years later it appeared
-under the title of “Christianity Explained: or, the True Spirit of
-that Religion Misinterpreted up to the Present Day.” In this work,
-says his estimable editor and translator Herr Springer, “he sought
-to prove, from the standing-point of a protestant christian, that
-Christ’s mission had for its end the abolition of the murder of animals
-(_Thiermord_), and that the whole significance of his teaching lay
-in the words spoken at the institution of the ‘Supper,’ that is to
-say, the substitution of bread instead of flesh, and wine instead of
-blood.” This undertaking, it is needless to remark, admirable as was
-its motive, could hardly, from the nature of the case, be successful.
-
-His last work was his _Thalysie: ou La Nouvelle Existence_, the first
-part of which was published at Paris in 1840, the second in 1842.
-He survived this his final appeal to the world on behalf of the new
-reformation but a few months. He had reached the proverbial limit of
-human existence; but that his life was shortened by disappointment
-and the bitter weariness of hope deferred, “by that sorrow which
-perpetually gnaws at the heart of the unrecognised reformer” (as his
-biographer well expresses it), we have too much reason to believe. The
-_Thalysie_--his _magnum opus_--excited, it appears, little interest,
-or even notice, upon its first appearance. It found one sympathising
-critic in M. Cabantous, to whom reference has been already made, who
-delivered a course of lectures upon it from his professorial chair. A
-few years later a Parisian advocate, M. Blot-Lequène, wrote a treatise
-in terms of strong recommendation of its principles; and Eugène
-Stourm, editor of _The Phalanx_, also eloquently advocated its claims
-upon the public notice. At length it was criticised in the _Révue des
-Deux Mondes_ by Alphonse Esquiros, known to English readers by his
-contributions to that Review on English life and manners. We are hardly
-surprised that the criticism was conceived in the usual supercilious
-and prejudiced spirit.
-
-No attempt appears to have been made to re-publish the _New Existence_
-until Herr Springer undertook the task for his countrymen. His German
-version, with an interesting notice of the life and labours of Gleïzès,
-was published at Berlin in 1872. Criticising a flippant article in
-_The Food Journal_ in the same year, Herr Springer eloquently rebukes
-the easy and arrogant tone--so successful in appealing to popular
-prejudices--and observes: “Gleïzès at last published his eminent work,
-which, as Weilhaüser says, he has written with the blood of his own
-heart. If it be eccentric, as Mr. Jerrold asserts, it has only _the
-eccentricity of a gospel of humanity_. Gleïzès was so eccentric as to
-write the following lines, which were found amongst his posthumous
-papers: ‘God, pure Source of Light, in order to obey thy commands I
-wrote this book. Be gracious to protect and to support my efforts;
-for the humble creature which raises its voice from its grain of
-sand may, perhaps, be speechless to-morrow, and deep silence reign
-in the desert.’ Yes; Mr. Jerrold is right: that theory was to its
-author a religion. In the _Thalysie_ we are instructed in the highest
-questions concerning the health and happiness of mankind. Surpassing
-all naturalists and philosophers, he explained to us the great mystery
-of Nature--that robbery and murder [in its full meaning] arose only
-by corruption, and by alienation from the original laws of creation,
-and that man, instead of favouring the corruption, as he has done till
-now, would be able to abolish it. In this way, and in contradiction
-to the hollow phrases of optimism and the depressing contemplation of
-pessimism, Gleïzès restores the peace of our mind, and bestows upon us
-the hope for a future reign of Wisdom and Love.”[223]
-
-In the preface to the _Thalysie_ Gleïzès thus expresses his
-convictions, his hopes, and the general purpose of his labours:--
-
- “The system which I now publish to the world is not, as the usual
- acceptation of that word might seem to indicate, a collection of
- principles more or less probable, and of which it depends upon
- each one to admit or reject the consequences. It is a chain of
- principles, rigorously true and just, from which man cannot depart
- without incurring penalties proportionate to his deviation. But, in
- spite of these penalties which he has suffered, and which he still
- suffers, he is not aware of his lost condition [_égarement_]. His
- fate is that of the slave, born in servitude, who plays with his
- chains, sometimes insults the freemen, and carries his madness to
- the point of refusing freedom when it is offered to him, and of
- choosing slavery.
-
- “It is not that _all_ men have allowed themselves to be carried
- willingly down the fatal descent: a large number have struggled
- against the press, but their diverse and scattered efforts have
- resembled the eddies of the flood, which ends with forcing together
- all the diverging waters and hurrying away with them into the gulf
- of the ocean. Or, if some few have raised and kept themselves above
- the rapid current, no permanent advantage has resulted from it to
- the human race, which has been none the less abandoned to itself.”
-
-We know that the greatest intellects amongst the Greeks[224] had taught
-the better way; but they failed, says Gleïzès, inasmuch as their
-doctrine was too exclusive and esoteric.
-
- “The condition of the human race is a plain witness of its error.
- This condition, in fact, is so alarming that it might seem
- desperate, if it were certain that men had acquired _all_ their
- knowledge. But, happily, there is one branch of it--the most
- essential of all, and without which the rest is scarcely of any
- account--which is yet entirely ignored. This knowledge is precisely
- that of which these great men had glimpses, and of which they
- reserved to themselves the sole enjoyment;[225] and it is this
- knowledge, or, rather, this wisdom (and we know that with the
- Greeks these two things were comprised under the same denomination)
- which I publish. I shall give it an extension which it was not
- possible for _them_ to perceive or to give; because Nature refuses
- its life-giving spirit [_esprit de vie_] to solitary and isolated
- seeds, and makes those only to fructify which enter into the common
- heritage of mankind.
-
- “With such support, the most feeble must have an advantage over
- the strongest without it. I have, besides, another advantage. Men
- feeling to-day, more than ever, the privation of what is wanting
- to them, invoke on all sides new principles, and demand a higher
- civilisation. It is not the first time, doubtless, that such a
- state of things has been manifested. It has been seen to supervene
- after all the moral revolutions that have left man greater than
- they have found him. But that of which we have been the witnesses
- [the revolution in France of 1789--the reforms of 1830] seems to
- have something more remarkable, more complete--one would almost be
- tempted to believe that it must be the last, and terminate that
- long sequence of vain disputes across which the human kind has
- painfully advanced, seeing it rise in the midst of the _débris_
- of all the old-world ideas which have expired or are expiring at
- one’s feet. What a moment for rebuilding! No more favourable one
- could exist; and it is urged on, so to speak, by the breeze of
- these happy circumstances that I offer to the meditation of men the
- following propositions....
-
- “I shall add but a few words. The principles which I have laid down
- are absolute--they cannot bend [_fléchir_]. But there are _steps_
- on the route which conduct to the heights which they occupy; and
- were there but a single step made in that direction, that single
- step could not be regarded as indifferent and unimportant. Thus
- this work--guide of those whom it shall convince--will be useful
- also to the rest of the world as, at least, a moderator and a
- check; and, I shall avow it, my hopes do not extend beyond this
- latter object. I should feel myself even perfectly satisfied, if
- this book should inspire in my contemporaries enough of esteem
- and favour to prevent them from arresting and impeding it at its
- start, and to allow it to follow its course towards a generation, I
- will not say more worthy, but better prepared than the present to
- receive it.”
-
-Gleïzès divides his great work into twelve Discourses, in two volumes,
-supplemented by a third volume which he entitles _Moral Proofs_. It is
-an almost exhaustive, as well as eloquent, _résumé_ of the history and
-ethics of the subject. The only fault of this, perhaps, most heartfelt
-appeal to the reason and conscience of mankind ever published is its
-too great discursiveness. The manifest anxiety of the author to meet,
-or to anticipate, every possible objection or subterfuge on the part of
-the hostile or the indifferent, may well excuse this apparent blemish;
-and the slightest acquaintance with his _New Existence_ can hardly
-fail to extort, even from the most prejudiced reader, a tribute of
-admiration to a spirit so noble and so pure, devoting all its energies
-to the furtherance of an exalted and refined morality.
-
-In the earlier portion of his book he reviews the dietetic habits and
-practices of the various peoples of the younger world, and notices the
-various philosophic and other writers who have left any record of their
-opinions upon flesh-eating. He next treats of modern authorities, and,
-after quoting a large number of anti-kreophagistic testimonies, in his
-fifth Discourse he applies himself to answer the sophisms of the chief
-opponents, and particularly of its arch-enemy--his countryman, Buffon,
-in his well-known _Histoire Naturelle_--and he may be said effectually
-to have disposed of his astonishing fallacies.[226]
-
- “What most strikes the observer when he throws an attentive glance
- over the earth, is the _relative_ inferiority of man, considered as
- what he is, in regard to what he ought to be: it is the feebleness
- of the work compared with the aptitude of the workman. All his
- inspirations are good, and all his actions bad; and it is to this
- singular fact that must be attributed, without doubt, the universal
- contempt that man exhibits towards his fellows.... We must remount
- to the source, and see if there is not in man’s existence some
- essential act which, reflecting itself on all the rest, would
- communicate to them its fatal influence. Let us consider, above
- everything, the _distinctive_ quality of man--that which raises him
- above all other beings. It is clear that it is Pity,[227] source
- of that intelligence which has placed him at the head of that
- fine moral order, invincible in the midst of the catastrophes of
- Nature. His utter failure to exhibit this feeling of pity towards
- his humble fellow-beings, as well as to his own kind, engages us
- to inquire what is the _permanent_ cause of such failure; and
- we find it, at first, in that unhappy facility with which man
- receives his _impressions_ of the beings by whom he is surrounded.
- These impressions, transmitted with life and cemented by habit,
- have formed a creation apart and separate from himself, which is
- consequently beyond the domain of his conscience, or, if you prefer
- it, of the ordinary jurisprudence of men. Thus men continue to
- accuse themselves of being unjust, violent, cruel, and treacherous
- to one another, but they do not accuse themselves of cutting the
- throats of other animals and of feeding upon their mangled limbs,
- which, nevertheless, is the single cause of that injustice, of that
- violence, of that cruelty, and of that treachery.
-
- “Although all have not these vices to the same degree, and it is
- exactly this fact which aids the self-deception, I shall clearly
- prove that all have the _germs_ of them; and that, if they are not
- equally developed, we must thank the circumstances only which have
- failed them.
-
- “It is thus that many Europeans, whom their destiny conducts to the
- cannibal countries, after some months of sojourn with the natives,
- make no difficulty of seating themselves at their banquet, and of
- sharing their horrible repast, which at first had excited their
- horror and disgust. They begin with devouring a dog: from the dog
- to the man the space is soon cleared.
-
- “Men believe themselves to be just, provided that they fulfil, in
- regard to their fellows, the duties which have been prescribed to
- them. But it is goodness which is the justice of man; and it is
- impossible, I repeat it, to be good towards one’s fellow without
- being so towards other existences. Let us not be the dupes of
- _appearances_. Seneca, who lived only on the herbs of his garden,
- to which he owed those last gleams of philosophy which enlightened,
- so to speak, the fall of the Roman Empire, also thinks that crime
- cannot be circumscribed: _Nullum intrà se manet vitium_. And if,
- as Ovid affirms, the sword struck men only after having been first
- dyed in the blood of the lower animals, what interest have we not
- in respecting such a barrier? Like Æolus, who held in his hands the
- bag in which the winds were confined, we may at our will, according
- as we live upon plants or upon animals, tranquillize the earth or
- excite terrible tempests upon it.
-
- “I am too well aware that a subterfuge will be found in excusing
- the crime by necessity, and calumniating Providence. According to
- the pretended belief of the greatest number of people, if other
- animals were not put to death, they would deprive men of the empire
- of the earth. But it is easy to reply to this objection by the
- examples of people who, holding in horror the effusion of blood,
- and robbing no being of life--even the vilest or most hateful--are
- by no means disturbed in the exercise of their sovereignty.[228]
- And it would result from the examples of these people, if one had
- not other proofs besides, that man is absolutely master of the
- means of increasing or limiting the multiplication of the species
- which are more or less in dependence upon him. And it is not less
- evident that the earth, in this latter hypothesis, would support
- an infinitely greater number of the human species. Thus will the
- vegetable regimen be _necessarily_ adopted one day over the whole
- earth, when the multiplication of our species shall have reached
- a certain number fixed and pre-established by that imperious and
- irrevocable law which is intimately connected, for the most part,
- with humanity, justice, and virtue--the number at which it is
- slowly arriving, arrested by the very causes which I am striving
- to destroy, and which, for that single reason, ought to arm
- against them all generous beings who appreciate the benefit of
- existence.”[229]
-
-Amongst other pretexts by which men seek to excuse selfishness, is
-the assertion that its victims have little or no consciousness of
-suffering, and that their death is so unexpected that it cannot excite
-their terror. This monstrous fiction is eloquently exposed by Gleïzès,
-as it is, indeed, by the commonest everyday experience:--
-
- “The instinct of life among animals generally gives them a
- presentiment and fear of death--that is to say _violent_ death; for
- as for natural death it inspires in them no alarm, for the simple
- reason that it is in the course of nature. And it is the same with
- man. He is not afflicted with the thought of dying when he knows
- his hour is come; he resigns himself to that fate as to any other
- imposed upon him by necessity. The sensations of other beings
- differ in no respect from those of men; and when the horse, for
- example, is condemned to death by the lion, that is to say, when he
- hears the confused roar of that terrible beast which fills space,
- while the precise spot from which it emanates cannot be determined,
- which takes from the victim all hope of escape by flight, the
- perspiration rolls down all his limbs, he falls to the earth as if
- he had just been struck by a thunderbolt, and would die of terror
- alone if the lion did not run up to terminate the tragedy.”[230]
-
- “There exists so great an analogy, so strong a resemblance, between
- the life of man and that of other animals who surround him, that a
- simple return to himself--simple reflection--ought to suffice to
- make him respect the latter; and if he were condemned by Nature to
- rend it from them, he might justly curse the order of things which,
- on the one hand, should have implanted in his heart the source of
- feeling so gentle, and, on the other, should have imposed on him a
- necessity so cruel.... And if this man have children, if he bear in
- his heart objects which are so dear to him, how can he unceasingly
- surround himself with images of death--of that death which must
- deprive him one day of those whom he loves, or snatch himself away
- from their love? And if he be just, if he be good, how will he not
- have repugnance for acts which will continually recall to him ideas
- of ingratitude, of cruelty, and of violence? There exists in the
- East a tree which, by a mechanical movement, inclines its branches
- towards the traveller, whom it seems to invite to repose under
- its shade. This simple image of hospitality, which is revered in
- that part of the world, makes them regard it as sacred, and they
- would punish with death him who should dare to apply a hatchet to
- its trunk. Our humble fellow-beings, should _they_ be less sacred
- because they represent, not by mechanical movements, but by actions
- resembling our own, feelings the dearest to our hearts? Ah! let us
- respect them, not alone because they aid us to bear the burdens
- of the world, which would overwhelm us without them but _because
- they have the same right with ourselves to life_.... A reason which
- is without reply, at least for generous souls, is the trust and
- confidence reposed in man by other animals. Nature has not taught
- them to distrust him. He is the only enemy whom she has not pointed
- out to them. Is it not evident proof that he was not intended to be
- so? For can one believe that Nature, who holds so just a balance,
- could have been willing to deceive all other beings in favour of
- man alone? It has been observed that birds of the gentle species
- express certain cries when they perceive the fox, the weasel,
- &c., although they have nothing to fear from them, without doubt,
- by reason of the analogy which they offer. They are the cries of
- hatred rather than of fear, whilst they utter these latter at sight
- of the eagle, of the hawk, &c. Now, it is certain that in all the
- islands on which man has landed, the native animals have not fled
- before them. They have been able to take even birds with the hand.”
-
-Gleïzès rejects the common fallacy that, because men have _acquired_ a
-lust for flesh, _therefore_ it is natural or proper for them.
-
- “It is a specious but very false reason to allege that, since man
- has acquired this taste, he ought to be permitted to indulge it--in
- the first place because Nature has not given him _cooked_ flesh,
- and because several ages must have rolled away before fire was
- used. It is very well known that there are many countries in which
- it was not known at the period of their discovery. Nature, then,
- could have given man only _raw_ or _living_ flesh, and we know that
- it is repugnant to him over the whole extent of the earth. Now it
- is exactly this character which essentially distinguishes animals
- of prey from others. The former, those at least of the larger
- species, have generally an extreme repugnance, not only for cooked
- flesh, but even for that which has lost its freshness. Man, then,
- is not carnivorous but under certain abnormal conditions; and his
- senses, to which he appeals in support of his carnivorousness, are
- perverted to such a degree, that he would devour his fellow-man
- without perceiving it, if they served him up in place of veal, the
- flesh of which is said to have the same taste. Thus Harpagus ate,
- without knowing it, the corpse of his son.”
-
-Gleïzès instances the case of Cows and of Reindeer who, in Norway, have
-been denaturalised so far as to feed on fish, and readily to take to
-that unnatural food.
-
- “It would be too long to enumerate here all the causes which may
- have produced so great an aberration. This will be the matter of
- another Discourse. I shall content myself for the moment with
- saying some words upon that which perpetuates it. It is essentially
- that lightness of mind, or, rather, that sort of stupidity, which
- makes all reflection upon anything which is opposed to their habits
- painful to the generality of mankind. They would turn their head
- aside with horror if they saw what a single one of their repasts
- costs Nature. They eat animals as some amongst them launch a
- bomb into the midst of a besieged town, without thinking of the
- evils which it must bring to a crowd of individuals, strangers to
- war--women, children, and old men--evils the near spectacle of
- which they could not support, in spite of the hardness of their
- hearts.... To-day, when everything is calculated with so much
- precision [he remarks with bitterness], there will not be wanting
- persons with sufficient assurance to attempt to prove that there
- is more of advantage for the domesticated animals to be born and
- live on condition of having their throats cut, than if they had
- remained in ‘nothingness,’ or in the natural state. As for the
- word ‘nothingness,’ I confess that I do not understand it, but I
- understand the other very well; and I have never conceived how man
- could have had the barbarity to accumulate all the calamities of
- the earth upon a single individual; that is to say, to slaughter
- it in return for having caused its degeneracy. But if he thinks
- himself to escape from the influence of an action so dastardly and
- so infamous, he would be in a very great error....
-
- “I shall finish these prolegomena with an important remark. I have
- known a large number of good souls who offered up the most sincere
- wishes for the establishment of this doctrine of humaneness,
- who thought it just and true in all its aspects, who believed
- in all that it announces; but who, in spite of so praiseworthy
- a disposition, dared not be the first to give the example. They
- awaited this movement from minds stronger than their own. Doubtless
- they are the minds which give the impulse to the world; but is it
- necessary to await this movement when one is convinced of one’s
- self? Is it permissible to temporise in a question of life or
- death for innocent beings whose sole crime is _to have been born_,
- and is it in a case like this that strength of mind should fail
- justice? No! Well-doing is, happily, not so difficult. Ah! what
- is your excuse, besides, pusillanimous souls? I blush for you at
- the miserable pretexts which keep you back. It would be necessary,
- say you, to separate one’s self from the world; to renounce one’s
- friends and neighbours. I see no such necessity, and I think,
- on the contrary, that if you truly loved the world and your
- neighbours, you would hasten to give them an example which must
- have so powerful an influence upon their present happiness and upon
- their future destiny.”[231]
-
-We have reason once again to lament the perversity of literary or
-publishing enterprise which will produce and reproduce, _ad infinitum_,
-books of no real and permanent value to the world, and altogether
-neglect its true luminaries. This is, in an especial manner, the case
-with Gleïzès. The _Nouvelle Existence_ has never been republished,
-we believe, in the author’s own country; while it has never found a
-translator, perhaps scarcely a reader, in this country outside the
-Vegetarian ranks. Germany, as we have already noticed, alone has the
-honour of attempting to preserve from oblivion one of the few who have
-deserved immortality.
-
-
-
-
-XLI.
-
-SHELLEY. 1792-1822.
-
-
-That a principle of profound significance for the welfare of our own
-species in particular, and for the peaceful harmony of the world
-in general--that a true spiritualism, of which some of the most
-admirable of the poets of the pre-Christian ages proved themselves not
-unconscious, has been, for the most part, altogether overlooked or
-ignored by modern aspirants to poetic fame is matter for our gravest
-lament. Thomson, Pope, Shelley, Lamartine--to whom Milton, perhaps, may
-be added--these form the small band who almost alone represent, and
-have developed the earlier inspiration of a Hesiod, Ovid, or Virgil,
-the prophet-poets who, faithful to their proper calling,[232] have
-sought to _unbarbarise_ and elevate human life by arousing, in various
-degree, feelings of horror and aversion from the prevailing materialism
-of living.
-
-Of this illustrious band, and, indeed, of all the great intellectual
-and moral luminaries who have shed a humanising influence upon our
-planet--who have left behind them “thoughts that breathe and words
-that burn”--none can claim more reverence from humanitarians than the
-poet of poets--the influence of whose life and writings, considerable
-even now, and gradually increasing, doubtless in a not remote future
-is destined to be equal to that of the very foremost of the world’s
-teachers, and of whom our sketch, necessarily limited though it is,
-will be extended beyond the usual allotted space.
-
-Percy Bysshe Shelley descended from an old and wealthy family long
-settled in Sussex. At the age of 13 he was sent to Eton, where (such
-was the spirit of the public and other schools at that time, and,
-indeed, of long afterwards) he was subjected to severe trials of
-endurance by the rough and rude manners of the ordinary schoolboy, and
-the harsh and unequal violence of the schoolmaster. Of an exceptionally
-refined and sensitive temperament, he was none the less determined
-in resistance to injustice and oppression, and his refusal to submit
-tamely to their petty tyrannies seems to have brought upon him more
-than the common amount of harsh treatment. It penetrated into his
-inmost soul, and inspired the opening stanzas of “The Revolt of
-Islam,” in intensity of feeling seldom equalled. Some alleviation of
-these sufferings of childhood he found in his own mental resources.
-For his amusement he translated, we are assured, several books of
-the _Natural History_ of Pliny. Of Greek writers he even then (in an
-English version) read Plato, who afterwards, in his own language,
-always remained one of his chief literary companions, and he applied
-himself also to the study of French and of German. In natural science,
-Chemistry seems to have been his especial pursuit.
-
-In 1810, at the age of seventeen, he entered University College,
-Oxford. There he studied and wrote unceasingly. With a strong
-predilection for metaphysics, he devoted himself in particular to
-the great masters of dialectics, Locke and Hume, and to their chief
-representatives in French philosophy. Ardent and enthusiastic in
-the pursuit of truth, he sought to enlarge his knowledge and ideas
-from every possible quarter, and he engaged in correspondence with
-distinguished persons, suggested to him by choice or chance, with
-whom he discussed the most interesting philosophical questions. Like
-all truly fruitful minds, the youthful inquirer was not satisfied
-with the _dicta_ of mere authority, or with the _consensus_, however
-general, of past ages, and he hesitated not, in matters of opinion in
-which every well-instructed intelligence is capable of judging for
-itself, to bring to the test of right reason the most widely-received
-dogmas of Antiquity. Actuated by this spirit, rather than by any
-matured convictions, and wishing to elicit sincere as well as
-exhaustive argument on the deepest of all metaphysical inquiries,
-in an unfortunate moment for himself, he caused to be printed an
-abstract of anti-theistic speculations, drawn from David Hume and
-other authorities, presented in a series of mathematically-expressed
-propositions. Copies of this modest thesis of two pages were sent
-either by the author, or by some other hand, to the heads of his
-College. The clerical dignitaries, listening to the dictates of
-outraged authority, rather than influenced by calm reflection, which
-would have, perhaps, shewn them the useless injustice of so extreme a
-measure, proceeded at once to expel him from the University.[233]
-
-That in spite of this impetuous attack upon the stereotyped
-presentations of Theism, Shelley had an eminently religious temperament
-has been well insisted upon by a recent biographer:--
-
- “Brimming over with love for men, he was deficient in sympathy with
- the conditions under which they actually think and feel. Could he
- but dethrone the anarch, Custom, the ‘Millennium,’ he argued, would
- immediately arrive; nor did he stop to think how different was
- the fibre of his own soul from that of the unnumbered multitudes
- around him. In his adoration of what he recognised as _living_,
- he retained no reverence for the ossified experience of past
- ages.... For he had a vital faith, and this faith made the ideals
- he conceived seem possible--faith in the duty and desirability of
- overthrowing idols; faith in the gospel of liberty, fraternity,
- equality; faith in the divine beauty of Nature; faith in the
- perfectibility of man; faith in the omnipresent soul, whereof our
- souls are atoms; faith in love, as the ruling and co-ordinating
- substance of morality. The man who lived by this faith was in no
- vulgar sense of the word ‘atheist.’ When he proclaimed himself to
- be one he pronounced his hatred of a gloomy religion which had been
- the instrument of kings and priests for the enslavement of their
- fellow beings. As he told his friend Trelawney, he used the word
- _Atheism_ ‘to express his abhorrence of superstition: he took it
- up, as a knight took up a gauntlet, in defiance of injustice.’”[234]
-
-So thorough was his contempt for mere received and routine thought,
-that even Aristotle, the great idol of the mediæval schoolmen, and
-still an object of extraordinary veneration in the elder University,
-became for him a kind of synonym for despotic authority--
-
- “Tomes
- Of reasoned Wrong glozed on by Ignorance”--
-
-and was, accordingly, treated with undue neglect. As for politics,
-as represented in the parliament and public Press of his day, he was
-indignantly impatient of the too usual trifling and unreality of public
-life. He seldom read the newspapers; nor could he ever bring himself to
-mix with the “rabble of the House.”
-
-Thus, forced into antipathy to the ordinary and orthodox business of
-life around him, the poet withdrew himself more and more from it into
-his own thoughts, and hopes, and aspirations, which he communicated to
-his familiar friends. Some of those, however, into whose society he
-chanced to be thrown, were not of a sort of mind most congenial to his
-own. Yet they all bear witness to his surpassing moral no less than
-mental, constitution. “In no individual, perhaps, was the moral sense
-ever more completely developed than in Shelley,” says one of his most
-intimate acquaintances; “in no being was the perception of right and
-wrong more acute.”
-
-“As his love of intellectual pursuits was vehement, and the vigour
-of his genius almost celestial, so were the purity and sanctity of
-his life most conspicuous.... I have had the happiness to associate
-with some of the best specimens of gentleness; but (may my candour
-and preference be pardoned), I can affirm that Shelley was almost the
-only example I have yet found that was never wanting, even in the most
-minute particular, of the infinite and various observances of pure,
-entire, and perfect gentility.” This is the voluntary testimony of a
-friend who was not inclined to excess of praise.[235]
-
-The sudden end of his career at Oxford had estranged him from his
-father, who was of a temperament the very opposite to that of
-the enthusiastic reformer--harsh, intolerant, and bigoted in his
-prejudices; and the young Shelley’s marriage, shortly afterwards,
-to Harriet Westbrook, a young girl of much beauty, but of little
-cultivation of mind, and in a position of life different from his
-own, incensed him still further. The marriage, happy enough in the
-beginning, proved to be an ill-assorted one, and various causes
-contributed to the inevitable _dénouement_. After a union of some
-three years, the marriage, by mutual consent, was dissolved. Two years
-later--not, it seems, in consequence of the divorce, as sometimes has
-been suggested--the young wife put an end to her existence--a terrible
-and tragic termination of an ill-considered attachment, which must have
-caused him the deepest pangs of grief, and which seems always, and
-justly, to have cast a gloomy shadow upon his future life.
-
-Brief as his career was, we can refer only to the most interesting
-events in it. Of these, his enthusiastic effort to arouse a bloodless
-revolution in Ireland, such as, if effected, might have prevented the
-continued miseries of that especially neglected portion of the three
-kingdoms, is not the least noteworthy. With his lately-married wife and
-her sister he was living at Keswick, when, by a sudden inspiration, he
-resolved to cross the Channel, and engage in the work of propagating
-his principles of political and social reform. This was in the early
-part of 1812. In Dublin, where they established their head-quarters,
-he printed an _Address to the Irish People_, which, by his own hands,
-as well as by other agency, was distributed far and wide. In this
-wonderfully well-considered and reasonable manifesto, the principles
-laid down as necessary to success in attempting deliverance from ages
-of bad laws and misgovernment, are as sound as the ardour and sincerity
-of his hopeless undertaking are unmistakeable. The cosmopolitan scope
-of the _Address_ appears in such passages as these:--
-
- “Do not inquire if a man be a heretic, if he be a Quaker, a Jew,
- or a Heathen, but if he be a virtuous man, if he love liberty and
- truth, if he wish the happiness and peace of human kind. If a man
- be ever so much ‘a believer,’ and love not these things, he is a
- heartless hypocrite and a knave.... It is not a merit to tolerate,
- but it is a crime to be intolerant.... Be calm, mild, deliberate,
- patient.... Think, and talk, and discuss.... Be free and be happy,
- but _first be wise and good_.... Habits of sobriety, regularity,
- and thought must be entered into and firmly resolved upon.”
-
-Truer in his perception of the radical causes and cure of national
-evils than most party politicians, he urged the essential need of
-ethical and social change, without which mere political change of
-parties, or increase in material wealth of some sections in the
-community, must be valueless in any true estimate of a nation’s
-prosperity. Shelley also issued, in pamphlet form, _Proposals for an
-Association_--a plan for the formation of a vast society of Irish
-Catholics, to enforce their “emancipation”--a measure which was
-not brought about until twenty years later after long and vehement
-opposition.
-
-Two months were devoted to this generous but futile work; the people of
-Ireland did not move, and the young reformer returned to England, but
-without abandoning his _propaganda_ of the principles of liberty and
-justice. While residing in Somersetshire he published a paper entitled
-a _Declaration of Rights_, to circulate which recourse was had to
-ingenious methods. Four years later, in 1817, he published _A Proposal
-for putting Reform to the Vote throughout the Kingdom_. “He saw that
-the House of Commons did not represent the country; and acting upon his
-principle that Government is the servant of the Governed, he sought
-means for ascertaining the real will of the nation with regard to its
-Parliament, and for bringing the collective opinions of the population
-to bear upon its rulers. The plan proposed was that a large network of
-committees should be formed, and that by their means every individual
-man should be canvassed. We find here the same method of advancing
-reform by peaceable associations as in Ireland.” At the same time, in
-presence of the incalculable amount of ignorance, destitution, and
-consequent venality of the great mass of the community--the necessary
-outcome of long ages of bad and selfish legislation--Universal
-Suffrage for the present appeared to him to be not a safe experiment.
-Evidence of controversial power, is his “grave and lofty” Letter to
-Lord Ellenborough, who had recently sentenced to imprisonment the
-printers of the _Age of Reason_, “an eloquent argument in favour of
-toleration and the freedom of the intellect, carrying the matter beyond
-the instance of legal tyranny, which occasioned its composition, and
-treating it with philosophical if impassioned, seriousness.”[236]
-Before his visit to Ireland, he had been engaged (as he tells his
-correspondent, William Godwin) in writing _An Inquiry into the Causes
-of the Failure of the French Revolution to Benefit Mankind_. We have
-to lament that this Essay seems never to have been completed, since it
-is hardly doubtful that it would have been of unusual interest. Such
-was the force and activity of Shelley’s intellect, as displayed in the
-regions of practical philosophy, at the age of twenty, and before he
-had given to the world his first productions in poetry.
-
-_Queen Mab_, written in part two years before, was finished and printed
-in 1813. Although it may have some of the defects of immaturity of
-genius, it has the charm of a genuine poetic inspiration. Intense
-hatred of selfish injustice and untruth in all their shapes, equally
-intense sympathy with all suffering, sublime faith in the ultimate
-triumph of Good, clothed in the language of entrancing eloquence and
-sublimity, are the characteristics of this unique poem. The author’s
-depreciation of his earliest poetic attempt in after years, in a letter
-addressed to the _Examiner_, only a month before his death, strikes us
-as scarcely sincere, and as having been a sort of necessary sacrifice
-on the altar of Expediency.
-
-In this exquisitely beautiful prophecy of a “Golden Age” to be, the
-fairy Queen Mab, the unembodied being who acts as his instructress and
-guide through the Universe, displays to his affrighted vision, in one
-vast panorama, the horrors of the Past and the Present. She afterwards,
-in a glorious apocalypse, relieves his despair by revealing to him the
-“new heavens and the new earth,” which eventually will displace the
-present evil constitution of things on our planet. On the redeemed and
-regenerated Globe:--
-
- “Ambiguous Man! he that can know
- More misery, and can dream more joy than all:
- Whose keen sensations thrill within his heart,
- To mingle with a loftier instinct there,
- Lending their power to pleasure and to pain,
- Yet raising, sharpening, and refining each:
- Who stands amid the ever-varying world
- The burden or the glory of the Earth--
- He chief perceives the change: his being notes
- The gradual renovation, and defines
- Each movement of its progress on his mind.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Here now the human being stands, adorning
- This loveliest Earth with taintless body and mind.
- Blest from his birth with all bland impulses,
- Which gently in his truthful bosom wake
- All kindly passions and all pure desires.
- Him (still from hope to hope the bliss pursuing,
- Which from the exhaustless store of human weal
- Draws on the virtuous mind), the thoughts that rise
- In time-destroying infiniteness, gift
- With self-enshrined eternity, that mocks
- The unprevailing hoariness of age:
- And Man, once fleeting o’er the transient scene,
- Swift as an unremembered vision, stands
- Immortal upon Earth. _No longer now
- He slays the Lamb who looks him in the face_,
- And horribly devours his mangled flesh,
- Which, still avenging Nature’s broken law,
- Kindled all putrid humours in his frame--
- All evil passions and all vain belief--
- Hatred, despair, and loathing in his mind,
- The germs of misery, death, disease, and crime.
- No longer now the wingèd habitants,
- That in the woods their sweet lives sing away,
- Flee from the form of Man.
-
- * * * * *
-
- All things are void of terror. Man has lost
- His terrible prerogative, and stands
- An equal amidst equals. Happiness
- And Science dawn, though late, upon the Earth.
- Peace cheers the mind, Health renovates the frame.
- Disease and pleasure cease to mingle here,
- Reason and passion cease to combat there;
- Whilst each, unfettered, o’er the Earth extends
- Its all-subduing energies, and wields
- The sceptre of a vast dominion there;
- Whilst every shape and mode of matter lends
- Its force to the omnipotence of Mind,
- Which from its dark mine drags the gem of Truth
- To decorate its paradise of Peace.”
-
-In rapt vision the prophet-poet apostrophises the “New Earth”:
-
- “O happy Earth! reality of Heaven,
- To which those restless souls, that ceaselessly
- Throng through the human universe, aspire.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Of purest spirits, thou pure dwelling-place,
- Where care and sorrow, impotence and crime,
- Languor, disease, and ignorance dare not come.
- O happy Earth! reality of Heaven.
- Genius has seen thee in her passionate dreams;
- And dim forebodings of thy loveliness,
- Haunting the human heart, have there entwined
- Those rooted hopes of some sweet place of bliss.
-
- * * * * *
-
- and the souls
- That, by the paths of an aspiring change,
- Have reached thy haven of perpetual Peace,
- There rest from the eternity of toil,
- That framed the fabric of thy perfectness.”
-
-From the Essay, in the form of a note, which he subjoined to the
-passage we have quoted, we extract the principal arguments:--
-
- “Man, and the other animals whom he has afflicted with his malady
- or depraved by his dominion, are _alone diseased_. The Bison,
- the wild Hog, the Wolf, are perfectly exempt from malady, and
- invariably die either from external violence or from mature old
- age. But the domestic Hog, the Sheep, the Cow, the Dog, are subject
- to an incredible variety of distempers, and, like the corruptors
- of their nature, have physicians who thrive upon their miseries.
- The super-eminence of man is, like Satan’s, the super-eminence of
- pain; and the majority of his species, doomed to penury, disease,
- and crime, have reason to curse the untoward event that, by
- enabling him to communicate his sensations, raised him above the
- level of his fellow-animals. But the steps that have been taken
- are irrevocable. The whole of human science is comprised in one
- question: How can the advantages of intellect and civilisation be
- reconciled with the liberty and pure pleasures of natural life?
- How can we take the benefits and reject the evils of the system
- which is now interwoven with the fibre of our being? I believe
- that abstinence from animal food and spirituous liquors would, in
- a great measure, capacitate us for the solution of this important
- question.
-
- “It is true that mental and bodily derangements are attributable,
- in part, to other deviations from rectitude and nature than those
- which concern diet. The mistakes cherished by society respecting
- the connexion of the sexes, whence the misery and diseases of
- unsatisfied celibacy, unenjoyed prostitution, and the premature
- arrival of puberty, necessarily spring. The putrid atmosphere of
- crowded cities, the exhalations of chemical processes, the muffling
- of our bodies in superfluous apparel, the absurd treatment of
- infants--all these, and innumerable other causes, contribute their
- mite to the mass of human evil.
-
- “Comparative Anatomy teaches us that man resembles the frugivorous
- animals in everything, the carnivorous in nothing. He has neither
- claws wherewith to seize his prey, nor distinct and pointed teeth
- to tear the living fibre. A mandarin of the first class, with
- nails two inches long, would probably find them alone inefficient
- to hold even a hare. After every subterfuge of gluttony, the bull
- must be degraded into the “ox,” and the ram into the “wether,” by
- an unnatural and inhuman operation, that the flaccid fibre may
- offer a fainter resistance to rebellious nature. It is only by
- softening and disguising dead flesh by culinary preparation that it
- is rendered susceptible of mastication or digestion, and that the
- sight of its bloody juice and raw horror does not excite loathing
- and disgust.
-
- “Let the advocate of animal food force himself to a decisive
- experiment on its fitness, and, as Plutarch recommends, tear a
- living lamb with his teeth and, plunging his head into its vitals,
- slake his thirst with the streaming blood. When fresh from this
- deed of horror, let him revert to the irresistible instinct of
- nature that would rise in judgment against it and say, ‘Nature
- formed me for such work as this.’ Then, and then only would he be
- consistent.
-
- “Man resembles no carnivorous animal. There is no exception, unless
- man be one, to the rule of herbivorous animals having cellulated
- colons.
-
- “The orang-outang perfectly resembles man both in the order
- and in the number of his teeth. The orang-outang is the most
- anthropomorphous of the ape tribe, all of whom are strictly
- frugivorous. There is no other species of animals, which live
- on different food, in which this analogy exists.[237] In many
- frugivorous animals the canine teeth are more pointed and distinct
- than those of man. The resemblance also of the human stomach to
- that of the orang-outang is greater than to that of any other
- animal.
-
- “The structure of the human frame, then, is that of one fitted to
- a pure vegetable diet in every essential particular. It is true
- that the reluctance to abstain from animal food, in those who have
- been long accustomed to its stimulus, is so great in some persons
- of weak minds as to be scarcely overcome. But this is far from
- bringing any argument in its favour. A Lamb, who was fed for some
- time on flesh by a ship’s crew, refused her natural diet at the end
- of the voyage. There are numerous instances of Horses, Sheep, Oxen,
- and even Wood-Pigeons having been taught to live upon flesh until
- they have loathed their natural aliment. Young children evidently
- prefer pastry, oranges, apples, and other fruit, to the flesh of
- animals, until, by the gradual depravation of the digestive organs,
- the free use of vegetables has, for a time, produced serious
- inconveniences--_for a time_, I say, since there never was an
- instance wherein a change from spirituous liquors and animal food
- to vegetables and pure water has failed ultimately to invigorate
- the body by rendering its juices bland and consentaneous, and to
- restore to the mind that cheerfulness and elasticity which not
- one in fifty possesses on the present system. A love of strong
- liquors also is with difficulty taught infants. Almost every one
- remembers the wry faces which the first glass of port produced.
- Unsophisticated instinct is invariably unerring, but to decide on
- the fitness of animal food from the _perverted_ appetites which its
- continued adoption produces, is to make the criminal a judge of his
- own cause. It is even worse, for it is appealing to the infatuated
- drunkard in a question of the salubrity of brandy.
-
- “Except in children, there remain no traces of that instinct which
- determines, in all other animals, what aliment is _natural_ or
- otherwise; and so perfectly obliterated are they in the reasoning
- adults of our species, that it has become necessary to urge
- considerations drawn from comparative anatomy to prove that we are
- _naturally_ frugivorous.
-
- “Crime is madness. Madness is disease. Whenever the cause of
- disease shall be discovered, the root from which all vice and
- misery have so long overshadowed the Globe will be bare to the
- axe. All the exertions of man, from that moment, may be considered
- as tending to the clear profit of his species. No sane mind in
- a sane body resolves upon real crime.... The system of a simple
- diet promises no Utopian advantages. It is no mere reform of
- legislation, whilst the furious passions and evil propensities of
- the human heart, in which it had its origin, are still unassuaged.
- It _strikes at the root of all evil_, and is an experiment which
- may be tried with success, not alone by nations, but by small
- societies, families, and even individuals. In no cases has a return
- to vegetable diet produced the slightest injury; in most it has
- been attended with changes undeniably beneficial. Should ever a
- physician be born with the genius of Locke, I am persuaded that he
- might trace all bodily and mental derangements to our unnatural
- habits as clearly as that philosopher has traced all knowledge to
- sensation....
-
- “By all that is sacred in our hopes for the human race, I conjure
- those who love happiness and truth to give a fair trial to the
- vegetable system. Reasoning is surely superfluous on a subject
- whose merits an experience of six months would set for ever at
- rest. But it is only among the enlightened and benevolent that so
- great a sacrifice of appetite and prejudice can be expected, even
- though its ultimate excellence should not admit of dispute. It is
- found easier by the short-sighted victims of disease to _palliate_
- their torments by medicine than to _prevent_ them by regimen.
- The vulgar of all ranks are invariably sensual and indocile, yet
- I cannot but feel myself persuaded that when the benefits of
- vegetable diet are mathematically proved; when it is as clear that
- those who live naturally are exempt from premature death as that
- one is not nine, the most sottish of mankind will feel a preference
- towards a long and tranquil, contrasted with a short and painful,
- life. On the average, out of sixty persons four die in three years.
- Hopes are entertained that, in April, 1814, a statement will be
- given that sixty persons, all having lived more than three years on
- vegetables and pure water, are then in _perfect health_. More than
- two years have now elapsed--_not one of them has died_. No such
- example will be found in any sixty persons taken at random.
-
- “Seventeen persons of all ages (the families of Dr. Lambe and Mr.
- Newton) have lived for seven years on this diet without a death,
- _and almost without the slightest illness_.... In proportion to the
- number of proselytes, so will be the weight of evidence, and when a
- thousand persons can be produced living on vegetables and distilled
- water,[238] who have to dread no disease but old age, the world
- will be compelled to regard flesh and fermented liquors as slow but
- certain poisons.”
-
-Shelley next insists on the incalculable benefits of a reformed diet
-economically, socially, and politically:--
-
- “The monopolising eater of flesh would no longer destroy his
- constitution by devouring an acre at a meal; and many loaves of
- bread would cease to contribute to gout, madness, and apoplexy, in
- the shape of a pint of porter or a dram of gin, when appeasing the
- long-protracted famine of the hard-working peasant’s hungry babes.
- The quantity of nutritious vegetable matter consumed in fattening
- the carcase of an ox would afford ten times the sustenance,
- undepraved, indeed, and incapable of generating disease, if
- gathered immediately from the bosom of the earth. The most fertile
- districts of the habitable globe are now actually cultivated by men
- for [other] animals, at a delay and waste of aliment absolutely
- incapable of calculation. It is only the wealthy that can, to any
- great degree, even now, indulge the unnatural craving for dead
- flesh, and they pay for the greater licence of the privilege by
- subjection to supernumerary diseases. Again, the spirit of the
- nation, that should take the lead in this great reform, would
- insensibly become _agricultural_.
-
- “The advantage of a reform in diet is obviously greater than that
- of any other. It strikes at the _root_ of the evil. To remedy the
- abuses of legislation, before we annihilate the propensities by
- which they are produced, is to suppose that by taking away the
- _effect_ the _cause_ will cease to operate....
-
- “Let not too much, however, be expected from this system. The
- healthiest among us is not exempt from hereditary disease. The most
- symmetrical, athletic, and long-lived is a being inexpressibly
- inferior to what he would have been, had not the unnatural habits
- of his ancestors accumulated for him a certain portion of malady
- and deformity. In the most perfect specimen of civilised man,
- something is still found wanting by the physiological critic. Can a
- return to Nature, then, instantaneously eradicate predispositions
- that have been slowly taking root in the silence of innumerable
- Ages? Undoubtedly not. All that I contend for is, that from the
- moment of relinquishing all _unnatural_ habits no new disease is
- generated; and that the predisposition to hereditary maladies
- gradually perishes for want of its accustomed supply. In cases
- of consumption, cancer, gout, asthma, and scrofula, such is the
- invariable tendency of a diet of vegetables and pure water....”
-
-He concludes this philosophic discourse with an earnest appeal to the
-various classes of society:--
-
- “I address myself not to the young enthusiast only, to the ardent
- devotee of truth and virtue--the pure and passionate moralist,
- yet unvitiated by the contagion of the world. He will embrace a
- pure system from its abstract truth, its beauty, its simplicity,
- and its promise of wide-extended benefit. Unless custom has
- turned poison into food, he will hate the brutal pleasures of the
- chase by instinct. It will be a contemplation full of horror and
- disappointment to his mind that beings, capable of the gentlest and
- most admirable sympathies, should take delight in the deathpangs
- and last convulsions of dying animals.
-
- “The elderly man, whose youth has been poisoned by intemperance,
- or who has lived with apparent moderation, and is afflicted
- with a variety of painful maladies, would find his account in
- a beneficial change, produced without the risk of poisonous
- medicines. The mother, to whom the perpetual restlessness of
- disease, and unaccountable deaths incident to her children, are the
- causes of incurable unhappiness, would, on this diet, experience
- the satisfaction of beholding their perpetual health and natural
- playfulness.[239] The most valuable lives are daily destroyed by
- diseases that it is dangerous to palliate, and impossible to cure,
- by medicine. How much longer will man continue to pimp for the
- gluttony of Death--his most insidious, implacable, and eternal foe?”
-
-Some time after the melancholy death of his first wife, Shelley married
-Mary Wolstoncroft, the daughter of William Godwin, author of _Political
-Justice_--perhaps the most revolutionary of all pleas for a change in
-the constitution of society that has ever proceeded from a prosaic
-tradesman, such as, in the ordinary intercourse of life and interchange
-of ideas, his biography and correspondence (lately published) prove
-him to have been. Her mother was the celebrated and earliest advocate
-of the rights of women. Previously, the lovers had travelled through
-France and part of Germany, and an account of their six weeks’ tour was
-afterwards printed by Mrs. Shelley.
-
-In 1815 appeared his _Alastor; or the Spirit of Solitude_. In 1817
-he again left England for Geneva. While in Switzerland he made the
-acquaintance of Byron, which was renewed during his stay in Italy.
-In the same year he returned to this country and, after a short
-sojourn with Leigh Hunt, he settled at Great Marlow, one of the most
-picturesque parts of the Thames. There, in spite of his own ill-health,
-he showed the active benevolence of his character, not only in the
-easier form of alms-giving but also in frequent visits to the sick
-and destitute, at the risk of aggravating symptoms of consumption now
-alarmingly apparent. There, too, he composed the _Revolt of Islam_,
-or, as it was originally more fitly entitled, _Laon and Cythna_. In
-this poem, by the mouth of Laone, he again expresses his humanitarian
-convictions and sympathies. She calls upon the enfranchised nations:--
-
- “‘My brethren, we are free! The fruits are glowing
- Beneath the stars, and the night-winds are flowing
- O’er the ripe corn; the Birds and Beasts are dreaming--
- Never again may blood of bird or beast
- Stain with his venomous stream a human feast,
- To the pure skies in accusation steaming.
- Avenging poisons shall have ceased
- To feed disease, and fear, and madness.
- The dwellers of the earth and air
- Shall throng around our steps in gladness,
- Seeking their food or refuge there.
- Our toil from Thought all glorious forms shall cul.
- To make this earth, our home, more beautiful,
- And Science, and her sister Poesy,
- Shall clothe in light the fields and cities of the Free.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “Their feast was such as Earth, the general Mother,
- Pours from her fairest bosom, when she smiles
- In the embrace of Autumn--to each other
- As when some parent fondly reconciles
- Her warring children, _she_ their wrath beguiles
- With her own sustenance; _they_, relenting, weep--
- Such was this Festival, which, from their isles,
- And continents, and winds, and oceans deep,
- All shapes might throng to share, that fly, or walk, or creep:
-
- “Might share in peace and innocence, for _gore_,
- _Or poison none this festal did pollute_.
- But, piled on high, an overflowing store
- Of pomegranates, and citrons--fairest fruit,
- Melons, and dates, and figs, and many a root
- Sweet and sustaining, and bright grapes, ere yet
- Accursed fire their mild juice could transmute
- Into a mortal bane; and brown corn set
- In baskets: with pure streams their thirsting lips they wet.”[240]
-
-While he was yet residing in Marlow, the Princess Charlotte, daughter
-of the Prince of Wales (afterwards George IV.,) died; and, since her
-character had been in strong contrast with her father’s and with
-royal persons’ in general, her early death seems to have caused, not
-only ceremonial mourning, but also genuine regret amongst all in the
-community having any knowledge of her exceptional amiability. The poet
-seized the opportunity of so public an event, and published _An Address
-to the People on the Death of the Princess Charlotte. By the Hermit of
-Marlow_, in which he inscribed the motto--“We pity the plumage, but
-forget the dying bird.” In this pamphlet, while paying due tribute of
-regret for the death of an amiable girl, and fully appreciating the
-sorrow caused by death as well among the destitute and obscure (with
-whom, indeed, the too usual absence of the care and sympathy of friends
-intensifies the sorrow) as among the rich and powerful, he invited, in
-studiously moderate language, attention to the many just reasons for
-national mourning in the interests of the poor no less than of princes;
-and, in particular, invited the nation to express its indignant grief
-for the fate of the Lancashire mechanics who, missing the happier
-fate of their brethren slaughtered at Peterloo, were subjected to an
-ignominious death by a government which had, by its neglect, encouraged
-the growth of a just discontent.
-
-In 1818 Shelley left England never to return. At this time was composed
-the principal part of his masterpiece--_Prometheus Unbound_, the most
-finished and carefully executed of all his poems. While in Rome (1819)
-he published _The Cenci_, which had been suggested to him by the famous
-picture of Guido, until lately supposed to be that of Beatrice Cenci,
-and by the traditions, current even in the poet’s time, of the cruel
-fate of his heroine. Shakspere’s four great dramas excepted, _The
-Cenci_ must take rank as the finest tragic drama since the days of
-the Greek masters. It is worked up to a degree of pathos unsurpassed
-by anything of the kind in literature. “The Fifth Act,” remarks Mrs.
-Shelley, his editor and commentator, “is a masterpiece. Every character
-has a voice that echoes truth in its tones.” _The Cenci_ was followed
-in quick succession by the _Witch of Atlas_, _Adonais_ (an elegy on
-the death of Keats), the most exquisite “In Memoriam”--not excepting
-Milton’s or Tennyson’s--ever written; and _Hellas_, which was inspired
-by his strong sympathy with the Greeks, who were then engaged in the
-war of independence.
-
-Of his lesser productions, the _Ode to the Skylark_ is of an
-inspiration seldom equalled in its kind. With the “blythe spirit,” whom
-he apostrophises, the poet rises in rapt ecstasy “higher still and
-higher.” For the rest of his productions (the _Letters from Italy_ and
-criticisms or rather eulogies on Greek art have an especial interest)
-and for the other events in his brief remaining existence we must
-refer our readers to the complete edition of his works.[241] The last
-work upon which he was engaged was his _Triumph of Life_, a poem in
-the _terza rima_ of the _Divine Comedy_. It breaks off abruptly--it is
-peculiarly interesting to note--with the significant words, “Then what
-is Life, I cried?”
-
-The manner of his death is well known. While engaged in his usual
-recreation of boating he was drowned in the bay of Spezia. His body
-was washed on to the shore and, according to regulations then in force
-by the Italian governments of the day, in guarding against possible
-infection from the plague, it was burned where it lay, in presence of
-his friends Byron and Trelawney, and the ashes were entombed in the
-Protestant cemetery in Rome--a not unfitting disposal of the remains of
-one the most spiritualised of human beings.
-
-The following just estimate of the character of his genius and
-writings, by a thoughtful critic, is worth reproduction here:--“No man
-was more essentially a poet--‘glancing from earth to heaven.’ He was,
-indeed, ‘of imagination all compact.’ ... In all his poems he uniformly
-denounces vice and immorality in every form; and his descriptions of
-love, which are numerous, are always refined and delicate, with even
-less of sensuousness than in many of our most admired writers. It
-is true that he decried marriage, but not in favour of libertinism;
-and the evils he depicts, or laments, are those arising from the
-indissolubility of the bond, or from the opinions of society as to its
-necessity--opinions to which he himself submitted by marrying the woman
-to whom he was attached.... His reputation as a poet has gradually
-widened since his death, and has not yet reached its culminating point.
-He was the poet of the future--of an ideal futurity--and hence it was
-that his own age could not entirely sympathise with him. He has been
-called the ‘poet of poets,’ a proud title, and, in some respects,
-deserved.”[242]
-
-Of his creed, the article which he most firmly held, and which,
-perhaps, most distinguishes him from ordinary thinkers, was the
-_Perfectibility_ of his species, and his firm faith in the ultimate
-triumph of Good. “He believed,” says the one authority who had the
-best means of knowing his thought and feeling, “that mankind had only
-to _will_ that there should be no evil, and there would be none. It is
-not my part in these notes to criticise the arguments that have been
-urged against this opinion, but to mention the fact that he entertained
-it, and was, indeed, attached to it with fervent enthusiasm. That man
-could be so perfectionised as to be able to expel Evil from his own
-nature, and from the greater part of the world, was the cardinal point
-of his system. And the subject he liked best to dwell upon was the
-image of One warring with an evil principle, oppressed not only by it
-but by all, even the good, who were deluded into considering evil a
-_necessary_ portion of humanity--a victim full of gratitude and of hope
-and of the spirit of triumph emanating from a reliance in the ultimate
-omnipotence of Good.” Such was the conviction which inspired his
-greatest poem _The Prometheus Unbound_.
-
-A principal charm of his poetry is that which repels the common class
-of readers: “He loved to _idealise_ reality, and this is a task shared
-by few. We are willing to have our passing whims exalted into passions,
-for this gratifies our vanity. But few of us understand or sympathise
-with the endeavour to ally the love of abstract beauty and adoration
-of abstract Good with sympathies with our own kind.”[243] Of so rare a
-spirit it is peculiarly interesting to know something of the outward
-form:--
-
- “His features [describes one of his biographers] were not
- symmetrical--the mouth, perhaps, excepted. Yet the effect of the
- whole was extremely powerful. They breathed an animation, a fire,
- an enthusiasm, a vivid and preternatural intelligence, that I never
- met with in any other countenance. Nor was the moral expression
- less beautiful than the intellectual: for there was a softness, a
- delicacy, a gentleness, and especially (though this will surprise
- many) that air of profound religious veneration that characterises
- the best works, and chiefly the frescoes, of the great Masters of
- Florence and of Rome.
-
- “His eyes were blue, unfathomably dark and lustrous. His hair was
- brown: but very early in life it became grey, while his unwrinkled
- face retained to the last a look of wonderful youth. It is admitted
- on all sides that no adequate picture was ever painted of him.
- Mulready is reported to have said that he was too beautiful to
- paint. And yet, although so singularly lovely, he owed less of his
- charm to regularity of feature, or to grace of movement, than to an
- indescribable personal fascination.”
-
-As to his voice, impressions varied:--
-
- “Like all finely-tempered natures, he vibrated in harmony with
- the subjects of his thought. Excitement made his utterance shrill
- and sharp. Deep feeling, or the sense of beauty, lowered its
- tone to richness; but the _timbre_ was always acute, in sympathy
- with his intense temperament. All was of one piece in Shelley’s
- nature. This peculiar voice, varying from moment to moment, and
- affecting different sensibilities in diverse ways, corresponds to
- the high-strung passion of his life, his finedrawn and ethereal
- fancies, and the clear vibrations of his palpitating verse. Such a
- voice, far-reaching, penetrating, and unearthly, befitted one who
- lived in rarest ether on the topmost heights of human thought.”[244]
-
-If the physical characteristics of a great Teacher or of a sublime
-Genius excite a natural curiosity, it is the principal _moral_
-characteristics which most reasonably and profoundly interest us. To
-the supremely amiable disposition of the creator of _The Cenci_ and
-_Prometheus Unbound_ brief reference has been made; and we shall fitly
-supplement this imperfect sketch of his humanitarian career with the
-vivid impressions left on the mind of the friend who best knew him.
-Love of truth and hatred of falsehood and injustice were not, in his
-case, limited to the pages of a book, and forgotten in the too often
-deadening influence of intercourse with the world--they permeated his
-whole life and conversation.
-
- “The qualities that struck any one newly introduced to Shelley
- were, first, a gentle and cordial goodness that animated his
- discourse with warm affection and helpful sympathy; the other, the
- eagerness and ardour with which he was attached to the cause of
- human happiness and improvement, and the fervent eloquence with
- which he discussed such subjects. His conversation was marked
- by its happy abundance, and the beautiful language in which he
- clothed his poetic ideas and philosophical notions. To defecate
- life of its misery and its evil was the ruling passion of his
- soul; he dedicated to it every power of his mind, every pulsation
- of his heart. He looked on political freedom as the direct agent
- to effect the happiness of mankind; and thus any new-sprung hope
- of liberty inspired a joy and even exultation more intense and
- wild than he could have felt for any personal advantage. Those
- who have never experienced the workings of passion on general and
- unselfish subjects cannot understand this; and it must be difficult
- of comprehension to the younger generation rising around, since
- they cannot remember the scorn and hatred with which the partisans
- of reform were regarded some few years ago, nor the persecution to
- which they were exposed.
-
- “Many advantages attended his birth; he spurned them all when
- balanced with what he considered his duties. He was generous to
- imprudence--devoted to heroism. These characteristics breathe
- throughout his poetry. The struggle for human weal; the resolution
- firm to martyrdom; the impetuous pursuit; the glad triumph in
- good; the determination not to despair.... Perfectly gentle
- and forbearing in manner, he suffered a great deal of internal
- irritability, or rather excitement, and his fortitude to bear was
- almost always on the stretch; and thus, during a short life, he had
- gone through more experience of sensation than many whose existence
- is protracted. ‘If I die to-morrow,’ he said, on the eve of
- unanticipated death, ‘I have lived to be older than my father.’ The
- weight of thought and feeling burdened him heavily. You read his
- sufferings in his attenuated frame, while you perceived the mastery
- he held over them in his animated countenance and brilliant eyes.
-
- “He died, and the world showed no outward sigh; but his influence
- over mankind, though slow in growth, is fast augmenting; and in
- the ameliorations that have taken place in the political state of
- his country we may trace, in part, the operation of his arduous
- struggles.... He died, and his place among those who knew him
- intimately has never been filled up. He walked beside them like a
- spirit of good to comfort and benefit--to enlighten the darkness of
- life with irradiations of genius, to cheer with his sympathy and
- love.”[245]
-
- * * * * *
-
-With the name of Shelley is usually connected that of his more popular
-contemporary, Byron (1788-1824). The brother poets, it already has been
-noted, met in Switzerland; and, afterwards, they had some intercourse
-in Italy during Shelley’s last years. Excepting surpassing genius,
-and equal impatience of conventional laws and usages they had little
-in common. The one was first and above all a reformer, the other a
-satirist. To assert, however, the author of _Childe Harold_ to have
-been inspired solely by cynical contempt for his species is unjust.
-A large part of his poems is pervaded apparently with an intense
-conviction of the evils of life as produced by human selfishness and
-folly. But what distinguishes the author of _Prometheus Unbound_ from
-his great rival (if he may be so called) is the sure and certain
-hope of a future of happiness for the world. Thus, that belief in
-the all-importance of humane dietetics, as a principal factor in the
-production of weal or woe on earth, is far less apparent in Byron is
-matter of course.
-
-Yet, that in moments of better feeling, Byron revolted from the gross
-materialism of the banquets, of which, as he expresses it, England
-
- “Was wont to boast--as if a Glutton’s tray
- Were something very glorious to behold.”[246]
-
-and that, had he not been seduced by the dinner-giving propensity
-of English society, he would have retained his early preference for
-the refined diet, we are glad to believe. In a letter to his mother,
-written in his early youth, he announces that he had determined upon
-relinquishment of flesh-eating, and his clearer mental perceptions in
-consequence of his reformed living;[247] and he seems even to have
-advanced to the extreme frugality of living, at times, upon biscuits
-and water only.
-
-It would have been well for him had he, like Shelley, abstained from
-gross eating and drinking upon _principle_; and had he uniformly
-adhered to the resolution formed in his earlier years, we should, in
-that case, not have to lament his too notorious sexual intemperance.
-
-
-
-
-XLII.
-
-PHILLIPS. 1767-1840.
-
-
-It is an obvious truth--in vain demonstrated seventeen centuries
-since by the best moral teachers of non-Christian antiquity--that
-abolition of the slaughter-house, with all the cruel barbarism
-directly or indirectly associated with it, by a necessary and logical
-corollary, involves abolition of every form of injustice and cruelty.
-Of this truth the subject of the present article is a conspicuous
-witness. During his long and active career, in social and political
-as well as in literary life, Sir Richard Phillips was a consistent
-_philanthropist_; and few, in his position of influence, have
-surpassed him in real beneficence. In the face of rancorous obloquy
-and opposition from that too numerous proportion of communities which
-systematically resist all “innovation” and deviation from the “ancient
-paths,” he fearlessly maintained the cause of the oppressed; and, as a
-prison reformer, he claims a place second only to that of Howard.
-
-Of his life we have fuller record than we have of some others of the
-prophets of dietetic reformation. Yet there is uncertainty as to his
-birthplace. One account represents him to have been born in London,
-and to have been the son of a brewer. Another statement, which appears
-to be more authentic, reports his place of birth to have been in the
-neighbourhood of Leicester, and his father to have been a farmer. What
-is of more permanent interest is the account preserved of the reason
-of his first revolt from the practice of kreophagy. Disliking the
-business of farming, it seems, while yet quite young, not without the
-acquiescence of his parents, he had adventurously sought his living, on
-his own account, in the metropolis. What, if any, plans had been formed
-by him is not known; but it is certain that he soon found himself
-in imminent danger of starvation, and, after brief trial, he gladly
-re-sought his home. Upon his return to the farm, he found awaiting him
-the welcome of the “Prodigal Son”--although, happily, he had no just
-claim to the title of that well-known character. A “fatted calf” was
-killed, and the boy shared in the dish with the rest of the family.
-It was not until after the feast that he learned that the slaughtered
-calf had been his especial favourite and playmate. So revolting to
-his keener sensibility was the consciousness of this fact, that he
-registered a vow never again to live upon the products of slaughter.
-To this determination he adhered during the remainder of his long
-life.[248]
-
-His next venture, and first choice of a profession, while he was still
-quite young, led him to engage in teaching. As an advertisement he
-placed a flag at the door of a house in which he rented a room, where
-he gave elementary instruction to such children as were entrusted to
-his tuition by the townspeople of Leicester. The experiment proved not
-very successful, and at the end of a twelvemonth he tried his fortune
-elsewhere. He next turned to commerce--at first in a humble fashion.
-His business prospered, and his next important undertaking was the
-establishment of a newspaper--the _Leicester Herald_. This journal
-was what is now called a “Liberal” paper. Yet by those who affected
-to identify the welfare of England with the continued existence of
-rotten boroughs and other corruptions, it was held up to opprobrium as
-revolutionary and “incendiary.” Phillips himself had the reputation
-of an able political writer; but the chief support of the journal was
-the celebrated Dr. Priestley, whose name and contributions gave it a
-reputation it otherwise might not have gained. The responsible editor
-did not escape the perils that then environed the denouncers of legal
-or social iniquity, and Phillips, convicted of a “misdemeanour,” was
-sentenced to three years’ imprisonment in the Leicester jail. During
-his imprisonment he displayed the beneficence of his disposition in
-relieving the miseries of some of his more wretched companions. Upon
-his release, he sold his interest in the _Leicester Herald_, and for
-some time confined himself altogether to his business.
-
-Leaving Leicester he migrated to London and set up a hosiery
-establishment, which, however, he soon converted into the more
-congenial bookshop. It was the success of the _Leicester Herald_
-that, probably, led him to think of starting a new periodical. Upon
-consultation with Priestley and other friends he was encouraged to
-proceed, and the _Monthly Magazine_ was the result. It commenced in
-July 1795 and proved to be a most decided success. At first conducted
-by Priestley, it was afterwards partly under the editorship of Dr.
-Aikin, author of the _Country Around Manchester_. The proprietors
-shared in the management of the magazine, but to what extent it is
-difficult to ascertain. Amongst the contributors was “Peter Pindar,”
-so well known as the author, amongst other satirical rhymes, of the
-verses upon George III., perplexed by the celebrated “apple dumpling.”
-The monthly receipts from the sale amounted to £1,500. A quarrel
-with Aikin was followed by the resignation of the editor. Increase
-of business soon led to a removal of the publishing-house from St.
-Paul’s Churchyard to a much larger establishment in Blackfriars. His
-home was at Hampstead where, in a beautiful neighbourhood and in an
-elegant villa, the opulent publisher enjoyed the refined pleasures
-which his humaneness of living, as well as beneficent industry, had
-justly deserved. At this time he began a correspondence with C. J.
-Fox, on the subject of the History of James II., upon which the famous
-Whig statesman was then engaged. Four letters addressed to him by
-Fox have been printed, but they have no special importance. He was
-already married, and the story of his courtship has more than the mere
-gossiping interest of ordinary biography. Upon his first arrival in
-London, he had taken lodgings in the house of a milliner. One of her
-assistants was a Miss Griffiths, a beautiful young Welsh girl, who,
-learning the unconquerable aversion of their guest from the common
-culinary barbarism, had amiably volunteered to prepare his dishes on
-strictly anti-kreophagist principles. This incident induced a sympathy
-and friendship which speedily resulted in a proposal of marriage. They
-were a handsome pair; and a somewhat precipitate matrimonial alliance
-was followed by many years of unmixed happiness for both.
-
-In 1807 the “Livery” of London elected him to the office of High
-Sheriff of the City and County of Middlesex for the ensuing year. This
-responsible post put to the proof the sincerity of his professions as
-a reformer. Nor did he fail in the trial. During his term of power he
-effected many improvements in the treatment of the real or pretended
-criminals who, as occupants of the jails, came under his jurisdiction.
-No one who has read Howard’s _State of the Prisons_, published thirty
-years before Phillips’ entrance upon his office, or even general
-accounts of them, needs to be told that they were the very nurseries
-of disease, vice, misery, and crime of all kinds--one of the many
-everlasting disgraces of the governments and civilisation of the day.
-Nor had they been appreciably improved during the interval of thirty
-years.
-
-The new Sheriff daily visited Newgate and the Fleet prisons and, by
-personal inquiry, made himself acquainted with the actual state of the
-occupants, and in many ways was able to ameliorate their condition. By
-his direction several collecting boxes were conspicuously displayed,
-and the alms collected were applied to the relief of the families of
-destitute debtors. He further insisted that persons, whose indictments
-had been ignored by the grand jury, should not be detained in the
-foul and pestilential atmosphere, as was then the case, but should be
-immediately released.
-
-In his admirable _Letter to the Livery of London_, he begins with an
-appeal to the common sentiments of humanity which ought to have some
-influence with those in authority. He reminds his readers that:--
-
- “It is too much the fashion to exclude _feeling_ from the
- business of public life, and a total absence of it is considered
- as a necessary qualification in a public man. Among statesmen
- and politicians he is considered as weak and incompetent who
- suffers natural affection to have any influence on his political
- calculations.”
-
-In a note to this passage he adds:--
-
- “It appears to me that political errors of all kinds arise, in
- a great degree, from the studied banishment of feeling from the
- consideration of statesmen. Reasoning frequently fails us from
- a false estimate of the premises on which our deductions are
- founded. But _feeling_, which, in most respects, is synonymous
- with conscience, is almost always right. Statesmen are apt to view
- society as a machine, the several parts of which must be made by
- them to perform their respective functions for the success of
- the whole. The comparison is often made, but the analogy is not
- perfect. The parts of the social machine are made up of sensitive
- beings, each of whom (though in the obscurest situation) is
- equal, in all the affections of our nature, to those in the most
- conspicuous places. The harmony and happiness of the whole will
- depend on the _degree_ of feeling exercised by the directors and
- prime movers.”
-
-After this preliminary exhortation, he presents to their contemplation
-an appalling revelation of the stupid cruelties of the criminal law
-and its administration. He gives a graphic account of the jail of
-Newgate--both of the felons’ and the debtors’ division. The dimensions
-of the entire building were 105 yards by 40 yards, of which only
-one-fourth part was used by the prisoners. Into this space were crowded
-sometimes seven or eight hundred, never less than four or five hundred,
-human beings of both sexes and of all ages. “Felons” and debtors seem
-to have fared pretty much the same, and filth, fever, and starvation
-prevailed in all parts of the jail alike. The women prisoners he
-describes as pressed together so closely as, upon lying down, to
-leave no atom of space between their bodies. As for the results of
-this neglect on the part of the State, he finds it impossible to draw
-an adequate picture of them, and is at a loss to imagine how the whole
-city is not carried off by a plague. By persevering energy he obtained
-some reformation, although he failed in his proposal for a new building.
-
-As to the individual occupants of these pest-houses, he found a large
-number whose offences were comparatively of an innocent kind, but who
-were herded with the most savage criminals. He espoused the cause
-of several of these prisoners--especially of the women--who, after
-some years of incarceration, were frequently drifted off to Botany
-Bay, which, besides its other terrors, was for almost all of them a
-perpetual separation from their homes, their husbands, and families.
-Twice he vainly addressed a memorial to the Secretary of State (Lord
-Hawkesbury) on their behalf. The traditions and routine of office were
-too powerful even for his persistent energy.
-
-Romilly had lately introduced his measure for amendment of the
-barbarous and bloody penal code of this country. Sir Richard Phillips
-addressed to him also a thoughtful letter, in which were pointed out
-some of the more glaring abuses in the administration of the laws, with
-which his official experience as High Sheriff had made him familiar.
-When Mansfield was Lord Chief Justice, and Thurlow Lord Chancellor,
-the hangings were so numerous that, as he informs us, on one “hanging
-holiday” he saw nineteen persons on the gallows, the eldest of whom
-was not twenty-two years of age. The larger number, probably, had
-been sentenced to this barbarous death for theft of various kinds.
-Three hundred years had passed away since the animadversions of
-More (_before_ his accession to office) in the _Utopia_, and some
-half-century since Beccaria and Voltaire had protested against this
-monstrous iniquity of criminal legislation, without effect, in England,
-at least. As far as their contemporaries and their successors for long
-afterwards were concerned these philanthropists had written wholly in
-vain.
-
-In the letter to Romilly Phillips insists particularly upon the
-following reforms: (1) No prisoner to be placed in irons before trial.
-(2) None to be denied free access of friends or legal advisers. (3)
-None to be deprived of adequate means of subsistence--14 ounces of
-bread then being the _maximum_ of allowance of food. (4) Every prisoner
-to be discharged as soon as the grand jury shall have thrown out the
-bill of indictment. (5) Abolition of payment to jailors by exactions
-forced from the most destitute prisoners, and of various other
-exorbitant or illegal fines and extortions. (6) Separation of lunatic
-from other occupants of the jails. (7) That counsel be provided for
-those too poor to pay for themselves.
-
-In 1811 Phillips published his _Treatise on the Powers and Duties of
-Juries, and on the Criminal Laws of England_. Three years later _Golden
-Rules for Jurymen_, which he afterwards expanded into a book entitled
-_Golden Rules of Social Philosophy_ (1826), in which he lays down rules
-of conduct for the ordinary business of life--lawyers, clergymen,
-schoolmasters, and others being the objects of his admonitions. It is
-in this work that the civic dignitary--so “splendidly false” to the
-habits of his class--sets forth at length the principles upon which his
-unalterable faith in the truth of humanitarian dietetics was founded.
-The reasons of this “true confession” are fully and perspicuously
-specified, and the first forms the key-note of the rest:--[249]
-
- “1. _Because_, being mortal himself, and holding his life on the
- same uncertain and precarious tenure as all other sensitive beings,
- he does not find himself justified by any supposed superiority or
- inequality of condition in destroying the enjoyment of existence of
- any other mortal, except in the necessary defence of his own life.
-
- “2. _Because_ the desire of life is so paramount, and so
- affectingly cherished in all sensitive beings, that he cannot
- reconcile it to his feelings to destroy or become a voluntary party
- in the destruction of any innocent living being, however much in
- his power, or apparently insignificant.
-
- “3. _Because_ he feels the same abhorrence from devouring flesh in
- general that he hears carnivorous men express against eating human
- flesh, or the flesh of Horses, Dogs, Cats, or other animals which,
- in some countries, it is not customary for carnivorous men to
- devour.
-
- “4. _Because_ Nature seems to have made a superabundant provision
- for the nourishment of [frugivorous] animals in the saccharine
- matter of Roots and Fruits, in the farinaceous matter of Grain,
- Seed, and Pulse, and in the oleaginous matter of the Stalks,
- Leaves, and Pericarps of numerous vegetables.
-
- “5. _Because_ he feels an utter and unconquerable repugnance
- against receiving into his stomach the flesh or juices of deceased
- animal organisation.
-
- “6. _Because_ the destruction of the mechanical organisation of
- vegetables inflicts no sensible suffering, nor violates any moral
- feeling, while vegetables serve to sustain his health, strength,
- and spirits above those of most carnivorous men.
-
- “7. _Because_ during thirty years of rigid abstinence from the
- flesh and juices of deceased sensitive beings, he finds that he has
- not suffered a day’s serious illness, that his animal strength and
- vigour have been equal or superior to that of other men, and that
- his mind has been fully equal to numerous shocks which he has had
- to encounter from malice, envy, and various acts of turpitude in
- his fellow-men.
-
- “8. _Because_ observing that carnivorous propensities among animals
- are accompanied by a total want of sympathetic feelings and gentle
- sentiments--as in the Hyæna, the Tiger, the Vulture, the Eagle, the
- Crocodile, and the Shark--he conceives that the practice of these
- carnivorous tyrants affords no worthy example for the imitation or
- justification of rational, reflecting, and _conscientious_ beings.
-
- “9. _Because_ he observes that carnivorous men, unrestrained by
- reflection or sentiment, even refine on the most cruel practices
- of the most savage animals [of other species], and apply their
- resources of mind and art to prolong the miseries of the victims
- of their appetites--bleeding, skinning, roasting, and boiling
- animals alive, and torturing them without reservation or remorse,
- if they thereby add to the variety or the delicacy of their
- carnivorous gluttony.
-
- “10. _Because_ the natural sentiments and sympathies of human
- beings, in regard to the killing of other animals, are generally
- so averse from the practice that few men or women could devour the
- animals whom _they might be obliged themselves to kill_; and yet
- they forget, or affect to forget, the living endearments or dying
- sufferings of the being, while they are wantoning over his remains.
-
- “11. _Because_ the human stomach appears to be naturally so averse
- from receiving the remains of animals, that few could partake
- of them if they were not disguised and flavoured by culinary
- preparation; yet rational beings ought to feel that the prepared
- substances are not the less what they truly are, and _that no
- disguise of food, in itself loathsome_, ought to delude the
- unsophisticated perceptions of a considerate mind.
-
- “12. _Because_ the forty-seven millions of acres in England and
- Wales _would maintain in abundance as many human inhabitants_,
- if they lived wholly on grain, fruits, and vegetables; but they
- sustain only twelve millions [in 1811] _scantily_, while animal
- food is made the basis of human subsistence.
-
- “13. _Because_ animals do not present or contain the substance of
- food in mass, like vegetables; every part of their economy being
- subservient to their mere existence, and their entire frames being
- solely composed of blood necessary for life, of bones for strength,
- of muscles for motion, and of nerves for sensation.
-
- “14. _Because_ the practice of killing and devouring animals can
- be justified by no moral plea, by no physical benefit, nor _by any
- just allegation of necessity in countries where there is abundance
- of vegetable food_, and where the arts of gardening and husbandry
- are favoured by social protection, and by the genial character of
- the soil and climate.
-
- “15. _Because_ wherever the number and hostility of predatory land
- animals might so tend to prevent the cultivation of vegetable food
- as to render it necessary to destroy and, perhaps, to eat them,
- there could in that case exist no necessity for destroying the
- animated existences of the distinct elements of air and water; and,
- as in most civilised countries, there exist no land animals besides
- those which are properly bred for slaughter or luxury, of course
- the destruction of mammals and birds in such countries must be
- ascribed either to unthinking wantonness or to carnivorous gluttony.
-
- “16. _Because_ the stomachs of locomotive beings appear to have
- been provided for the purpose of conveying about with the moving
- animal nutritive substances, analogous in effect to the soil in
- which are fixed the roots of plants and, therefore, nothing ought
- to be introduced into the stomach for digestion and for absorption
- by the _lacteals_, or roots of the animal system, but the natural
- bases of simple nutrition--as the saccharine, the oleaginous, and
- the farinaceous matter of the vegetable kingdom.”[250]
-
-Perhaps his most entertaining book is his _Morning Walk from London
-to Kew_ (1817). In it he avails himself of the various objects on his
-road for instructive moralising--as, for example, when he meets with
-a mutilated soldier, on the frightful waste and cruelty of war; or
-with a horse struggling up a precipitous hill in agony of suffering
-from the torture of the bearing-rein, on the common forms of selfish
-cruelty; or again, when he deplores the incalculable waste of food
-resources, by the careless indifferentism of owners of land and of the
-State in allowing the country to remain encumbered with useless, or
-comparatively useless, timber, in place of planting it with valuable
-fruit trees of various sorts according to the nature of the soil.
-
-His next publication of importance was his _Million of Facts and
-Correct Data and Elementary Constants in the entire Circle of the
-Sciences, and on all Subjects of Speculation and Practice_ (1832) 8vo.
-It is this work by which, perhaps, Phillips is now most known--an
-immense collection and, although many of the “Constants” may be open
-to criticism or have already become obsolete, it may still be examined
-with interest. The plan of the work is that of a classified collection
-of scraps of information on all the arts and sciences. It was so
-popular that five large editions were published in seven years. His
-preface to the stereotyped edition is dated 1839. He remarks that
-“his pretensions for such a task are a prolonged and uninterrupted
-intercourse with books and men of letters. He has, for forty-nine
-years, been occupied as the literary conductor of various public
-journals of reputation; he has superintended the press in the printing
-of many hundred books in every branch of human pursuit, and he has been
-intimately associated with men celebrated for their attainments in each
-of them.” In the facts concerning anatomy and physiology will be found
-references to scientific and other authorities upon the subject of
-flesh-eating.
-
-Occasionally we meet with biographical facts of special interest.
-Thus, he says that, early in 1825, he suggested the first idea of the
-Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge to Dr. Birkbeck and then,
-by his advice, to Lord Brougham. His idea was the establishment of a
-fund for selling or giving away books and tracts, after the manner of
-the Religious Tract Society. As regards his astronomic paradoxes, his
-theory, in opposition to the Newtonian, that the phenomena attributed
-to gravitation are, in reality, the “proximate effects of the orbicular
-and rotatory motions of the earth” (for which he was severely
-criticised by Professor De Morgan), exhibits at least the various
-activity, if not the invariable infallibility, of his mental powers.
-
-A work of equal interest with a _Million of Facts_ is his next
-compilation--_A Dictionary of the Arts of Life and Civilisation_
-(1833). Under the article _Diet_ he well remarks:--
-
- “Some regard it as a purely _egotistical_ question whether men live
- on flesh or on vegetables. But others mix with it moral feelings
- towards animals. If theory prescribed _human_ flesh, the former
- party would lie in wait to devour their brethren; but the latter,
- regarding the value of life to all that breathe, consider that,
- even in a balance of argument, feelings of sympathy ought to turn
- the scale.... We see all the best animal and social qualities in
- mere vegetable-feeders.... Beasts of prey are necessarily solitary
- and fearful, even of one another. Physiologists, themselves
- carnivorous, differ on the subject, but they never take into
- account _moral_ considerations.
-
- “Though it is known that the Hindus and other Eastern peoples live
- wholly on rice--that the Irish and Scotch peasantry subsist on
- potatoes and oatmeal--and that the labouring poor of all countries
- live on the food, of which an acre yields one hundred times more
- than of flesh, while they enjoy unabated health and long life--yet
- an endless play of sophistry is maintained about the alleged
- necessity of killing and devouring animals.
-
- “At twelve years of age the author of this volume was struck with
- such horror in accidentally seeing the barbarities of a London
- slaughter-house, that since that hour he has never eaten anything
- but vegetables. He persevered, in spite of vulgar forebodings,
- with unabated vigorous health; and at sixty-six finds himself more
- able to undergo any fatigue of mind and body than any other person
- of his age. He quotes himself because the case, in so carnivorous
- a country, is uncommon--especially in the grades of society in
- which he has been accustomed to live.... On principle he does not
- abstain from any _vegetable_ luxuries or from fermented liquors;
- but any indulgence in the latter requires (he hastens to add) the
- correction of carbonate of soda. He is always in better health when
- water is his sole beverage; and such is the case with all who have
- imitated his practice.”[251]
-
-Under the article “Farming,” he observes that “a man who eats 1lb.
-of flesh eats the exact equivalent of 6lbs. of wheat, and 128lbs. of
-potatoes.” That is, that he, in such proportion, wastes the national
-resources of a country.
-
-The High Sheriff, on the occasion of some petition to the King, had
-been knighted, (to the affected scandal of his political enemies, who,
-apparently, wished to reserve all titular or other recognition for
-their own party), and the conspicuous beneficence of his career, while
-in office, had gained for him an honourable popularity. But fortune,
-so long favourable, now for a time showed itself adverse. In 1809
-his affairs became embarrassed, and recourse to the bankruptcy court
-inevitable. Happily his friends aided him in saving from the general
-wreck the copyright of the _Monthly Magazine_. Its management was a
-chief occupation of his remaining years; and his own contributions,
-under the signature of “Common Sense,” attracted marked attention.
-In his publishing career, the most curious incident was the refusal
-of the MSS. of _Waverley_. The author’s demands seem to have been in
-excess of the value placed upon the novel by the publisher. It had been
-advertised in the first instance (he tells us) as the production of Mr.
-W. Scott. The name was then withdrawn, and the famous novel came before
-the world anonymously.
-
-Besides the writings already noticed, Phillips compiled or edited a
-large number of school books. He tells us that all the elementary
-books, published under the names of Goldsmith, Blair and others, were
-his own productions--between the years 1798 and 1815. Nor was his
-mental activity confined to literary work; mechanical and scientific
-inventions largely occupied his attention. To prevent the enormous
-expenses of railway viaducts, embankments, and removals of streets, he
-proposed suspension roads, ten feet above the housetops, with inclined
-planes of 20° or 30°, and stationary engines to assist the rise and
-fall at each end. Cities, he maintained, might be traversed in this way
-on right lines, with intermediate points for ascent and descent. This
-bold and ingenious idea seems to be very like an anticipation of the
-elevated railways of New York, although even these have not yet reached
-the height Phillips thought to be desirable.
-
-He interested himself, also, in steam navigation. When Fulton was in
-England he was in frequent communication with his English friend, to
-whom he despatched a triumphant letter on the evening of his first
-voyage on the Hudson. This letter, having been shown to Earl Stanhope
-and some eminent engineers, was treated by them with derision as
-describing an impossibility. Sir R. Phillips then advertised for a
-company, to repeat on the Thames what had become an accomplished fact
-on the American rivers. After expenditure of a large sum of money in
-advertising he obtained only two ten-pound conditional subscribers.
-He then printed, with commendation, Fulton’s letters in the _Monthly
-Magazine_, and his credulity was almost universally reprobated. It is
-worth recording that, in the first steam voyage from the Clyde to the
-Thames, Phillips, three of his family, and five or six others, were the
-only passengers who had the courage to test the experiment. To allay
-the public alarms he published a letter in the newspapers, and before
-the end of that summer he saw the same packet set out on its voyage
-with 350 passengers.[252]
-
-In 1840, the year following the final edition of his most popular book,
-he died at Brighton in the seventy-third year of his age. During his
-busy life if, by his reforming energy, he had raised up some bitter
-enemies and detractors, he had made, on the other hand, some valuable
-friendships. Amongst these--not the least noteworthy--is his intimate
-friendship with that most humane-minded lawyer, Lord Erskine, one of
-those who have best adorned the legal profession in this country.
-
-
-
-
-XLIII.
-
-LAMARTINE. 1790-1869.
-
-
-Of aristocratic descent, and educated at the college of the “Fathers
-of the Faith” (Pères de la Foi), Du Prat--such was the name of his
-family--imbibed in his youth principles very different from those of
-his great literary contemporary Michelet. Happily, Nature seems to have
-endowed his mother with a rare refinement and humaneness of feeling;
-and from her example and instruction he derived, apparently, the germs
-of those loftier ideas which, in maturer age, characterise a great part
-of his writings. While the first Napoléon was still emperor, he entered
-the army, from which he soon retired to employ his leisure in the more
-congenial amusement of travel.
-
-In 1820 he first came before the world as the author of _Méditations
-Poétiques_, of which, within four years, 45,000 copies were sold, and
-the new poet was eagerly welcomed by the party of Reaction, who thought
-to find in him a future successor to the brilliant author of the _Génie
-du Christianisme_, the literary hope of their party, and the champion
-of the Church and royalty--the political counterbalance to Béranger,
-the poet of the Revolution--for Hugo had not yet raised the standard of
-revolt. Yet this remarkable volume with the greatest difficulty found
-its way into print. “A young man, [writes one of his biographers] his
-health scarcely re-established from a cruel malady, his face pale with
-suffering and covered with a veil of sadness, through which could be
-read the recent loss of an adored being, went about from publisher
-to publisher, carrying a small packet of verses dyed with tears.
-Everywhere the poetry and the poet were politely bowed out. At length,
-a bookseller, better advised, or seduced by the infinite grace of the
-young poet, decided to accept the manuscript so often rejected.” It was
-published without a name and without recommendation. The melancholy
-beauty of the style, and the melody of the rhythm, could not fail to
-attract sympathy from readers of taste and feeling, even from those
-opposed to his political prejudices--“A rhythm of a celestial melody,
-verse supple, cadenced, and sonorous, which softly vibrates as an
-Æolian harp sighing in the evening breeze.”
-
-Its political, rather than its poetical, recommendations, we
-may presume, gained for the writer from the Government of Louis
-XVIII. a diplomatic post at Florence, which he held until the
-dynastic revolution of 1830. For some short time he acted as secretary
-to the French Embassy in London, and during his stay in England he
-made the acquaintance of a rich Englishwoman, whom he afterwards
-married at Florence. A legacy of valuable property from an uncle, upon
-the condition of his assuming the name of Lamartine, still further
-enriched him.
-
-In 1829 appeared the collection of _Harmonies Poétiques et
-Réligieuses_, in which, as in all his poetry up to this time, one of
-the most characteristic features is his devotion to Legitimacy and the
-Church. The _renversement_ of 1830 considerably modified his political
-and ecclesiastical ideas. “I wish,” he declared at this turning-point
-in his career, “to enter the ranks of the people; to think, speak,
-act, and struggle with them.” One of the first proofs of his advanced
-opinions was his pamphlet advocating abolition of “capital” punishment.
-He failed to obtain a seat in the Chambre des Députés of Louis
-Philippe, whether in consequence of this advocacy or by reason of his
-antecedent politics. His enforced leisure he employed in travelling,
-and in 1832, with his English wife and their young daughter Juliette
-(whose death at Beyrout caused him inconsolable grief), he set sail for
-the East in a vessel equipped and armed at his own expense. A narrative
-of these travels he published in his _Voyage en Orient_ (1835). In the
-following year appeared his _Jocelyn_, a poem of charming tenderness
-and eloquence, and, in 1838, _La Chute d’un Ange_ (“The Fall of an
-Angel”), in which he, for the first time, gives expression to his
-feeling of revolt from the barbarisms of the Slaughter-House. In this
-strikingly original poem, one of the most remarkable of its kind in
-any language, Lamartine discovers to us that he no longer views human
-institutions, the customs of society, and the consecrated usages of
-nations through the rose-coloured medium of traditional prejudice. It
-is penetrated with a deep consciousness of the injustice and falseness
-of a large proportion of those things which are tolerated, and even
-approved, under the sanction of religious or social law, and with
-ardent indignation against cruelty and selfishness. In the frightful
-representation of the practices of the early tyrants of the world saved
-from the “universal deluge,” he allows us to see his own feeling. One
-of more humane race thus addresses his charming heroine Daïdha:--
-
- “Ces hommes, pour apaiser leur faim,
- N’ont pas assez des fruits que Dieu mit sous leur main.
- Par un crime envers Dieu dont frémit la Nature,
- Ils demandent au sang une autre nourriture.
- Dans leur cité fangeuse il coule par ruisseaux!
- Les cadavres y sont étalés en monceaux.
- _Ils traînent par les pieds des fleurs de la prairie,
- L’innocente brebis que leur main a nourrie,
- Et sous l’œil de l’agneau l’égorgeant sans remords,
- Ils savourent ses chairs et vivent de la mort!_
-
- * * * * *
-
- De cruels aliments incessamment repus,
- Toute pitié s’efface en leurs cœurs corrompus.
- Et leur œil, qu’au forfait le forfait habitue,
- Aime le sang qui coule et l’innocent qu’on tue.
- _Ils aiguisent le fer en flèches, en poignard;
- Du métier de tuer ils ont fait le grand art:
- Le meurtre par milliers s’appelle une victoire,
- C’est en lettres de sang que l’on écrit la Gloire._”
-
-From the pages of the “Primitive Book,” which he imagines to have been
-originally delivered to men, their hermit-host reads to Daïdha and her
-celestial, but incarnate, lover the true divine revelation, which is
-thus sublimely prefaced:--
-
- “Hommes! ne dites pas, en adorant ces pages,
- Un Dieu les écrivit par la main de ses sages.
-
- * * * * *
-
- La langue qu’il écrit chante éternellement--
- Ses lettres sont ces feux, mondes du firmament
- Et, par delà ces cieux, des lettres plus profondes--
- Mondes étincelants voilés par d’autres mondes.
- Le seul livre divin dans lequel il écrit
- Son nom toujours croissant, homme, c’est Ton Esprit!
- C’est ta Raison, miroir de la Raison suprême,
- Où se peint dans ta nuit quelque ombre de lui-même.
- Il vous parle, ô Mortel, mais c’est par ce seul sens.
- Toute bouche de chair altère ses accents.”
-
-In pronouncing the following code of morality, the voice of conscience
-and of reason coincides with the divine voice in our hearts:--
-
- “Tu ne leveras point la main contre ton frère:
- Et tu ne verseras aucun sang sur la terre,
- Ni celui des humains, ni celui des troupeaux
- Ni celui des animaux, ni celui des oiseaux:
- _Un cri sourd dans ton cœur défend de le répandre_,
- Car le sang est la vie, et tu ne peux la rendre.
- Tu ne te nourriras qu’avec les épis blonds
- Ondoyant comme l’onde aux flancs de tes vallons,
- Avec le riz croissant en roseaux sur tes rives--
- Table que chaque été renouvelle aux convives,
- Les racines, les fruits sur la branche mûris,
- L’excédant des rayons par l’abeille pétris,
- Et tous ces dons du sol où la séve de vie
- Vient s’offrir de soi-même à ta faim assouvie.
- _La chair des Animaux crierait comme un remord,
- Et la Mort dans ton sein engendrerait la Mort!_”
-
-Not only is the human animal sternly forbidden to imbrue his hands in
-the blood of his innocent earth-mates: it is also enjoined upon him to
-respect and cultivate their undeveloped intelligence and reason:--
-
- “Vous ferez alliance avec les ‘brutes’ même:
- Car Dieu, qui les créa, veut que l’homme les aime.
- D’intelligence et d’âme, à différents degrés,
- Elles ont eu leur part, vous la reconnaîtrez:
- Vous livez dans leurs yeux, douteuse comme un rêve,
- L’aube de la raison qui commence et se lève.
- Vous n’étoufferez pas cette vague clarté,
- Présage de lumière et d’immortalité:
- Vous la respecterez.
- La chaîne à mille anneaux va de l’homme à l’insecte:
- Que ce soit le premier, le dernier, le milieu,
- N’en insultez aucun, car tous tiennent à Dieu!”
-
-From such more rational estimate should follow, necessarily, just
-treatment:--
-
- “Ne les outragez pas par des noms de colère:
- Que la verge et le fouet ne soient pas leur salaire.
- Pour assouvir par eux vos brutaux appétits,
- Ne leur dérobez pas le lait de leurs petits:
- Ne les enchaînez pas serviles et farouches:
- Avec des mors de fer ne brisez pas leurs bouches
- Ne les écrasez pas sous de trop lourds fardeaux:
- Comprenez leur nature, adoucissez leur sort:
- _Le pacte entre eux et vous, hommes, n’est pas la Mort_.
- À sa meilleure fin façonnez chaque engeance,
- Prêtez-leur un rayon de votre intelligence:
- Adoucissez leurs mœurs en leur étant plus doux,
- Soyez médiateurs et juges entre eux tous.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Le plus beau don de l’homme, c’est la Miséricorde._”
-
-Consistently with, and consequently from, such just human relations
-with the lower species are the admonitions to break down the walls
-of partition between the various human races, and to the proper
-cultivation of the Earth, the common mother of all:--
-
- “Vous n’établirez pas ces séparations
- En races, en tribus, peuples ou nations.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Vous n’arracherez pas la branche avec le fruit:
- _Gloire à la main qui sème, honte à la main qui nuit_!
- Vous ne laisserez pas le terre aride et nue,
- Car vos pères par Dieu la trouvèrent vêtue.
- Que ceux qui passeront sur votre trace un jour
- Passent en bénissant leurs pères à leur tour.
- Vous l’aimerez d’amour comme on aime sa mère,
- Vous y posséderez votre place éphémère,
- Comme an soleil assis les hommes, tour à tour,
- Possedènt le rayon tant que dure le jour.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Par un inconcevable et maternel mystère,
- L’homme en la fatiguant fertilise la Terre.
- Nulle bouche ne sent sa tendresse tarir:
- Tout ce qu’elle a porté, son flanc peut le nourrir.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Vous vous assisterez dans toutes vos misères,
- Vous serez l’un à l’autre enfants, pères, et mères:
- _Le fardeau de chacun sera celui de tous,
- La Charité sera la justice entre vous_.
- Votre ombre ombragera le passant, votre pain
- Restera sur le seuil pour quiconque aura faim:
- Vous laisserez toujours quelques fruits sur la branche
- Pour que le voyageur vers ses lèvres la penche.
- Et vous n’amasserez jamais que pour un temps,
- _Car la Terre pour vous germe chaque printemps_,
- Et Dieu, qui verse l’onde et fait fleurir ses rives,
- Sait au festin des champs le nombre des convives.[253]
-
-It is hardly necessary to record that _The Fall of an Angel_ was far
-from receiving, from the world of fashion, the applause of his earlier
-and more conventional productions.
-
-Lamartine was still in the East (we refer to an earlier period),
-when news of his election to the Chambre des Deputés by a Legitimist
-constituency brought him back to Paris. Among the prominent political
-leaders of the day he figured “as a progressive Conservative, strongly
-blending reverence for the antique with a kind of philosophical
-democracy. He spoke frequently on social and philanthropic questions.”
-In 1838 he became deputy for Macon, his native town. During the
-Orleanist régime he refused to hold office, professing aversion for the
-“vulgar utility” of the government of Guizot and the Bourgeois King,
-and in 1845 he openly joined the Liberal opposition. His _Histoire
-des Girondins_ (1847) probably contributed to the expulsion of the
-Orleanist dynasty in the next year.
-
-In the scenes of the Revolution of February, 1848, he occupied a
-prominent position as mediator between the two opposite parties;
-and the retention of the tricolour, in place of the Red flag, is
-attributed to his intervention. Elected a member of the Provisional
-Government, Lamartine served as Foreign Minister of the Republic. In
-this capacity he published his well-known _Manifesto à l’Europe_.
-But, in spite of the fact that ten departments had elected him as
-representative in the Assemblée Constituante, and that he was also made
-one of the five members of the Executive Commission, his popularity
-was short-lived. With all his, apparently, sincere sympathy with the
-cause of the Oppressed, traditionary associations and strong family
-attachments (sufficiently manifest in his _Mémoirs_) impeded him in
-his political course; and his compromising attitude provoked the
-distrust of more advanced political reformers. In competition with
-Louis Napoléon and Cavaignac, he was nominated for the presidency; but
-he received the support of few votes. From this period he withdrew
-into private life and devoted himself entirely to literature. His
-_Histoire de la Révolution_ (1849), _Histoire de la Restauration_,
-_Histoire de la Russie_, _Histoire de la Turquie_, _Raphael_ (a
-narrative of his childhood and youth) _Confidences_ (1849-1851), a
-further autobiography--one of the most interesting of all his prose
-productions--and various other writings, most of them appearing,
-in the first instance, in the periodicals of the day, attested the
-activity and versatility of his genius. He also for some time conducted
-a journal--_Conseiller du Peuple_. In 1860 he collected his entire
-writings into forty-one volumes. Of them his _Histoire des Girondins_
-is, probably, the most widely known. But, next to _The Fall of an
-Angel_, it is his own Memoirs which will always have most interest
-and instruction for those who know how to appreciate true refinement
-of soul, and, making due deductions from political or traditionary
-prejudice, can discern essential worth of mind. In _Les Confidences_
-he allows us to see the natural sensibility and superiority of his
-disposition in his deep repugnance to the orthodox table--none the less
-real because he seems, unhappily, to have deemed himself forced to
-comply with the universal or, rather, fashionable barbarism. Writing of
-his early education, he tells us:--
-
- “Physically it was derived (_découlait_) in a large measure from
- Pythagoras and from the _Emile_. Thus it was based upon the
- greatest simplicity of dress and the most rigorous frugality with
- regard to food. My mother was convinced, as I myself am, that
- killing animals for the sake of nourishment from their flesh and
- blood, is one of the infirmities of our human condition; that it is
- one of those curses imposed upon man either by his fall, or by the
- obduracy of his own perversity. She believed, as I do still, that
- the habit of hardening the heart towards the most gentle animals,
- our companions, our helpmates, our brothers in toil, and even in
- affection, on this earth; that the slaughtering, the appetite
- for blood, the sight of quivering flesh are the very things to
- _have the effect_ (_sont faits pour_) to brutalise and harden
- the instincts of the heart. She believed, as I do still, that
- such nourishment, although, apparently, much more succulent and
- active (_énergique_) contains within itself irritating and putrid
- principles which embitter the food and shorten the days of man.
-
- “To support these ideas she would instance the numberless refined
- and pious people of India who abstain from everything that has had
- life, and the hardy, robust pastoral race, and even the labouring
- population of our fields, who work the hardest, live the longest
- and most simply, and who do not eat meat ten times in their
- lives. She never allowed me to eat it until I was thrown into the
- rough-and-tumble (_pêle-mêle_) life of the public schools. To
- wean me from the liking for it she used no arguments, but availed
- herself of that instinct in us which reasons better than logic.
- I had a lamb, which a peasant of Milly had given me, and which I
- had trained to follow me everywhere, like the most attached and
- faithful dog. We loved each other with that first love (_première
- passion_) which children and young animals naturally have for
- each other. One day the cook said to my mother in my presence
- “Madame, the lamb is fat, and the butcher has come for it; must
- I give it him?” I screamed and threw myself on the lamb, asking
- what the butcher would do with it, and what was a ‘butcher.’ The
- cook replied that he was a man who gained his living by killing
- lambs, sheep, calves and cows. I could not believe it. I besought
- my mother and readily obtained mercy for my favourite. A few days
- afterwards my mother took me with her to the town and led me, as
- by chance, through the shambles. There I saw men with bared and
- blood-stained arms felling a bullock. Others were killing calves
- and sheep, and cutting off their still palpitating limbs. Streams
- Of blood smoked here and there upon the pavement. I was seized with
- a profound pity, mingled with horror, and asked to be taken away.
- The idea of these horrible and repulsive scenes, the necessary
- preliminaries of the dishes I saw served at table, made me hold
- animal food in disgust, and butchers in horror.
-
- “Although the necessity of conforming to the customs of society
- has since made me eat what others eat, I shall preserve a rational
- (_raisonnée_) dislike to flesh dishes, and I have always found it
- difficult not to consider the trade of a butcher almost on a par
- with that of the executioner. I lived, then, till I was twelve on
- bread, milk-products, vegetables and fruit. My health was not the
- less robust, nor my growth the less rapid; and perhaps it is to
- that _regimen_ that I owed the beauty of feature, the exquisite
- sensibility, the serene sweetness of character and temper that I
- preserved till that date.”[254]
-
-Some years before the publication of his _Fall of an Angel_, Lamartine,
-from the height of the National Tribune, had given significant
-expression to the feeling of all the more thoughtful minds, vague
-though it was, of the urgent need of some new and better principle to
-inspire and govern human actions than any hitherto tried:--
-
- “I see [he exclaimed] men who, alarmed by the repeated shocks
- of our political commotions, await from providence a social
- revolution, and look around them for some man, a philosopher, to
- arise--_a doctrine_ which shall come to take violent possession
- of the government of minds (_une doctrine qui vienne s’emparer
- violemment du gouvernement des esprits_), and reinvigorate the
- staggered (_ébranlé_) world. They hope, they invoke, they look for
- this power, which shall impose itself by inherent right (_de son
- plein droit_) as the Arbitrator and Supreme Ruler of the Future.”
-
-But a few years earlier, in the same place, a still more positive
-protest--not the less noteworthy because futile--was heard upon
-the occasion of a discussion as to the introduction into France of
-foreign “Cattle,” when one of the Deputies, Alexandre de Laborde,
-maintained that flesh-meat is but an _object of luxury_; and was
-supported, at least, by one or two other thoughtful deputies who had
-the courage of their better convictions. It deserves to be noted that
-while the Left seemed not unfavourable to the humaner feeling, the
-Centre apathetic, and the Right derisively antagonistic, the minister
-of the King (Charles X.) threw all the weight of his position into
-the materialistic side of the scales. Thus this feeble and last
-public attempt in France to stop the torrent of Materialism proved
-abortive.[255]
-
-
-
-
-XLIV.
-
-MICHELET. 1797-1874.
-
-
-The early life of this most original and eloquent of French historians
-passed amidst much hardship and difficulty. His father, who was a
-printer, had been employed by the government of the Revolution period
-(1790-1794), and at the political reaction, a few years later, he found
-himself reduced to poverty. From the experiences of his earlier life
-Jules Michelet doubtless derived his contempt for the common rich and
-luxuriant manner of living. Until his sixteenth year, flesh-meat formed
-no part of his food; and his diet was of the scantiest as well as
-simplest kind.
-
-Naturally sensitive and contemplative, and averse from the rough
-manners and petty tyranny of his schoolfellows, the young student found
-companionship in a few choice books, of which A’Kempis’ _Imitation
-of Christ_ seems to have been at that time one of the most read. At
-the Sorbonne Michelet carried away some of the most valued prizes,
-which were conferred with all the _éclat_ of the public awards of the
-_Académie_. At the age of 24, having graduated as doctor in philosophy,
-he obtained the chair of History in the Rollin College. His manner,
-original and full of enthusiasm, though wanting often in method and
-accuracy, possessed an irresistible fascination for his readers; and
-all, who had the privilege of listening to him, were charmed by his
-earnest eloquence.
-
-His first principal work was his _Synopsis of Modern History_ (1827).
-His version of the celebrated _Scienza Nuova_ of Vico, of whom he
-regarded himself as the especial disciple, appeared soon after. Upon
-the revolution of July, Michelet received the important post of Keeper
-of the Archives, by which appointment he was enabled to prosecute his
-researches in preparation for his _magnum opus_ in history, _L’Histoire
-de la France_, the successive volumes of which appeared at long
-intervals. It contains some of the finest passages in French prose, the
-episode of _La Pucelle d’Orleans_ being, perhaps, the finest of all.
-Having previously held a professorship in the Sorbonne (of which he was
-deprived by Guizot, then minister), he was afterwards invited to fill
-the chair of History in the Collège de France.
-
-In 1847 his advanced political views deprived him once more of his
-professorial post and income, in which the Revolution of the next year,
-however, reinstated him. The _coup d’état_ of 1851 finally banished
-him from public life--at least as far as teaching was concerned--for
-being too conscientious to subscribe the oath of allegiance to the
-new Empire. Michelet, like an eminent writer of the present day,
-upon principle, elected to be his own publisher; a fact which, in
-conjunction with the unpopularity of his opinions, considerably
-lessened the sale and circulation of his books; and, by this
-independency of action, the historian was a pecuniary loser to a great
-extent.
-
-Deprived of the means of subsistence by his conscientiousness, he
-left Paris almost penniless, and sought an asylum successively in
-the Pyrenees and on the Normandy coast. In 1856 appeared the book
-with which the name of Michelet will hereafter be most worthily
-associated--the one which may be said to have been written with his
-heart’s blood. That the taste of the reading world was not entirely
-corrupt, was proved by the rapid sale of this the most popular of
-all his productions. A new edition of _L’Oiseau_ came from the press
-each year for a long period of time, and it has been translated into
-various European languages. How far the attractiveness of the book,
-through the illustrative genius of Giacomelli, influenced the buying
-public; how far the surpassing merits of the style and matter of the
-work--we will not stay to determine; but it is certain that _The Bird_
-at once established his popularity as a writer, and relieved his
-pecuniary needs. _L’Oiseau_ was followed by several other eloquent
-interpretations of Nature. But the first--there can be no question with
-persons of taste--remains the masterpiece. It is, indeed, unique in its
-kind in literature--by the intense sympathy and love for the subject
-which inspired the writer. It is the only book which treats the Bird
-as something more than an object of interest to the mere classifier,
-to the natural-history collector, or to the “sportsman.” It considers
-the winged tribes--those of the non-raptorial kinds--as possessed of
-a high intelligence, of a certain moral faculty, of devoted maternal
-affection--of a soul, in fine.
-
-Of his remaining writings, _La Bible de l’Humanité_ (1863) is one of
-the most notable, characteristic as it is of the author’s method of
-treatment of historical and ethnographical subjects.
-
-The calamities of his native land he so greatly loved, through the
-corrupt government which had brought upon it the devastations of a
-terrible war, ending, by a natural sequence, in the fearful struggle
-of the suffering proletariat, deeply affected the aged champion of
-the rights of humanity. Almost broken-hearted, he withdrew from his
-accustomed haunts and went to Switzerland, and afterwards to Italy. He
-died at Hyères, in 1874, in the 77th year of his age. A public funeral,
-attended by great numbers of the working classes, awaited him in the
-capital.
-
-In the following passage Michelet _virtually_ subscribes to the creed
-of Vegetarianism. The saving clause, in which he seems to suppose the
-diet of blood to be imposed upon our species by the “cruel fatalities”
-of life, it is pretty certain he would have been the first to wish to
-cancel, had he enjoyed the opportunity of investigating the scientific
-basis of dietetic reform:--
-
- “There is no selfish and exclusive salvation. Man merits his
- salvation only _through the salvation of all_. The animals below us
- have also their rights before God. ‘Animal life, sombre mystery!
- Immense world of thoughts and of dumb sufferings! But signs too
- visible, in default of language, express those sufferings. All
- Nature protests against the barbarity of man, who misapprehends,
- who humiliates, who tortures his inferior brethren.’ This sentence,
- which I wrote in 1846, has recurred to me very often. This year
- (1863), in October, near a solitary sea, in the last hours of the
- night, when the wind, the wave were hushed in silence, I heard the
- voices of our humble domestics. From the basement of the house,
- and from the obscure depths, these voices of captivity, feeble
- and plaintive, reached me and penetrated me with melancholy--an
- impression of no vague sensibility, but a serious and positive one.
-
- “The further we advance in knowledge, the more we apprehend the
- true meaning of realities, the more do we understand simple but
- very serious matters which the hurry (_entraînement_) of life
- makes us neglect. Life! Death! The daily murder, which feeding
- upon other animals implies--those hard and bitter problems sternly
- placed themselves before my mind. Miserable contradiction! Let us
- hope that there may be another globe in which the base, the cruel
- fatalities of this may be spared to us.”[256]
-
-Extolling the greater respect of the Hindus for other life, as
-exhibited in their sacred scriptures, Michelet vindicates the
-pre-eminently beneficent character of the Cow, in Europe so
-ungratefully treated by the recipients of her bounty:--
-
- “Let us name first, with honour, his beneficent nurse--so honoured
- and beloved by him--the sacred Cow, who furnished the happy
- nourishment--favourable intermediate between insufficient herbs and
- flesh, which excites horror. The Cow, whose milk and butter has
- been so long the sacred offering. She alone supported the primitive
- people in the long journey from Bactria to India. By her, in face
- of so many ruins and desolations--by this fruitful nurse, who
- unceasingly renovates the earth for him, he has lived and always
- lives.”[257]
-
-In his _Bird_ he constantly preaches the faith that can remove
-mountains--the faith that regards the regeneration and pacification of
-earth as the proper destiny of our species:--
-
- “The devout faith which we cherish at heart, and which we teach
- in these pages, is that man will peaceably subdue the whole
- earth, when he shall gradually perceive that every adopted being,
- accustomed to a domesticated life, or at least to that degree of
- friendship and companionship of which his nature is susceptible,
- will be a hundred times more useful to him than he can be with
- his throat cut (_qu’il ne pourrait l’être égorgé_). Man will not
- be truly man until he shall labour seriously for that which the
- Earth expects from him--the pacification and harmonious union
- (_ralliement_) of all living Nature. Hunt and make war upon the
- lion and the eagle if you will, but not upon the Weak and Innocent.”
-
-This Michelet never wearies of repeating, and he returns again and
-again to a truth which is scorned by the modern self-seeking and
-money-getting, as it was by the fighting, wholly barbarous, world:--
-
- “Conquerors have never failed to turn into derision this
- gentleness, this tenderness for animated Nature. The Persians, the
- Romans in Egypt, our Europeans in India, the French in Algeria,
- have often outraged and stricken these innocent brothers of
- man--the objects of his ancient reverence. Cambyses slew the sacred
- Cow; a Roman the Ibis who destroyed unclean reptiles. But what
- means the Cow? The fecundity of the country. And the Ibis? Its
- salubrity. Destroy these animals, and the country is no longer
- habitable. That which has saved India and Egypt through so many
- misfortunes and preserved their fertility, is neither the Nile nor
- the Ganges. It is respect for other life, the mildness and the
- [comparatively] gentle heart of man.
-
- “Profound in meaning was the speech of the Priest of Saïs to the
- Greek Herodotus--‘You shall be children always.’
-
- “We shall always be so--we men of the West--subtle and graceful
- reasoners, so long as we shall not have comprehended, with a
- simple and more exhaustive view, the _motive_ of things. To be a
- child, is to seize life only by partial glimpses. To be a man is
- to be fully conscious of _all its harmonious unity_. The child
- disports himself, shatters and destroys; he finds his happiness
- in _undoing_. And science, in its childhood, does the same. It
- cannot study unless it kills. The sole use which it makes of a
- living mind, is, in the first place, to dissect it. None carry into
- scientific pursuits that tender reverence for life which Nature
- rewards by unveiling to us her mysteries.”[258]
-
-Like Shelley, he firmly believed in the indefinite amelioration of our
-world by the ultimate triumph of principles of _humaneness_, so that
-the “sting of death” and of pain might almost, if not entirely, be
-removed:--
-
- To prevent death is, undoubtedly, impossible; but we may _prolong_
- life. We may eventually render pain rarer, less cruel, and _almost
- suppress_ it. That the hardened old world laughs at our expression
- is so much the better. We saw quite such a spectacle in the days
- when our Europe, barbarised by war, centered all medical art in
- surgery, and made the knife its only means of cure, while young
- America discovered the miracle of that profound dream in which all
- pain is annihilated.
-
-He upbraids the sportsman no less than he does the scientist, and finds
-sufficient cause for the too general sterility of the intellect in the
-habituation to slaughter, and in disregard for the subject species:--
-
- “Woe to the ungrateful! By this phrase I mean the sporting crowd,
- who, unmindful of the numerous benefits we owe to other animals,
- exterminate innocent life. A terrible sentence weighs upon the
- tribes of ‘sportsmen’--_they can create nothing_. They originate
- no art, no industry. They have added nothing to the hereditary
- patrimony of the human species....
-
- “Do not believe the axiom, that huntsmen gradually develope into
- agriculturalists. It is not so--they kill or die. Such is their
- whole destiny. We see it clearly through experience. He who has
- killed will kill--he who has created will create.
-
- “In the want of emotion, which every man suffers from his birth,
- the child who satisfies it habitually by murder, by a miniature
- ferocious drama of surprise and treason, of the torture of the
- weak, will find no great enjoyment in the gentle and tranquil
- emotions arising from the progressive success of toil and study,
- from the limited industry which does everything itself. To create,
- to destroy--these are the two raptures of infancy. To create is a
- long, slow process; to destroy is quick and easy.
-
- “It is a shocking and hideous thing to see a child partial to
- ‘sport;’ to see woman enjoying and admiring murder, and encouraging
- her child. That delicate and ‘sensitive’ woman would not give him
- a knife, but she gives him a gun. Kill at a distance if it pleases
- you, for we do not see the suffering. And this Mother will think it
- admirable that her son, kept confined to his room, will drive off
- _ennui_ by plucking the wings from flies, by torturing a bird or a
- little dog.
-
- “Far-seeing mother! She will know, when too late, the evil of
- having formed a bad heart. Aged and weak, rejected of the world,
- she will experience, in her turn, her son’s brutality.
-
- “Among too many children we are saddened by their almost incredible
- sterility. A few recover from it in the long circle of life, when
- they have become experienced and enlightened men. But the first
- freshness of the heart? It shall return no more.”[259]
-
-Although, as has already been indicated, Michelet evidently had not
-examined the _scientific_ basis of akreophagy, yet all his aspirations
-and all his sympathies, it is also equally evident, were for the
-bloodless diet. With Locke and Rousseau, and many others before
-him, he presses upon mothers the vital import of not perverting
-the early preferences of their children for the foods prescribed
-by unsophisticated nature and their own truer instincts. In one of
-his books, the most often republished, in laying down rules for the
-education of young girls, he thus writes:--
-
- “Purity, above everything, _in regimen and nourishment_. What are
- we to understand by this?
-
- “I understand by it that the young girl should have the proper
- nourishment of a child--that she should continue the mild,
- tranquilising, unexciting regimen of milk; that, if she eats at
- your table, she will be accustomed not to touch the dishes upon it,
- which for her, at least, are poisons.
-
- “A revolution has taken place. We have quitted the more sober
- French regimen, and have adopted more and more the coarse and
- bloody diet of our neighbours, appropriate to their climate much
- more than to ours. The worst of it all is that we inflict this
- manner of living upon our children. Strange spectacle! To see a
- mother giving her daughter, whom but yesterday she was suckling
- at her breast, this gross aliment of bloody meats, and the
- dangerous excitant wine! She is astonished to see her violent,
- capricious, passionate; but it is herself whom she ought to accuse
- as the cause. What she fails to perceive, and yet what is very
- grave, is that with the French race, so precocious, the arousing
- of the passions is so directly provoked by this food. Far from
- strengthening, it agitates, it weakens, it unnerves. The mother
- thinks it fine (_plaisant_) to have a child so preternaturally
- mature. All this comes from herself. Unduly excitable, she wishes
- her child to be such another as she, and she is, without knowing
- it, the corruptress of her own daughter.
-
- “All this [unnatural stimulation] is of no good to her, and is
- little better for you, Madame. You have not the heart, you say, to
- eat anything in which she has no share. Ah, well! abstain yourself,
- or, at all events, moderate your indulgence in this food, good,
- possibly, for the hard-worked man, but fatal in its consequences
- to the woman of ease and leisure--regimen which _vulgarises_
- her, perturbs her, renders her irritable, or oppresses her with
- indigestion.
-
- “For the woman and the child it is a grace--an amiable grace (_grâce
- d’amour_)--to be, above all things, _frugivorous_--to avoid the
- coarseness and foulness (_fétidité_) of flesh-meats, and to live
- rather upon innocent foods, which bring death to no one (_qui
- ne coûtent la mort à personne_)--sweet nourishment which charms
- the sense of smell as much as it does the taste. The real reason
- why the beloved ones in nothing inspire in us repugnance but, in
- comparison with men, seem ethereal, is, in a special manner, their
- [presumed] preference for herbs and for fruits--for that purity of
- regimen which contributes not a little to that of the soul, and
- assimilates them to the innocency of the flowers of the field.”[260]
-
-
-
-
-XLV.
-
-COWHERD. 1763-1816.
-
-
-In any history of Vegetarianism it is impossible to omit record of the
-lives and labours of the institutors of a religious community who, in
-establishing humane dietetics as an essential condition of membership,
-may well claim the honourable title of religious reformers, and to whom
-belongs the singular merit of being the first and only founders of a
-Christian church who have inculcated a true religion of life as the
-_basis_ of their teaching.
-
-William Cowherd, the first founder of this new conception of the
-Christian religion, which assumed the name of the “Bible Christian
-Church,” was born at Carnforth, near Lonsdale, in 1763. His first
-appearance in public was as teacher of philology in a theological
-college at Beverley. Afterwards, coming to Manchester, he acted as
-curate to the Rev. J. Clowes, who, while remaining a member of the
-Established Church, had adopted the theological system of Swedenborg.
-Cowherd attached himself to the same mystic creed, and he is said
-to be one of the few students of him who have ever read through all
-the Latin writings of the Swedish theologian. He soon resigned his
-curacy, and for a short time he preached in the Swedenborgian temple
-in Peter Street. There he seems not to have found the freedom of
-opinion and breadth in teaching he had expected, and he determined to
-propagate his own convictions, independently of other authority. In
-the year 1800 he built, at his own expense, Christ Church, in King
-Street, Salford--the first meeting-place of the reformed church.[261]
-His extraordinary eloquence and ability, as well as earnestness
-of purpose, quickly attracted a large audience, and may well have
-brought to recollection the style and matter of the great orator
-of Constantinople of the fourth century. One characteristic of his
-Church--perhaps unique at that time--was the non-appropriation of
-sittings. Another unfashionable opinion held by him was the Pauline
-one of the obligation upon Christian preachers to maintain themselves
-by some “secular” labour, and he therefore kept a boarding school,
-which attained extensive proportions. In this college some zealous
-and able men, who afterwards were ordained by him to carry on a truly
-beneficent ministry, assisted in the work of teaching, of whom the
-names of Metcalfe, Clark, and Schofield are particularly noteworthy.
-Following out the principles of their Master, two of them took degrees
-in medicine, and gained their living by that profession. The Principal
-himself built an institute, connected with his church in Hulme, where,
-more recently, the late Mr. James Gaskill presided, who, at his death,
-left an endowment for its perpetuation as an educational establishment.
-
-It was in the year 1809 that Cowherd formally promulgated, as cardinal
-doctrines of his system, the principle of abstinence from flesh-eating,
-which, in the first instance, he seems to have derived from “the
-medical arguments of Dr. Cheyne and the humanitarian sentiments of
-St. Pierre.” He died not many years after this formal declaration of
-faith and practice, not without the satisfaction of knowing that able
-and earnest disciples would carry on the great work of renovating the
-religious sentiment for the humanisation of the world.
-
-Of those followers not the least eminent was Joseph Brotherton, the
-first M.P. for Salford, than which borough none has been more truly
-honoured by the choice of its legislative representative. A printing
-press had been set up at the Institution, and, after the death of
-the Master, his _Facts Authentic in Science and Religion towards a
-New Foundation of the Bible_, under which title he had collected the
-most various matter illustrative of passages in the Bible, and in
-defence of his own interpretation of them, was there printed. It is,
-as his biographer has well described it, “a lasting memorial of his
-wide reading and research--travellers, lawyers, poets, physicians,
-all are pressed into his service--the whole work forming a large
-quarto common-place book filled with reading as delightful as it is
-discursive. Some of his minor writings have also been printed. He was,
-besides his theological erudition, a practical chemist and astronomer,
-and he caused the dome of the church in King Street to be fitted up for
-the joint purposes of an observatory and a laboratory. His microscope
-is still preserved in the Peel Park Museum. His valuable library,
-which at one time was accessible to the public on easy terms, is now
-deposited in the new Bible Christian Church in Cross Lane. The books
-collected exhibit the strong mind which brought them together for its
-own uses. This library is the workshop in which he wrought out a new
-mode of life and a new theory of doctrine--with these instruments he
-moulded minds like that of Brotherton, and so his influence has worked
-in many unseen channels.” He died in 1816, and is buried in front of
-his chapel, in King Street, Salford.[262]
-
-
-
-
-XLVI.
-
-METCALFE. 1788-1862.
-
-
-Amongst the immediate disciples of the founder of the new community,
-the most active apostle of the principles of Vegetarianism, William
-Metcalfe, to whom reference has been already made, claims particular
-notice. Born at Orton in Westmoreland, after instruction in a classical
-school kept by a philologist of some repute, he began life as an
-accountant at Keighley, in Yorkshire. His leisure hours were devoted to
-mental culture, both in reading and in poetic composition. Converted by
-Cowherd in 1809, in the twenty-first year of his age, he abandoned the
-flesh diet, and remained to the end a firm believer in the truths of
-“The Perfect Way.” In the year following he married the daughter of the
-Rev. J. Wright who was at the head of the “New Church” at Keighley, and
-whom he assisted as curate. His wife, of highly-cultured mind, equally
-with himself was a persistent follower of the reformed mode of living.
-Sharing the experiences of many other dietary reformers, the young
-converts encountered much opposition from their family and friends, who
-attempted at one moment ridicule, at another dissuasion, by appealing
-to medical authority. Unmoved from their purpose, they continued
-unshaken in their convictions.
-
- “They assured me,” he writes at a later period, “that I was rapidly
- sinking into a consumption, and tried various other methods to
- induce me to return to the customary dietetic habits of society;
- but their efforts proved ineffectual. Some predicted my death in
- three or four months; and others, on hearing me attempt to defend
- my course, hesitated not to tell me I was certainly suffering from
- mental derangement, and, if I continued to live without flesh-food
- much longer, would unquestionably have to be shut up in some insane
- asylum. All was unavailing. Instead of sinking into consumption,
- I gained several pounds in weight during the first few weeks of
- my experiment. Instead of three or four months bringing me to the
- silent grave, they brought me to the matrimonial altar.
-
- “She [his wife] fully coincided with me in my views on vegetable
- diet, and, indeed, on all other important points was always ready
- to defend them to the best of her ability--studied to show our
- acquaintances, whenever they paid us a visit, that we could live,
- in every rational enjoyment, without the use of flesh for food.
- As she was an excellent cook, we were never at a loss as to what
- we should eat. We commenced housekeeping in January, 1810, and,
- from that date to the present time, we have never had a pound
- of flesh-meat in our dwelling, have never patronised either
- slaughter-houses or spirit shops.
-
- “When, again, in the course of time we were about to be blessed
- with an addition to our family, a renewed effort was made. We
- were assured it was impossible for my wife to get through her
- confinement without some _more strengthening food_. Friends
- and physicians were alike decided upon that point. We were,
- notwithstanding, unmoved and faithful to our principles. Next we
- were told by our kind advisers that the little stranger could not
- be sufficiently nourished unless the mother could eat a little
- ‘meat’ once a day; or, if not that, drink a pint or half a pint of
- ale daily. To both proposals my wife turned a deaf ear; and both
- she and the child did exceedingly well.[263] It may be proper to
- add here [remarks the biographer], that the ‘little stranger’ above
- referred to is the author of this _Memoir_,--that he is in the
- fifty-sixth year of his age, that he has never so much as _tasted_
- animal food, nor used intoxicating drinks of any kind, and that he
- is hale and hearty.”
-
-These experiences, it is scarcely necessary to remark, in the lives of
-followers of reformed dietetics, have been not seldom repeated.
-
-In the Academy of Sciences, instituted by Dr. Cowherd, Metcalfe was
-invited to assume the direction of the “classical” department (1811).
-In the same year he took “Orders,” and, at the solicitation of the
-secessionists from the Swedenborgian Communion (which, with some
-inconsistency, seems to have looked with indifference, or even dislike,
-upon the principles of akreophagy), he officiated at Adingham, in
-Yorkshire. By the voluntary aid of one of his admirers a church was
-built, to which was added a commodious school-room. He then resigned
-his position under Dr. Cowherd, and opened a grammar school in
-Adingham, where he was well supported by his friends.
-
-The United States of America, however, was the field to which he
-had long been looking as the most promising for the mission work to
-which he had devoted himself; and in this hope he had been sustained
-by his Master. In the spring of 1817 a company of forty-one persons,
-members of the Bible Christian community, embarked at Liverpool
-for Philadelphia, They comprised two clerics--W. Metcalfe and Jas.
-Clark--twenty other adults, and nineteen children. Of this band only a
-part were able to resist the numerous temptations to conformity with
-the prevalent social practices; and the vast distances which separated
-the leaders from their followers were almost an insuperable bar to
-sympathy and union. Settling in Philadelphia--for them at least a name
-of real significance--Metcalfe supported his family by teaching, while
-performing the duties of his position as head of the faithful few who
-formed his church. His day-school, which was attended by the sons
-of some of the leading people of the city, proved to be pecuniarily
-successful until the appearance of yellow fever in Philadelphia, which
-broke up his establishment and involved him in great difficulties;
-for upon his school he depended entirely for his living. He had many
-influential friends, who tempted him, at this crisis of his fortunes,
-with magnificent promises of support, if only he would desert the cause
-he had at heart--the propagandism of a religion based upon principles
-of true temperance and active goodness. Both moral and physical
-superiority pointed him out as one who could not fail to bring honour
-to any undertaking, and, had he sacrificed conviction to interest, he
-might have greatly advanced his material prospects. All such seductions
-he firmly resisted.
-
-Meanwhile, through the pulpit, the schoolroom, and, more widely,
-through the newspapers, he scattered the seeds of the gospel
-of Humanity. But the spirit of intolerance and persecution, of
-self-seeking religionism, and of rancorous prejudice, was by no means
-extinct even in the great republic, and the (so-called) “religious”
-press united to denounce his humane teaching as well as his more
-liberal theology. Nor did some of his more unscrupulous opponents
-hesitate, in the last resort, to raise the war-cry of “infidel” and
-“sceptic.” These assailants he treated with contemptuous silence; but
-the principle of moral dietetics he defended in the newspapers with
-ability and vigour. In 1821 he published an essay on _Abstinence from
-the Flesh of Animals_, which was freely and extensively circulated. For
-several years his missionary labours appear to have been unproductive.
-In the year 1830 he made two notable converts--Dr. Sylvester Graham,
-who was at that time engaged as a “temperance” lecturer, and was
-deep in the study of human physiology; and Dr. W. Alcott. Five years
-later, the _Moral Reformer_ was started as a monthly periodical,
-which afterwards appeared under the title of the _Library of Health_.
-In 1838-9 the _Graham Journal_ was also published in Boston, and
-scientific societies were organised in many of the New England towns.
-The Bible was largely appealed to in the controversy, and a sermon of
-Metcalfe’s had an extensive circulation through the United States. With
-all this controversy upon his hands, he was far from neglecting his
-private duties, and, in fact, his health was over-taxed in the close
-and constant work in the schoolrooms, overcrowded and ill-ventilated
-as they were. In the day and night school he was constantly employed,
-during one half of the year, from eight in the morning until ten at
-night; and Sunday brought him no remission of labour.
-
-In the propagandism of his principles through the press he was not
-idle. The _Independent Democrat_, and, in 1838, the _Morning Star_,
-was printed and published at his own office--by which latter journal,
-in spite of the promise of support from political friends, he was a
-pecuniary loser to a large amount. _The Temperance Advocate_, also
-issued from his office, had no better success. Several years earlier,
-about 1820, it is interesting to note, he had published a tract on _The
-Duty of Abstinence from all Intoxicating Drinks_; and the founder of
-the Bible Christian Church in America can claim the merit of having
-been the first systematically to inculcate this social reform.
-
-In the year 1847 the Vegetarian Society of Great Britain had been
-founded, of which Mr. James Simpson had been elected the first
-president. Metcalfe immediately proposed the formation of a like
-society in the United States. He corresponded with Drs. Graham,
-Alcott, and others; and finally an American Vegetarian Convention
-assembled in New York, May 15, 1850. Several promoters of the cause,
-previously unknown to each other (except through correspondence),
-here met. Metcalfe was elected president of the Convention; addresses
-were delivered, and the constitution of the society determined upon.
-The Society was organised by the election of Dr. William Alcott as
-president, Rev. W. Metcalfe as corresponding secretary, and Dr.
-Trall as recording secretary. An organ of the society was started in
-November, 1850, under the title of _The American Vegetarian and Health
-Journal_, and under the editorship of Metcalfe. Its regular monthly
-publication, however, did not begin until 1851. In that year he was
-selected as delegate to the English Vegetarian Society, as well as
-delegate from the Pennsylvania Peace Society to the “World’s Peace
-Convention,” which was fondly supposed to be about to be inaugurated
-by the _Universal Exhibition_ of that year. The proceedings at the
-annual meeting of the Vegetarian Society of Great Britain, and the
-eloquent address, amongst others, of the American representative, are
-fully recorded in the _Vegetarian Messenger_ for 1852. On this occasion
-Joseph Brotherton, M.P. presided.
-
-Two years later he suffered the irreparable loss of the sympathising
-sharer in his hopes for the regeneration of the world. Mrs. Metcalfe
-died in the seventy-fourth year of her age, having been, during
-forty-four years, a strict abstinent. Her loss was mourned by the
-entire Vegetarian community. By far the larger part of the matter, as
-well as the expenses of publication, of the _American Vegetarian_,
-was supplied by the editor, and, being inadequately supported by the
-rest of the community, the managers were forced to abandon its further
-publication. The last volume appeared in 1854. It has been succeeded
-in later times, under happier circumstances, by the _Health Reformer_
-which is still in existence.
-
-In 1855 Metcalfe received an invitation to undertake the duties
-attached to the mother church at Salford. Leaving his brother-in-law
-in charge of the church in Philadelphia, he embarked for England once
-more, and the most memorable event, during his stay in this country,
-was the deeply and sincerely lamented death of Joseph Brotherton, who
-for twenty years had represented Salford in the Legislature, and whose
-true benevolence had endeared him to the whole community. Metcalfe
-was chosen to preach the funeral eulogy, which was listened to by a
-large number of Members of Parliament and municipal officers, and by
-an immense concourse of private citizens. Returning to America soon
-afterwards, at the urgent request of his friends in Philadelphia,
-he was, in 1859, elected to fill the place of President vacated by
-Dr. Alcott, whose virtues and labours in the cause he commemorated
-in a just eulogy. His own death took place in the year 1862, in the
-seventy-fifth year of his age, caused by hemorrhage of the lungs,
-doubtless the effect of excessive work. His end, like his whole
-interior if not exterior life, was, in the best meaning of a too
-conventional expression, full of peace and of hope. His best panegyric
-is to be found in his life-work; and, as the first who systematically
-taught the truths of reformed dietetics in the “New World,” he has
-deserved the unceasing gratitude of all sincere reformers in the
-United States, and, indeed, throughout the globe. By all who knew him
-personally he was as much loved as he was esteemed, and the newspapers
-of the day bore witness to the general lamentation for his loss.[264]
-
-
-
-
-XLVII.
-
-GRAHAM. 1794-1851.
-
-
-As an exponent of the physiological basis of the Vegetarian theory of
-diet, in the most elaborate minuteness, the author of _Lectures on
-the Science of Human Life_ has always had great repute amongst food
-reformers both in the United States and in this country. Collaterally
-connected with the ducal house of Montrose, his father, a graduate of
-Oxford, emigrated to Boston, U.S., in the year 1718. He must have
-attained an advanced age when his seventeenth child, Sylvester,
-was born at Suffield, in Connecticut. Yet he seems to have been of
-a naturally dyspeptic and somewhat feeble constitution, which was
-inherited by his son, whose life, in fact, was preserved only by the
-method recommended by Locke--free exposure in the open air. During
-several years he lived with an uncle, on whose farm he was made to work
-with the labourers. In his twelfth year he was sent to a school in New
-York, and at fourteen he was set for a short time to learn the trade of
-paper-making. “He is described as handsome, clever, and imaginative.
-‘I had heard,’ he says, ‘of noble deeds, and longed to follow in the
-field of fame.’ Ill health soon obliged his return to the country, and
-at sixteen symptoms of consumption appeared. Various occupations were
-tried until the time, when about twenty years of age, he commenced as
-a teacher of youth, proving highly successful with his pupils. Again
-ill-health obliged the abandonment of this pursuit.”[265]
-
-At the age of thirty-two he married, and soon after became a preacher
-in the Presbyterian Church. Deeply interested in the question of
-“Temperance,” he was invited to lecture for that cause by the
-Pennsylvania Society (1830). He now began the study of physiology and
-comparative anatomy, in which his interest was unremitting. These
-important sciences were used to good effect in his future dietetic
-crusade. At this time he came in contact with Metcalfe, by whom he
-was confirmed in, if not in the first instance converted to, the
-principles of radical dietary reform. “He was soon led to believe that
-no permanent cure for intemperance could be found, except in such
-change of personal and social customs as would relieve the human being
-from all desire for stimulants. This idea he soon applied to medicine,
-so that the prevention and cure of disease, as well as the remedy for
-intemperance, were seen to consist mainly in the adoption of correct
-habits of living, and the judicious adaptation of hygienic agencies.
-These ideas were elaborated in an _Essay on the Cholera_ (1832), and
-a course of lectures which were delivered in various parts of the
-country, and subsequently published under the title of _Lectures on
-the Science of Human Life_ (2 vols., Boston, 1839). This has been
-the leading text-book of all the dietetic and nearly all the health
-reformers since.”[266]
-
-_The Science of Human Life_ is one of the most comprehensive as well as
-minute text books on scientific dietetics ever put forth. If it errs
-at all, it errs on the side of redundancy--a feature which it owes to
-the fact that it was published to the world as it was orally given. It
-therefore well bears condensation, and this has been judiciously done
-by Mr. Baker, whose useful edition is probably in the hands of most of
-our readers. Graham was also the author of a treatise on _Bread and
-Bread-Making_, and “Graham bread” is now universally known as one of
-the most wholesome kinds of the “staff of life.” Besides these more
-practical writings, for some time before his death he occupied his
-leisure in the production of a _Philosophy of Sacred History_, the
-characteristic idea of which seems to have been to harmonise the dogmas
-of the Jewish and Christian Scriptures with his published views on
-physiology and dietetics. He lived to complete one volume only (12mo.),
-which appeared after his death.
-
-Tracing the history of Medicine from the earlier times, and its more or
-less of empiricism in all its stages, Graham discovers the cause of a
-vast proportion of all the egregious failure of its professors in the
-blind prejudice which induces them to apply to the _temporary cure_,
-rather than to the _prevention_, of disease. As it was in its first
-barbarous beginning, so it has continued, with little really essential
-change, to the present moment:--
-
- “Everything is done with a view to _cure_ the disease, without
- any regard to its cause, and the disease is considered as
- the infliction of some supernatural being. Therefore, in the
- progress of the healing art thus far, not a step is taken towards
- investigating the laws of health and the philosophy of disease.
-
- “Nor, after Medicine had received a more systematic form, did
- it apply to those researches which were most essential to its
- success, but, like religion, it became blended with superstitions
- and absurdities. Hence, the history of Medicine, with very limited
- exceptions, is a tissue of ignorance and error, and only serves
- to demonstrate the absence of that knowledge upon which alone an
- enlightened system of Medicine can be founded, and to show to
- what extent a noble art can be perverted from its capabilities of
- good to almost unmixed evil by the ignorance, superstition, and
- cupidity of men. In modern times, anatomy and surgery have been
- carried nearly to perfection, and great advance has been made
- in physiology. The science of human life has been studied with
- interest and success, but this has been confined to the few, while
- even in our day, and in the medical profession itself, the general
- tendency is adverse to the diffusion of scientific knowledge.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “The result is, that men prodigally waste the resources as if the
- energies of life were inexhaustible; and when they have brought on
- disease which destroys their comforts, they fly to the physician,
- _not to learn by what violation of the laws of life_ they have
- drawn the evil upon themselves, and by what means they can avoid
- the same; but, considering themselves visited with afflictions
- which they have in no manner been concerned in causing, they
- require the physician’s remedies, by which their sufferings may be
- alleviated. In doing this, the more the practice of the physician
- conforms to the _appetites_ of the patient, the greater is his
- popularity and the more generously is he rewarded.
-
- “Everything, therefore, in society tends to confine the practising
- physician to the department of therapeutics, and make him a
- mere curer of disease; and the consequence is, that the medical
- fraternity have little inducement to apply themselves to the
- study of the _science of life_, while almost everything, by which
- men can be corrupted, is presented to induce them to become the
- mere panderers of human ignorance and folly; and, if they do not
- sink into the merest empiricism, it is owing to their own moral
- sensibility rather than to the encouragement they receive to pursue
- an elevated scientific professional career.
-
- “Thus the natural and acquired habits of man concur to divert
- his attention from the study of human life, and hence he is left
- to _feel_ his way to, or gather from what he calls experience,
- all the conclusions which he embraces. It has been observed
- that men, in their (so-called) inductive reasonings deceive
- themselves continually, and think that they are reasoning from
- facts and experience, when they are only reasoning _from a mixture
- of truth and falsehood_. The only end answered by facts so
- incorrectly apprehended is that of making error more incorrigible.
- Nothing, indeed, is so hostile to the interests of Truth as
- facts incorrectly observed. On no subjects are men so liable to
- misapprehend facts, and _mistake the relation between cause and
- effect_, as on that of human life, health, and disease.”
-
-By the opponents of dietetic reform it has been pretended that climate,
-or individual constitution, must determine the food proper for nations
-or individuals:--
-
- “We have been told that some enjoy health in warm, and others
- in cold climates some on one kind of diet, and under one set of
- circumstances, and some under another; that, therefore, what is
- best for one is not for another; that what agrees _well_ with one
- disagrees with another; that what is one man’s meat is another
- man’s poison; that different constitutions require different
- treatment; and that, consequently, no rules can be laid down
- adapted to all circumstances which can be made a basis of regimen
- to all.
-
- “Without taking pains to examine circumstances, people consider the
- bare fact that some intemperate individuals reach old age evidence
- that such habits are not unfavourable to life. With the same loose
- reasoning, people arrive at conclusions equally erroneous in regard
- to nations. If a tribe, subsisting on vegetable food, is weak,
- sluggish, and destitute of courage and enterprise, it is concluded
- that vegetable food is the cause. Yet examination might have shown
- that causes fully adequate to these effects existed, which not only
- exonerated the diet, _but made it appear that the vegetable diet
- had a redeeming effect, and was the means by which the nation was
- saved from a worse condition_.
-
- “The fact that individuals have attained a great age in certain
- habits of living is no evidence that those habits are favourable to
- longevity. The only use which we can make of cases of extraordinary
- old age, is to show how the human constitution is capable of
- sustaining the vital economy, _and resisting the causes which
- induce death_.
-
- “If we ask _how_ we must live to secure the best health and longest
- life, the answer must be drawn from physiological knowledge; but
- if we ask _how long_ the best mode of living will preserve life,
- the reply is, Physiology cannot teach you that. Probably each
- aged individual has a mixture of good and bad habits, and has
- lived in a mixture of favourable and unfavourable circumstances.
- Notwithstanding apparent diversity, there is a pretty equal amount
- of what is salutary in the habits and circumstances of each. Some
- have been ‘correct’ in one thing, some in another. All that is
- proved by instances of longevity in connexion with bad habits is,
- that such individuals are able to resist causes that have, in the
- same time, sent thousands of their fellow-beings to an untimely
- grave; and, under a proper regimen, they would have sustained life,
- perhaps, a hundred and fifty years.
-
- “Some have more constitutional [or inherited] powers to resist the
- causes of disease than others, and, therefore, what will destroy
- the life of one may be borne by another a long time without any
- manifestations of immediate injury. There are, also, constitutional
- peculiarities, but these are far more rare than is generally
- supposed. Indeed, such may, in almost every case, be overcome by
- a correct regimen. So far as the general laws of life and the
- application of general principles of regimen are considered,
- the human constitution is _one_: there are no constitutional
- differences which will not yield to a correct regimen, and thus
- improve the individual. Consequently, what is best for one is best
- for all.... Some are born without any tendency to disease while
- others have the predisposition to particular diseases of some kind.
- But _differences result from causes which man has the power to
- control_, and it is certain that all can be removed by conformity
- to the laws of life for generations, and that the human species can
- be brought to as great uniformity, as to health and life, as the
- lower animals.”
-
-With Hufeland, Flourens, and other scientific authorities, he maintains
-that:--
-
- “Physiological science affords no evidence that the human
- constitution is not capable of gradually returning to the
- primitive longevity of the species. The highest interests of our
- nature require that _youthfulness_ should be prolonged. And it
- is as capable of being preserved as life itself, both depending
- on the same conditions. If there ever was a state of the human
- constitution which enabled it to sustain life [much beyond the
- present period], that state involved a harmony of relative
- conditions. The vital processes were less rapid and more complete
- than at present, development was slower, organisation more perfect,
- childhood protracted, and the change from youth to manhood took
- place at a greater remove from birth. Hence, if we now aim at long
- life, we can secure our object only by conformity to those laws by
- which youthfulness is prolonged.”
-
-As for the _omnivorousness_ of the human animal:--
-
- The ourang-outang, on being domesticated, readily learns to eat
- animal food. But if this proves that animal to be _omnivorous_,
- then the Horse, Cow, Sheep, and others are all omnivorous, for
- everyone of them is easily trained to eat animal food. Horses
- have frequently been trained to eat animal food,[267] and Sheep
- have been so accustomed to it as to refuse grass. All carnivorous
- animals can be trained to a vegetable diet, and brought to subsist
- upon it, with less inconvenience and deterioration than herbivorous
- or frugivorous animals can be brought to live on animal food.
- Comparative anatomy, therefore, proves that Man is naturally a
- frugivorous animal, formed to subsist upon fruits, seeds, and
- farinaceous vegetables.[268]
-
-The _stimulating_, or alcoholic, property of flesh produces the
-delusion that it is, therefore, the most _nourishing_:--
-
- “Yet by so much as the stimulation exceeds that which is necessary
- for the performance of the functions of the organs, the more does
- the expenditure of vital powers exceed the renovating economy; and
- the exhaustion which succeeds is commensurate with the excess.
- Hence, though food which contains the greatest proportion of
- stimulating power causes a _feeling_ of the greatest strength, it
- also produces the greatest exhaustion, which is commensurately
- importunate for relief; and, as the same food affords such by
- supplying the requisite stimulation, their _feelings_ lead the
- consumers to believe that it is most strengthening.... Those
- substances, the stimulating power of which is barely sufficient to
- excite the digestive organs in the appropriation of nourishment,
- are most conducive to vital welfare, causing all the processes to
- be most perfectly performed, without any unnecessary expenditure,
- thus contributing to health and longevity.
-
- “Flesh-meats average about _thirty-five per cent_ of nutritious
- matter, while rice, wheat, and several kinds of pulse (such as
- lentils, peas, and beans), afford from _eighty to ninety-five per
- cent_; potatoes afford twenty-five per cent of nutritious matter.
- So that one pound of rice contains more nutritious matter than two
- pounds and a half of flesh meat; three pounds of whole meal bread
- contain more than six pounds of flesh, and three pounds of potatoes
- more than two pounds of flesh.”
-
-That the human species, _taken in its entirety_, is no more carnivorous
-_de facto_ than it could be _de jure_, is apparent on the plain
-evidence of facts. In all countries of our Globe, with the exception of
-the most barbarous tribes, it is, in reality, only the ruling and rich
-classes who are kreophagist. The Poor have, almost everywhere, but the
-barest sufficiency even of vegetable foods:--
-
- “The peasantry of Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Turkey, Greece,
- Italy, Switzerland, France, Spain, England, Scotland, Ireland, a
- considerable portion of Prussia, and other parts of Europe subsist
- mainly on non-flesh foods. The peasantry of modern Greece [like
- those of the days of Perikles] subsist on coarse brown bread and
- fruits. The peasantry in many parts of Russia live on very coarse
- bread, with garlic and other vegetables, and, like the same class
- in Greece, Italy, &c., they are obliged to be extremely frugal even
- in this kind of food. Yet they are [for the most part] healthy,
- vigorous, and active. Many of the inhabitants of Germany live
- mainly on rye and barley, in the form of coarse bread. The potato
- is the principal food of the Irish peasantry, and few portions
- of the human family are more healthy, athletic, and active, when
- uncorrupted by intoxicating substances [and, it may be added, when
- under favourable political and social conditions]. But alcohol,
- opium, &c. [equally with bad laws] have extended their blighting
- influence over the greater portion of the world, and nowhere do
- these scourges so cruelly afflict the self-devoted race as in the
- cottages of the poor, and when, by these evils and neglect of
- sanitation, &c., diseases are generated, sometimes epidemics, we
- are told that these things arise from their poor, meagre, low,
- _vegetable_ diet. Wherever the various sorts of intoxicating
- substances are absent, and a decent degree of cleanliness is
- observed, the vegetable diet is not thus calumniated.
-
- “That portion of the peasantry of England and Scotland who subsist
- on their barley and oatmeal bread, porridge, potatoes, and other
- vegetables, with temperate, cleanly habits [and surroundings],
- are able to endure more fatigue and exposure than any other class
- of people in the same countries. _Three-fourths of the whole
- human family_, in all periods of time [excepting, perhaps, in the
- primitive wholly predatory ages] have subsisted on non-flesh foods,
- and when their supplies have been abundant, and their habits in
- other respects correct, they have been well nourished.”
-
-That the sanguinary diet and savagery go hand in hand, and that in
-proportion to the degree of carnivorousness is the barbarous or
-militant character of the people, all History, past and present, too
-clearly testifies. Nor are the carnivorous tribes conspicuous by their
-cruel habits only:--
-
- “Taking all flesh-eating nations together, though some, whose
- other habits are favourable, are, comparatively, well-formed, as
- a general average they are small, ill-formed races; and taking
- all vegetable-eating nations, though many, from excessive use
- of narcotics, and from other unfavourable circumstances, are
- comparatively small and ill-formed, as a general average they are
- much better formed races than the flesh-eaters.[269] It is only
- among those tribes whose habits are temperate, and who subsist on
- the non-flesh diet, that the more perfect specimens of symmetry are
- found.
-
- “Not one human being in many thousands dies a _natural_ death.
- If a man be shot or poisoned we say he dies a violent death, but
- if he is ill, attended by physicians, and dies, we say he dies a
- ‘natural’ death. This is an abuse of language--the death in the
- latter case being as truly violent as if he had been shot. Whether
- a man takes arsenic and kills himself, or by small doses or other
- means, however common, gradually destroys life, he equally dies a
- violent death. He only dies a natural death who so obeys the laws
- of his nature as by neither irritation nor intensity to waste his
- energies, but slowly passes through the changes of his system to
- old age, and falls asleep in the exhaustion of vitality.”[269]
-
-With Flourens he adduces a number of instances both of individuals and
-of communities who have attained to protracted ages by reason of a pure
-diet. He afterwards proceeds to prove from comparative physiology and
-anatomy, and, in particular, from the conformation of the human teeth
-and stomach (which, by an astounding perversion of fact, are sometimes
-alleged to be formed carnivorously, in spite of often-repeated
-scientific authority, as well as of common observation), the natural
-frugivorous character of the human species, and he quotes Linné,
-Cuvier, Lawrence, Bell, and many others in support of this truth.[270]
-
-
-
-
-XLVIII.
-
-STRUVE. 1805-1870.
-
-
-Germany, at the present day able to boast so many earnest apostles of
-humanitarianism, until the nineteenth century was some way advanced,
-had contributed little, definitely, to the literature of _Humane
-Dietetics_. A Haller or a Hufeland, indeed, had, with more or less
-boldness, raised the banner of partial revolt from orthodox medicine
-and orthodox living, but their heterodoxy was rather hygienic than
-humane. In the history of humanitarianism in Germany the honour of the
-first place, in order of time, belongs to the author of _Pflanzenkost,
-die Grundlage einer Neuen Weltanschauung_, and of _Mandaras’
-Wanderungen_, whose life, political as well as literary, was one
-continuous combat on behalf of justice, freedom, and true progress.
-
-Gustav von Struve was born at München (Munich), October 11, 1805, from
-whence his father, who was residing there as Russian Minister, shortly
-afterwards removed to Stuttgart. The foundation of his education was
-laid in the gymnasium of that capital, where he remained until his
-twelfth year. From 1817 to 1822 he was a scholar in the Lyceum in
-Karlsruhe. Having finished his preparatory studies in those schools,
-he proceeded to the University of Göttingen, which, after a course of
-nearly two years, he exchanged for Heidelberg. Four years of arduous
-study enabled him to pass his first examination, and, as the result of
-his brilliant attainments and success, he received the appointment of
-_Attaché_ to the Bundestag Embassy at Oldenberg.
-
-With such an opening, a splendid career in the service of courts and
-kings seemed to be reserved for him. His family connexions, his great
-abilities, and his unusual acquirements at so early an age guaranteed
-to him quick promotion, with reward and worldly honour. But to figure
-in the service of the oppressors of the people--to waste in luxurious
-trifling the resources of a peasantry, supplied by them only at the
-cost of a life-time of painful destitution, to support the selfish
-greed and vain ostentation of the Jew--such was not the career which
-could stimulate the ambition of Struve. The conviction that this was
-not his proper destiny grew stronger in him, and he soon abandoned his
-diplomatic position and Oldenberg at the same time. Without wealth
-or friends, at variance with his relatives, who could not appreciate
-his higher aims, he settled himself in Göttingen (1831), and in the
-following year in Jena. His attempts to obtain fixed employment
-as professor or teacher, or as editor of a newspaper, long proved
-unsuccessful, for independent and honest thought, never anywhere
-greatly in esteem, at that time in Germany was in especial disfavour
-with all who, directly or indirectly, were under court influences. Yet
-the three years which he lived in Göttingen and Jena supplied him with
-varied and useful experiences.
-
-In 1833 he went to Karlsruhe. After years of long patience and effort,
-he at length effected his object (to gain a position which should
-make it possible for him to carry out his schemes of usefulness for
-his fellow-beings), and, at the end of 1836, he obtained the office
-of Obergerichts-Advocat in Mannheim. This position gave leisure
-and opportunity for the prosecution of his various scientific and
-philosophic pursuits, and to engage in literary undertakings. He
-founded periodicals and delivered lectures, the constant aim of which
-was the improvement of the world around him. At this period he wrote
-his philosophic romance, _Mandaras’ Wanderungen_ (“The Wanderings of
-Mandaras”), through which he conveys distasteful truths in accordance
-with the principles of Tasso.[271]
-
-Struve’s active political life began in 1845. In that year were
-published _Briefwechsel zwischen einen ehemaligen and einen jetzigen
-Diplomaten_,(“Correspondence between an Old and a Modern Diplomatist”),
-which was soon followed by his _Oeffentliches Recht des Deutschen
-Bundes_ (“Public Rights of the German Federation”) and his _Kritische
-Geschichte des Allgemeinen Staats-Rechts_ (“Critical History of the
-Common Law of Nations”). In the same year he undertook the editorship
-of the _Mannheimer Journal_, in which he boldly fought the battles
-of political and social reform. He was several times condemned to
-imprisonment, as well as to payment of fines; but, undeterred by such
-persecution, the champion of the oppressed succeeded in worsting most
-of his powerful enemies.
-
-In the beginning of 1847 he founded a weekly periodical, the _Deutscher
-Zuschauer_ (“The German Spectator”), in which, without actually
-adopting the invidious names, he maintained in their fullest extent
-the principles of Freedom and Fraternity; and it was chiefly by the
-efforts of Struve that the great popular demonstration at Oldenberg of
-September 12, 1847, took place, which formulated what was afterwards
-known as the “Demands of the People.” The public meeting, assembled
-at the same town March 9, 1848, which was attended by 25,000 persons,
-and which, without committing itself to the adoption of the term
-“republican,” yet proclaimed the inherent Rights of the People, was
-also mainly the work of the indefatigable Struve. He took part, too, in
-the opening of the Parliament at Frankfurt. His principal production
-at this time was _Grundzüge der Staats-Wischenschaft_ (“Outlines of
-Political Science”). This book, inspired by the movement for freedom
-which was then agitating, but, as it proved, for the most part
-ineffectually, a large part of Europe, is not without significance
-in the education of the community for higher political conceptions.
-Struve and F. Hecker took a leading part in the democratic movements
-in Baden. These attempts failing, after a short residence in Paris,
-he settled near Basel (Basle). There he published his _Grundrechte
-des Deutschen Volkes_ (“Fundamental Rights of the German People”),
-and, in association with Heinzen, a _Plan für Revolutionierung und
-Republikanisierung Deutschlands_. The earnest and noble convictions
-apparent in all the writings of the author, and the unmistakable purity
-of his aims, forced from the more candid of the opponents of his
-political creed recognition and high respect. Nevertheless, he narrowly
-escaped legal assassination and the _fusillades_ of the Kriegsgericht
-or Military Tribunal.
-
-Later the unsuccessful lover of his country sought refuge in England,
-and from thence proceeded to the United States (1850). Upon the
-breaking out of the desperate struggle between the North and South, he
-threw in his lot with the former, and took part in several battles. In
-America he wrote his historical work _Weltgeschichte_ (12 vols.) and,
-amongst others, _Abeilard und Heloise_. In 1861 he returned to Europe,
-and, at different periods, wrote two of his most important books,
-_Pflanzenkost, die Grundlage einer Neuen Weltanschauung_ (“Vegetable
-Diet, the Foundation of a New World-View”), and _Das Seelenleben,
-oder die Naturgeschichte des Menschen_ (“The Spiritual Life, or the
-Natural History of Man”), in both of which he earnestly insists, not
-only upon the vast and incalculable suffering inflicted, in the most
-barbarous manner, upon the victims of the _Table_, but, further, upon
-the demoralising influence of living by pain and slaughter:--
-
- “The thoughts and feelings which the food we partake of provokes
- are not remarked in common life, but they, nevertheless, have their
- significance. A man who daily sees Cows and Calves slaughtered,
- or who kills them himself, Hogs ‘stuck,’ Hens plucked, or Geese
- roasted alive, &c., cannot possibly retain any true feeling for
- the sufferings of his own species. He becomes hardened to them by
- witnessing the struggles of other animals as they are being driven
- by the butcher, the groans of the dying Ox, or the screams of the
- bleeding Hog, with indifference.... Nay, he may come even to find
- a devilish pleasure in seeing beings tortured and killed, or in
- actually slaughtering them himself....
-
- “But even those who take no part in killing, nay, do not even see
- it, are conscious that the flesh-dishes upon their tables come from
- the Shambles, and that _their feasting and the suffering of others
- are in intimate connexion_. Doubtless, the majority of flesh-eaters
- do not reflect upon the manner in which this food comes to them,
- but this thoughtlessness, far from being a virtue, is the parent of
- many vices.... How very different are the thoughts and sentiments
- produced by the non-flesh diet!”[272]
-
-The last period of his life was passed in Wien (Vienna), and in that
-city his beneficently-active career closed in August, 1870. His last
-broken words to his wife, some hours before his end, were, “I must
-leave the world ... this war ... this conflict!” With the life of
-Gustav Struve was extinguished that of one of the noblest soldiers of
-the Cross of Humanity. His memory will always be held in high honour
-wherever justice, philanthropy, and humane feeling are in esteem.
-
-In _Mandaras’ Wanderungen_, of a different inspiration from that of
-ordinary fiction, and which is full of refinement of thought and
-feeling, are vividly represented the repugnance of a cultivated Hindu
-when brought, for the first time, into contact with the barbarisms of
-European civilisation. To few of our English readers, it is presumable,
-is this charming story known; and an outline of its principal incidents
-will not be supererogatory here.
-
-The hero, a young Hindu, whose home is in one of the secluded
-valleys of the Himalaya, urged by the solicitude of the father of
-his betrothed, who wishes to prove him by contact with so different
-a world, sets out on a course of travel in Europe. The story opens
-with the arrival of his ship at Leftheim (Livorno) on the Italian
-coast. Mandaras has no sooner landed than he is accosted by two
-clerics (_ordensgeistliche_), who wish to acquire the honour and
-glory of making a convert. But, unhappily for their success, like his
-predecessor Amabed, he had already on his voyage discovered that the
-religion of the people, among whom he was destined to reside, did not
-exclude certain horrible barbarisms hitherto unknown to him in his own
-unchristian land:--
-
- “While still on board ship I had been startled when I saw the rest
- of the passengers feeding on the flesh of animals. ‘By what right,’
- I asked them, ‘do you kill other animals to feed upon their flesh?’
- They could not answer, but they continued to eat their salted
- flesh as much as ever. For my part, I would have rather died than
- have eaten a piece of it. But now it is far worse. I can pass
- through no street in which there are not poor slaughtered animals,
- hung up either entire or cut into pieces. Every moment I hear the
- cries of agony and of alarm of the victims whom they are driving
- to the slaughter-house,--see their struggles against the murderous
- knife of the butcher. Ever and again I ask of one or other of the
- men who surround me, _by what right_ they kill them and devour
- their flesh; but if I receive an answer, it is returned in phrases
- which mean nothing or in repulsive laughter.”
-
-In fact the Hindu traveller had been but a brief space of time in
-Christian lands when he finds himself, almost unconsciously, in the
-position of a _catechist_ rather than of a _catechumen_. One day,
-for example, he finds himself in the midst of a vast crowd, of all
-classes, hurrying to some spectacle. Inquiring the cause of so vast an
-assemblage, he learns that some persons are to be put to death with
-all the frightful circumstances of public executions. After travelling
-through a great part of Germany, he fixes his residence, for the
-purpose of study, in the University of Lindenberg. In the society of
-that place he meets with a young girl, Leonora, the daughter of a
-Secretary of Legation, who engages his admiration by her exceptional
-culture and refinement of mind. On the occasion of an excursion of
-a party of her father’s visitors, of some days, to an island on the
-neighbouring coast, the first discussion on humane dietetics takes
-place, when, being asked the reason of his _eccentricity_, he appeals
-to the ladies of the party, believing that he shall have at least
-_their_ sympathy with the principles he lays down:--
-
- “From you, ladies, doubtless I shall meet with approval. Tell
- me, could you, _with your own hands_, kill to-day a gentle Lamb,
- a soft Dove, with whom perhaps you yesterday were playing? You
- answer--No? You dare not say you could. If you were to say yes,
- you would, indeed, betray a hard heart. But why could you not? Why
- did it cause you anguish, when you saw a defenceless animal driven
- to slaughter? Because you felt, _in your inmost soul_, that it is
- wrong, that it is unjust to kill a defenceless and innocent being!
- With quite other feelings would you look on the death of a Tiger
- that attacks men, than on that of a Lamb who has done harm to no
- one. To the one action attaches, naturally, justice; to the other,
- injustice. Follow the inner promptings of your heart,--no longer
- sanction the slaughter of innocent beings by feeding on their
- bodies (_beförden Sie nicht deren Tödtung dadurch dass Sie ihr
- Fleisch essen_).”
-
-This exhortation, to his surprise, was received by all “the softer sex”
-with coldness, and even with signs of impatience, excepting Leonora,
-who acknowledged the force of his appeal and promised to the best
-of her power to follow his example. Pleased and encouraged by her
-approval, he proceeds:--
-
- “Assuredly it will not repent you to have formed this resolution.
- The man who, with firmly-grounded habits, denies himself something
- which lies in his power, to spare pain and death to living and
- sentient beings, must become milder and more loving. The man who
- steels himself against the feeling of compassion for the lower
- animals, will be more or less hard towards his own species; while
- he who shrinks from giving pain to other beings, will so much the
- more shrink from inflicting it upon his fellow men.”
-
-Leonora, however, was a rare exception in his experience; and the more
-he saw of Christian customs, the less did he feel disposed to change
-his religion, which, by the way, was of an unexceptionable kind. Some
-time before his leaving Lindenberg, the secretary’s wife gave a dinner
-in his honour, which, in compliment to her guest, was without any
-flesh-dish. As a matter of course, the conversation soon turned upon
-Dietetics; and one of the guests, a cleric, challenged the Hindu to
-defend his principles. Mandaras had scarcely laid down the cardinal
-article of his creed as a fundamental principle in Ethics--that it is
-unjust to inflict suffering upon a living and sensitive being, which
-(as he insists) cannot be called in question _without shaking the very
-foundations of Morality_ (_welcher nicht die Sittenlehre in ihren
-Fundamenten erschüttern will_)--when opponents arise on all sides of
-him. A doctor of medicine led the opposition, confidently affirming
-that the human frame itself proved men to be intended for flesh-eating.
-Mandaras replied that:--
-
- “It seemed to him, on the contrary, that it is the bodily frame of
- man that especially declares _against_ flesh-eating. The Tiger,
- the Lion, in short, all flesh-eating animals seized their prey,
- running, swimming, or flying, and tore it in pieces with their
- teeth or talons, devouring it there and then upon the spot. Man
- cannot catch other animals in this way, or tear them in pieces, and
- devour them as they are.... Besides he has higher, and not merely
- animal, impulses. The latter lead him to gluttony, intemperance,
- and many other vices. Providence has given him reason to prove what
- is right and what wrong, and power of will to avoid what he has
- discovered to be wrong. The doctor, however, in place of admitting
- this argument, grew all the warmer. ‘In all Nature,’ said he, ‘one
- sees how the lower existence is serviceable to the higher. As man
- does, so do other animals seize upon the weaker, and the weakest
- upon plants, &c.’”
-
-To this the Hindu philosopher in vain replies, _that_ the sphere of
-man, is _wider_, and ought therefore to be _higher_ than that of other
-animals, for the larger the circle in which a being can freely move,
-the greater is the possible degree of his perfection; _that_, if we
-are to place ourselves on the plane of the carnivora in one point,
-why not in all, and recognise also treachery, fierceness, and murder
-in general, as proper to man _that_ the different character of the
-Tiger, the Hyæna, the Wolf on the one side, and of the Elephant, the
-Camel, the Horse on the other, instruct us as to the mighty influence
-of food upon the disposition, and certainly not to the advantage of
-the flesh-eaters; _that_ man is to strive not after the lower but the
-higher character, &c., &c. To this the hostess replies: “This may
-be all very beautiful and good, but how is the housekeeper to be so
-skilful as to provide for all her guests, if she is to withhold from
-them flesh dishes?” “Exactly as our housekeepers do in the Himalayan
-valley--exactly as our hostess does to-day,” rejoins Mandaras. He
-alleges many other arguments, and in particular the high degree
-of reasoning faculty, and even of moral feeling, exhibited by the
-miserable slaves of human tyranny. Various are the objections raised,
-which, it is needless to say, are successfully overthrown by the
-champion of Innocence, and the company disperse after a prolonged
-discussion.
-
-The second division of the story takes us to the Valley of Suty, the
-Himalayan home of Mandaras, and introduces us to his amiable family.
-A young German, travelling in that region, chances to meet with the
-father of Urwasi (Mandaras’s betrothed), whom he finds bowed down
-with grief for the double loss of his daughter, who had pined away in
-the protracted absence of her lover and succumbed to the sickness of
-hope deferred, and of his destined son-in-law, who, upon his return
-to claim his mistress, had fallen (as it appeared) into a death-swoon
-at the shock of the terrible news awaiting him. The old man conducts
-the stranger to the scene of mourning, where Damajanti, the sister
-of Mandaras, with her friend Sunanda, is engaged in weaving garlands
-of flowers to deck the bier of her beloved brother. An interesting
-conversation follows between the European stranger and the Hindu
-ladies, who are worthy representatives of their countrywoman,
-Sakuntalà.[273] Accidentally they discover that he is a flesh-eater.
-
- _Sunanda_: Is it possible that you really belong to those men who
- think it lawful to kill other beings to feed upon their bleeding
- limbs?
-
- _Theobald_: In my country it is the ordinary custom. Do you not, in
- your country, use such food?
-
- _Damajanti_: Can you ask? Have not other animals feeling? Do they
- not enjoy their existence?
-
- _Theobald_: Certainly; but they are so much below us, that there
- can be no _reciprocity_ of duties between us.
-
- _Damajanti_: The higher we stand in relation to other animals,
- the more are we bound to disregard none of the eternal laws of
- Morality, and, in particular, that of Love. Hateful is it, at all
- events, to inflict pain upon an innocent being capable of feeling
- pain. Or do you consider it permissible to strike a dog, to witness
- the trembling of his limbs, and to hear his cries?
-
- _Theobald_: By no means. I hold, also, that it is wrong to torture
- them, because we ought to feel no pleasure in the sufferings of
- other animals.
-
- _Damajanti_: We ought to feel no _pleasure_! That is very cold
- reasoning. Detestation--disgust, rather, is the sensation we ought
- to have. Where this sentiment is real, there can be no desire
- to profit by the sufferings of others. Yet, where the feelings
- of disgust for what is bad are weaker than inclination to the
- self-indulgence which it promises, there is no possibility of their
- triumphing. For _gain_ the butcher slaughters the victim; for
- _horrible luxury_ other men participate in this murder, while they
- devour the pieces of flesh, in which, a few moments before, the
- blood was still flowing, the nerves yet quivering, the life still
- breathing!
-
- _Theobald_: I admit it: but all this is new to me. From childhood
- upwards I have been accustomed to see animals driven to the
- slaughter-house. It gave me no pleasure rather it was a positively
- displeasing spectacle; but I did not think about it--whether we
- have the right to slaughter for food, because I had never heard
- doubt expressed on the matter.
-
- _Sunanda_: Ah! Now I can well believe that the men in your country
- _must_ be hard and cold. Every softer feeling _must_ be hardened,
- every tenderer one be dulled in the daily scenes of murder which
- they have before their eyes, by the blood which they shed daily,
- which they taste daily. Happy am I that I live far from your world.
- A thousand times would I rather endure death than live in so
- horrible a land.
-
- _Damajanti_: To me, too, residence in such a land would be torture.
- Yet, were I a man, had I the power of eloquence, I would go from
- village to village, from town to town, and vehemently denounce
- such horrors. I should think that I had achieved more than the
- founders of all religions, if I should succeed in inspiring men
- with sympathy for their fellow-beings. What is religious belief,
- if it tolerates this murder, or rather sanctions it? What is all
- Belief without Love? And what is a Love _that excludes from its
- embrace the infinitely larger part of living beings_? Sweet and
- fair indeed is it to live in a valley which harbours only mild and
- loving people; but it is greater, and worthier of the high destiny
- of human life, to battle amongst the Bad for Goodness, to contend
- for the Light amongst the prisoners of Darkness. What is Life
- without Doing? We women, indeed, cannot, and dare not ourselves
- venture forth into the wild surge of rough and coarse men; but it
- is our business at least to incite to all that is True, Beautiful,
- and Good; to have regard for no man who is not ardent for what is
- noble, to accept none of them who does not come before us adorned
- with the ornament of worthy actions (der nicht mit dem Schmucke
- würdigen Thaten vor uns tritt).
-
-This eloquent discourse takes place while the three friends are
-watching, during the night, at the bier of the supposed dead. At
-the moment when the last funeral rites are to be performed, equally
-with the spectators we are surprised and pleased at the unexpected
-resuscitation of Mandaras, who, it appeared, had been in a trance,
-from which at the critical moment he awoke. With what transports he
-is welcomed back from the confines of the shadow-land, may easily be
-divined. For some time they live together in uninterrupted happiness;
-the young German, who had adopted their simple mode of living,
-remaining with them. In the intervals of pleasing labours in the
-field and the garden, they pass their hours of recreation in refined
-intellectual discourse and speculation, the younger ones deriving
-instruction from the experienced wisdom of the venerable sage. The
-conversation often turns upon the relations between the human and
-non-human races; and, in the course of one of his philosophical
-prelections, the old man, with profound insight, declares that “so
-long as other animals continue to be excluded from the circle of Moral
-Existence, in which Rights and Duties are recognised, so long is there
-no step forward in Morality to be expected. So long as men continue
-to support their lives upon bodies essentially like to their own,
-without misgiving and without remorse, so long will they be fast bound
-by blood-stained fetters (_mit blutgetränkten Fesseln_) to the lower
-planes of existence.”
-
-At length the sorrowful day of separation arrives. It is decided that
-Mandaras should return to Germany, a wider sphere of useful action than
-the Himalayan valleys presented; and an additional reason is found
-in the discovery that his mother herself had been German. With much
-painful reluctance in parting from beloved friends, he recognises the
-force of their arguments, and once more leaves his peaceful home for
-the turmoil of European cities. After suffering shipwreck, in which
-he rescues a mother and child--at the expense of what he had held
-as his most precious possession, a casket of relics of his beloved
-Urwasi--Mandaras lands once again at Livorno. He finds his old friends
-as eager as ever for proselytising “the heathen,” and quite unconscious
-of the need of conversion for themselves. At the death of the aged
-father of Damajanti, she, with her friend Sunanda and Theobald, who
-still remains with them, and (as may have been divined) is the devoted
-lover of the charming Sunanda, determines to leave her ancestral abode
-and join her brother in his adopted German home. When they arrive at
-the appointed place of meeting they are overwhelmed with grief to find
-that he, for whose sake so long a pilgrimage had been undertaken, had
-been taken from them for ever. Having lost his passport he had been
-arrested on suspicion and imprisoned. In confinement he had shrunk from
-the European flesh-dishes, and, unsupplied with proper nourishment or a
-sufficiency of it, had died (in the true sense of the word) a _martyr_,
-to the last, to his moral principles. With great difficulty his final
-words in writing are discovered, and these, in the form of letters to
-his sister, declare his unshaken faith and hopes for the future of the
-World. There are, also, found short poems, which are published at the
-end of his Memoirs, and are fully worthy of the refined mind of the
-author of _Mandaras_. Thus ends a romance which, for beauty of idea and
-sentiment, may be classed with the _Aventures de Télémaque_ of Fénélon
-and, still more fitly, with the _Paul et Virginie_ of St. Pierre.[274]
-
-The space we have been tempted to give to _Mandaras’s Wanderings_
-precludes more than one or two further extracts from Struve’s admirable
-writings. His _Pflanzenkost_, perhaps the best known, as it is his
-most complete, exposition of his views on Humane Dietetics, appeared
-in the year 1869. In it he examines Vegetarianism in all its varied
-aspects--in regard to Sociology, Education, Justice, Theology, Art and
-Science, Natural Economy, Health, War and Peace, the practical and
-real Materialism of the Age, Health, Refinement of Life, &c. From the
-section which considers the Vegetable Diet in its relations to National
-Economy we quote the following just reflections:--
-
- “Every step from a lower condition to a higher is bound up with
- certain difficulties. This is especially the case when it is a
- question of shaking off habits strengthened by numbers and length
- of time. Had the human race, however, not the power to do so,
- then the step from Paganism to Christianity, from predatory life
- to tillage, in particular from savage barbarousness to a certain
- stage in civilisation, would have been impossible. All these steps
- brought many struggles in their train, which to many thousands
- produced some hardships (_Schaden_); to untold millions, however,
- incalculable benefits. So, also, the steps onward from Flesh-Diet
- cannot be established without some disturbances. The great majority
- of men hold fast to old prejudices. They struggle, not seldom with
- senseless rage, against enlightenment and reason, and a century
- often passes away before a new idea has forced the way for the
- spread of new blessings.
-
- “Therefore, we need not wonder if we, also, who protest and stand
- out against the evils of Flesh-Eating, and proclaim the advantages
- of the Vegetable Diet, find violent opponents. The gain which would
- accrue to the whole race of man by the acceptance of that diet is,
- however, so great and so evidently destined, that our final victory
- is certain....
-
- “Doubtless the Political Economy of our days will be shaken to its
- foundations by the step from the flesh to the non-flesh diet; but
- this was also the case when the nomads began to practise tillage,
- and the hunters found no more _game_. The relics of certain
- barbarisms must be shaken off. All barbarians, or semi-barbarians,
- will struggle desperately against this with their selfish
- coarseness (_eigenthümlichen Rohheit_). But the result will be that
- the soil which, under the influence of the Flesh-Régime supported
- one man only, will, with the unfettered advantages of the Vegetable
- Diet support five human beings. Liebig, even, recognised so much
- as this--that the Flesh-Diet is twelve times more costly than the
- Non-Flesh.”[275]
-
-Struve’s _Seelenleben_,[276] published in the same year with the
-_Pflanzenkost_, and his last important work, forms a sort of _résumé_
-of his opinions already given to the world, and is, therefore, a more
-comprehensive exposition of his opinions on Sociology and Ethics than
-is found in his earlier writings. It is full of the truest philosophy
-on the Natural History of Man, inspired by the truest refinement of
-soul. In the section entitled _Moral_ he well exposes the futility
-of hap-hazard speeches, meaning nothing, which, vaguely and in an
-indefinite manner addressed to the child, are allowed to do duty for
-_practical_ moral teaching:--
-
- “They tell children, perhaps, that they must not be cruel either
- to ‘Animals’ or to human beings weaker than themselves. But when
- the child goes into the kitchen, he sees Pigeons, Hens, and Geese
- slaughtered and plucked; when he goes into the streets, he sees
- animals hung up with bodies besmeared with blood, feet cut off, and
- heads twisted back. If the child proceeds still further, he comes
- upon the slaughter-house, in which harmless and useful beings of
- all kinds are being slaughtered or strangled. We shall not here
- dwell upon all the barbarisms bound up in the butchery of animals;
- but in the same degree in which men abuse their superior powers, in
- regard to other species, do they usually cause their tyranny to be
- felt by weaker human beings in their power.
-
- “What avails all the fine talk about morality, in contrast with
- _acts of barbarism and immorality presented to them on all sides_?
-
- “It is no proof of an exalted morality when a man acts justly
- towards a person stronger than himself, who can injure him.
- _He alone acts justly who fulfils his obligatory duties
- (Verpflichtungen) in regard to the weaker._ ... He, who has
- no _human_ persons under him, at least can strike his horse,
- barbarously drive his calf, and cudgel his dog. The relations
- of men to the inferior species are so full of significance, and
- exercise so mighty an influence upon the development of human
- character, that Morality wants a wider province that shall embrace
- those beings within it.”
-
-In the chapter devoted especially to Food and Drinks (_Speise und
-Trank_) Struve warns those whom it most concerns that:--
-
- “The monstrous evils and abuses, which gradually and stealthily
- have invaded our daily foods and drinks, have now reached to such a
- pitch that they can no longer be winked at. He who desires to work
- for the improvement of the human species, for the elevation of the
- human soul, and for the invigoration of the human body, dares not
- leave uncontested the general dominant unnaturalness of living.
-
- “With a people struggling for Freedom the Kitchen must be no
- murderous den (_Mördergrube_); the Larder no den of corruption;
- the Meal no occasion for stupefaction. In despotic states the
- oppressors of the People may intoxicate themselves with spirituous
- drink, and bring disease and feebleness upon themselves with
- unlawful and unwholesome meats. The sooner such men perish (_zu
- grunde gehen_) the better. But in free states (or in such as are
- striving for Freedom), Simplicity, Temperance, Soberness must be
- the first principles of citizen-life. No people can be free whose
- individual members are still slaves to their own passions.[277]
- Man must first free himself from these before he can, _with any
- success_, make war upon those of his fellow-men.”
-
-Weighty words coming from a student of Science and of Human Life.
-Still weightier coming from one who had devoted so large a part of his
-existence to assist, and had taken so active a part in, the struggles
-of the people for Justice and Freedom.
-
-
-
-
-XLIX.
-
-DAUMER. 1800-1875.
-
-
-One of the earliest pioneers of the New Reformation in Germany, chiefly
-from what may be termed the religious-philosophical standpoint, and one
-whose useful learning was equalled only by his true conception of the
-significance of the religious sentiment, was born at Nürnberg, in the
-last year of the eighteenth century.
-
-Of a naturally feeble constitution, unable to mix in the ordinary
-amusements of school-life, he found ample leisure for literature and
-for music, to which especially he was devoted. Much of his time, also,
-was given to theological, and, in particular, biblical reading, so that
-his mother unhesitatingly fixed upon the clerical profession as his
-future career. He attended the Gymnasium of his native town, at that
-time under the direction of Hegel, who exercised a permanent influence
-upon his mental development. In the eighteenth year of his age he
-proceeded to the University of Erlangen for the study of theology.
-Doubts, however, began to disturb his contentment with orthodoxy;
-and, more and more dissatisfied with its systems, the young student
-relinquished the course of life for which he had believed himself
-destined; and, after attending the lectures of Schelling, he went
-to Leipsic to apply himself wholly to philology. Having completed
-the usual course of study, he was appointed teacher, and afterwards
-Professor of Latin in the Nürnberg Gymnasium (1827). Unpleasant
-relations with the Rector of the schools (whose orthodoxy seems to have
-been less questionable than his amiability), and also, in part, his
-feeble health, obliged him to resign this post, and from that time he
-gave himself up exclusively to literary occupations, which were, for
-the most part, in the domain of philosophic theology.
-
-During his professoriate Daumer had written his _Urgeschichte des
-Menschengeistes_ (“Primitive History of the Human Mind”), which was
-succeeded, at an interval of some years, by his _Andeutungen eines
-Systems Speculativer Philosophie_ (“Intimations of a System of
-Speculative Philosophy”), in which he attempted to found and formulate
-a philosophic Theism. The unreality of the professions and trifling of
-those who had most reputation in the “religious” world, estranged him
-more and more from the prevalent interpretations of Christianity.
-
-His _Philosophie, Religion, und Alterthum_ appeared in 1833. Two
-years later his _Züge zu einer neuen Philosophie der Religion
-and Religionsgeschichte_ (“Indications for a New Philosophy of
-Religion and History of Religion”). In 1842 was published _Der
-Feuer-und-Moloch-Dienst der Hebräer_ (“The Fire and Moloch-Worship of
-the Hebrews”), and (1847) _Die Geheimnisse des Christlichen Alterthums_
-(“The Mysteries of Christian Antiquity”), in which he pointed out
-that human sacrifice, and even cannibalism, were connected with the
-old Baal-worship of the Jews, and maintained the newer religion to
-be, in one important respect, not so much a purification of Judaism,
-as an apparently retrograde movement to the still older religionism.
-Besides these and other philosophic writings, Daumer published a free
-translation of the Persian poet Hafiz. _Hafiz_ was followed by _Mahomed
-und seine Werke: eine Sammlung Orientalischer Geschichte_ (“Mahommed
-and his Actions: a Résumé of Oriental History”) 1848; and in 1855 by
-_Polydora: ein Weltpoetisches Liederbuch_ (“Polydora: A Book of Lays
-from the World’s Poetry”).
-
-In his _Anthropologismus und Kriticismus_ (“Anthropology and
-Criticism”), 1844, are many assaults upon the orthodox dietetic
-practices; and in _Enthüllungen über Kaspar Hauser_ (“Revelations
-in regard to Kaspar Hauser”) he displays the noxious influences of
-flesh-eating upon a “wild boy of the woods,” who had been deserted or
-lost by his parents in his childhood, and who had lived an entirely
-natural life in the forests, eating only wild fruits. When he had
-been reclaimed from the _savage_ state, his guardians, it seems,
-thought that the most effectual method of “civilising” their charge
-was to force him to discard fruits for flesh. The result, as shown by
-Professor Daumer, who watched the case with the greatest interest,
-was not reassuring for the orthodox believers. The inveteracy of the
-practice of kreophagy, which blinds men to its essential barbarism, as
-well as its anti-ethical, anti-humanising influences, is eloquently
-insisted upon:--
-
- “Among the reforms necessary for the triumph of true refinement and
- true morality, which ought to be our earnest aim, is the Dietetic
- one, which, if not the weightiest of all (_allerwichtigste_), yet,
- undoubtedly, is one of the weightiest. Still is the ‘civilised’
- world stained and defiled by the remains of a horrible barbarity;
- while the old-world revolting practice of slaughter of animals and
- feeding on their corpses still is in so universal vogue, that men
- have not the faculty even of recognising it as such, as otherwise
- they would recognise it; and aversion from this horror provokes
- censure of such eccentricity, and amazement at any manifestion of
- tendency to reform, as at something absurd and ridiculous--nay,
- arouses even bitterness and hate. To extirpate this barbarism is a
- task, the accomplishment of which lies in the closest relationship
- with the most important principles of humaneness, morality,
- æsthetics, and physiology. A foundation for real culture--a
- thorough civilising and refining of humanity--is clearly impossible
- so long as an organised system of murder and of corpse-eating
- (_organisirten Mord-und-Leichenfratz System_) prevails by
- recognised custom.
-
- “That through a manner of living, of a character so fostering of
- corrupting and putrefying principles, is generated and nourished a
- whole host of diseases which, otherwise, would not exist, is so
- easy to see, that only an extremely obstinate love of flesh-meat
- can blind one to the fact. Before I renounced flesh-eating, which,
- unhappily, I had not the courage to do before I had lived a half
- century, I suffered from time to time from a frightful neuralgia,
- which tortured me many long days and nights. Since I abstained from
- that diet I have rid myself of this evil entirely. Observations of
- other individuals, in respect of the same and other maladies, have
- led me to the same conclusion. Worms, for instance, from which it
- formerly suffered, have entirely disappeared in a child, when it no
- longer was fed upon flesh.
-
- “That through the _cadaverous_ diet, also, very great disadvantages
- are derived to the spiritual and moral nature of men, appears to me
- to be proved by my experience in the case of my former foster-son,
- the celebrated Kaspar Hauser. This young man, maintained during his
- close confinement upon bread and water, for a long time after his
- introduction to the world ate nothing else, and wished for nothing
- else, as food. While he was accustomed, without ill-effect, to take
- bread-sops, oatmeal, and plain chocolate, from flesh, which had
- for him an intolerable odour, he had conceived a violent aversion.
- Living in this way he always looked sufficiently well-nourished,
- he developed a remarkable intelligence, and exhibited an
- extraordinarily refined and tender feeling. He was induced at last,
- but only by the most extraordinary caution and gradually, to take
- the usual flesh-dishes, by being given at first only a few drops
- of flesh-soup in his bread-sops, and, when he had grown in some
- measure accustomed to it, by infusing stronger ingredients, and so
- on.
-
- “There was now manifested the most disastrous change in his mind
- and disposition: learning became for him strangely difficult--the
- nobility of his nature disappeared into the background, and he
- turned out to be nothing more than a very ordinary individual.
- They ascribed this, of course, to every other cause than to
- his habituation to the flesh-diet. I myself was at that time
- very remote from the opinion of which I now am. From my present
- standpoint, however, I certainly cannot doubt that dietetic
- barbarism is for man of the most essential harm, not alone in a
- physical, but also in an intellectual and moral, point of view,
- however much it may, at present, be taken under the patronage of
- physiologists and physicians--upon no other ground, apparently,
- than because they themselves, to a melancholy degree, are devotedly
- attached to this inhuman diet. For, alas! man is wont to make use
- of his reason to justify by specious show of reasoning what he
- likes and delights in upon quite other grounds.”[278]
-
-Of the rest of the little band of the propagators of the truer
-Philosophy in Germany no longer living--who resolutely bore aloft
-the standard of the Humanitarian Creed, at a time when it was yet
-more scouted and scorned by the infidels than even at the present
-day--deserving as they are of everlasting gratitude and remembrance
-at the hands of their more fortunate successors, the limits of this
-book compel us to be content with recording here the witness of one
-or two more only; while for acquaintance with the numerous able and
-eloquent expositions of their living representatives--of such earnest
-humanitarian and social reformers as Ed. Baltzer, Emil Weilshäuser,
-Theodor Hahn, Dr. Aderholdt, A. von Seefeld, R. Springer, and
-others-- we must refer our readers, who wish to form an adequate idea
-of contemporary German _anti-kreophagistic_ literature (as also in
-regard to the equally extensive contemporary English literature of the
-subject), to the original works themselves.
-
-From _Der Weg zum Paradiese_ (“The Way to Paradise”) the following
-extract sufficiently represents the inspiration of the writer, Dr. W.
-Zimmermann:--
-
- “Men are almost entirely everything that they are by the force of
- custom; and this force, for the most part, resists every other
- power, and remains victorious over all. Reason itself, morality,
- and conscience are submissive to it. In the matter of Dietary
- Reform it displays itself as the enemy _par excellence_ (_die
- Hauptmacht_). People will fall back upon alleged _impossibilities_,
- although it is a question only of will and resolution. They will
- reject many of the dietetic propositions hitherto advanced as
- dangerous ‘abstractions,’ although they are founded in history,
- reason, and human destiny; although a brief enquiry ought to
- suffice to convince one of the first importance of the Reform. For
- although one must suppose that all would prefer a long, healthy,
- and happy existence to a feeble, painful life upon the old regimen,
- yet will the majority of human beings think it easier to attempt to
- assuage their torments and pains by uncertain, and, by no means,
- unhazardous medicine, rather than to remove them by obedience to
- Nature’s laws. As it is with most of the highest truths, so is
- it especially with Dietary Reform. People will reject it as an
- _abstraction_, and pronounce it an _impossibility_. In the future,
- however, by the greater number of the higher minds--for such a
- sacrifice of the lower and unnatural appetite we dare not expect
- from the ordinary run of men--will it be regarded in practice as
- a great blessing. For even now there are many exceptions in the
- social organism for whom Nature’s laws are superior to unreasoning
- impulse; for whom morality is superior to materialistic and mere
- sensual living; for whom duty is superior to superfluity. Besides,
- we are advancing towards a humaner century; and, as the present
- is a humaner time than the century before, so later will there
- be a milder _régime_ than now. Just as, in our days, exposure
- of children, combats of gladiators, torture of prisoners, and
- other atrocities are held to be scandalous and shameful, while
- in earlier times they were thought quite justifiable and right,
- so in the future will the murder of animals, to feed upon their
- corpses, be pronounced to be immoral and indefensible. Already
- (1846) are associations being formed for the protection of these
- beings; already now are there many who, like the nobler spirits
- of antiquity, apply to their diet the watchword of morality (_das
- Losungswort der Moral_) _to do good and to abstain from wrong is
- always, and above everything, possible_, and no longer give their
- sanction, by feeding on animals, to the torture and killing of
- innocent sentient beings.
-
- “According to the _number_ of proselytes will the importance of
- the evidence be adjudged. When thousands, practising natural diet,
- are observed in the midst of diseased flesh-eaters to be in the
- enjoyment of a prolonged, happy, old age, without disease and the
- sufferings of a vicious method of life, then will the way be laid
- down for _the many_ to abandon the living upon the corpses of other
- animals.”
-
-Of a like inspiration is the indignant protest of another of the
-apostles of Humanitarianism in Germany:--
-
- “What humiliation, what disgrace for us all, _that it should be
- necessary_ for one man to exhort other men not to be inhuman and
- irrational towards their fellow-creatures!
-
- Do they recognise, then, no mind, no soul in them--have they not
- feeling, pleasure in existence, do they not suffer pain? Do their
- voices of joy and sorrow indeed fail to speak to the human heart
- and conscience--so that they can murder the jubilant lark, in the
- first joy of his spring-time, who ought to warm their hearts with
- sympathy, from delight in bloodshed or for their ‘sport,’ or with
- a horrible insensibility and recklessness only to practise their
- aim in shooting! Is there no _soul_ manifest in the eyes of the
- living or dying animal--no expression of suffering in the eye of
- a deer or stag hunted to death--nothing which accuses them of
- murder before the avenging Eternal Justice?... Are the souls of
- all other animals but man mortal, or are they essential in their
- organisation? Does the world-idea (_Welt-Idee_) pertain to them
- also--the soul of nature--a particle of the Divine Spirit? I know
- not; but I feel, and every reasonable man feels like me, it is in
- miserable, intolerable contradiction with our human nature, with
- our conscience, with our reason, with all our talk of humanity,
- destiny, nobility; it is in frightful (_himmelschreinder_)
- contradiction with our poetry and philosophy, with our nature and
- with our (pretended) love of nature, with our religion, with our
- teachings about _benevolent design_--that we bring into existence
- merely to kill, to maintain our own life by the destruction of
- other life.... It is a frightful wrong that other species are
- tortured, worried, flayed, and devoured by us, in spite of the fact
- that we are not obliged to this by necessity; while in sinning
- against the defenceless and helpless, just claimants as they are
- upon our reasonable conscience and upon our compassion, we succeed
- only in brutalising ourselves. This, besides, is quite certain,
- that man has no real pity and compassion for his own species, so
- long as he is pitiless towards other races of beings.”[279]
-
-
-
-
-L.
-
-SCHOPENHAUER. 1788-1860.
-
-
-The chief interpreter of Buddhistic ideas in Europe, and whose bias
-in this direction is exercising so remarkable an influence upon
-contemporaneous thought, in Germany in particular, was born at
-Dantzig, the son of a wealthy merchant of that city. His mother,
-herself distinguished in literature, was often the centre of the most
-eminent persons of the day at Weimar. At a very early age devoted to
-the philosophies of Plato and of Kant, Arthur Schopenhauer studied
-at the Universities of Göttingen and Berlin. His course of studies,
-both scientific and literary, was, even for a German, unusually severe
-and searching; and his acquirements were encyclopædic in their range.
-Unlike most German students, it is worth noting, he was addicted
-neither to beer-drinking nor to duelling.
-
-His most important writings are: _Die Welt als Wille und Vorstellung_
-(“The World as Will and Representation”), 2 vols; _Die Grundprobleme
-der Ethik_ (“The Ground-Problems of Ethics”); _Parerga und
-Paralipomena_ (“Incidental and Neglected Subjects”), 2 vols; _Das
-Fundament der Moral_ (“The Foundation of Morality”), 1840.
-
-The peculiar characteristics of his philosophy are uncompromising
-opposition to the hollow doctrines of easy-going Optimism--an
-antagonism which, indeed, assumes the form of an exaggerated
-Pessimism--and (what especially distinguishes him from most
-systematisers and formularisers of morals) his making _Compassion_ the
-principal, and, indeed, the exclusive source of moral action; and it
-is his vindication of the _rights_ of the subject species, in marked
-contrast with the silence, or even positive depreciation and contempt
-for them, on the part of ordinary moralists, which will always entitle
-him to take exceptionally high rank among reformers of Ethical systems,
-in spite of his exaggerations and short-comings in other respects.
-Dr. David Strauss (_Der Alte und der Neue Glaube_) thus writes of his
-claims on these grounds:--
-
- “Criminal history shows us how many torturers of men, and
- murderers, have first been torturers of the lower animals. _The
- manner in which a nation, in the aggregate, treats the other
- species, is one chief measure of its real civilisation._ The
- Latin races, as we know, come forth badly from this examination;
- we Germans not half well enough. Buddhism has done more, in this
- direction, than Christianity; and Schopenhauer more than all
- ancient and modern philosophers together. The warm sympathy with
- sentient nature, which pervades all the writings of Schopenhauer,
- is one of the most pleasing aspects of his thoroughly intellectual,
- though often unhealthy and unprofitable, philosophy.”
-
-This, it is necessary to add, plainly is written in ignorance of the
-numerous writings of earlier and contemporaneous humanitarian dietists,
-to whom, of course, is due a higher, because more consistent and more
-logical, position than even Schopenhauer can claim, who, from ignorance
-of the physical and moral arguments of anti-kreophagy (it reasonably
-may be presumed), at the same time that he established the rights of
-the subject species on the firmest basis, and included them as an
-essential part of any moral code, yet, with a strange, but too common,
-inconsistency, did not perceive that to hand over the Cow, the Ox, or
-the Sheep, &c., to the butcher, is in most flagrant violation of his
-own ethical standard. While, then, the author of the _Foundation of
-Morality_ cannot claim the highest place, absolutely; outside the ranks
-of anti-kreophagistic writers, a high rank may properly be conceded
-to him as one of the most eminent moralists who, short of entire
-emancipation, have done most to vindicate the position of the innocent
-non-human races.[280] Especially has he denounced the horrible outrage
-upon the commonest principles of justice by the pseudo-scientific
-torturers of the physiological laboratory.[281] It is thus that he lays
-the foundations of morality:--
-
- “A Pity, without limits, which unites us with all living
- beings--_in that_ we have the most solid, the surest guarantee
- of morality. _With that_ there is no need of casuistry. Whoso
- possesses it will be quite incapable of causing harm or loss to
- any one, of doing violence to any one, of doing ill in any way.
- But rather he will have for all long-suffering, he will aid the
- helpless with all his powers, and each one of his actions will
- be marked with the stamp of justice and of love. Try to affirm:
- ‘this man is virtuous, only he knows no pity,’ or rather: ‘he is
- an unjust and wicked man: nevertheless, he is compassionate.’ The
- contradiction is patent to everyone. Each one to his taste: but for
- myself, I know no more beautiful prayer than that which the Hindus,
- of old used in closing their public spectacles (just as the English
- of to-day end with a prayer for their king). They said: ‘May All
- that have life be delivered from suffering!’”
-
-Enforcing his teaching that the principles and mainspring of all moral
-action must be justice and love, Schopenhauer maintains that the real
-influence of these first of virtues is tested, especially, by the
-conduct of men to other animals:--
-
- “Another proof that the moral motive, here proposed, is, in fact,
- the true one, is, that in accordance with it the lower animals
- themselves are protected. The unpardonable forgetfulness in which
- they have been iniquitously left hitherto by all the [popular]
- moralists of Europe is well known. It is pretended that the
- [so-called] beasts have no rights. They persuade themselves that
- our conduct in regard to them has nothing to do with morals, or (to
- speak in the language of their morality) that we have no duties
- towards ‘animals:’ a doctrine revolting, gross, and barbarous,
- peculiar to the west, and which has its root in Judaism. In
- Philosophy, however, it is made to rest upon a hypothesis, admitted
- in the face of evidence itself, of an absolute difference between
- man and ‘beast.’ It is Descartes who has proclaimed it in the
- clearest and most decisive manner: and, in fact, it was a necessary
- consequence of his errors. The Cartesian-Leibnitzian-Wolfian
- philosophy, with the assistance of entirely abstract notions, had
- built up the ‘rational psychology,’ and constructed an immortal
- _anima rationalis_: but, visibly, the world of ‘beasts,’ with its
- very natural claims, stood up against this exclusive monopoly--this
- _brevet_ of immortality decreed to man alone--and, silently,
- Nature did what she always does in such cases--she protested. Our
- philosophers, feeling their scientific conscience quite disturbed,
- were forced to attempt to consolidate their ‘rational psychology’
- by the aid of empiricism. They, therefore, set themselves to work
- to hollow out between man and ‘beast’ an enormous abyss, of an
- immeasurable width; by this they would wish to prove to us, in
- contempt of evidence, an impassable difference. It was at all these
- efforts that Boileau already laughed:--
-
- ‘Les animaux ont-ils des Universités?
- Voit-on fleurir chez eux les Quatre Facultés?’
-
- In accordance with this theory, ‘beasts’ would have finished with
- no longer knowing how to distinguish themselves from the external
- world, with having no more consciousness of their own existence
- than of mine. Against these intolerable assertions one remedy only
- was needed. Cast a single glance at an animal, even the smallest,
- the lowest in intelligence. See the unbounded _egoism_ of which
- it is possessed. It is enough to convince you that ‘beasts’ have
- thorough consciousness of their _ego_, and oppose it to the
- world--to the _non-ego_. If a Cartesian found himself in the
- claws of a Tiger, he would learn, and in the most evident way
- possible, whether the Tiger can distinguish between the _ego_ and
- the _non-ego_. To these sophisms of the philosophers respond the
- sophisms of the people. Such are certain _idiotisms_, notably those
- of the German, who, for eating, drinking, conception, birth, death,
- corpse (when ‘beasts’ are in question), has special terms; so much
- would he fear to employ the same words as for men. He thus succeeds
- in dissimulating, under this diversity of terms, the perfect
- identity of things.
-
- “The ancient languages knew nothing of this sort of synonymy,
- and they simply called things which are the same by one and the
- same name. These artificial ideas, then, must needs have been
- an invention of the priesthood [_prétraille_] of Europe, a lot
- of sacrilegious people who knew not by what means to debase, to
- vilipend the eternal essence which lives in the substance of every
- animated being. In this way they have succeeded in establishing
- in Europe those wicked habits of hardness and cruelty towards
- ‘beasts,’ which a native of High Asia could not behold without a
- just horror. In English we do not find this infamous invention;
- that is owing, doubtless, to the fact that the Saxons, at the
- moment of the conquest of England, were not yet Christians.
- Nevertheless, the pendent of it is found in this particularity of
- the English language: all the names of animals there are of the
- _neuter gender_: and, as a consequence, when the name is to be
- represented by the pronoun, they use the neuter _it_, absolutely as
- for inanimate objects. Nothing is more shocking than this idiom,
- especially when the _primates_ are spoken of--the Dog, for example,
- the Ape, and others. One cannot fail to recognise here a dishonest
- device (_fourberie_) of the priests to debase [other] animals
- to the rank of things. The ancient Egyptians, for whom Religion
- was the unique business of life, deposed in the same tombs human
- mummies and those of the Ibis, &c.; but in Europe it would be an
- abomination, a crime, to inter the faithful Dog near the place
- where his master lies; and yet it is upon this tomb sometimes that,
- more faithful and more devoted than man ever was, he has awaited
- death.
-
- “If you wish to know how far the identity between ‘beast’ and
- man extends, nothing will conduct to such knowledge better than
- a little Zoology and Anatomy. Yet what are we to say when an
- anatomical bigot is seen at this day (1839) to be labouring to
- establish an absolute, radical, distinction between man and other
- animals; proceeding so far in enmity against true Zoologists--those
- who, without conspiracy with the priesthoods, without platitude,
- without _tartuferie_, permit themselves to be conducted by Nature
- and Truth--as to attack them, to calumniate them!
-
- “Yet this superiority [of man over other mammals of the higher
- species] depends but upon a more ample development of the
- brain--upon a difference in one part of the body only; this
- difference, besides, being but one of _quantity_. Yes, man and
- other animals are, both as regards the moral and the physical,
- identical _in kind_, without speaking of other points of
- comparison. Thus one might well recall to them--these Judaising
- westerns, these menagerie-keepers, these adorers of ‘reason’--that
- if _their_ mother has given suck to them, Dogs also have _theirs_
- to suckle _them_. Kant fell into this error, which is that of
- his time and of his country: I have already brought the reproach
- against him. The morality of Christianity has no regard for
- ‘beasts;’ it is therein a vice, and it is better to avow it than
- to eternise it. We ought to be all the more astonished at it,
- because this morality is in striking accord with the moral codes of
- Brahmanism and of Buddhism.
-
- “Between pity towards ‘beasts’ and goodness of soul there is a
- very close connexion. One might say without hesitation, when
- an individual is wicked in regard to them, that he cannot be a
- _good_ man. One might, also, demonstrate that this pity and the
- social virtues have the same source.... That [better section of
- the] English nation, with its greater delicacy of feeling, we
- see it taking the initiative, and distinguishing itself by its
- unusual compassion towards other species, giving from time to time
- new proofs of it--this compassion, triumphing over that ‘cold
- superstition’ which, in other respects, degrades the nation, has
- had the strength to force it to fill up the chasm which Religion
- had left in morality. This Chasm is, in fact, the reason why
- in Europe and in N. America, we have need of societies for the
- protection of the lower animals. In Asia the Religions suffice to
- assure to ‘beasts’ aid and protection (?), and there no one thinks
- of Societies of that kind. Nevertheless in Europe, also, from day
- to day [rather by intervals of _decades_] is being awakened the
- feeling of the Rights of the lower animals, in proportion as,
- little by little, disappear, vanish, the strange ideas of man’s
- domination over [other] animals, as if they had been placed in the
- world but for our service and enjoyment, for it is thanks to those
- ideas that they have been treated as _Things_.
-
- “Such are, certainly, the causes of that gross conduct, of that
- absolute want of regard, of which Europeans are guilty towards the
- lower animals; and I have shown the source of those ideas, which is
- in the _Old Testament_, in section 177 of the second volume of my
- _Parerga_.”[282]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of the many eminent scientists who, in recent times, indirectly have
-affirmed the _wantonness_ of slaughtering for human food, the most
-famous of European Chemists, Justus von Liebig, may seem to demand
-especial notice. THE founder of the science of Organic Chemistry
-and the method of Organic Analysis (1803-1873), educated at the
-Universities of Bonn and Erlangen, received his diploma of Doctor
-in Philosophy (physical and mathematical sciences) at the age of
-nineteen. Two years later, chiefly by the influence of Humboldt, he
-was named Professor Extraordinary of Chemistry at Giessen, whither a
-crowd of disciples flocked from all parts of Germany and from England.
-In 1832 he accepted a Chair at Munich. All the Scientific Societies of
-Europe were eager in offering him honorary distinctions.
-
-It is his application of his Special Science to the advancement of
-Agriculture, and his more philosophic, though (it must be added)
-occasionally contradictory views upon the comparative values of Foods,
-which give him his best title to remembrance with posterity. We can
-enumerate only a few of his numerous works: _Ueber Theorie und Praxis
-der Landwirthschaft_ (“Upon the Theory and Practice of Agricultural
-Economy),” Brunswick, 1824, translated into English; _Anleitung zur
-Analyse Organische Körper_ (“Introduction to the Organic Analysis
-of Bodies”), 1837; _Die Organische Chemie in ihren Anwendung auf
-Physiologie und Pathologie_ (“Organic Chemistry in its Relationship
-to Physiology and Pathology”), 1839; “Researches upon Alimentary
-Chemistry,” 1849; _Chemische Briefe_ (“Letters upon Chemistry
-considered in Relation with Industry, Agriculture, and Physiology”),
-1852.
-
-Whatever opinions this eminent German Chemist may have published
-elsewhere inconsistent with the statements below, such inconsistency,
-no more than in the case of Buffon, can weaken the force of his more
-reasonable utterance. Upon the essential ultimate identity of the
-nutritive properties of animal and vegetable substance he thus clearly
-pronounces:--
-
- “Vegetable fibrine and animal fibrine, vegetable albumen and
- animal albumen, differ at the most (_höchstens_) in form. If these
- principles in nourishment fail, the nourishment of the animal will
- be cut off; if they obtain them, then the grass-feeding animal gets
- the same principles in his food as those upon which the flesh-eater
- entirely depends. Vegetables produce in their organism the blood
- of all beings. So that when the flesh-eaters consume the blood and
- flesh of the vegetable-eaters, they take to themselves exactly and
- simply the vegetable principles.
-
- “Vegetable Foods, in particular Corn of all kinds, and through
- these Bread, contain as much iron as the flesh of Oxen or as other
- kinds of flesh.
-
- “Certain it is, that of three men, of whom the one has fed upon
- ox-flesh and bread, the other upon bread and cheese, the third
- upon potatoes, each considers it a peculiar hardship from quite
- different points of view; yet in fact the only difference between
- them is the action of the peculiar elements of each food upon the
- brain and nervous system. A Bear, who was kept in a zoological
- garden, displayed, so long as he had bread exclusively for
- nourishment, quite a mild disposition. Two days of feeding with
- flesh made him vicious, aggressive, and even dangerous to his
- attendant. It is well known that the _vis irritabilis_ of the Hog
- becomes so excessive through flesh-eating that he will then attack
- a man.
-
- “The flesh-eating man needs for his support an enormous extent of
- land, wider and more extensive even than the Lion and the Tiger.
- A nation of Hunters in a circumscribed territory is incapable
- of multiplying itself for that reason. The carbon necessary for
- maintaining life must be taken from animals, of whom in the limited
- area there can be only a limited number. These animals collect
- from the plants the elements of their blood and their organs, and
- supply them to the Indians living by the chase, who devour them
- unaccompanied by the substance (_stoffen_) which during the life
- of the animal maintained the life processes. While the Indian, by
- feeding upon a single animal, might contrive to _sustain_ his life
- and health a certain number of days, he must, in order to gain
- for that time the requisite heat, devour _five_ animals. His food
- contains a superfluity of nitrogenous substance. What is wanting to
- it during the greater portion of the year is the necessary quantity
- of carbon, and hence the inveterate inclination of flesh consumers
- for brandy.
-
- “The practical illustration of agricultural superiority cannot be
- more clearly and profoundly given than in the speech of the North
- American Chief, which the Frenchman Crevecous has reported to us.
- The Chief, recommending to his tribe the practice of Agriculture,
- thus addressed it: ‘Do you not observe that, while we live upon
- Flesh, the white men live [_in part_] upon Grain? That Flesh takes
- more than thirty months to grow to maturity, and besides is often
- scarce? That each of these miraculous grains of corn, which they
- bury in the earth, gives back to them more than a hundredfold? That
- Flesh has four legs upon which to run away, and we have only two
- to overtake them? That the Corn remains and grows where the white
- men sow it; that the winter, which for us is a time of toilsome
- hunting, is for them the time of rest? Therefore have they so many
- children, and live so much longer than we. I say, then, to each
- one who hears me: Before the trees over our wigwams have died from
- old age, and the maples have ceased to supply us with sugar, the
- race of the corn-planter will have exterminated the race of the
- flesh-eater, because the hunters determine not to sow.’”[283]
-
-Liebig’s views as to the mischievous effects of the propensity of
-farmers, and of so-called agriculturists, to convert arable into
-pasture land are sufficiently well known.[284]
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX.
-
-
-
-
-I.
-
-HESIOD.
-
-
-The original of the English version, given in the beginning of this
-work, is as follows:--
-
- Νήπιοι, οὐδὲ ἴσασιν, ὀσῳπλέον ἣμισυ Παντός,
- Οὐδ’ ὃσον ἐν Μαλάχῃ τε καὶ Ἀσφοδέλῳ μέγ’ ὄνειαρ.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Χρύσεον μὲν πρώτιστα γένος μερόπων ἀνθρώπων
- Ἀθάνατοι ποίησαν Ὀλύμπια δώματ’ ἔχοντες.
- Ὣστε θεοί δ’ ἐζωον ἀκηδέα θυμὸν ἔχοντες,
- Νόσφιν ἄτερ τε πόνων καὶ ὀϊζύος· οὐδέ τι δειλὸν
- Γῆρας ἐπῆν, αἰεὶ δε πόδας καὶ χεῖρας ὁμοῖοι
- Τέρποντ’ ἐν θαλίῃσι κακῶν ἔκτοσθεν ἀπάντων·
- Θνῆσκον δ’ ὡς ὑπνῳ δεδμημένοι· ἐσθλὰ δὲ πάντα
- Τοῖσιν ἔην· καρπὸν δ’ ἔφερε ζείδωρος Ἄρουρα
- Αὐτομάτη, πολλόν τε καὶ ἄφθονον· οἱ δ’ ἐθελημοὶ
- Ἣσυχοι εργ’ ἐνέμοντο σὺν ἐσθλοῖσιν πολέεσσιν,
- [Ἀφνειοὶ μήλοισι, φίλοι μακάρεσσι θεοῖσι][285]
- Αὐτὰρ ἐπειδὴ τοῦτο γένος κατὰ γαῖα κάλυψεν,
- Τοὶ μὲν δαίμονες εἰσι Διὸς μεγάλου διὰ βουλὰς
- Ἐσθλοί, ἐπιχθόνιοι, φύλακες θνητῶν ἀνθρώπων,[286]
- Οἳ ῥα φυλάσσουσιν τε δίκας καὶ σχέτλια ἔργα,
- Ἡρα ἑσσάμενοι πάντῃ φοιτῶντες ἐπ’ αῖαν,
- Πλαυτοδόται· καὶ τοῦτο γέρας βασιλήϊον ἔσχον.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Ζεὺς δὲ Πατὴρ τρίτον ἄλλο γένος μερόπων ἀνθρώπων
- Χάλκειον ποίησε
-
- * * * * *
-
- Οὐδέ τι σῖτον
- Ἣσθιον, ἀλλ’ ἀδάμαντος ἔχον κρατερόφρονα θυμόν,
- Ἄπλητοι· μεγάλη δὲ βίν καὶ χεῖρες ἄαπτοι
- Ἐξ ὤμων ἐπέφυκον ἐπὶ στιβαροῖσι μέλεσσιν.
- Ἔργα καὶ Ἣμεραι (_Works and Days_), _passim_.
-
-
-
-
-II.
-
- _Extracts from “The Golden Verses”_ (Χρυσᾶ Ἔπη). _An Exposition of
- Pythagorean Doctrine, of the Third Century, B.C., in Hexameters._
- (See pages 21, 22.)
-
-
- κρατεῖν δ’ εἰθίζεο τῶνδε--
- Γαστρὸς μὲν πρώτιστα, καὶ ὑπνοῦ, λαγνείης τε,
- Καὶ θυμοῦ· πρήξεις δ’ αἰσχρόν ποτε μήτε μετ’αλλοῦ
- Μήτ’ ἰδίῃ· πάντων δε μαλίστ’ αἰσχύνεο σαυτόν.
- Εἶτα Δικαιοσύνην ἀσκεῖν ἐργῳ τε λόγῳ τε.
- Μηδ’ ἀλογίστως σαυτὸν ἐχειν περὶ μηδὲν ἔθιζε·
- Αλλα γνῶθε μὲν ὡς θανέειν πέπρωται ἃπασι.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Μηδεὶς μήτε λόγῳ σε παρείπῃ, μήτε τι ἔργῳ,
- Πρήξαι μήτ’ εἰπείν ὃ τι τοι μὴ βέλτερον ἔστι·
- Εἰθίζου δε διαίταν ἔχειν καθάρειον, ἄθρυπτον.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Μηδ’ ὓπνον μαλακοῖσιν ἐπ’ ὄμμασι προσδέξασθαι
- Πρὶν τῶν ἡμερινῶν ἔργων τρὶς ἓκαστον ἐπελθεῖν--
- Πῆ παρέβην· Τί δ’ ἔρεξα· Τί μοι δέον ουκ ἐτελέσθη·--
- Ἀρξάμενος δ’ ἀπὸ πρώτου ἐπέξιθι καὶ μετεπείτα
- Δειλὰ μὲν ἐκπρήξας, ἐπεπλήσσεο· Χρηστὰ δε τέρπνου.
- Ταῦτα πόνει, ταῦτ’ ἐκμελέτα· τούτων χρὴ ἐρᾷν.
- Ταῦτα σε τῆς θείης Ἀρετῆς εἰς ἴχνια θήσει·
- Ναὶ μὰ Τὸν ἁμετέρᾳ ψυχᾷ Παραδόντα Τετρακτύν,
- Παγὰν ἀενάον Ψύσεως
-
- * * * * *
-
- Τούτων δε κρατήσας
- Γνώσῃ ἀθανάτων τε Θεῶν, θνητῶν τ’ ἀνθρώπων
- Σύστασιν, ῇτε ἓκαστα διέρχεται, ῇτε κπατεῖται.
- Γνώσῃ δ’ ᾖ θέμις ἐστὶ, Φύσω περὶ παντὸς ὁμοίην
- Ὦστε σε μήτε ἄελπτ’ ἐλπιζειν, μήτε τι λήθειν.
- Γνώσῃ δ’ ἀνθρώπους αὐθαίρετα πήματ’ ἔχοντας
- Τλήμονες, οἳ τ’ ἀγαθῶν πέλας ὄντων οὐκ ἐσοπῶσιν
- Οὔτε κλύουσι· λύσιν δὲ Κακῶν παῦποι συνίσασι.
- Ζεῦ Πάτερ, ἦ πολλῶν κε κακῶν λύσειας ἃπαντας,
- Εἰ πᾶσιν δείξαις οἳω τῷ δαίμονι χρῶνται.
- Ἄλλα σὺ θάρσει, ἐπεὶ θεῖον γένος ἐστὶ βροτοῖσιν,
- Οἷς ἱερα προφέπουσα Φύσις δείκνυσιν ἒκαστα
- Ὧν εἰ σοί μέτεστι, κρατήσεις ὧν σε κελεύω
- Ἐξακέσας, ψυχὴν δὲ πόνην ἀπὸ τῶνδε σαώσεις.
- Ἀλλ’ εἴργου βρωτῶν ὧν εἴπομεν, ἔν τε καθάρμοις,
- Ἐν τε λύσει ψυχῆς κρίνην, καὶ φράζευ ἓκαστα,
- Ἡνίοχον γνώμην στήσας καθύπερθεν ἀρίστην·
- Ἠν δ’ ἀπολείψας σῶμα ἐς αἰθερ’ ἐλεύθερον ἔλθης,
- Ἔσσεαι ἀθάνατος, θεὸς, ἀμβρότος, οὐκ ἔτι θνητός.[287]
-
-
-
-
-III.
-
-
-In _Texts from the Buddhist Canon_, Love or Compassion for all living
-beings is thus inculcated by Buddha, in a sermon addressed to a number
-of women (belonging to a class of hunters) whose husbands were then
-engaged on one of their predatory excursions:--
-
- “He who is humane does not kill; he is ever able to preserve [his
- own?] life. This principle is imperishable. Whosoever observes it,
- no calamity shall betide that man. Politeness, indifference to
- worldly things, hurting no one, without place for annoyance--this
- is the character of the Brahma Heaven. Ever exercising love towards
- the infirm; pure, according to the teaching of Buddha; knowing when
- sufficient has been had; knowing when to stop.
-
- “There are eleven advantages which attend the man who practises
- compassion, and is tender to all that lives: his body is always
- in health (happy); he is blessed with peaceful sleep, and when
- engaged in study he is also composed; he has no evil dreams, he is
- protected by Heaven (Devas) and loved by men; he is unmolested by
- poisonous things, and escapes the violence of war; he is unharmed
- by fire or water; he is successful wherever he lives, and, when
- dead, goes to the Heaven of Brahma.”
-
-When he had uttered these words, both men and women were admitted into
-the company of his disciples, and obtained rest.
-
-There was, in times gone by, a certain mighty King, called Ho-meh
-(_love-darkness_), who ruled in a certain district where no tidings of
-Buddha or his merciful doctrine had yet been heard; but the religious
-practices were the usual ones of sacrifice and prayer to the gods for
-protection. Now it happened that the King’s mother, being sick, the
-physicians having vainly tried their medicine, all the wise men were
-called to consult as to the best means of restoring her health.... On
-the King asking them [the Brahman priests] what should be done, they
-replied ... sacrifices of a hundred beasts of different kinds should
-be offered on the four hills (or to the four quarters), with a young
-child, as a crowning oblation to Heaven. [Here follows a description
-of the King ordering a hundred head of Elephants, Horses, Oxen, and
-Sheep to be driven along the road from the Eastern Gate towards the
-place of sacrifice, and how their piteous cries rang through heaven
-and earth.--_Editor’s Note._] On this Buddha, moved with compassion,
-came to the spot, and preached a sermon on “Love to all that Live,” and
-added these words:--
-
- “If a man live a hundred years, and engage the whole of his time
- and attention in religious offerings to the gods, sacrificing
- Elephants and Horses, and other life, all this is not equal to _one
- act of pure love in saving life_.”
-
-See _Texts from the Buddhist Canon, commonly known as Dhammapada--with
-accompanying Narratives--Translated from the Chinese_, by Samuel Beal,
-Professor of Chinese, University College, London--Trübner, 1878: and
-the similar scene in _The Light of Asia_, where Buddha interposes at
-the moment of a religious sacrifice:--
-
- “But Buddha softly said,
- ‘Let him not strike, great King!’ and therewith loosed
- The victim’s bonds, none staying him, so great
- His presence was. Then, craving leave, he spake
- Of life which all can take but none can give,
- Life, which all creatures love and strive to keep,
- Wonderful, dear and pleasant unto each,
- Even to the meanest; yea, a boon to all
- Where Pity is, for Pity makes the world
- Soft to the Weak, and noble for the Strong.
- Unto the dumb lips of his flock he lent
- Sad pleading words, shewing how man, who prays
- For mercy to the Gods, is merciless,
- Being as God to those: albeit all Life
- Is linked and kin, and what we slay have given
- Meek tribute of the milk and wool, and set
- Fast trust upon the hands that murder them.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “Nor, spake he, shall one wash his spirit clean
- _By blood_; nor gladden gods, being good, with blood;[288]
- Nor bribe them, being evil: nay, nor lay
- Upon the brow of innocent bound beasts
- One hair’s weight of that answer all must give
- For all things done amiss or wrongfully,
- Alone--each for himself--reckoning with that
- The fixed arithmic of the Universe,
- Which meteth good for good and ill for ill,
- Measure for measure, unto deeds, words, thoughts.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “While still our Lord went on, teaching how fair
- This earth were, if all living things be linked
- In friendliness, and common use of foods,
- Bloodless and pure; the golden grain, bright fruits,
- Sweet herbs which grow for all, the waters wan,
- Sufficient drinks and meats--which when these heard,
- The might of gentleness so conquered them,
- The priests themselves scattered their altar-flames
- And flung away the steel of sacrifice:
- And through the land next day passed a decree
- Proclaimed by criers, and in this wise graved
- On rock and column: ‘Thus the King’s will is:--
- There hath been slaughter for the Sacrifice,
- And slaying for the Meat, but henceforth none
- Shall spill the blood of life, nor taste of flesh,
- Seeing that Knowledge grows, and Life is one,
- And mercy cometh to the merciful.’”[289]
-
-See also the annexed extracts from the Buddhist Sacred Scriptures,
-written probably about the third century B.C.:--
-
-
- _“The Short Paragraphs on Conduct.”--The Kûla Sîlam._
-
- 1. “Now wherein, Vâsettha, is his [the true disciple’s] Conduct
- good? Herein, O Vâsettha, that putting away the Murder of that
- which lives, he abstains from Destroying Life. The cudgel and
- the sword he lays aside; and, full of Modesty and Pity, he is
- compassionate and kind to all beings that have life.
-
- “This is the kind of Goodness that he has.
-
- [After strict prohibitions of Robbery and Unchastity, Gautama
- Buddha proceeds.]
-
- 4. “Putting away Lying, he abstains from speaking Falsehood.
- He speaks Truth. From the Truth he never swerves. Faithful and
- trustworthy, he injures not his fellow-men by deceit.
-
- “This is the kind of Goodness that he has.
-
- 5. “Putting away Slander, he abstains from Calumny. What he learns
- here he repeats not elsewhere, to raise a quarrel against the
- people here. What he learns elsewhere, &c. Thus he lives as a
- binder together of those who are divided, an encourager of those
- who are friends, impassioned for Peace, a speaker of words that
- make for Peace.
-
- “This, too, &c.
-
- 6. “Putting away Bitterness of Speech, he abstains from harsh
- language. Whatever word is humane, pleasant to the ear, lovely,
- reaching to the heart, urbane--such are the words he speaks.
-
- 7. “Putting away Foolish Talk, he abstains from Vain Conversation,
- &c.
-
- 8. “He abstains from Injuring any Herb [uselessly] or any Animal.
- He takes but one meal a day, abstaining from food at night-time, or
- at the wrong time, &c.
-
- 10. “He abstains from Bribery, Cheating, Fraud, and Crooked Ways.
-
- “This, too, &c.
-
- 11. “He refrains from Maiming, Killing, Imprisoning,
- Highway-Robbery, Plundering Villages, or obtaining money by threats
- of Violence.
-
- * * * * *
-
- 1. “And he lets his mind pervade one quarter of the World with
- thoughts of Love, and so the second, and so the third, and so
- the fourth. And thus the whole Wide World above, below, around,
- and everywhere, does he continue to pervade with heart of
- Love--far-reaching, grown great, and beyond measure.
-
- 2. “Just, Vâsettha, as a mighty Trumpeter makes himself heard, and
- that without difficulty, in all the four directions, even so, of
- all Things that have Shape or Life, there is not one that he passes
- by or leaves aside; but he regards them all with mind set free, and
- deep-felt love.
-
- “Verily this, Vâsettha, is the way to a state of union with Brahmâ.
-
- 3. “And he lets his mind pervade all parts of the World with
- thoughts of Pity, Sympathy, and Equanimity.
-
- * * * * *
-
- 9. “When he had thus spoken, the young Brâhmans, Vâsettha and
- Bhâradvâga, addressed the Blessed One, and said:--
-
- ‘Most excellent, Lord, are the words of thy mouth, most excellent!
- Just as if a man were to set up that which is thrown down, or
- were to reveal that which is hidden away, or were to point out
- the right road to him who has gone astray, or were to bring a
- Lamp into the Darkness, so that those who have eyes can see
- eternal forms--just even so, Lord, has the Truth been made known
- to us, in many a figure, by the Blessed One. And we, even we,
- betake ourselves, Lord, to the Blessed One, as our Refuge, to the
- Truth and to the Brotherhood. May the Blessed One accept us as
- disciples, as true believers from this time forth, so long as life
- endures!’”--_Buddhist Suttas_, Translated from Pâli, by T. W. Rhys
- Davids. _Sacred Books of the East._ Ed. by Max Müller, Clarendon
- Press, Oxford. 1881.
-
-As for the older (sacerdotal) religionism of the Peninsula--that of
-Brahma--the force of Truth obliges us here to remark that, while the
-great mass of the Hindus continue to shrink with disgust and abhorrence
-from the Slaughter-house and from the sanguinary diet of their
-conquerors and rulers, Mohammedan and Christian, the richer classes,
-and even many of the Brahmins and priests have long conformed, in great
-measure at least, to Western dietetic practices; and (the flesh of the
-Cow or Ox excepted), no more than other religionists do they scruple to
-violate the laws of their Sacred Books--the _Vedas_--which, however,
-are not so _humane_ as the teaching of the great Founder of Buddhism,
-as preserved in the Buddhist Sacred Scriptures, the _Tripataka_, being
-more essentially ritual and ceremonial than its popular off-shoot.
-Yet there are traces in the sacred writings of Hinduism of a strong
-consciousness of the irreligionism of feeding upon slaughtered animals,
-as in the Laws of Manu, their Sacred Legislator, where it is laid down
-that:--
-
- “The man who forsakes not the Laws, and eats not flesh-meat like
- a blood-thirsty demon, shall attain good-will in this world, and
- shall not be afflicted with Maladies.”--(Quoted in the Works of Sir
- Wm. Jones, _vol. iii., 206_.)
-
- “The man who perceives in his own soul the Supreme Good present
- in all beings acquires equanimity towards them all, and shall be
- absorbed, at last, in the highest Essence--even in that of the
- Almighty himself.”--_Conclusion of the Laws of Manu._
-
-It is superfluous to insist upon the fact that inhabitants of the
-hotter and, in particular, of the tropical regions of the globe
-have, as a matter of course, even less valid pretexts for resorting
-to _butchering_ than have the natives of colder climates; and that
-proportionally, therefore, is the reprobation to which they are
-obnoxious. (See, among other recent testimony, that of Shib Chunder
-Bose in his interesting book--_The Hindus as they Are_. London: Ed.
-Stanford, 1881). The writer has usefully exposed the yearly-increasing
-evils to India from the example of English dietetic habits.
-
-
-
-
-IV.
-
-OVID.
-
-
-The original (the peculiar beauties of which cannot easily be
-represented in a modern idiom) of the English version already given in
-this work, with the concluding verses omitted in that translation, is
-here subjoined:--
-
- Primusque animalia mensis
- Arcuit imponi: primus quoque talibus ora
- Docta quidem solvit, sed non et credita, verbis:--
- “Parcite, mortales, dapibus temerare nefandis
- Corpora. _Sunt Fruges; sunt deducentia ramos
- Pondere Poma suo, tumidæque in vitibus Uvæ.
- Sunt Herbæ Dulces; sunt, quæ mitescere flammâ,
- Mollirique queant. Nec vobis lacteus Humor
- Eripitur, nec Mella thymi redolentia florem.
- Prodiga divitias alimentaque mitia Tellus
- Suggerit: atque epulas sine Cæde et Sanguine præbet._
- Carne Feræ sedant jejunia; _nec tamen Omnes_.
- Quippe Equus, et Pecudes, Armentaque gramine vivunt.
- At quibus ingenium est immansuetumque ferumque--
- Armeniæ Tigres, iracundique Leones,
- Cumque Lupis Ursi--dapibus cum sanguine gaudent.
- Heu quantum Scelus est--in viscera viscera condi,
- Congestoque avidum pinguescere corpore corpus,
- Alteriusque animantem animantis vivere leto!
- Scilicet in tantis opibus, quas optima Matrum
- Terra parit, _nil to nisi tristia mandere sævo
- Vulnera dente juvat, ritusque referre Cyclopum?
- Nec, nisi perdideris alium, placare voracis
- Et male morati poteris jejunia ventris?_
- At vetus illa Ætas, cui fecimus Aurea nomen,
- Fœtibus arboreis et, quas humus educat, Herbis
- Fortunata fuit: nee polluit ora Cruore.
- Tunc et Aves tutas movere per aëra pennas,
- Et Lepus impavidus mediis erravit in agris:
- Nec sua credulitas piscem suspenderat hamo.
- Cuncta sine insidiis, nullamque timentia Fraudem,
- Plenaque Pacis erant. Postquam non utilis auctor
- Victibus invidit (quisquis fuit ille virorum),
- Corporeasque dapes avidam demersit in alvum.
- Fecit iter sceleri; primâque e cæde Ferarum
- Incaluisse putem maculatum sanguine ferrum.
- Idque satis fuerat; nostrumque petentia letum
- Corpora missa neci, salvâ pietate, fatemur:
- Sed quàm danda neci, tàm non epulanda, fuerunt.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Quid meruistis, Oves, placidum pecus, inque tuendos
- Natum homines, pleno quæ fertis in ubere nectar?
- Mollia quæ nobis vestras velamina Lanas
- Præbetis, Vitâque magis quàm morte juvatis.
- Quid meruêre Boves--animal sine fraude dolisque
- Innocuum, simplex, natum tolerare labores?
- _Immemor est demùm, nee Frugum, munere dignus,
- Qui potuit, curvi dempto modo pondere aratri,
- Ruricolam mactare suum: qui trita labore
- Illa, quibus toties durum renovaverat Arvum,
- Tot dederat messes, percussit colla securi._”
- “Nec satis est quòd tale nefas committitur: _ipsos
- Inscripsêre Deos sceleri_, numenque Supernum
- Cæde Laboriferi credunt gaudere Juvenci!
- Victima labe carens, et præstantissima formâ,
- (Nam placuisse nocet), vittis præsignis et auro,
- Sistitur ante aras, auditque ignara precantem:
- Imponique suæ videt, inter cornua, fronti
- Quas coluit fruges, percussaque sanguine cultros
- Inficit in liquidâ prævisos forsitan undâ.
- Protinus ereptas viventi pectore fibras
- Inspiciunt: mentesque Deûm scrutantur in illis![290]
- “Unde fames Homini vetitorum tanta ciborum?
- Audetis vesci, _genus O Mortale_! Quod, oro,
- Ne facite: et monitis animos advertite nostris.
- Cumque Boûm dabitis cæsorum membra palato
- _Mandere vos vestros scite et sentite Colonos_.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “Neve Thyestêis cumulemur viscera mensis.
- _Quàm male consuescit, quàm se parat ille cruori.
- Impius humano, Vituli qui guttura cultro
- Rumpit, et immotas præbet mugitibus aures!
- Aut qui vagitus similes puerilibus Hœdum
- Edentem jugulare potest; aut Alite vesci
- Cui dedit ipse cibos--Quantum est, quod desit in istis
- Ad plenum facinus! Quò transitus inde paratur!_
- “Bos aret, aut mortem senioribus imputet annis:
- Horriferum contra Borean Ovis arma ministret;
- Ubera dent saturæ manibus præstanda Capellæ.
- Retia cum pedicis, laqueosque, artesque dolosas
- Tollite: nec Volucrem viscatâ fallite virgâ,
- Nec formidatis Cervos eludite pinnis,
- Nec celate cibis uncos fallacibus hamos.
- Perdite, si qua nocent: verùm hæc quòque perdite tantùm:
- Ora vacent epulis, alimentaque congrua carpant.”
-
- _Metamorphoseon_, _Lib._ xv. 72-142, 462-478.
-
-Nor is this the only passage in his writings in which the Pagan poet
-proves himself to have been not without that humaneness and feeling so
-rare alike in non-Christian and in Christian poetry. In the charming
-story of the visit of the disguised and incarnate Celestials to the
-cottage of the pious peasants, Philemon and Baucis, Ovid takes the
-opportunity to present an alluring picture of the innocent fruits which
-were placed before the divine guests--a picture which, probably, was
-present to Milton in recording the similar hospitality of Eve.
-
-Among the fragrant dishes--“savoury fruits, of taste to please true
-appetite”--appear Figs, Nuts, Dates, Plums, Grapes, Apples, Olives,
-Radishes, Onions, and Endive, with Honey, Eggs, and Milk:--
-
- “Ponitur hìc bicolor sinceræ bacca Minervæ,
- Conditaque in liquidâ Corna autumnalia fæce:
- Intubaque et Radix, et Lactis massa Coacti:
- Ovaque, non acri leviter versata Favillâ.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Hìc Nux, hìc mista est rugosis Carica Palmis,
- Prunaque, et in patulis redolentia Mala canistris,
- Et de purpureis collectæ vitibus Uvæ.
- Candidus in medio Favus est: super omnia vultus
- Accessêre boni.” ...
-
-We are not surprised, however, that, notwithstanding all this variety
-of sufficient foods, ignorant peasants, imitating the vicious examples
-of their rich neighbours, thought it due to “hospitality” to sacrifice
-life; and they were on the point of slaughtering the only _non-human_
-being belonging to them--a Goose, the “guardian of the cottage”--when
-the heavenly visitants intervene, and forbid the unnecessary
-barbarism:--
-
- “Unicus anser erat, minimæ custodia villæ,
- Quem Dîs hospitibus domini mactare parabant.
- Ille celer pennâ tardos ætate fatigat,
- Eluditque diu. Tandemque est visus ad ipsos
- Confugisse Deos. Superi vetuêre necari:
- ‘Dîque sumus,’” &c.
-
-When the rest of the inhabitants of Phrygia, were, for their
-wickedness, destroyed by indignant Heaven, the two old peasants, we
-may add, found safety from the general _Deluge_. (_Metam._ viii.
-664-688).[291]
-
-It may be noted in this place that the great “Epicurean” poet, Horace
-(Ovid’s contemporary), _bon-vivant_ though he was, and apparently
-uninspired by humanitarian feeling, yet now and again expresses his
-conviction of the superiority of the Fruit to the Flesh banquet, and of
-the greater compatibility of the former with the poetic genius. E.g.
-_Carmina_ I., 31. _Ad Apollinem_:--
-
- _Me pascunt Olivæ
- Me Cichorea levesque Malvæ._
-
- (“Olives, Endives, and easily-digested Mallows are my fare.”)
-
-_Satire II._ 2. “Frugality.:”--
-
- “Quæ virtus et quanta, boni, sit vivere Parvo,
-
- * * * * *
-
- Discite non inter lances mensasque nitentes,
- Cum stupet insanis acies fulgoribus, et cum
- Acclinis falsis animus meliora recusat,
- Verum hic impransi mecum disquirite--
- _Male Vervum examinat omnis
- Corruptus judex_.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Cum labor extuderit fastidia, siccus, inanis
- Sperne cibum vilem: nisi Hymettia mella Falerno
- Ne biberis diluta....
- _Cum sale Panis
- Latrantem stomachum bene leniet._...
- _Non in caro nidore voluptas
- Summa sed in te ipso. Tu pulmentaria qucere
- Sudando_: pinguem vitiis albumque neque ostrea,
- Nec scarus aut poterit peregrina juvare lagois.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Num vesceris istâ
- Quam laudas, plumâ? Cocto num adest honor idem?_
-
- * * * * *
-
- At vos
- Præsentes Austri, coquite horum obsonia.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Ergo
- Si quis nunc mergos suaves edixerit assos,
- Parebit pravi docilis Romana juventus.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Accipe nunc, victus tenuis quæ quantaque secum
- Afferat. Imprimis valeas bene....”
-
-His arraignment of the rich glutton, who obliges and allows the poor
-man to starve in the midst of plenty, is worthy of the morality of
-Seneca:--
-
- “Ergo,
- Quod superat, non est melius quo insumere possis?
- _Cur eget indignus quisquam te divite?_”
-
-
-
-
-V.
-
-MUSONIUS (1ST CENTURY, A.D.),
-
-
-a stoic writer of great repute with his contemporaries, son of a
-Roman Eques, was born at Volsinii (Bolsena), in Etruria, at the end
-of the reign of Augustus. He was banished by Nero, who especially
-hated the professors of the _Porch_; but by Vespasian he was held in
-extraordinary honour when the rest of the philosophers were expelled
-from Rome. The time of his death is uncertain. He was the author of
-various philosophical works which are characterised by Suïdas as
-“distinguished writings of a highly philosophic nature,” who also
-attributes to him (but on uncertain evidence) letters to Apollonius
-of Tyana. We are indebted for knowledge of his opinions to a work (of
-unknown authorship) entitled _Memoirs of Musonius the Philosopher_. It
-is from this work that Stobæus (_Anthologion_), Aulus Gellius, Arrian,
-and others seem to have borrowed, in quoting the _dicta_ of the great
-Stoic teacher. All the extant fragments of his writings are carefully
-collected by Peerlkamp (Haarlem, 1822). (See also Herr Ed. Baltzer’s
-valuable monograph, _Musonius: Charakterbild aus Der Römischen
-Kaiserzeit_. Nordhausen, 1871):--
-
- “On diet he used to speak often and very earnestly, as of a matter
- important in itself and in its effects. For he thought that
- continence in meats and drinks is the beginning and groundwork of
- temperance. Once, forsaking his usual line of argument, he spoke as
- follows:--
-
- “‘As we should prefer cheap fare to costly, and that which is easy
- to that which is hard to procure, so also, that which is akin
- to man to that which is not so. Akin to us is that from plants,
- grains, and such other vegetable products as nourish him well;
- also what is derived from (other) animals--not slaughtered, but
- otherwise serviceable. Of these foods the most suitable are such
- as we may use at once without fire, for such are readiest to hand.
- Such are fruits in season, and some herbs, milk, cheese, and
- honeycombs. Moreover such as need fire, and belong to the classes
- of grains or herbs, are also not unsuitable, but are all, without
- exception, akin to man.’
-
- “Eating of flesh-meat he declared to be _brutal_, and adapted to
- savage animals. It is heavier, he said, and hindering thought and
- intelligence; the vapour arising from it is turbid and darkens the
- soul, so that they who partake of it abundantly are seen to be
- slower of apprehension. As man is [at his best] most nearly related
- to the Gods of all beings on earth, so, also, his _food_ should be
- most like to that of the Gods. They, he said, are content with the
- steams that rise from earth and waters, and we shall take the food
- most like to theirs, if we take that which is _lightest and purest_.
-
- “So our soul also will be pure and clear, and, being so, will be
- best and wisest, as Heracleitus judges when he says the clear
- soul is wisest and best. As it is, said Musonius, we are fed far
- worse than the irrational beings; for they, though they are driven
- fiercely by appetite as by a scourge, and pounce upon their food,
- still are devoid of cunning and contrivance in regard to their
- fare--being satisfied with what comes in their way, seeking only
- to be filled and nothing further. But we invent manifold arts and
- devices the more to sweeten the pleasure of food and to deceive the
- gullet. Nay, to such a pitch of daintiness and greediness have we
- come, that some have composed treatises, as of music and medicine,
- so also of cookery, which greatly increase the pleasure in the
- gullet, but ruin the health. At any rate, you may see that those
- who are fastidious in the choice of foods are far more sickly in
- body--some even, like craving women, loathing customary foods, and
- having their stomachs ruined. Hence, as good-for-nothing steel
- continually needs sharpening, so their stomachs at table need the
- continual whet of some strong tasting food.... Hence, too, it is
- our duty to eat for life, not for pleasure (only), at least if we
- are to follow the excellent saying of Socrates, that, while most
- men lived to eat, he ate to live. For, surely, no one, who aspires
- to the character of a virtuous man, will deign to resemble the
- many, and live for eating’s sake as they do, hunting from every
- quarter the pleasure which comes from food.
-
- “Moreover, that God, who made mankind, provided them with meats
- and drinks for preservation, not for pleasure, will appear from
- this. When food is most especially performing its proper function
- in digestion and assimilation, then it gives no pleasure to the man
- at all--yet we are then fed by it and strengthened. _Then_ we have
- no sensation of pleasure, and yet this time is longer than that in
- which we are eating. But if it were for pleasure that God contrived
- our food, we ought to derive pleasure from it throughout this
- longer time, and not merely at the passing moment of consumption.
- _Yet, nevertheless, for that brief moment of enjoyment we make
- provision of ten thousand dainties_; we sail the sea to its
- furthest bounds; _cooks are more sought after than husbandmen_.
- Some lavish on dinners the price of estates, and that though their
- bodies derive no benefit from the costliness of the viands.
-
- “Quite the contrary; _it is those who use the cheapest food who are
- the strongest_. For example, you may, for the most part, see slaves
- more sturdy than masters, country-folk than towns-folk, poor than
- rich--more able to labour, sinking less at their work, seldomer
- ailing, more easily enduring frost, heat, sleeplessness, and the
- like. Even if cheap food and dear strengthens the body alike,
- still we ought to choose the cheap; for this is more sober and
- more suited to a virtuous man; inasmuch as what is easy to procure
- is, for good men, more proper for food than what is hard--what is
- free from trouble than what gives trouble--what is ready than what
- is not ready. To sum up in a word the whole use of diet, I say
- that we ought to make its aim health and strength, for these are
- the only ends for which we should eat, and they require no large
- outlay.”[292]
-
-
-
-
-VI.
-
-LESSIO. 1554-1623,
-
-
-Born at Brechten, a town in Brabant, of influential family, this noted
-Hygeist, at a very early age, exhibited so exceptional a disposition as
-to be known among his school-fellows as the “prophet.” His ardour for
-learning was so intense as to cause him to forget the hours of meals,
-and to reduce his time for sleep to the shortest period possible.
-Having obtained a scholarship at the Arras College in Louvain, Lessio
-pursued the course of studies there with the greatest success, and by
-his fellow-students was proclaimed “prince of philologers.” At the age
-of seventeen he entered the Society of Jesus. Two years later he was
-elected to the Chair of Philosophy at Douai. In 1585 he accepted the
-Professorship of Theology at Louvain.
-
-So extraordinary were the respect and veneration which he had attracted
-in his Order and from all who had access to him, that not only did his
-death cause the greatest regret, but (as we are assured) his friends
-contended among themselves for possession of every possible relic and
-memento “of one who had composed so admirable works.” He was interred
-before the high altar of the church of his college in Louvain. Held
-in high honour during life, after his death so rare an ornament of
-his Church was signally eulogised by the Pope, Urbano VIII.; and he
-was even believed to have worked miracles. His praises are especially
-recorded in a book entitled _De Vitâ et Moribus R. P. Leonardi
-Lessii_--reprinted at Paris, 1644.
-
-Principal Writings: _De Justitiâ et de Jure Actionum, Humanarum, &c._
-(reprinted seven times). Many of the propositions, it seems, eventually
-came under the censure of the Theological Faculty, the Bishops, and the
-Pontiffs.
-
-_Quæ Fides et Religio sit Capessenda, Consultatio._ Anvers, 1610.
-In the estimation of S. François de Sales, a work “not so much that of
-Lessio as of an Angel of the Judgment (Ange du Grand Conseil).”
-
-_Hygiasticon_ (Anvers, 1613-14, 8vo); it is superfluous to remark, his
-really valuable work. It was translated from the Latin into French by
-Sebastian Hardy, with the title of _Le Vrai Régime de Vivre pour la
-Conservation du Corps et de l’Ame_. Paris, 1646. Another editor, _La
-Bonnodière_, added notes, republishing it under the title of _De la
-Sobriété et de Ses Avantages_. Paris, 1701.
-
-“Lessio,” writes the author of the article in the _Biographie
-Universelle_, “having been condemned by the physicians to have no
-more than two years longer to live, himself studied the principles of
-_Hygiene_, was struck by the example of Cornaro, resolved to imitate
-him, and found himself so well from such imitation that he translated
-his book (_Della Vita Sobria_), joining to it the results of his own
-experience, to which he owed the prolongation of his life by forty
-years.” For the rest, he was a man of extensive erudition; and Justus
-Lipsius celebrates, in some fine verse, the variety of his talents.
-(See _Biog. Universelle Ancienne et Moderne_. À Paris, chez Michaud,
-1819.)
-
-The _Hygiasticon_ is prefaced by testimonials from three eminent
-physicians, setting forth their concurrence in the principles of the
-author. The English translation (1634) has prefixed to it addresses, in
-verse, to him; one of which is by Crashaw, the friend of Cowley, and
-a _Dialogue between Glutton and Echo_, also in verse. Affixed to this
-edition are an English version of Cornaro, by George Herbert, and a
-translation of an anonymous treatise by another Italian writer--_That a
-Spare Diet is better than a Splendid and Sumptuous One: A Paradox_.
-
-In his chap. v. “Of the Advantages which a Sober Diet brings to the
-Body, and first, That it freeth almost from all Diseases”--Lessio
-promises the adherents of it, that in the first place:--
-
- “It cloth free a man and preserve him from almost all manner
- of diseases. For it rids him of catarrhs, coughs, wheezings,
- dizziness, and pain in the head and stomach. It drives away
- apoplexies, lethargies, falling-sickness, and other ill-affections
- of the brain. It cures the gout in the feet and in the hands; the
- sciatica and diseases in the joints. It also prevents crudity
- (indigestion), the parent of all diseases. In a word, it so tempers
- the humours, and maintains them in an equal proportion, that they
- hurt not any way, either in quantity or quality. And this both
- reason and experience do confirm. For we see that those who keep
- themselves to a sober course of diet are very seldom, or rather
- never, molested with diseases; and if at any time they happen to
- be oppressed with sickness, _they do bear it much better, and
- sooner recover than those others whose bodies are full fraught with
- ill-humours_.
-
- “I know very many who, though they be weak by natural constitution,
- and well grown in years, and continually busied in employments of
- the mind, nevertheless by the help of this temperance, live in
- health, and have passed the greater part of their lives, which have
- been many years long, without any notable sickness....
-
- “The self-same comes to pass in wounds, bruises, puttings out of
- joint, and breaking of bones; in regard that there is either no
- flux at all of ill-humours, or, at least, very little of that part
- affected.... Furthermore an abstinent diet doth arm and fortify
- against the plague; for the venom thereof is much better resisted
- if the body be clear and free--wherefore Sokrates brought to pass
- that he himself was never sick of the plague, which ofttimes
- greatly wasted the city of Athens, where he lived, as Laertius
- writeth. The third commodity of the diet is that, although it doth
- not cure such diseases as are incurable in their own nature, yet
- it doth _so much mitigate and allay them as that they are easily
- borne_, and do not much hinder the functions of the mind. This is
- seen by daily experience.”
-
-Lessio proceeds to descant upon the other benefits of the reformed
-regimen--such as that it prolongs life (other things being equal) to
-extreme old age, produces cheerfulness, activity, memory, and the
-like.[293]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Moffet, another hygienic writer of the sixteenth century, demands
-indignantly:--
-
- “Till God (_i.e._, Superstition or Fraud) would have it so [the
- slaying of other animals for food], who dared to touch with his
- lips the remnant of a dead carcase? or to set the prey of a wolf,
- or the meat of a falcon, upon his table? Who, I say, durst feed
- upon those members which, lately, did see, go, bleat, low, feel,
- and move?[294]
-
- “Nay, tell me, can civil and human eyes yet abide the slaughter of
- an innocent ‘beast,’ the cutting of his throat, the smashing him on
- the head, the flaying of his skin, the quartering and dismembering
- of his limbs, the sprinkling of his blood, the ripping up of his
- veins, the enduring of ill-savours, the heaving of heavy sighs,
- sobs, and groans, the passionate struggling and panting for life,
- which only hard-hearted butchers can endure to see?
-
- “Is not the earth sufficient to give us meat, but that we must also
- rend up the bowels of ‘beasts,’ birds, and fishes? Yes, truly,
- there is enough in the earth to give us meat; yea, verily, and
- choice of meats, needing either none or no great preparation, which
- we may take without fear, and cut down without trembling; which,
- also, we may mingle a hundred ways to delight our taste, and feed
- on safely to fill our bellies.”--_Health’s Improvement_, by Dr. W.
- Moffet (ed. 1746), as quoted by Ritson. The author died in 1604.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The author of the _Anatomy of Abuses_, a writer of the same period,
-denouncing the unnatural and luxurious living of his time, compares the
-two diets with equal force and truth:--
-
- “I cannot persuade myself otherwise, but that our _niceness_
- and _cautiousness_ in diet hath altered our nature, distempered
- our bodies, and made us subject to hundreds of diseases and
- _discrasies_ (indigestions) more than ever our forefathers were
- subject unto, and consequently of shorter life than they.... Who
- are sicklier than they who fare deliciously every day? Who is
- corrupter? Who belcheth more? Who looketh worse? Who is weaker and
- feebler than they? Who hath more filthy phlegm and putrefaction
- (replete with gross humours) than they? And, to be brief, who dieth
- sooner than they?
-
- “Do we not see the poor man who eateth brown bread (whereof some
- is made of rye, barley, _peason_, beans, oats, and such other
- gross grains), and drinketh small drink, yea, sometimes water, and
- feedeth upon milk, butter and cheese--I say do we not see such a
- one healthfuller, stronger, fairer complexioned, and longer-living
- than the other that fares daintily every day; and how should it be
- otherwise?”--_Stubbes’s Anatomy of Abuses_, 1583. Quoted by Ritson
- (_Abstinence from Flesh: A Moral Duty._).
-
-
-
-
-VII.
-
-COWLEY. 1620-1667.
-
-
-Among the poets of the age second only to Milton and to Dryden. _The
-Garden_, from which we extract the following just sentiments, is
-prefixed by way of dedication to the _Kalendarium Hortense_ of John
-Evelyn, his personal and political friend. _The Gardener’s Almanac_, it
-is worthy of note, is one of the earliest prototypes of the numerous
-more modern treatises of the kind. It had reached a tenth edition in
-1706.
-
- “When Epicurus to the world had taught
- That pleasure is the chiefest good,
- (And was, perhaps, i’th’ right, if rightly understood),
- His life he to his doctrine brought,
- And in a garden’s shade that Sovereign pleasure sought:
- Whoever a true _Epicure_ would be.
- May there find cheap and virtuous luxury.
- Vitellius his table which did hold
- As many creatures as the ark of old--
- That fiscal table to which every day
- All countries did a constant tribute pay--
- Could nothing more delectable afford
- Than Nature’s Liberality--
- Helped with a little Art and Industry--
- Allows the meanest gardener’s board.
- _The wanton Taste no Flesh nor Fowl can choose,
- For which the Grape or Melon it would lose,
- Though all th’ inhabitants of Earth and Air
- Be listed in the Glutton’s bill of fare._
-
- * * * * *
-
- Scarce any Plant is growing here.
- Which against Death some weapon does not bear.
- Let Cities boast that they provide
- For life the ornaments of Pride;
- But ’tis the Country and the Field
- That furnish it with Staff and Shield.
-
- _The Garden._ Chertsey, 1666.
-
-
-
-
-VIII.
-
-TRYON. 1634-1703.
-
-
-One of the best known of the seventeenth century humane Hygeists, was
-born at Bibury, a village in Gloucestershire. His father was a tiler
-and plasterer, who by stress of poverty was forced to remove his son,
-when no more than six years of age, from the village school, and to set
-him at the work of spinning and carding, (the woollen manufacture being
-then extensively carried on in Gloucestershire). At eight years of age
-he became so expert, he tells us, as to be able to spin four pounds a
-day, earning two shillings a week. At the age of twelve he was made
-to work at his father’s employment. At this period he first learned
-to read. He next took to keeping sheep. With the sum of three pounds,
-realised by the sale of his four sheep, he went to London to seek his
-fortune, when seventeen years old, and bound himself apprentice to a
-“castor-maker,” in Fleet Street. His master was an Anabaptist--“an
-honest and sober man;” and, after two years’ apprenticeship, Tryon
-adopted the same religious creed. All his spare time was now devoted
-entirely to study; and, with the usual ardour of scholars who depend
-upon their own talents and exertions, he scarcely gave any time to food
-or sleep. The holiday period, too, spent by his fellow-apprentices in
-eating and drinking, and gross amusements, was utilised in the same
-way. Science, and Physiology in particular, attracted his attention.
-
-At the age of twenty-three he first adopted the reformed diet, “my
-drink being only water, and food only bread and some fruit, and that
-but once a day for some time; but afterwards I had more liberty given
-me by my guide, Wisdom, to eat butter and cheese; my clothing being
-mean and thin; for, in all things, self-denial was now become my real
-business.” This strict life he maintained for more than a year, when he
-relapsed, at intervals, during the next two years. At the end of this
-period he had become confirmed in his reform, and he remained to the
-end strictly akreophagist, and, indeed, strictly frugal, “contenting
-myself with herbs, fruits, grains, eggs, butter and cheese for food,
-and pure water for drink.” About two years after his marriage he made
-voyages to Barbadoes and to Holland in the way of trade--“making
-beavers.” He finally settled himself in England, and at the age of
-forty-eight he published his first book on _Dietetics_.
-
-His brief autobiography, from which the above facts are drawn, ends at
-this period. His editor adds, as to his appearance and character: “his
-aspect easily discovered something extraordinary; his air was cheerful,
-lively, and brisk; but grave with something of authority, though he was
-of the easiest access. Notwithstanding he was of no strong make, yet,
-through his great temperance, regularity, and by the strength of his
-spirits and vigour of his mind, he was capable of any fatigue, even to
-his last illness, equally with any of the best constitutions of men
-half his years. Through all his lifetime he had been a man of unwearied
-application, and so indefatigable that it may be as truly said of him
-as it can be of any man that he was never idle; but of such despatch
-that, though fortune had allotted him as great multiplicity of business
-as, perhaps, to any one of his contemporaries, yet, without any
-neglect thereof, he found leisure to make such a search into Nature,
-that perhaps few of this age equalled him therein: and not only into
-Nature, but also into almost all arts and sciences, of some whereof he
-was an improver, and of all innocent and useful ones an encourager and
-promoter.”[295]
-
-In spite of that penetration of mind and justness of thought which
-influenced him to abandon the cruelty and coarseness of the orthodox
-diet, the author of _The Way to Health_ could not free himself from
-certain of the credulous fancies of his age; and, it must be admitted,
-his writings are by no means exempt from such prejudices. It is as a
-moral reformer that he has deserved our respect, and of his numerous
-books the following are noteworthy:--
-
- _A Treatise on Cleanliness in Meats and Drinks._ London, 1682.
-
- _The Way to Health, Long Life, &c._ 1683, 1694, 1697. 3 vols., 8vo.
-
- _Friendly Advice to the Gentlemen-Planters of the East and West
- Indies._ London, 1684.
-
- _The Way to Make All People Rich: or, Wisdom’s Call to Temperance
- and Frugality._ 1685.
-
- _Wisdom’s Doctrine: or, Aphorisms and Rules for Preserving the
- Health of the Body and the Peace of the Mind._ 1696.
-
- _England’s Grandeur and the Way to Get Wealth: or, Promotion of
- Trade Made Easy and Lands Advanced._ 1699. 4_to._
-
-Nothing can be more just or forcible than these expostulations:--
-
- “Most men will, in words, confess that there is no blessing this
- world affords comparable to health. Yet rarely do any of them
- value it as they ought to do till they feel the want of it. To
- him that hath obtained this goodly gift the meanest food--even
- bread and water--is most pleasant, and all sorts of exercise and
- labour delightful. But the contrary makes all things nauseous and
- distasteful. What are full-spread Tables, Riches, or Honours, to
- him that is tormented with distempers? In such a condition men do
- desire nothing so much as _Health_. But no sooner is that obtained,
- but their thoughts are changed, forgetting those solemn promises
- and resolutions they made to God and their own souls, going on in
- the old road of _Gluttony_, taking little or no care to continue
- that which they so much desired when they were deprived of it.
-
- “Happy it were if men did but use the tenth part of that care and
- diligence to preserve their minds and bodies in Health, as they
- do to procure those dainties and superfluities which do generate
- Diseases, and are the cause of committing many other evils, there
- being but few men that do know how to use riches as they ought.
- For there are not many of our wealthy men that ever consider that
- as little and mean food and drink will suffice to maintain a
- _lord_ in perfect health as it will a _peasant_, and render him
- more capable of enjoying the benefits of the Mind and pleasures
- of the Body, far beyond all ‘dainties and superfluities.’ But,
- alas! the momentary pleasures of the _Throat-Custom_, vanity,
- &c., do ensnare and entice most people to exceed the bounds of
- necessity or convenience; and many fail through a false opinion or
- misunderstanding of Nature--childishly imagining that the richer
- the food is, and the more they can cram into their bellies, the
- more they shall be strengthened thereby. But experience shews to
- the contrary; for are not such people as accustom themselves to the
- richest foods, and most _cordial_ drinks, generally the most infirm
- and diseased?
-
- “Now the sorts of foods and drinks that breed the best blood and
- finest spirits, are Herbs, Fruits, and various kinds of Grains;
- also Bread, and sundry sorts of excellent food made by different
- preparations of Milk, and all dry food out of which the sun hath
- exhaled the gross humidity, by which all sorts of Pulses and Grains
- become of a firmer substance. So, likewise, Oil is an excellent
- thing, in nature more sublime and pure than Butter.” ...
-
-As to the unsuspected cause of the various diseases so abundant:--
-
- “Many of the richest sort of people in this nation might know by
- woful experience, especially in London, who do yearly spend many
- hundreds, I think I may say thousands, of pounds on their _ungodly
- paunches_. Many of whom may save themselves that charge and trouble
- they are usually at in learning of _Monsieur Nimble-heels_, the
- Dancing-Master, how to go upright; for their bellies are swollen up
- to their chins, which forces them ‘to behold the sky,’[296] but not
- for contemplation sake you may be sure, but out of pure necessity,
- and without any more impressions of reverence towards the Almighty
- Creator than their fellow-brutes; for their brains are sunk into
- their bellies; _injection and ejection_ is the business of their
- life, and all their precious hours are spent between the platter
- and the glass and the close-stool. Are not these fine fellows to
- call themselves _Christians_ and _Right-Worshipfuls_.”[297]
-
-In his xiv chapter, “Of Flesh and its Operation on the Body and Mind,”
-Tryon employs all his eloquence in proving that the practice of
-slaughtering for food is not only cruel and barbarous in itself, but
-originates, or, at all events, intensifies the worst passions of men.
-
-Eulogising the milder manners of the followers of Pythagoras, and of
-the Hindus generally, he tells his countrymen that:--
-
- “The very same, and far greater, advantages would come to
- pass amongst Christians, if they would cease from contention,
- oppression, and (what tends and disposes them thereunto) the
- killing of other animals, and eating their flesh and blood; and,
- in a short time, human murders and devilish feuds and cruelties
- amongst each other would abate, and, perhaps, scarce have a
- being amongst them. For _separation_ has greater power than most
- imagine, whether it be from evil or from good; for whatever any
- man separates himself from, that property in him presently is
- weakened. Likewise, _separation_ from cruelty does wonderfully
- dispel the dark clouds of ignorance, and makes the understanding
- able to distinguish between the good and evil principles--first in
- himself, and then in all other things proportionably. But so long
- as men live under the power of all kinds of uncleanness, violence,
- and oppression, they cannot see any evil therein. For this cause,
- those who do not separate themselves from these evils, but are
- contented to follow the multitude in the left-hand-way, and resolve
- to continue the religion of their fore-fathers--though thereby they
- do but continue mere _Custom_, the greatest of tyrants--’tis, I
- say, impossible for such people ever to understand or know anything
- _truly_, either of divine or of human things....
-
- “It is a grand mistake of people in this age to say or suppose:
- That Flesh affords not only a stronger nourishment, but also more
- and better than Herbs, Grains, &c.; for the truth is, it does yield
- more stimulation, _but not of so firm, a substance, nor so good
- as that which proceeds from the other food_; for flesh has more
- matter for corruption, and nothing so soon turns to putrefaction.
- Now, ’tis certain, such sorts of food as are subject to putrify
- _before_ they are eaten, are also liable to the same afterwards.
- Besides, Flesh is of soft, moist, gross, phlegmy quality, and
- generates a nourishment of a like nature; thirdly, Flesh heats the
- body, and causeth a drought; fourthly, Flesh does breed great store
- of noxious humours; fifthly, it must be considered that ‘beasts’
- and other living creatures are subject to diseases[298] and many
- other inconveniences, and uncleannesses, surfeits, over-driving,
- abuses of cruel butchers, &c., which renders their flesh still more
- unwholesome. But on the contrary, all sorts of dry foods, as Bread,
- Cheese, Herbs, and many preparations of Milk, Pulses, Grains, and
- Fruits; as their original is more clean, so, being of a sound firm
- nature, they afford a more excellent nourishment, and more easy
- of concoction; so that if a man should exceed in quantity, the
- Health will not, thereby, be brought into such danger as by the
- superfluous eating of flesh....
-
- “What an ill and ungrateful sight is it to behold dead carcasses,
- and pieces of bloody, raw, flesh! It would undoubtedly appear
- dreadful, and no man but would abhor to think of putting it in
- his mouth, had not Use and Custom from generation to generation
- familiarised it to us, which is so prevalent, that we read in some
- countries the mode is to eat the bodies of their dead parents
- and friends, thinking they can no way afford them a more noble
- sepulchre than their own bowells. And because it is _usual_, they
- do it with as little regret or nauseousness as others have when
- they devour the leg of a Rabbit or the wing of a Lark. Suppose a
- person were bred up in a place where it were not a _custom_ to kill
- and eat flesh, and should come into our Leadenhall Market, or view
- our Slaughter Houses, and see the communication we have with dead
- bodies, and how blythe and merry we are at their funerals, and
- what honourable sepulchres we bury the dead carcasses of beasts
- in--nay, their very guts and entrails--would he not be filled with
- astonishment and horror? Would he not count us cruel monsters, and
- say we were _brutified_, and performed the part of beasts of prey,
- to live thus on the spoils of our fellow-creatures?
-
- “Thus, Custom has awakened the inhuman, fierce nature, which makes
- killing, handling, and feeding upon flesh and blood, without
- distinction, so easy and familiar unto mankind. And the same is
- to be understood of men killing and oppressing those of their own
- kind; for do we not see that a soldier, who is trained up in the
- wars of bloody-minded princes, shall kill a hundred men without any
- trouble or regret of spirit, and such as have given him no more
- offence than a sheep has given the butcher that cuts her throat.
- If men have but Power and Custom on their side, they think all is
- well.”
-
-Whatever may be thought of the zealous attempt of the pious author to
-meet the assertions of the (practical) materialists, who draw their
-arguments from the Jewish Sacred Scriptures, or elsewhere, his replies
-to the common subterfuges or prejudices of the orthodox dietists are
-able and conclusive. His _humane_ arguments, indeed, are worthy of the
-most advanced thinkers of the present day; and those who are versed
-in the anti-kreophagist literature of the last thirty years--in the
-controversy in the press, and on the platform--will, perhaps, be
-surprised to find that the ordinary prejudices or subterfuges of this
-year “of Grace” are identical with those current in the year 1683. We
-wish that we could transcribe some of these replies. We cannot forbear,
-however, to quote his representation of the changed condition of things
-under the imagined humanitarian _régime_:--
-
- “Here all contention ceaseth, no hideous cries nor mournful groans
- are heard, neither of man nor of ‘beast.’ No channels running with
- the blood of slaughtered animals, no stinking shambles, nor bloody
- butchers. No roaring of cannons, nor firing of towns. No loathsome
- stinking prisons, nor iron grates to keep men from enjoying their
- wife, children, and the pleasant air; nor no crying for want of
- food and clothes. No rioting, nor wanton inventions to destroy as
- much in one day as a thousand can get by their hard labour and
- travel. No dreadful execrations and coarse language. No galloping
- horses up hills, without any consideration or fellow-feeling
- of the victim’s pains and burdens. No deflowering of virgins,
- _and then exposing them and their own young to all the miseries
- imaginable_. No letting lands and farms so dear that the farmer
- must be forced to oppress himself, servants, and cattle almost
- to death, and all too little to pay his rent. No oppressions of
- inferiors by superiors; neither is there any want, because there
- is no superfluity nor gluttony. No noise nor cries of wounded men.
- No need of chirurgeons to cut bullets out of their flesh; nor no
- cutting off hands, broken legs, and arms. No roaring nor crying out
- with the torturing pains of the gout, nor other painful diseases
- (as leprous and consumptive distempers), except through age, and
- the relics of some strain they got whilst they lived intemperately.
- Neither are their children afflicted with such a great number of
- diseases; but are as free from distempers as lambs, calves, or the
- young ones of any of the ‘beasts’ who are preserved sound and
- healthful, because they have not outraged God’s law in Nature, the
- breaking of which is the foundation of most, or all, cruel diseases
- that afflict mankind; there being nothing that makes the difference
- between Man and ‘Beasts’ in health, but only superfluity and
- intemperance, both in quality and in quantity.”
-
-His chapter, in which he deals with the relations between the sexes and
-the married state, shews him to have been as much in advance of his
-time, in a sound knowledge and apprehension of Physiology, and of the
-laws of Health, in that important part of hygienic science, as he was
-in the special branch of Diet.[299]
-
-Affixed to this work is a very remarkable Essay, in the shape of _A
-Dialogue between an East-Indian Brachman and a French Gentleman,
-concerning the Present Affairs of Europe_. In this admirable piece, the
-author ably exposes the folly no less than the horrors of war--and,
-in particular, _religious_ war--all which he ultimately traces to
-the first source--the iniquities and barbarism of the Shambles. The
-Dialogue is worthy of the most trenchant of the humanitarian writers
-of the next century. It was by meeting with _The Way to Health_ that
-Benjamin Franklin, in his youth, was induced to abandon the flesh-diet,
-to which revolutionary measure he ascribes his success, as well as
-health in after life.
-
-
-
-
-IX.
-
-HECQUET. 1661-1737.
-
-
-This meritorious medical reformer, at first intended for the Church,
-happily (in the event) adopted the profession which he has so truly
-adorned, by his virtues, as well as by his enlightened labours. After
-a long and severe course of Anatomy and Physiology, in 1684 he was
-admitted as “Doctor” at Reims, and as Fellow (_Agrégé_) in the College
-of Physicians in his native town. He then returned to Paris to perfect
-himself in physiological science. Disgusted with the _tricasseries_
-which were excited against him by the members of his profession,
-he withdrew (in 1688) to Port-Royal-des-Champs, where he succeeded
-Hamon, who had just died, as physician. Here he practised the reforms
-he taught, while he devoted himself to the most laborious works of
-charity, giving all his time and attention to the poor for several
-leagues round, and travelling the distances, great as they were, on
-foot.
-
-His health enfeebled by excessive labour in this way, he was induced
-to retire from his post at Port-Royal, and he went back to the capital
-where, having gone through the necessary formalities, he was regularly
-enrolled as Doctor of the Paris University, receiving the official hat
-after an examination of “rare success” (1697).
-
-Soon afterwards the Faculty named him _Docteur-Régent_, and appointed
-him to the post of Professor of _Materia Medica_. “Hecquet had soon
-numerous and illustrious patients, and his services were eagerly
-sought for, particularly in religious communities and in hospitals. He
-attached himself to that of Charity.” In 1712 he was named Dean of the
-Faculty. In the midst of so much work, he found time to publish several
-medical books.
-
-“He exercised his art with a noble disinterestedness. The poor were
-his favourite patients. He presented himself at the houses of the rich
-only when absolutely obliged, or when courtesy required it. He had
-much studied his art, and contributed with all his power, to advance
-it, as well by his writings as by his guidance and encouragement of
-young physicians.... He was in correspondence with the most famous
-savants and physicians of his age. His style in Latin is correct, and
-does not want eloquence; in French he is more negligent, and a little
-unpolished. He was animated (_vif_) in debate, and strongly attached to
-his opinions; but he sought Truth in good faith.”
-
-Amongst his numerous works are:--
-
-_De l’Indécence aux Hommes d’Accoucher les Femmes, et de l’Obligation,
-de Celles-ci de nourrir leurs enfants._ (On the Indecency of Male
-Physicians Attending Women in Child-Birth) 1708. _Traité des Dispenses
-du Carême_, 1709--his most celebrated book. _De la Digestion et des
-Maladies de l’Estomac_, 1712. _Novus Medicinæ Conspectus cum Appendice
-De Peste_, 1722. “He there combats the various systems upon the origin
-of diseases, which he attributes to the disorders which supervene, in
-accordance with the laws which direct the movement of the blood:” the
-Plague, upon which he writes, was desolating the south of France at
-that time. Also, at this period, various _brochures_ upon the Small-Pox.
-
-_La Médecine, la Chirurgie, et la Pharmacie des Pauvres_ (1740-2),
-his most popular book--_La Brigandage de la Médecine_ (1755),
-which he supplemented with _Brigandage de la Chirurgie, et de la
-Pharmacie_--will sufficiently mark his attitude towards the orthodox
-Schools of Medicine of his day. _Le Naturalisme des Convulsions dans
-les Maladies_ (1755), with several other books upon the same subject.
-The history of the _Convulsionnaires_ occupies a curious episode in
-the religious history of the period, as it has occupied, and, in some
-measure still, in fact, occupies the attention of physiologists and
-psychologists of our own age. Hecquet, with the physiologists of the
-present time, attributes the phenomena to physical and natural causes.
-_La Médecine Naturelle_: “in this work the author alleges that it is
-not in the blood only that is to be sought the causes of maladies, but
-also in the nervous fluid.”[300]
-
-The books in which he treats of reform in Dietetics are the _Traité des
-Dispenses and La Médecine des Pauvres_.
-
-However _dietetically_ heterodox and heretical, the author of _The
-Treatise on Dispensations_ was of unsuspected ecclesiastical as well
-as theological orthodoxy; yet he takes occasion, at the outset of
-his book, to reproach his Church with its indifferentism towards so
-essentially important a matter as Dietetics--scientific or moral:--
-
- “It will, perhaps, be found that much theology enters into this
- undertaking. We acknowledge it. One might even expect that some
- zealous ecclesiastic or other would have done himself the credit of
- sustaining so beautiful a cause (que quelque ecclesiastique zelé
- se seroit fait gloire de soutenir une si belle cause). It might be
- hoped, especially in an age like ours, when physical science is
- in honour and for the benefit of everyone, and in which Medicine
- has become the property of every condition.... It ought then to
- have been the duty of so many Abbés, Monks and Religious Orders,
- who invest themselves with the titles of physicians--who receive
- their pay, who fill their employments--to advocate this part of
- ecclesiastical discipline [abstinence]. But, instead of doing so,
- though they undertake the care of the body, they, in fact, apply
- themselves solely to the _healing_ of maladies.... One can see
- enough of it, nevertheless, to be convinced that the public has
- gained less from their _secrets_ than they themselves, while their
- patients die more than ever under their hands....”
-
-In Chap. VI., _Que les Fruits, les Grains, les Legumes sont les Alimens
-les plus Naturels à l’Homme_, after appealing to _Gen._ i. and “the
-Garden of Eden,” Hecquet proceeds to insist that our foods should be
-analogous and consistent with the juices which maintain our life; and
-these are Fruits, Grains, Seeds, and Roots. But prejudice, of long
-standing, opposes itself to this truth. The false ideas attached to
-certain traditional terms have warped the minds of the majority of the
-world, and they have succeeded in persuading themselves that it is upon
-stimulating foods that depend the strength and health of men. From
-thence has come the love of wine, of spirituous liquors, and of gross
-meats. The ambiguity (équivoque) comes from confounding the idea of
-Remedy with that of Food.
-
- “Here the greater part of the world take alarm. ‘How,’ say they,
- ‘can we be supported on Grains, which furnish but dry meal, fitter
- to cloy than to nourish; on Fruits, which are but condensed water;
- with vegetables, which are fit but for manure (fumier)?’ But this
- meal, well prepared, forms Bread, the strongest of all aliments,
- this condensed water is the same that has caused the Trees to
- attain so great bulk, this _fumier_ becomes such only because
- they prepare vegetables badly, and eat of them to excess. Besides,
- how can men affect to fear failure in strength, in eating what
- nourishes even the most robust animals, who would become even
- formidable to us, if only they knew their own strength.”
-
-In Chap. VII., _Que l’Usage de la Viande n’est pas le plus naturel à
-l’Homme, ni absolument Nécessaire_, he remarks:--
-
-“It is incredible how much Prejudice has been allowed to operate
-in favour of [flesh] meat, while so many facts are opposed to the
-pretended necessity of its use.”
-
-Having entered into the physiological argument, now so well-worn, among
-other reasons he adduces the fact that “the soundest part of the world,
-or the most enlightened, have believed in the obligation to abstain
-from flesh,” and “the very nature of flesh, which is digested with
-difficulty, and which furnishes the worst juices.”
-
-Nature being uniform in her method of procedure, is anything else
-necessary to determine whether Man is intended to live upon flesh-meats
-than to compare the organs which have to prepare them for his
-nourishment, with those of animals whom Nature manifestly has destined
-for carnage? And herein it may be clearly recognised, since men have
-neither fangs nor talons to tear flesh, that it is very far from being
-the food most natural to them.
-
-He quotes numerous examples of eminent persons, as well as of nations
-in all times, and adds, as an argument not easy to be answered, that:--
-“It is proved it would not be difficult to nourish animals who live
-on flesh with non-flesh substances, while it is almost impossible to
-nourish with flesh those who live ordinarily upon vegetable substances.”
-
-Hecquet devotes several chapters to a description of various Fruits and
-Herbs, and also of various kinds of Fish, which he holds to be much
-less objectionable and more innocent food than flesh. Comparing the two
-diets, we must acknowledge:--
-
- “It causes our nature to revolt, and excites horror to eat raw
- flesh, and as it is presented to us naturally; and it becomes
- supportable for us to the taste and to the sight only after long
- preparation of cooking, which deprives it of what is inhuman and
- disgusting in its original state; and, often, it is only after
- _many_ various preparations and strange seasonings that it can
- become agreeable or sanitarily good. It is not so with other meats:
- the majority, as they come from the hand of Nature, without cookery
- and without art, are found proper to nourish, and are pleasant to
- the taste--plain proof that they are intended by Nature to maintain
- our health. Fruits are of such property that, when well-chosen and
- quite ripe, they excite the appetite by _their own virtue_, and
- might become, without preparation, sufficing.... If Vegetables or
- Fish have need of fire to accommodate them to our nature, the fire
- appears to be used less to _correct_ these sorts of foods than to
- penetrate them, to make them soft and tender, and to develope what
- in them is most proper and suitable for health.... In fine, it is
- clear that vegetables and fish have need of less, and less strange
- and récherché, condiments--all sensible marks that these aliments
- are the most natural and suited to man.”[301]
-
-Hecquet’s _Traité des Dispenses_ received the formal approval and
-commendation of several “doctors regent” of the Faculty of Medicine
-of the Paris University, which testimonies are prefixed to the second
-edition of 1710. With his English contemporary, Dr. Cheyne, and other
-medical reformers, however, he experienced much insult and ridicule
-from anonymous professional critics.
-
-
-
-
-X.
-
-POPE. 1688-1744.
-
- _Primâque e cæde ferarum
- Incaluisse putem maculatum sanguine ferrum._
-
- (Ovid _Metam._ XV. 106).
-
-
- “I cannot think it extravagant to imagine that mankind are no
- less, in proportion, accountable for the ill use of their dominion
- over the lower ranks of Beings, than for the exercise of tyranny
- over their own species. The more entirely the inferior creation
- is submitted to our power, the more answerable we should seem for
- the mismanagement of it; and the rather, as the very condition of
- Nature renders these beings incapable of receiving any recompense
- in another life, for their ill-treatment in this.
-
- “It is observable of those noxious animals, who have qualities
- most powerful to injure us, that they naturally avoid mankind, and
- never hurt us unless provoked, or necessitated by hunger. Man, on
- the other hand, _seeks_ out and pursues even the most inoffensive
- animals on purpose to persecute and destroy them. Montaigne thinks
- it some reflection on human nature itself, that few people take
- delight in seeing ‘beasts’ caress or play together, but almost
- every one is pleased to see them lacerate and worry one another.
-
- “I am sorry this temper is become almost a distinguishing character
- of our own nation, from the observation which is made by foreigners
- of our beloved _Pastimes_--Bear-baiting, Cock-fighting, and the
- like. We should find it hard to vindicate the destroying of
- anything that has Life, merely out of wantonness. Yet in this
- principle our children are bred, and one of the first pleasures we
- allow them is the licence of inflicting Pain upon poor animals.
- Almost as soon as we are sensible what Life is ourselves, we make
- it our Sport to take it from other beings. I cannot but believe a
- very good use might be made of the fancy which children have for
- Birds and Insects. Mr. Locke takes notice of a mother who permitted
- them to her children; but rewarded or punished them as they treated
- well or ill. This was no other than entering them betimes into a
- daily exercise of Humanity, and improving their very diversion to a
- Virtue.
-
- “I fancy, too, some advantage might be taken of the common notion,
- that ’tis ominous or unlucky to destroy some sorts of Birds, as
- Swallows or Martins. This opinion might possibly arise from the
- confidence these Birds seem to put in us, by building under our
- roofs, so that it is a kind of violation of the laws of Hospitality
- to murder them. As for Robin-red-breasts, in particular, ’tis
- not improbable they owe their security to the old ballad of the
- _Children in the Wood_. However it be, I don’t know, I say, why
- this prejudice, well-improved and carried as far as it would go,
- might not be made to conduce to the preservation of many innocent
- beings, who are now exposed to all the wantonness of an ignorant
- barbarity....
-
- “When we grow up to be men we have another succession of sanguinary
- Sports--in particular, _Hunting_. I dare not attack a diversion
- which has such Authority and Custom to support it; but must have
- leave to be of opinion, that the agitation of that exercise, with
- the example and number of the chasers, not a little contribute to
- resist those checks which Compassion would naturally suggest in
- behalf of the Animal pursued. Nor shall I say, with M. Fleury,
- that this sport is a remain of the Gothic Barbarity; but I must
- animadvert upon a certain custom yet in use with us, barbarous
- enough to be derived from the Goths or even the Scythians--I mean
- that savage compliment our Huntsmen pass upon ladies of quality who
- are present at the death of a Stag, when they put the knife into
- their hands to cut the throat of a helpless, trembling, and weeping
- creature.
-
- “_Questuque cruentus,
- Atque imploranti similis._”[302]
-
- “But if our ‘Sports’ are destructive, our _Gluttony_ is more so,
- and in a more inhuman manner. Lobsters roasted alive, Pigs whipt
- to death, Fowls sewed up,[303] are testimonies of our outrageous
- Luxury. Those who (as Seneca expresses it) divide their lives
- betwixt an anxious Conscience and a Nauseated Stomach, have a
- just reward of their gluttony in the diseases it brings with it.
- For human savages, like other wild beasts, find snares and poison
- in the provisions of life, and are allured by their appetite to
- their destruction. I know nothing more shocking or horrid than the
- prospect of one of their kitchens covered with blood, and filled
- with the cries of Beings expiring in tortures. It gives one an
- image of a giant’s den in a romance, bestrewed with the scattered
- heads and mangled limbs of those who were slain by his cruelty.
-
- “The excellent Plutarch (who has more strokes of good nature in
- his writings than I remember in any author) cites a saying of Cato
- to this effect:--_That ’tis no easy task to preach to the Belly
- which has no ears._ Yet if (says he) we are ashamed to be so out
- of fashion as not to offend, let us at least offend with _some_
- discretion and measure. If we kill an animal for our provision, let
- us do it with the meltings of compassion, and without tormenting
- it. Let us consider that it is, in its own nature, cruelty to put a
- living being to death--we, at least destroy a soul that has sense
- and perception.[304]
-
- “History tells us of a wise and polite nation that rejected a
- person of the first quality, who stood for a justiciary office,
- only because he had been observed, in his youth, to take pleasure
- in teasing and murdering of Birds. And of another that expelled a
- man out of the Senate for dashing a bird against the ground who
- had taken refuge in his bosom. Every one knows how remarkable the
- Turks are for their Humanity in this kind. I remember an Arabian
- author, who has written a Treatise to show how far a man, supposed
- to have subsisted in a desert island, without any instruction, or
- so much as the sight of any other man, may, by the pure light of
- Nature, attain the knowledge of Philosophy and Virtue. One of the
- first things he makes him observe is the benevolence of Nature, in
- the protection and preservation of her creatures.[305] In imitation
- of which, the first act of virtue he thinks his self-taught
- philosopher would, of course, fall into, is to relieve and assist
- all the animals about them in their wants and distresses....
-
- “Perhaps that voice or cry, so nearly resembling the human, with
- which Nature has endowed so many different animals, might purposely
- be given them to move our Pity, and prevent those cruelties we are
- to apt to inflict upon our Fellow Creatures.”
-
-Pope quotes, in part, the admirable verses of Ovid, Metam. XV., with
-Dryden’s translation--and an apposite _fable_ of the Persian Pilpai,
-which illustrates the base ingratitude of men who torture and slaughter
-their fellow labourers.--“I know it” (this common ingratitude) said
-the Cow, “by woful experience; for I have served a man this long time
-with milk, butter, and cheese, and brought him, besides, a Calf every
-year--but now I am old, he turns me into this pasture with design to
-sell me to a butcher, who, shortly, will make an end of me.”--_The
-Guardian_, LXI, May 21, 1713.
-
-With Pilpai or Bidpai’s fable, compare that of La Fontaine on the same
-subject--_L’Homme et la Couleuvre_.
-
-
-
-
-XI.
-
-CHESTERFIELD. 1694-1773.
-
-
-To the expression of the opinion or feeling of Lord Chesterfield on
-butchering, given, in its place, in the body of this work (page 140),
-is here subjoined the remainder of his paper in _The World_. The value
-of such testimony may be deemed proportionate to the extreme rarity
-of any protests of this sort from those who, by their influential
-position, are the most _bound_ to make them:--
-
- “Although this reflection [the fact of the preying of the
- stronger upon the weaker throughout Nature] had force enough to
- _dispythagorise_ me _before my companions_ [in his college at
- the University of Oxford] _had time to make observations upon my
- behaviour, which could by no means have turned to my advantage in
- the world_, I for a great while retained so tender a regard for
- all my fellow-creatures, that I have several times brought myself
- into imminent peril by putting butcher-boys in mind, that their
- Sheep were going to die, and that they walked full as fast as
- could reasonably be expected, without the cruel blows they were so
- liberal in bestowing upon them. As I commonly came off the worst
- in these disputes, and as I could not but observe that I often
- aggravated, never diminished, the ill-treatment of these innocent
- sufferers, I soon found it necessary to consult my own ease, as
- well as security, by turning down another street, whenever I met
- with an adventure of this kind, rather than be compelled to be a
- spectator of what would shock me, or be provoked to run myself into
- danger, without the least advantage to those whom I would assist.
-
- “I have kept strictly, ever since, to this method of fleeing from
- the sight of cruelty, wherever I could find ground-room for it;
- and I make no manner of doubt, that I have more than once escaped
- the horns of a Mad Ox, as all of that species are called, that do
- not choose to be tortured as well as killed. But, on the other
- hand, these escapes of mine have very frequently run me into great
- inconveniences. I have sometimes been led into such a series of
- blind alleys, that it has been matter of great difficulty to me to
- find my way out of them. I have been betrayed by my hurry into the
- middle of a market--_the proper residence of Inhumanity_. I have
- paid many a six-and-eightpence for non-appearance at the hour my
- lawyer had appointed for business; and, what would hurt some people
- worse than all the rest, I have frequently arrived too late for the
- dinners I have been invited to at the houses of my friends.
-
- “All these difficulties and distresses, I began to flatter myself,
- were going to be removed, and that I should be left at liberty
- to pursue my walks through the straightest and broadest streets,
- when Mr. Hogarth first published his Prints upon the subject of
- Cruelty.[306] But whatever success so much ingenuity, founded upon
- so much humanity, might deserve, all the hopes I had built of
- seeing a Reformation, proved vain and fruitless. I am sorry to say
- it, but there still remain in the _streets_ of this metropolis,
- more scenes of Barbarity than, perhaps, are to be met with in all
- Europe besides. Asia (at least in the larger population of it--the
- Hindus) is well known for compassion to ‘brutes’; and nobody who
- has read Busbequius, will wonder at me for most heartily wishing
- that our common people were no crueller than Turks.
-
- “I should have apprehensions of being laughed at, were I to
- complain of want of compassion in our Laws [!]; the very word
- seeming contradictory to any idea of it. But I will venture to own
- that to me it appears strange, that the men against whom I should
- be enabled to bring an action for laying a little dirt at my door,
- may, with _impunity_, drive by it half-a-dozen Calves, _with their
- tails lopped close to their bodies and their hinder parts covered
- with blood_....
-
- “To conclude this subject--as I cannot but join in opinion with Mr.
- Hogarth, that the frequency of murders among us is greatly owing
- to those scenes of Cruelty, which the lower ranks of people are so
- much accustomed to; _instead of multiplying such scenes_, I should
- rather hope that some proper method might be fixed upon either
- _for preventing them_, or removing them out of sight; so that our
- infants might not grow up into the world in a familiarity with
- blood.
-
- “If we may believe the Naturalists, that a Lion is a gentle animal
- until his tongue has been dipped in blood, _what precaution ought
- we to use to prevent MAN from being inured to it, who has such
- superiority of power to do mischief_.”--_The World_, No. LXI., Aug.
- 19, 1756.
-
-
-
-
-XII.
-
-JENYNS. 1704-1787.
-
-
-A supporter of the Walpole Administration, he represented the county
-of Cambridge, and during twenty-five years held the office of
-Commissioner of the Board of Trade. He wrote papers in _The World_ and
-other periodicals, and published two volumes of Poems. His principal
-book is the _Free Enquiry into the Origin of Evil_, in which he
-seeks to reconcile the obvious evils in the constitution of things
-with his optimistic creed. Johnson, who, with all his orthodoxy, was
-pessimistic, severely criticised this apology for Theism. In striking
-contrast with the indifferentism of the vast majority of his class,
-his just and humane feeling is sufficiently remarkable. The line of
-reasoning, in his comprehensive arraignment of the various atrocities
-perpetrated, sanctioned, or condoned by English Society or English Law
-in the last century, and which, for the most part, still continue (it
-is scarcely necessary to add), _logically_ leads to the abolition of
-the Slaughter-House--the fountain and origin of the evil:--
-
- “How will Man, that sanguinary Tyrant, be able to excuse himself
- from the charge of those innumerable cruelties inflicted on his
- unoffending subjects, committed to his care, and placed under
- his authority, by their common father? To what horrid deviations
- from these benevolent intentions are we daily witnesses! No small
- part of Mankind derive their chief amusement from the deaths and
- sufferings of inferior Animals. A much greater part still, consider
- them only as engines of wood or iron, useful in their several
- occupations. The Carman drives his Horse as the Carpenter his nail
- by repeated blows; and so long as these produce the desired effect,
- and they both go, they neither reflect nor care whether either of
- them have any sense of feeling.
-
- “The Butcher knocks down the stately Ox with no more compassion
- than the Blacksmith hammers a horse-shoe, and plunges his knife
- into the throat of the innocent Lamb with as little reluctance as
- the Tailor sticks his needle into the collar of a coat.[307] If
- there are some few who, formed in a softer mould, view with pity
- the sufferings of these defenceless beings, _there is scarce one
- who entertains the least idea that Justice or Gratitude can be due
- to their Merits or their Services_.
-
- “The social and friendly Dog, if by barking, in defence of his
- master’s person and property, he happens unknowingly to disturb
- his rest--the generous Horse, who has carried his ungrateful
- master for many years, with ease and safety, worn out with age
- and infirmities contracted in his service, is by him condemned to
- end his miserable days in a dust-cart, where the more he exerts
- his little remains of spirit, the more he is whipped to save his
- stupid driver the trouble of whipping some other less obedient
- to the lash. Sometimes, having been taught the practice of many
- unnatural and useless feats in a Riding-House, he is, at last,
- turned out and consigned to the dominion of a hackney-coachman, by
- whom he is every day corrected for performing those tricks which he
- has learned under so long and severe a discipline. [Add the final
- horrors of the _Knackers’ Yard_, to which sort of hell the worn-out
- Horse is usually consigned.]
-
- “The Sluggish Bear, in contradiction to his nature, is taught to
- dance, for the diversion of an ignorant mob, by placing red-hot
- irons under his feet. The majestic Bull is tortured by every mode
- that malice can invent, for no offence but that he is unwilling
- to assail his diabolical tormentors.[308] These and innumerable
- other acts of Cruelty, Injustice, and Ingratitude are every day
- committed--not only with impunity, but _without censure, and even
- without observation_....
-
- “The law of self-defence, undoubtedly, justifies us in destroying
- those animals that would destroy us, that injure our properties,
- or annoy our persons; but not even these, whenever their situation
- incapacitates them from hurting us....
-
- “If there are any [there are vast numbers even now], whose tastes
- are so vitiated, and whose hearts are so hardened, as to delight in
- such inhuman sacrifices [the tortures of the Slaughter-House and of
- the Kitchen], and to partake of them without remorse, they should
- be looked upon as demons in human shape, and expect a retaliation
- of those tortures _which they have inflicted on the Innocent for
- the gratification of their own depraved and unnatural appetites_.
-
- “So violent are the passions of anger and revenge in the human
- breast, that it is not wonderful that men should persecute their
- real or imaginary enemies with cruelty and malevolence. But that
- there should exist in Nature a being who can receive pleasure from
- giving pain would be totally incredible, if we were not convinced
- by melancholy experience that there are not only many--but that
- this unaccountable disposition is in some manner inherent in the
- nature of men.[309] For as he cannot be taught by example, nor led
- to it by temptation, nor prompted to it by interest, it must be
- derived from his native constitution.[310]
-
- “We see children laughing at the miseries which they inflict on
- every unfortunate animal who comes within their power. All Savages
- are ingenious in contriving and executing the most exquisite
- tortures, and [not alone] the common people of all countries
- are delighted with nothing so much as with Bull-Baitings,
- Prize-Fightings, ‘Executions,’ and all spectacles of cruelty and
- horror.... They arm Cocks with artificial weapons which Nature had
- kindly denied to their malevolence, and with shouts of applause and
- triumph see them plunge them into each other’s hearts. They view
- with delight the trembling Deer and defenceless Hare flying for
- hours in the utmost agonies of terror and despair, and, at last,
- sinking under fatigue, devoured by their merciless pursuers. They
- see with joy the beautiful Pheasant and harmless Partridge drop
- from their flight, weltering in their blood, or, perhaps, perishing
- with wounds and hunger under the cover of some friendly thicket,
- to which they have in vain retreated for safety.... And to add to
- all this, they spare neither labour nor expense to preserve and
- propagate these innocent animals for no other end than to multiply
- the objects of their persecution.
-
- “What name should we bestow upon a Supreme Being whose whole
- endeavours were employed, and whose whole pleasure consisted, in
- terrifying, ensnaring, tormenting, and destroying mankind; whose
- superior faculties were exerted in fomenting animosities amongst
- them, in contriving engines of destruction, inciting them to use
- them in maiming and murdering each other; whose power over them
- was employed in assisting the rapacious, deceiving the simple, and
- oppressing the innocent? Who, without provocation or advantage,
- should continue, from day to day, void of all pity and remorse,
- thus to torment mankind for diversion; and, at the same time,
- endeavouring, with the utmost care, to preserve their lives and
- propagate their species, in order to increase the number of victims
- devoted to his malevolence? I say, what name detestable enough
- could we find for such a being. Yet if we impartially consider the
- case, and our intermediate situation, with respect to inferior
- animals, just such a being is a ‘Sportsman,’ [and let us add,
- by way of corollary, _à fortiori_ one who consciously sanctions
- the daily and hourly cruelties of the Slaughter-House and the
- Butcher.”]--_Disquisition II._ “On Cruelty to Animals,” by Soame
- Jenyns.
-
-
-
-
-XIII.
-
-PRESSAVIN. 1750.
-
-
-An eminent Surgeon of Lyon, in the Medical and Surgical College of
-which city he held a professorship, and where he collected an extensive
-Anatomical Museum. At the Revolution of 1789 he embraced its principles
-with ardour, and filled the posts of Municipal Officer and of Procureur
-de la Commune. On the day of the Lyon executions, under the direction
-of the revolutionary tribunals, Sept. 9, 1792, Pressavin intervened,
-and attempted to save several of the condemned. In the Convention
-Nationale, to which he had been elected deputy, he voted for the
-execution of the King; in other respects he was opposed to the extreme
-measures of the violent revolutionists, and in Sept., 1793, he was
-expelled from the Society of the Jacobins. In 1798 he was named Member
-of the Council of Five Hundred, for two years, by the department of the
-Rhone. The date of his death seems to be uncertain.
-
-His chief writings are:--
-
-_Traité des Maladies des Nerfs_, 1769. _Traité des Maladies
-Vénériennes, où l’on indique un Nouveau Remède_, 8vo., 1773. Last, and
-most important, _L’Art de Prolonger la Vie et de Conserver la Santé_,
-8vo. Paris, 1786. It was translated into Spanish, Madrid, 8vo., 1799.
-
-Pressavin thus expresses his convictions as to the fatal effects of
-Kreophagy:--
-
- “We cannot doubt that, if Man had always limited himself to the use
- of the nourishment destined for his organs, he would not be seen,
- to-day, to have become the victim of this multitude of maladies
- which, by a premature death, mows down (moissonne) the greatest
- number of individuals, before Age or Nature has put bounds to the
- career of his life. Other Animals, on the contrary, almost all
- arrive at that term without having experienced any infirmity. I
- speak of those who live free in the fields; for those whom we
- have subjected to our needs (real or pretended), and whom we call
- _domestic_, share in the penalty of our abuses, experience nearly
- the same alteration in their temperament, and become subject to an
- infinity of maladies from which Wild Animals are exempt.
-
- “Men, then, coming from the hands of Nature, lived a long
- time without thinking of immolating living beings to gratify
- (s’assouvir) their appetite. They are, without doubt, those happy
- times which our ancient poets have represented to us under the
- agreeable allegory of the _Golden Age_. In fact Man, _by natural
- organisation_ mild, nourishing himself only on vegetable-foods,
- must have been originally of pacific disposition, quite fitted
- (bien propre) to maintain among his fellows that happy Peace which
- makes the delights of Society. Ferocity, I repeat it, is peculiar
- to carnivorous animals; the blood which they imbibe maintains that
- character in them....
-
- “But if this faculty (reflection), which is called Reason, has
- furnished Man with so great resources for extending his enjoyments
- and increasing his well-being, how many evils have not the
- multiplied abuses, which he has made of them, drawn upon him? That
- which regards his Food is not the one of them which has _least_
- contributed to his degradation, as well physical as moral....
-
- “Among other evidences of this, country-people, who subsist upon
- the non-flesh diet, are exempt from the multitude of maladies which
- engender corruption of the juices of the blood, such as _humoral_,
- putrid, and malign fevers, from Apoplexy, from _Cachexy_, from
- Gout, and from an infinity of miserable disorders--their offspring;
- they arrive at a very advanced Age, free from the infirmities which
- early affect our old _Sybarites_. On the contrary, the inhabitants
- of towns, who make flesh their principal food, pass their lives
- miserably, a prey to all these maladies which one may regard, for
- that reason, endemic among them.
-
- “Another very evident proof that Flesh is not a food natural to man
- is that, whoever has abstained, during a certain time, when he goes
- back to it--it is rare that this new regimen does not soon become
- in him the germ of a disease, the graver in proportion to the
- abstinence from that food. We have opportunities of observing this
- after the Fasts of the Catholics--in the majority of those who have
- faithfully practised abstinence from flesh.”
-
-He admits that there may be some constitutions, whose organs of
-digestion have been so corrupted by the long use of flesh, that a
-_sudden_ change may be unadvisable; but a gradual reform cannot but be
-always beneficial:--
-
- “I do not doubt that Apoplexy, that fatal Malady so common among
- the rich people of the towns, might be escaped by those who are
- threatened with it, by entire abstinence from flesh. A Sanguine
- or humoral _plethora_ is always the predisposing cause of this
- disease. A sudden rarefaction of the blood or of the humours in the
- vessels is the proximate cause of it; this rarefaction takes place
- only by the predisposition of the juices of the body to corruption.”
-
-Pressavin devotes a considerable proportion of his Treatise to the
-arguments from Comparative Physiology.--While firmly persuaded both
-of the unnaturalness, and of the fatal mischiefs, of the diet of
-blood,[311] he expresses his despair of an early triumph of Reason and
-Humanity by means of a general dietetic reformation.[312]
-
-
-
-
-XIV.
-
-SCHILLER. 1759-1805.
-
-
-After Goethe the greatest of German Poets, began life as a surgeon
-in the army. In his twenty-second year he produced his first drama,
-_Die Räuber_ (“The Robbers”). Some passages in it betrayed the “cloven
-hoof” of revolutionary, or at least democratic, bias, and he brought
-upon himself the displeasure of the sovereign Duke of Würtemberg, in
-consequence of which he was forced to leave Stuttgart. His principal
-dramas are _Wallenstein_, _Wilhelm Tell_, _Die Jungfrau von Orleans_,
-_Maria Stuart_, and _Don Carlos_, of which _Wallenstein_ is, usually,
-placed first in merit. Even greater than the dramatic power of Schiller
-is the genius of his ballad poetry, and in lyrical inspiration he is
-the equal of Goethe. _Das Lied von der Glocke_ (“The Lay of the Bell”),
-one of his most widely-known ballads, is also one of the most beautiful
-in its kind.
-
-In prose literature, his _Briefe Philosophische_ (“Philosophical
-Letters”), and his correspondence with his great poetical rival, are
-the most interesting of his writings.
-
-In _Das Eleusische Fest_ (“The Eleusinian Feast”) and _Der Alpenjäger_
-(“The Hunter of the Alps”) are to be found the humanitarian sentiments
-as follow:--
-
- Schwelgend bei dem Siegesmahle
- Findet sie die rohe Schaar,
- Und die blutgefüllte Schaale
- Bringt man ihr zum Opfer dar
- Aber schauernd, mit Entsetzen,
- Wendet sie sich weg and spricht:
- ’_Blut’ge Tigermahle_ netzen
- Eines Gottes Lippen nicht.
- Reine Opfer will er haben
- Früchte, die der Herbst bescheert--
- Mit des Feldes frommen gaben
- Wird der Heilige verehrt.
-
- Und sie nimmt die Wucht des Speeres
- Aus des Jäger’s rauher hand;
- Mit dem Schaft des Mordgewehres
- Furchet sie den leichten Sand,
- Nimmt von ihres Kranzes Spitze
- Einen Kern mit Kraft gefüllt,
- Senkt ihn in die zarte Ritze,
- Und der Trieb des Keimes schwillt.[313]
-
- * * * * *
-
- Mit des Jammers Stummen Blicken
- Fleht sie zu dem harten Mann,
- Fleht umsonst, denn, loszudrücken,
- Legt er schon den Bogen an;
- Plötzlich aus der Felsenspalte
- Tritt der Geist, der Bergesalte
-
- Und mit seinen Götterhänden
- Schützt er das gequälte Thier:
- “_Musst du Tod und Jammer Senden_”
- Ruft er “bis herauf zu mir?
- _Raum fur alle hat die Erde_
- Was verfolgst du meine Heerde?”[314]
-
-
-
-
-XV.
-
-BENTHAM. 1749-1832.
-
-
-This great legal reformer was educated at Westminster, and at the
-age of thirteen proceeded to Queen’s College, Oxford. At the age of
-sixteen he took his first degree in Arts. The mental uneasiness with
-which he signed the obligatory test of the “Thirty-nine Articles” he
-vividly recorded in after years. At the Bar, which he soon afterwards
-entered, his prospects were unusually promising; but unable to
-reconcile his standard of ethics with the recognised morality of the
-Profession, he soon withdrew from it. His first publication,--_A
-Fragment on Government_, 1776--which appeared without his name, was
-assigned to some of the most distinguished men of the day. His next,
-and principal work, was his _Introduction to the Principles of Morals
-and Legislation_ (1780), not published until 1789. At this period
-he travelled extensively in the East of Europe. _Panopticon: or the
-Inspection-House_ (on prison discipline), appeared in 1791. The _Book
-of Fallacies_ (reviewed by Sidney Smith, in the _Edinburgh_), in
-which the “wisdom of our ancestors” delusion was, mercilessly exposed
-(1824), is the best known, and is the most lively of all his writings.
-_Rationale of Judicial Procedure_, and the _Constitutional Code_,
-are those which have had most influence in effecting legislative and
-judicial reform.
-
-Bentham stands in the front rank of legal reformers; and as a fearless
-and consistent opponent of the iniquities of the English Criminal
-Law, in particular, he has deserved the gratitude and respect of all
-thoughtful minds. Yet, during some sixty years, he was constantly held
-up to obloquy and ridicule by the enemies of Reform, in the Press and
-on the Platform; and his name was a sort of synonym for _utopianism_,
-and revolutionary doctrine. In his own country his writings were long
-in little esteem; but elsewhere, and in France especially, by the
-interpretation of Dumont, his opinions had a wider dissemination.
-In _Morals_, the foundation of his teaching is the principle of the
-greatest Happiness of the Greatest Number; that other things are good
-or evil in proportion as they advance or oppose the general Happiness,
-which ought to be the end of all morals and legislation.
-
-Not the least of his merits as a moralist is his assertion of the
-rights of other animals than man to the protection of Law, and his
-protest against the culpable selfishness of the lawmakers in wholly
-abandoning them to the capricious cruelty of their human tyrants. The
-most eminent of the disciples of Bentham, John Stuart Mill (who found
-himself forced to defend the teaching of his master, in this respect,
-against the sneers of Whately, Archbishop of Dublin, and others),
-repeats this protest, and declares that--
-
- “The reasons for legal intervention in favour of children apply not
- less strongly to the case of those unfortunate slaves and victims
- of the most brutal part of mankind, the lower animals. It is by
- the grossest misunderstanding of the principles of Liberty, that
- the infliction of exemplary punishment on ruffianism practised
- towards these defenceless beings has been treated as a meddling by
- Government with things beyond its province--an interference with
- domestic life. The domestic life of domestic tyrants is one of the
- things which it _is the most imperative on the Law to interfere
- with_. And it is to be regretted that metaphysical scruples,
- respecting the nature and source of the authority of governments,
- should induce many warm supporters of laws against cruelty to
- the lower animals to seek for justification of such laws in the
- incidental consequences of the indulgence of ferocious habits
- to the interest of human beings, _rather than in the intrinsic
- merits of the thing itself_. What it would be the duty of a human
- being, possessed of the requisite physical strength, to prevent by
- force, if attempted in his presence, it cannot be less incumbent
- on society generally to repress. The existing laws of England are
- chiefly defective in the trifling--often almost nominal--maximum
- to which the penalty, even in the worst cases, is limited.”
- (_Principles of Political Economy_, ed. 1873.)
-
-The observations both of Bentham and of Mill upon this subject,
-slighted though they are, are pregnant with consequences. It is thus
-that the former authority expresses his opinion:--
-
- “What other agents are those who, at the same time that they
- are under the influence of man’s direction, are susceptible of
- Happiness? They are of two sorts: (1) Other Human beings, who
- are styled _Persons_. (2) Other Animals who, on account of their
- interests having been neglected by the insensibility of the ancient
- Jurists, stand degraded into the class of _Things_. Under the
- Gentoo and Mahometan religions, the interests of the rest of the
- animal kingdom seem to have met with _some_ attention. Why have
- they not, universally, with as much as those of human beings,
- allowance made for the differences in point of sensibility?
- _Because the Laws that are have been the work of mutual fear_--a
- sentiment which the less rational animals have not had the same
- means, as men have, of turning to account. Why _ought_ they not [to
- have the same allowance made]? No reason can be given....
-
- “The day has been (and it is not yet past) in which the greater
- part of the Species, under the denomination of _Slaves_, have been
- treated by the Laws exactly upon the same footing--as in England,
- for example, the inferior races of beings are still. The day _may_
- come, when other Animals may obtain those rights _which never could
- have been withholden from them but by the hand of Tyranny_. The
- French have already (1790) recognised that the blackness of the
- skin is no reason why a human being should be abandoned, without
- redress, to the caprice of a tormentor.
-
- “It may come one day to be recognised that the number of the legs,
- the villosity of the skin, or the termination of the _os sacrum_,
- are reasons equally insufficient for abandoning a sensitive being
- to the same fate. What else is it should fix the insuperable
- line? Is it the faculty of reason, or, perhaps, the faculty of
- discourse? But a full-grown Horse or Dog is, beyond comparison, a
- more rational, as well as more conversable animal, than an infant
- of a day, or a week, or even of a month old. But suppose the case
- were otherwise, what would it avail? The question is not, can they
- reason? Nor is it, can they talk? But, _can they suffer_?”[315]
-
-
-
-
-XVI.
-
-SINCLAIR. 1754-1835.
-
-
-This celebrated Agricultural Reformer and active promoter of various
-beneficent enterprises was a most voluminous writer. During sixty years
-he was almost constantly employed in producing more or less useful
-books. He was born at Thurso Castle, in Caithness, and received his
-education at the Edinburgh High School, and at the Universities of
-Glasgow and Oxford. In 1775 he was admitted a member of the Faculty of
-Advocates, and afterwards was called to the English Bar. Five years
-later he was elected to represent his county in the Legislature; and
-for more than half a century Sir John Sinclair occupied a prominent
-position in the world of politics, as well as of science and
-literature. His reputation as an Agriculturist extended far and wide
-throughout Europe and America; and statesmen and political economists,
-if they did not aid them as they ought to have done, professed for his
-labours the highest esteem.
-
-His principal writings are: (1) _A History of the Revenue of Great
-Britain_, 3 vols.; (2) _A Statistical Account of Scotland_, a most
-laborious work; (3) _Considerations on Militias and Standing Armies_;
-(4) _Essays on Agriculture_; (5) Not the least important, _The Code of
-Health and Longevity_, in which the sagacious and indefatigable author
-has collected a large number of interesting particulars in regard to
-the diet of various peoples. Comparing the two diets, he asserts:--
-
- “The Tartars, who live wholly on animal food, possess a degree of
- ferocity of mind and fierceness of character which form the leading
- feature of all carnivorous animals. On the other hand, an entire
- diet of vegetable matter, as appears in the Brahmin and Gentoo,
- gives to the disposition a softness, gentleness, and mildness of
- feeling directly the reverse of the former character. It also has
- a particular influence on _the powers of the mind_, producing
- liveliness of imagination and acuteness of judgment in an eminent
- degree.”
-
-Sir John Sinclair elsewhere quotes the following sufficiently
-condemnatory remarks from the _Encyclopédie Methodique_, vol. vii.,
-part 1:--
-
- “The man who sheds the blood of an Ox or a Sheep will be habituated
- more easily than another to witness the effusion of that of his
- fellow-creatures. Inhumanity takes possession of his soul, and the
- trades, whose occupation is to sacrifice animals for the purpose
- of supplying the [pretended] necessities of men, impart to those
- who exercise them a ferocity which their relative connections with
- Society but imperfectly serve to mitigate.”--_Code of Health and
- Longevity_, vol. i., 423, 429, and vol. iii., 283.[316]
-
-
-
-
-XVII.
-
-BYRON. 1788-1824.
-
-
- “As we had none of us been apprised of his peculiarities with
- respect to food, the embarrassment of our host [Samuel Rogers] was
- not little, on discovering that there was nothing upon the table
- which his noble guest could eat or drink. Neither [flesh] meat,
- fish, nor wine would Lord Byron touch; and of biscuits and soda
- water, which he asked for, there had been, unluckily, no provision.
- He professed, however, to be equally well pleased with potatoes and
- vinegar; and of these meagre materials contrived to make rather a
- hearty meal....
-
- “We frequently, during the first months of our acquaintance dined
- together alone.... Though at times he would drink freely enough
- of claret, he still adhered to his system of abstinence in food.
- _He appeared, indeed, to have conceived a notion that animal food
- has some peculiar influence on the character_;[317] and I remember
- one day, as I sat opposite to him, employed, I suppose, rather
- earnestly over a ‘beef-steak,’ after watching me for a few seconds,
- he said in a grave tone of inquiry,--‘Moore, don’t you find eating
- _beef-steak_ makes you ferocious?’”--_Life, Letters, and Journals
- of Lord Byron_, by Thomas Moore. New Edition. Murray, 1860.
-
-In these Memorials of Byron, reference to his aversion from all
-“butcher’s meat” is frequent; and for the greater part of his life,
-he seems to have observed, in fact, an extreme abstinence as regards
-eating; although he had by no means the same repugnance for fish as
-for flesh-eating. That this abstinence from flesh-meats was founded
-upon physical or mental, rather than upon moral, reasons, has already
-been pointed out. Nor, unhappily, was he as abstinent in drinking as in
-eating; to which fact, in great measure, must be attributed the failure
-of his purer eating to effect all the good which, otherwise, it would
-have produced.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The observations of the author of a book entitled _Philozoa_, published
-in 1839, and noticed with approval by Schopenhauer, are sufficiently
-worthy of note, and may fitly conclude this work:--
-
- “Many very intelligent men have, at different times of their lives,
- abstained wholly from flesh; and this, too, with very considerable
- advantage to their health. Mr. Lawrence, whose eminence as a
- surgeon is well known, lived for many years on a vegetable diet.
- Byron, the poet, did the same, as did P. B. Shelley, and many other
- distinguished _literati_ whom I could name. Dr. Lambe and Mr. F.
- Newton have published very able works in defence of a diet of
- herbs, and have condemned the use of flesh as tending to undermine
- the constitution by a sort of slow poisoning. Sir R. Phillips
- has published _Sixteen Reasons for Abstaining from the Flesh of
- Animals_, and a large society exists in England of persons who eat
- nothing which has had life.
-
- “The most attentive researches, which I have been able to make
- into the health of all these persons, induce me to believe that
- vegetable food is the natural diet of man. I tried it once with
- very considerable advantage. My strength became greater, my
- intellect clearer, my power of continued exertion protracted, and
- my spirits much higher than they were when I lived on a mixed diet.
- I am inclined to think that the ‘inconvenience’ which some persons
- profess to experience from vegetable food is only _temporary_.
- A few repeated trials would soon render it not only safe but
- agreeable, and a disgust for the taste of flesh, _under any
- disguise_, would be the result of the experiment. The Carmelites,
- and other religious orders, who subsist only on the productions
- of the vegetable world, live to a greater age than those who feed
- on flesh; and, in general, frugivorous persons are milder in
- their disposition than other people. The same quantity of ground
- has been proved to be capable of sustaining a _larger[318] and
- stronger population_ on a vegetable than on a flesh-meat diet; and
- experience has shown _that the juices of the body are more pure,
- and the viscera much more free from disease, in those who live in
- this simple way_.
-
- “All these facts, taken collectively, point to a period in
- the history of civilisation when men will cease to slay their
- fellow-mortals for food, and will tend to realise the fictions
- of Antiquity, and of the Sybilline oracles respecting a ‘Golden
- Age.’”[319]
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
- Abernethy John, M.D., _Surgical Observations on Tumours_,
- quoted, 196
-
- Aderholdt A., M.D., referred to, 271-284
-
- Æsop, _Fable of the Wolf_, referred to, 117
-
- Alcott Wm., M.D., referred to, 262-264
-
- Anquetil Du Perron, _Récherches sur les Indes_,
- referred to, 177-210
-
- Apollonius of Tyana (_Life_ by Philostratus),
- quoted and referred to, 50-51, 303
-
- Arbuthnot John, M.D., _Essay Concerning Aliments_,
- referred to, 132
-
- Arnold Edwin, _The Light of Asia_, quoted, 296
-
- Attalus, noticed by Seneca, 30
-
- Axon W. E. A.,(Biog. Sketches of George Nicholson,
- Sir R. Phillips, and William Cowherd), referred to, 191, 244, 260
-
-
- Baker Thomas, Abstract of Graham’s _Science of Human Life_,
- referred to, 265, 266
-
- Baltzer Eduard, _Porphyry_ and _Musonius_, 68, 284, 304
-
- Bartolini Biagio, M.D. (Notice of Cornaro), referred to, 89
-
- Bentham Jeremy, quoted, 327, 328
-
- Blot-Lequène, Critique of _Thalysie_, quoted by R. Springer, 211
-
- Bonnodière La, _De la Sobriété et de ses Avantages_,
- referred to, 306
-
- Bossuet Jacques Bénigne, _Discours sur l’Histoire Universelle_,
- quoted, 112
-
- Brewster Sir David, _More Worlds than One_, quoted, 255
-
- Brotherton Joseph, M.P., President of the English
- Vegetarian Society, referred to, 202, 259, 264
-
- Buddha Gautama, referred to and noticed, 6, 295-296
-
- Buddhist Sacred Scriptures, Texts from the Buddhist Canon,
- commonly known as _Dhammapada_, also the _Kûla Sîlam_,
- translated from the Pâli, 295-299
-
- Buffon George Louis Le Clerc de, _Histoire Naturelle_,
- quoted and referred to, 166, 214
-
- Burigni de (Translator of Porphyry, and author of a Treatise
- against Flesh-Eating, noticed by Voltaire), 67
-
- Busbecq Augier de, on the Turks, referred to by Lord
- Chesterfield, 321
-
- Byron George Gordon, Lord, _Life, Letters, and Journals_,
- by Moore, and _Poems_, 234, 331
-
-
- Cabantous J., Doyen de in Faculté de Lettres, Toulouse,
- noticed by R. Springer, 210
-
- Chantrans Girod de, noticed by R. Springer, 210
-
- Charron Pierre, _De la Sagesse_, referred to, 99
-
- Chesterfield Philip Dormer, Lord, _The World_, CXC.,
- quoted, 139, 320-321
-
- Cheyne George, M.D., _Essay on the Gout_; _Of Health
- and a Long Life_; _English Malady: or, a Treatise of
- Nervous Diseases of all Kinds_; _Essay on Regimen_;
- _Natural Method of Curing the Diseases of the Body,
- and the Disorders of the Mind Depending on the Body_,
- referred to and quoted, 97, 120-128
-
- Christian Sacred Scriptures, 52, 54, 55, 79
-
- Chrysostom Ioannes, _Homilies_, _Golden Book_, quoted, 76-81
-
- Cicero Marcus Tullius, _Epistles_ vii. 1, quoted, 24
-
- Clarke James, referred to, 259
-
- Clemens Titus Flavius (of Alexandria), _Pædagogus_ or
- _Instructor_, _Stromata_ or _Miscellanies_, quoted, 56-63
-
- _Clementine Homilies_, quoted and referred to, 56
-
- Cocchi Antonio, M.D., _Del Vitto Pithagorico Per Uso
- Della Medicina_, quoted, 157-159
-
- Collyns C. H., _The Times_, referred to, 202
-
- Cornaro Luigi di, _Trattato della Vita Sobria,
- Amorevole Esortazione, &c._; _Lettera a Barbaro_,
- quoted and referred to, 83-90, 306
-
- Cowherd William, noticed, 258-260
-
- Cowley Abraham, _The Garden_, quoted, 308-309
-
- Cowper William, _The Task_, quoted, 178
-
- Cuvier George, &c., Baron de, _Leçons d’Anatomie
- Comparative, III._, 169, 373, 443, 465, 480
- _Régne Animal_, noticed by Shelley, 226
-
-
- Daumer Georg, _Anthropologismus und Kriticismus_;
- _Enthüllungen über Kaspar Hauser_,
- referred to and quoted, 281-283
-
- _Dietetic Reformer_, referred to, 212, 251
-
-
- Eden Sir F. M., _State of the Poor_, referred to, 177, 189
-
- Epikurus, _De Sobrietate Contra Gulam_,
- quoted by Gassendi, 101, 104
-
- Erasmus Desiderius, _Encomium Moriæ_, quoted, 92
-
- Erskine Thomas, Lord, referred to, 202
-
- Essenians and Essenism, noticed, 56, 72
-
- Euripides, quoted by Athenæus, 32
-
- Evelyn John, _Acetaria: On Sallets_, quoted, 107-110
-
-
- Ferdusi, quoted by Sir William Jones, 141
-
- Ferguson Adam, referred to, 208
-
- Flaubert G., _Légende de St. Julien_, quoted in
- _Fortnightly Review_, 187
-
- Flourens, I. M. P., _Longévité de la Race Humaine_,
- referred to, 175, 268, 270
-
- Fontaine La, Jean de, _Fables_ x. 2, quoted, 117
-
- Forster T., M.D., _Philozoa_, &c., quoted, 332
-
- Franklin Benjamin, _Autobiography_, referred to, 176
-
-
- Galen, Greek Physician, referred to, 35
-
- Gaskill James, referred to, 259
-
- Gay John, _Fables_--_Pythagoras and the Countryman_;
- _The Court of Death_; _The Shepherd’s Dog and the Boy_;
- _The Wild Boar and the Ram_; _The Philosopher and the
- Pheasants_, quoted, 115-119
-
- Gassendi Pierre, _Letter_ to Van Helmont, _Ethics_, quoted, 100-104
-
- Gibbon Edward, _History of the Decline and Fall of the
- Roman Empire_, xxvi, quoted and referred to, 177, 220
-
- Gleïzès Jean Antoine, _Thalysie: ou la Nouvelle
- Existence_; _Les Nuits Elysiennes_, &c., quoted, 208-218, 252
-
- Gleïzès Colonel, referred to, 210
-
- Grævius Johann Georg, referred to, 293
-
- Graham Sylvester, M.D., _The Science of Human Life_,
- referred to and quoted, 262, 263, 264, 271
-
- _Golden Verses The_, referred to and quoted, 21, 294
-
- Göthe Johann Wolfgang von, _Italienische Reise_;
- _Werther’s Leiden_, &c., referred to, 327
-
- Goltz Bogumil, _Das Menschendasein in Seinen Weltewigen
- Zügen und Zeichen_, 285
-
- Gompertz Lewis, referred to by Forster, 332
-
- Greg W. R., _Social Problems_, referred to and quoted, 215, 332
-
- Gützlaff V., M.D., _Schopenhauer über die Thiere und
- den Thierschutz_; _Ein Beitrag zur ethischen Seite
- der Vivisectionsfrage_, referred to, 288
-
-
- Hahn Theodor, _Die Naturgemässe Diät: die Diät der Zukunft_,
- quoted, 284, 292
-
- Haller Albrecht von, M.D., quoted, 156, 157
-
- Hardy Sebastian, _Le Vrai Régîme de Vivre_, &c., referred to, 306
-
- Hare Edward, _Life of William Lambe, M.D._, quoted, 205
-
- Hartley David, M.D., _Observations on Man_, quoted, 138, 139
-
- Hartlib Samuel, _A Design for Plenty, by a Universal
- Planting of Fruit-Trees_, referred to, 108
-
- Hawkesworth John, _Edition of Swift’s Works_; _Adventurer_,
- quoted and referred to, 168
-
- Hecquet Philippe, M.D., _De L’Indécence aux Hommes
- d’Accoucher les Femmes, &c._; _Traité des Dispenses
- du Carême_; _La Médicine, La Chirurgie, et la Pharmacie
- des Pauvres_; _La Brigandage de la Médicine_, &c.,
- referred to and quoted, 68, 133, 314-318
-
- Helps Sir Arthur, _Animals and Their Masters_, referred to, 329
-
- Hesiodos, Ἔργα καὶ Ἣμεραι (_Works and Days_), quoted, 1, 3, 293
-
- Hierokles, Χρυσᾶ Επη (_Golden Verses_), referred to
- and quoted, 21, 294
-
- Hindu Sacred Books, _Laws of Manu_, referred to
- and quoted, 182, 298
-
- Hippokrates, Περὶ Ὑγιαίνης Διαίτης (_On the Healthful
- Regimen_), referred to, 12
-
- Hogarth William, _Four Stages of Cruelty_, referred to, 179, 321
-
- Hogg Jefferson, _Life of Shelley_, quoted, 206
-
- Horatius Flaccus, _Odes_, _Ars Poet._, _Sat. II. 2._,
- quoted, 74, 299-303
-
- Howard John, _Life of_, referred to, 189
-
- Hufeland Christian Wilhelm, M.D., _Makrobiotik, oder
- die Kunst das Menschliche Leben zu Verlängern_, &c.,
- quoted and referred to, 184, 268
-
- Hypatia, referred to, 67, 82
-
-
- Iamblichus, _Life of Pythagoras_, referred to, 5, 8
-
-
- Jenyns Soame, quoted, 322-324
-
- Jewish Sacred Scriptures, quoted and referred to, 54, 61, 79
-
- Jones Sir William, _Asiatic Researches_, iv. 12, quoted, 141
-
- Josephus Flavius, _Antiquities of the Jews_, quoted, 73
-
- Julianus, Emperor, _Misopogon (Beard Hater)_, noticed, 74-76
-
- Juvenalis Decimus Junius, _Sat._ I., xv., &c.,
- quoted, 9, 48, 85, 182
-
-
- Kalidâsa, _Sakúntala_, referred to, 182, 277
-
- Kingsford Anna, M.D., _The Perfect Way in Diet_, referred to, 271
-
-
- Laborde Alexandre de, referred to, 252
-
- Lamartine Alphonse de, _Mémoires_; _La Chute d’un Ange_,
- quoted, 247-252
-
- Lambe William, M.D., _Additional Reports on Regimen_,
- referred to and quoted, 197, 198-205, 206, 207, 331
-
- Lawrence William, Professor, F.R.C.S., _Lectures
- on Physiology_, quoted, 270
-
- Lémery Louis, M.D., _Traité des Alimens_, referred to,
-
- Lesage Alain Réné, _Gil Blas_ ii. 2, quoted, 134
-
- Lessio Leonard, _Hygiasticon_, quoted, 305-307
-
- Liebig Justus von, _Chemische Briefe_, referred to
- and quoted, 215, 290-292
-
- Linné Karl von, _Amœnitates Accademicæ_, quoted, 164-165
-
- Lipsius Justus von, edition of Seneca, quoted, 31-32
-
- Locke John, _Thoughts on Education_, referred to, 109, 251
-
- Lucretius Titus Carus, _De Rerum Naturâ II._, referred
- to and quoted, 25, 300
-
- Lyford H. G., M.D., referred to, 205
-
-
- _Mahâbhârata_, Story of the Princess Savîtri, quoted, 297
-
- Mandeville Bernard de, M.D., _Fable of the Bees_, quoted, 113-115
-
- Martin John, referred to, 179, 187
-
- Mayor J. E. B., Professor, _Musonius_ and _Juvenal_,
- quoted and referred to, 305
-
- Metcalfe William, M.D., _Essay on Abstinence from the
- Flesh of Animals_; _Moral Reformer_; _American
- Vegetarian and Health Journal_, &c., noticed, 260-264
-
- Michelet Jules, _La Bible de l’Humanité_; _La Femme_;
- _L’Oiseau_, quoted, 252-258
-
- Mill John Stuart, _Principles of Political Economy_;
- _Dissertations_, referred to and quoted, 328
-
- Milton John, _Paradise Lost_, v., xi.; _Latin Poem_
- addressed to Diodati, quoted, 110-112
-
- Moffet Thomas, M.D., _Health’s Improvement_, quoted, 307
-
- Montaigne Michel de, _Essais_, quoted, 94-99
-
- More Sir Thomas, _Utopia_, quoted, 90-94
-
- Musonius Rufus, in _Anthologion_ of Stobæus, quoted
- by Professor Mayor, 303-305
-
-
- Neo-Platonism, referred to, 56, 67, 82
-
- Newman F. W., Professor, President of the English
- Vegetarian Society, _Lectures on Vegetarianism_,
- referred to, 93, 172, 215, 292
-
- Newton Sir Isaac, referred to by Voltaire (_Elémens
- de la Philosophie de Newton_), and by Haller, 101, 145
-
- Newton J. F., _The Return to Nature_, quoted and
- referred to, 205-208, 331
-
- Nichols T. L., M.D. (Hygienic Literature), referred to, 314
-
- Nicholson George, _On the Conduct of Man to Inferior
- Animals_; _The Primeval Diet of Man_, quoted, 190-196
-
- Nicholson E. B., _The Rights of an Animal_, referred to, 329
-
- Nodier Charles, referred to, 210
-
-
- Oswald John, _The Cry of Nature_, quoted, 179-183
-
- Ovidius Naso, _Metamorphoses_, xv.; _Fasti_, iv.,
- quoted, 23-27, 49, 299-303
-
-
- Paley William, _Principles of Moral and Political
- Philosophy_, quoted, 169-172
-
- Phillips Sir Richard, _Golden Rules of Social Philosophy_;
- _Medical Journal_ (July 27, 1811); _Dictionary of the
- Arts of Life and Civilisation_, quoted and
- referred to, 235-244, 331
-
- Philolaus, _Pythagorean System_, referred to, 5
-
- Philostratus, _Life of Apollonius of Tyana_, quoted, 50-51
-
- Pilpai, _Fable of the Cow_, quoted by Pope, 320
-
- Pitcairn Archibald, M.D., referred to, 200
-
- Plato, _Republic_ ii; _Laws_, quoted, 12-22
-
- Plinius the Elder, _Hist. Naturalis_, quoted, 24
-
- Plotinus, noticed by Donaldson, 65-66
-
- Plutarch, _Essay on Flesh-Eating_; _Symposiacs_;
- _Parallel Lives_, quoted, 41-49
-
- Pope Alexander, _Pastorals_; _Essay on Man_; _The
- Guardian_, quoted, 71, 128-132, 318-320
-
- Porphyry, Περὶ Τῆς Ἀπόχης (_On Abstinence_); _Life
- of Pythagoras_, quoted, 63-74
-
- Pressavin Jean Baptiste, Membre du Collége Royale
- de Chirurgie, Lyon, Demonstrateur en Matière
- Médicale-Chirurgicale à Lyon, _L’Art de Prolonger
- la Vie et de Conserver la Santé_, quoted, 324-326
-
- Proklus, referred to, 82
-
- Pythagoras (in Hierokles, Diogenes, Iamblichus,
- Porphyry, and Cocchi) noticed and quoted, 4-11, 21, 158, 294
-
-
- Ramazzini Bernardo, M.D., referred to, 89
-
- Ray John, _Historia Plantarum_, quoted, 106, 107
-
- Richardson B. W., M.D., _Salutisland_; _Hygieia_, referred to, 326
-
- Richter Jean Paul, _Levana_, quoted, 287, 288
-
- Ritson Joseph, _Abstinence from Animal Food: a Moral Duty_,
- quoted, 185-190, 323
-
- Rorarius, _Quòd Animalia Bruta Sæpe Utantur Ratione
- Melius Homine_, referred to, 99
-
- Rousseau Jean Jacques, _De l’Inégalité Parmi les Hommes_;
- _Emile_; _Julie: ou la Nouvelle Héloise_; _Confessions_,
- referred to and quoted, 159-164, 195
-
-
- Sadi, Persian Poet, referred to, 141
-
- Sakya Muni, referred to, 182
-
- Schiller Johann Friedrich, _Das Eleusische Fest_;
- _Alpenjäger_, quoted, 326-327
-
- Schopenhauer Arthur, _Fundament der Moral_ (_Le Fondement
- de la Morale_); _Parerga und Paralipomena_, quoted and
- referred to, 286-290
-
- Seefeld A. von, referred to, 284
-
- Seneca Marcus Annæus, _Epistolæ ad Lucilium_; _De
- Clententiâ_; _De Vitâ Beatâ_; _De Irâ_; _Questiones
- Naturales_, quoted, 27-40
-
- Sextius Quintus, referred to, 31
-
- Shelley Percy Bysshe, _Queen Mab_ and _Note_; _The Revolt
- of Islam_, quoted, 218-234
-
- Shakespeare William, _As You Like It_, ii. 1; _Cymbeline_,
- i. 6, referred to and quoted, 105
-
- Simpson James, President of English Vegetarian Society,
- referred to, 263
-
- Sinclair Sir John, _The Code of Health and Longevity_,
- quoted, 330
-
- Sloane Sir Hans, _Nat. Hist. of Jamaica_, referred to, 177
-
- Smith Adam, _The Wealth of Nations_, quoted, 177
-
- Smith John, _Fruits and Farinacea: the Proper Food of Man_,
- edited by Professor Newman, quoted, 71
-
- Smith Sydney, quoted, 168
-
- Sotion, referred to by Seneca, 31
-
- Sparrman André, referred to, 177
-
- Sperone Speroni, referred to, 89
-
- Springer Robert, German translator of _Thalysie, ou
- la Nouvelle Existence_, quoted, 211
-
- Strauss David Friedrich Dr., _Der Alte und der Neue Glaube_,
- quoted, 287
-
- Struve Gustav, _Mandaras’ Wanderungen_; _Das Seelenleben_;
- _Die Pflanzenkost_, quoted;, 271-281
-
- St. Pierre Bernardin, _Paul et Virginie_; _Etudes de
- la Nature_, quoted, 173-176
-
- Stubbs Philip, _Anatomy of Abuses_, quoted by Ritson, 307
-
- Swedenborg Emanuel, referred to, 176
-
- Swift Jonathan, Dean, _Gulliver’s Travels_, 133
-
-
- Tertullianus Quintus Septimius, _De Jejuniis Adversus
- Psychicos_, quoted, 51-55
-
- Thomson James, _The Seasons_, quoted, 134-137
-
- Trelawney F., _Life of Shelley_, referred to, 220
-
- Tryon Thomas, _The Way to Health and Long Life_;
- _A Treatise on Cleanliness in Meats and Drinks_;
- _The Way to make all People Rich_; _England’s Grandeur_;
- _Dialogue between an East-India Brachman and a French
- Gentleman_, &c., 309-314
-
-
- Villeneuve C. de, M.D., referred to, 202
-
- Virgilius Maro, _Georgica_; _Æneis_, quoted, 50, 51, 96
-
- Volney Constantine Comte de, _Voyages en Syrie et en
- Egypte_, referred to and quoted, 109, 330
-
- Voltaire François Marie Arouet de, _Essai sur les Mœurs
- et L’Esprit des Nations_; _Dictionnaire Philosophique_
- (Art. _Viande_); _Princesse de Babylone_; _Lettres
- d’Amabed à Shastasid_; _Dialogue du Chapon et de la
- Poularde_, quoted and referred to, 39, 68, 101, 141-156
-
-
- Weilshäuser Emil, quoted by R. Springer, 211
-
- Wesley John, _Journals_, referred to, 176
-
- Williamson John (noticed by Ritson, and by writer in
- _Gentleman’s Magazine_, Aug. 1787), 189
-
- _Woman and the Age_, an Essay, referred to, 256
-
-
- Young Thomas, _On Cruelty_, referred to by Forster (_Philozoa_), 333
-
-
- Zimmerman W., M.D. _Der Weg zum Paradiese_ (_The Way
- to Paradise_), quoted, 285
-
-
-JOHN HEYWOOD, Excelsior Steam Printing and Bookbinding Works,
-Hulme Hall Road, Manchester.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Quoted by Sir Arthur Helps in his _Animals and their Masters_.
-(Strahan, 1873.) The further just remark of Arnold upon this subject
-may here be quoted:--“Kind, loving, submissive, conscientious,
-much-enduring we know them to be; but _because_ we deprive them of
-all stake in the future--_because_ they have no selfish, calculated
-aims--these are not virtues. Yet, if we say a ‘vicious’ Horse, why not
-say a ‘virtuous’ Horse?”
-
-[2] That the indescribable atrocities inflicted in the final scene of
-the slaughter-house, are far from being the only sufferings to which
-the victims of the Table are liable, is a fact upon which, at this
-day, it ought to be superfluous to insist. The frightful sufferings
-during “the middle passage,” in rough weather, and especially in severe
-storms, have over and over again been recounted even by spectators
-the least likely to be easily affected by the spectacles of lower
-animal suffering. Thousands of Oxen and Sheep, year by year, are
-thrown _living_ into the sea during the passage from the United States
-alone. In the year 1879, according to the official report, 14,000 thus
-perished, while 1,240 were landed dead, and 450 were slaughtered on
-the quay upon landing to prevent death from wounds.--See, among other
-recent works on humane Dietetics, the _Perfect Way in Diet_ of Dr.
-Anna Kingsford for some most instructive details upon this subject.
-The reader is also referred to the Lecture recently addressed to the
-Students of Girton College, Cambridge, by the same able and eloquent
-writer, for other aspects of the humanitarian argument.
-
-[3] Cf. Horace (whom, however, we do not quote as an authority)--
-
- “Let olives, endives, mallows light
- Be all my fare;”
-
-and Virgil thus indicates the charm of a rural existence for him who
-realises it:--
-
- “Whatever fruit the branches and the mead
- Spontaneous bring, he gathers for his need.”
-
-[4] The same apparent contradiction--the co-existence of “flocks and
-herds” with the prevalence of the non-flesh diet--appears in the Jewish
-theology, in _Genesis_. It is obvious, however, that in both cases
-the “flocks and herds” might be existing for other purposes than for
-slaughter.
-
-[5] _Daimones._ The _dæmon_ in Greek theology was simply a lesser
-divinity--an _angel_.
-
-[6] Compare Spenser’s charming verses (“Faery Queen,” Book ii., canto
-8): “And is there care in heaven,” &c.
-
-[7] His moral principles are reduced to these:--“1. Mercy established
-on an immovable basis. 2. Aversion to all cruelty. 3. A boundless
-compassion for all creatures.” Quoted from Klaproth by Huc, _Chinese
-Empire_, xv. Buddhism was to Brahminism, sacerdotally, what early
-Christianity was to Mosaism.
-
-[8] All the varieties of the bear tribe, it is perhaps scarcely
-necessary to observe, are by organisation, and therefore by preference,
-frugivorous. It is from necessity only, for the most part, that they
-seek for flesh.
-
-[9] Compare Montaigne (_Essais_, Book II., chap. 12), who, to the shame
-of the popular opinion of the present day, ably maintains the same
-thesis.
-
-[10] The allegory of the trials and final purification of the soul was
-a favourite one with the Greeks, in the charming story of the loves and
-sorrows of Psyche and Eros. Apuleius inserted it in his fiction of _The
-Golden Ass_, and it constantly occurs in Greek and modern art.
-
-[11] Beans, like lean flesh, are very nitrogenous, and it is possible
-that Pythagoras may have deemed them too invigorating a diet for the
-more aspiring ascetics. This may seem at least a more solid reason than
-the absurd conjectures to which we have referred.
-
-[12] “As regards the fruits of this system of training or belief
-(the Pythagorean), it is interesting to remark,” says the author
-of the article Pythagoras in Dr. Smith’s _Dictionary of Greek and
-Roman Biography_, “that, wherever we have notices of distinguished
-Pythagoreans, we usually hear of them as men of great uprightness,
-conscientiousness, and self-restraint, and as capable of devoted and
-enduring friendship.” Amongst them the names of Archytas, and Damon,
-and Phintias are particularly eminent. Archytas was one of the very
-greatest geniuses of antiquity: he was distinguished alike as a
-philosopher, mathematician, statesman, and general. In mechanics he was
-the inventor of the wooden flying dove--one of the wonders of the older
-world. Empedokles (the Apollonius of the 5th century B.C.), who devoted
-his marvellous attainments to the service of humanity, may be claimed
-as, at least in part, a follower of Pythagoras.
-
-[13] “Quæ Philosophia fuit, facta Philologia est.” (Ep. cviii.)
-Compare Montaigne, _Essais_, i., 24, on Pedantry, where he admirably
-distinguishes between _wisdom_ and _learning_.
-
-[14] _The Republic of Plato._ By Davies and Vaughan.
-
-[15] In support of this thesis Plato adduces arguments derived from
-analogy. Amongst the non-human species the sexes, he points out, are
-nearly equal in strength and intelligence. In human savage life the
-difference is far less marked than in artificial conditions of life.
-
-[16] Ὄψον--the name given by the Greeks generally to everything which
-they considered rather as a “relish” than a necessary. Bread was held
-to be--not only in name but in fact--the veritable “staff of life.”
-Olives, figs, cheese, and, at Athens especially, fish were the ordinary
-Ὄψον.
-
-[17] Translated by Davies and Vaughan. 1874.
-
-[18] The _four_ sacred Pythagorean virtues--justice, temperance,
-wisdom, fortitude. See notice of Plato above.
-
-[19] Upon which excellent maxim Hierokles justly remarks: “The judge
-here appointed is the most just of all, and the one which is [ought to
-be] most at home with us, viz.: conscience and right reason.”
-
-[20] _Nineteenth Century_, October, 1877. The Greek original of
-the _Golden Verses_ is found in the text of Mullach, in _Fragmenta
-Philosophorum Græcorum_. Paris, 1860.
-
-[21] The Romans, we may remark, imported the gladiatorial fights from
-Spain.
-
-[22] _Hist. Naturalis VIII._ 7. His nephew says of these huge
-slaughter-houses that “there is no novelty, no variety, or anything
-that could not be seen once for all.” On one occasion, in the year
-A.D. 284, we are credibly informed that 1,000 ostriches, 1,000 stags,
-1,000 fallow-deer, besides numerous wild sheep and goats, were mingled
-together for indiscriminate slaughter by the wild beasts of the forest
-or the equally wild beasts of the city. (See _Decline and Fall._)
-
-[23] Some traces of it may be found, _e.g._, in Lucretius (_De Rerum
-Nat. II._, where see his touching picture of the bereaved mother-cow,
-whose young is ravished from her for the horrid sacrificial altar);
-Virgil (_Æneis VII._), in his story of Silvia’s deer--the most touching
-passage in the poem; Pliny, _Hist. Nat._ In earlier Greek literature,
-Euripides seems most in sympathy with suffering--at least as regards
-his own species.
-
-[24] I see and approve the better way; I pursue the worse.--_Metam._
-vii., 20.
-
-[25] In a note on this passage Lipsius, the famous Dutch commentator,
-remarks: “I am quite in accord with this feeling. The constant use of
-flesh meat (_assidua_ κρεοφαγία) by Europeans makes them stupid and
-irrational (_brutos_).”
-
-[26] Lipsius suggests, with much reason, that Seneca actually wrote
-the opposite respecting his father, “who had no dislike for this
-philosophy, but who feared calumny,” &c.
-
-[27] On this melancholy truth compare Montaigne’s _Essais_.
-
-[28] Ep. xxv. Lipsius here quotes Lucan “still more a philosopher than
-a poet”:--
-
- “_Discite quam parvo liceat producere vitam,
- Et quantum natura petat.
- . . Satis est populis fluviusque Ceresque._”
-
-“Learn by how little life may he sustained, and how much nature
-requires. The gifts of Ceres and water are sufficient nourishment for
-all peoples.”--(_Pharsalia._)
-
-Also Euripides:--
-
- “Ἐπεὶ τί δεῖ βροτοῖσι . . . .
- . . . πλὴν δύοιν μόνον,
- Δημητρὸς ἀκτῆς, πώματος θ’ ὑδρηχόου,
- Ἃπερ πάρεστι καὶ πέφυχ’ ἡμᾶς τρέφειν·
- Ὧν οὐκ ἀπαρκεῖ πλησμονή· τρυφῇ γέ τοι
- Ἄλλων ἐδεστῶν μηχανὰς θηρεύομεν.”
-
-Which may be translated:--
-
- “_Since what need mortals, save twain things alone,
- Crush’d grain (heaven’s gift), and streaming water-draught?
- Food nigh at hand, and nature’s aliment--
- Of which no glut contents us. Pampered taste
- Hunts out device of other eatables._”
-
- (Fragment of lost drama of Euripides, preserved in _Athenæus_ iv.
- and in _Gellius_ vii.)
-
-See, too, the elder Pliny, who professes his conviction that
-“the plainest food is also the most beneficial” (_cibus simplex
-utilissimus_), and asserts that it is from his eating that man derives
-most of his diseases, and from thence that all the drugs and all the
-arts of physicians abound. (_Hist. Nat._ xxvi., 28.)
-
-[29] Cf. Pope’s accusation of the gluttony of his species:--
-
- “Of half that live, the butcher and the tomb.”
-
- --_Essay on Man._
-
-[30] Compare Juvenal _passim_, Martial, Athenæus, Plutarch, and Clement
-of Alexandria.
-
-[31] _Ep._ cx. Cf. St. Chrysostom (_Hom._ i. on _Coloss._ i.) who seems
-to have borrowed his equally forcible admonition on the same subject
-from Seneca.
-
-[32] _Epistola_ vii. and _De Brevitate Vitæ_ xiv. As to the effect
-of the gross diet of the later _athletes_, Ariston (as quoted by
-Lipsius) compared them to columns in the _gymnasium_, at once “sleek
-and stony”--λιπαροὺς καὶ λιθίνους. Diogenes of Sinope, being asked why
-the athletes seemed always so void of sense and intelligence, replied,
-“Because they are made up of ox and swine flesh.” Galen, the great
-Greek medical writer of the second century of our æra, makes the same
-remark upon the proverbial stupidity of this class, and adds: “And
-this is the universal experience of mankind--that a gross stomach does
-not make a refined mind.” The Greek proverb, “παχεῖα γαστὴρ λεπτὸν οὐ
-τίκτει νόον,” exactly expresses the same experience.
-
-[33] _De Clementiâ_ i. and ii. The author has been accused of
-flattering a notorious tyrant. The charge is, however, unjust, since
-Nero, at the period of the dedication of the treatise to him, had not
-yet discovered his latent viciousness and cruelty. Like Voltaire, in
-recent times, Seneca bestowed perhaps unmerited praise, in the hope of
-flattering the powerful into the practice of justice and virtue.
-
-[34] Cf. the sad experiences of the great Jewish prophet. “The prophets
-prophesy falsely,” &c.
-
-[35] In the original, “dumb animals” (_mutis animalibus_)--a term
-which, it deserves special note, Seneca usually employs, rather
-than the traditional expressions “beasts” and “brutes.” The term
-“dumb animals” is not strictly accurate, seeing that almost all
-_terrestrials_ have the use of voice though it may not be intelligible
-to human ears. Yet it is, at all events, preferable to the old
-traditional terms still in general use.
-
-[36] Compare the advice of the younger Pliny--“Read much rather
-than many books.” (_Letters_ vii., 9 in the excellent revision of
-Mr. Bosanquet, Bell and Daldy, 1877) and Gibbon’s just remarks
-(_Miscellaneous Works_).
-
-[37] See this finely and wittily illustrated in _Micromégas_ (one
-of the most exquisite satires ever written), where the philosopher
-of the star Sirius proposes the same questions to the contending
-metaphysicians and _savans_ of our planet.
-
-[38] This essay ranks among the most valuable productions that have
-come down to us from antiquity. Its sagacious anticipation of the
-modern argument from comparative physiology and anatomy, as well as
-the earnestness and true feeling of its eloquent appeal to the higher
-instincts of human nature, gives it a special interest and importance.
-We have therefore placed it separately at the end of this article.
-
-[39] Περὶ τοῦ Τὰ Ἄλογα Λογῶ Χρῆσθαι--“An Essay to prove that the Lower
-Animals reason.”
-
-[40] This essay is remarkable as being, perhaps, the first speculation
-as to the existence of other _worlds_ than ours.
-
-[41] As regards this complete silence of Plutarch, it may be attributed
-to his eminently _conservative_ temperament, which shrank from an
-exclusive system that so completely broke with the sacred traditions
-of “the venerable Past.” Besides, Christianity had not assumed the
-imposing proportions of the age of Lucian, whose indifference is
-therefore more surprising than that of Plutarch.
-
-[42] See, for example, the _Isis and Osiris_, 49. And yet, with
-Francis Bacon, and Bayle, and Addison, he prefers Atheism to fanatical
-Superstition.
-
-[43] Of the many eminent persons who have been indebted to, or who have
-professed the greatest admiration for, the writings of Plutarch are
-Eusebius, who places him at the head of all Greek philosophers, Origen,
-Theodoret, Aulus Gellius, Photius, Suidas, Lipsius. Theodore of Gaza,
-when asked what writer he would first save from a general conflagration
-of libraries, answered, “Plutarch; for he considered his philosophical
-writings the most beneficial to society, and the best substitute for
-all other books.” Amongst moderns, Montaigne, Montesquieu, Voltaire,
-and especially Rousseau, recognise him as one of the first of moralists.
-
-[44] See Milton (_Paradise Lost_, xi.), and Shelley (_Queen Mab_).
-
-[45] Cf. Pope:--“Of half that live, the butcher and the tomb.”--_Moral
-Essays._
-
-[46] _Parallel Lives: Cato the Censor._ Translated by John and William
-Langhorne, 1826.
-
-[47] See _Odyssey_, xii., 395, of the oxen of the sun impiously
-slaughtered by the companions of Ulysses.
-
-[48] “Hinc subitæ mortes, atque intestata Senectus.”--“Hence sudden
-deaths, and age without a will.” Juvenal, _Sat._ I.
-
-[49]
-
- “The anarch Custom’s reign.”
-
- Shelley: _Revolt of Islam_.
-
-[50] Such it seems, were some of the popular methods of torture in
-the Slaughter Houses in the first century of our æra. Whether the
-“calf-bleeding,” and the preliminary operations which produce the
-_pâté de foie gras_, &c., or the older methods, bear away the palm for
-ingenuity in culinary torture, may be a question.
-
-[51] See Περὶ Σαρκοφαγίας Λόγος--in the Latin title, _De Esu
-Carnium_--“On Flesh-Eating,” Parts 1 and 2. We shall here add the
-authority of Pliny, who professes his conviction that “the plainest
-food is the most beneficial.” (_Hist. Nat._ xi., 117); and asserts
-that it is from his eating that man derives most of his diseases.
-(xxv., 28.) Compare the feeling of Ovid, whom we have already
-quoted--_Metamorphoses_ xv. We may here refer our readers also to the
-celebration, by the same poet, of the innocent and peaceful gifts of
-_Ceres_, and of the superiority of her pure table and altar--_Fasti_
-iv., 395-416.
-
- _Pace, Ceres, læta est._ At vos optate, Coloni,
- _Perpetuam pacem_, perpetuumque ducem.
- Farra Deæ, micæque licet salientis honorem
- Detis: et in veteres turea grana focos.
- Et, si thura aberant, unctas accendite tædas.
- Parva bonæ Cereri, _sint modo casta_, placent.
- _A Bove succincti cultros removete ministri:
- Bos aret....
- Apta jugo cervix non est ferienda securi:
- Vivat, et in durâ sæpe laboret humo._
-
-And the fine picture of Virgil of the agricultural life in the ideal
-“Golden Age,” in which slaughter for food and war was unknown:--
-
- _Ante
- Impia quam cæsis gens est epulata juvencis._
-
- “Before
- An impious world the labouring oxen slew.”--_Georgics II._
-
-[52] “The proclamation of the birth of Apollonius to his mother
-by Proteus, and the incarnation of Proteus himself--the chorus of
-swans which sang for joy on the occasion--the casting out of devils,
-raising the dead, and healing the sick--the sudden disappearances and
-reappearances of Apollonius--his adventures in the Cave of Trophonius,
-and the sacred Voice which called him at his death, to which may be
-added his claim as a teacher to reform the world--cannot fail to
-suggest the parallel passages in the Gospel history.... Still, it must
-be allowed that the resemblances are very general, and on the whole
-it seems probable that the life of Apollonius was not written with a
-_controversial_ aim, as the resemblances, though real, only indicate
-that a few things were borrowed, and exhibit no trace of a systematic
-parallel.”--_Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography._ Edited by Wm.
-Smith, LL.D. So great was the estimation in which he was held, that
-the emperor Alexander Severus (one of the very few good Roman princes)
-placed his statue or bust in the imperial _Larium_ or private Chapel,
-together with those of Orpheus and of Christ.
-
-[53] Cf. Virgil, _Georgics_ II.: “Fundit humo _facilem_ victum
-_justissima_ Tellus.”
-
-[54] So greatly was he esteemed by the later and leading Fathers of the
-Church that Cyprian, the celebrated Bishop of Carthage, and “the doctor
-and guide of all the Western Churches,” was accustomed to say, whenever
-he applied himself to the study of his writings, “_Da mihi magistrum_”
-(“Give me my master”).--Jerome, _De Viris Illustribus_ I., 284.
-
-[55] _On Fasting or Abstinence Against the Carnal-Minded._ The style of
-Tertullian, we may remark, is, for the most part, obscure and abrupt.
-
-[56] It is worth noting that neither the original (βρωμάτων) of
-the “Authorised Version,” nor the _meats_ of the “A. V.” itself,
-says anything about _flesh-eating_ in this favourite resort of its
-apologists. Both expressions merely signify foods of _any kind_;
-so that the passage in question of this Pastoral Letter--which is
-apparently post-Pauline--can be made to condemn _absolute_ fasting
-only: nor does the context warrant any other interpretation. As to
-St. Paul, the great opponent of the earlier Christian belief and
-practice, it must be conceded that he seems not to have shared the
-abhorrence of the immediately accredited disciples of Jesus for the
-sanguinary diet, especially of St. Matthew, of St. James, and of St.
-Peter, who, as we are expressly assured by Clement of Alexandria,
-St. Augustine, and others, lived entirely on _non-flesh_ meats. The
-apparent indifferentism of St. Paul upon the question of abstinence is
-best and most briefly explained by his avowed principle of action--from
-the missionary point of view useful, doubtless, but from the point of
-view of abstract ethics not always satisfactory--the being “all things
-to all men.”
-
-[57] Compare Seneca, _Epistles_, cx., and Chrysostom, _Homilies_.
-
-[58] _Aquis sobrius, et cibis ebrius._ This important truth we venture
-to commend to the earnest attention of those philanthropists, or
-hygeists, who are adherents of what may be termed the _semi_-temperance
-Clause--who abstain from alcoholic drinks but not from flesh.
-
-[59] A more accurate version of the original than that of the _A.
-V._ (1 _Cor._ viii., 8-13). We may here quote the conclusion of the
-argument of the Greek-Jew Apostle--“Wherefore, if [the kind of] meat
-is a cause of offence to my brother, I will eat no flesh while the
-world stands, that I may not be a cause of offence to my brother”--and
-press it, more particularly, upon the attention of English residents,
-and especially of Christian _missionaries_, amongst the sensitive and
-refined Hindus who form so overwhelming a proportion of the population
-of the British Empire. According to the evidence of the missionaries of
-the various Christian churches themselves, their habits of flesh-eating
-have not infrequently been found to prejudice all but the lowest caste
-of Hindus against the reception of other ideas of Christian and Western
-“civilisation.”
-
-[60] _Usque ad choleram ortygometras cruditando._ In the present case
-it seems that the wanderers in the Arabian deserts were not so much
-clamorous for flesh as for _some_ kind of sustenance, or rather for
-something more than the _manna_ with which they were supplied; since
-the late Egyptian slaves are reported to have said, “We remember the
-fish that we did eat in Egypt freely--the cucumbers, the melons, and
-the leeks, and the onions, and the garlic; but now our soul is dried
-away: _there is nothing at all_ besides this manna before our eyes.”
-
-We may here take occasion to observe that the fact of the existence of
-_sacrifice_ throughout their history necessarily involves the practice
-of flesh-eating--indeed, the two practices are, historically, clearly
-connected. What, however, we may fairly deduce from their simple and
-frugal living in the Egyptian slavery, lasting, as it did, through
-several centuries, during which period they must have been weaned
-from the gross living of their previous barbarous _pastoral_ life, is
-this--that but for the sacrificial rites (and, perhaps, the necessities
-of the desert) the Jews would have, like other Eastern peoples,
-probably adopted this _frugal_ living--of cucumbers, melons, onions,
-&c.--in their new homes. Such, at least, seems to be a legitimate
-inference from the highly-significant fact that, throughout their
-sacred scriptures, not flesh-meats but corn, and oil, and honey, and
-pomegranates, and figs, and other vegetable products (in which their
-land originally abounded), are their highest dietary _ideal_--_e.g._,
-“O that my people would have hearkened to me; for if Israel had walked
-in my ways.... He should have fed them with the finest wheat flour: and
-with honey out of the stony rock should I have satisfied thee.” (Ps.
-lxxxi., 17; cf. also Ps. civ., 14, 15.) It is equally significant of
-the latent and secret consciousness of the _unspiritual_ nature of the
-products of the Slaughter-House, even in the Western world, that in the
-_liturgies_ or “public services” of the Christian churches, wherever
-food is prayed for or whenever thanks are returned for it, there is (as
-it seems) a natural shrinking from mention of that which is obtained
-only by cruelty and bloodshed, and it is “the kindly fruits of the
-earth” which represent the legitimate dietary wants of the petitioners.
-
-[61] “For they that are after the Flesh do mind the things of the
-Flesh; but they that are after the Spirit the things of the Spirit. For
-to be _carnally minded is death_; but to be _spiritually minded is life
-and peace_.... So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God....
-Therefore, brethren, we are debtors not to the flesh, to live after the
-flesh. For if ye live after the flesh, ye shall die; but if ye, through
-the spirit, do mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live.” (_Rom._
-viii., 5, &c.) A more spiritual apprehension of ‘divine verities,’ if
-we may so say, than the apparently more equivocal utterance of the same
-great reformer elsewhere. Here it is well to observe, once for all that
-the whole significance of the utterances of St. Paul upon flesh-eating
-depends upon the bitter controversies between the older Jew and the
-newer Greek or Roman sections of the rising Church. It is, in fact,
-a question of the lawfulness of eating the flesh of the victims of
-the Pagan and Jewish sacrificial altars--not of the question of
-flesh-eating in the _abstract_ at all. In fine, it is a question not of
-_ethics_, but of theological ritual. It is greatly to be lamented that
-the confused and obscure translation of the _A. V._ has for so many
-centuries hopelessly mystified the whole subject--as far, at least, as
-the mass of the community is concerned.
-
-[62] See _De Jejuniis Adversus Psychicos_. (Quinti. Sept. Flor.
-Tertulliani Opera. Edited by Gersdorf, Tauchnitz.)
-
-[63] In the _Clementine Homilies_, which had a great authority
-and reputation in the earlier times of Christianity, St. Peter is
-represented, in describing his way of living to Clement of Rome, as
-professing the _strictest_ Vegetarianism. “I live,” he declares, “upon
-bread and olives only, with the addition, rarely, of kitchen herbs”
-(ἄρτῳ μόνῳ καὶ ἐλαίαις χρῶμαι καὶ σπανίως λαχάνοις xii. 6.) Clement of
-Alexandria (_Pædagogus_ ii. 1) assures us that “Matthew the apostle
-lived upon seeds, and hard-shelled fruits, and other vegetables,
-without touching flesh;” while Hegesippus, the historian of the Church
-(as quoted by Eusebius, _Ecclesiastical Hist._ ii. 2, 3) asserts of
-St. James that “he never ate any animal food”--οὔδε εμψυχον ἔφαγε: an
-assertion repeated by St. Augustine (_Ad. Faust_, xxii. 3) who states
-that James, the brother of the Lord, “lived upon seeds and vegetables,
-never tasting flesh or wine” (_Jacobus, frater Domini, seminibus
-et oleribus usus est, non carne nec vino_). The connexion of the
-beginnings of Christianity with the sublime and simple tenets of the
-Essenes, whose communistic and abstinent principles were strikingly
-coincident with those of the earliest Christians, is at once one of
-the most interesting and one of the most obscure phenomena in its
-nascent history. The Essenes, “the sober thinkers,” as their assumed
-name implies, seem to have been to the more noisy and ostentatious
-Jewish sects, what the Pythagoreans were to the other Greek schools
-of philosophy--_practical moralists_ rather than mere talkers and
-theorisers. They first appear in Jewish history in the first century
-B.C. Their communities were settled in the recesses of the Jordan
-valley, yet their members were sometimes found in the towns and
-villages. Like the Pythagoreans, they extorted respect even from the
-worldly and self-seeking religionists and politicians of the capital.
-See Josephus (_Antiquities_ xiii. and xviii.), and Philo, who speak in
-the highest terms of admiration of the simplicity of their life and
-the purity of their morality. Dean Stanley (_Lectures on the Jewish
-Church_, vol. iii.) regards St. John the Baptist as Essenian in his
-substitution of “reformation of life” for “the sanguinary, costly gifts
-of the sacrificial slaughter-house.”
-
-[64] It is a curious and remarkable inconsistency, we may here observe,
-that the modern ardent admirers of the Fathers and Saints of the
-Church, while professing unbounded respect for their _doctrines_,
-for the most part ignore the one of their _practices_ at once the
-most ancient, the most highly reputed, and the most universal. _Quod
-semper, quod ubique_, &c., the favourite maxim of St. Augustine and the
-orthodox church, is, in this case, “more honoured in the breach than
-in the observance.” Partial and periodical Abstinence, it is scarcely
-necessary to add, however consecrated by later ecclesiasticism, is
-sufficiently remote from the daily _frugal_ living of a St. James, a
-St. Anthony, or a St. Chrysostom.
-
-[65] The full title of the treatise is--_The Miscellaneous Collection
-of T. F. Clemens of Gnostic (or Speculative) Memoirs upon the true
-Philosophy_.
-
-[66] This celebrated term distinguished the superiority of _knowledge_
-(_gnosis_) of “the most polite, the most learned, and the most wealthy
-of the Christian name.” During the first three or four centuries the
-Gnostics formed an extremely numerous as well as influential section of
-the Church. They sub-divided themselves into more than fifty particular
-sects, of whom the followers of Marcion and the Manicheans are the most
-celebrated. Holding opinions regarding the Jewish sacred scriptures
-and their authority the opposite to those of the Ebionites or Jewish
-Christians, they agreed, at least a large proportion of them, with the
-latter on the question of kreophagy.
-
-[67] _History of the Literature of Ancient Greece_, by K. O. Müller,
-continued by J. W. Donaldson, D.D., vol. iii., 58.
-
-[68] The argument here suggested, although rarely, if ever, adduced,
-may well be deemed worthy of the most serious consideration. It is,
-to our mind, one of the most forcible of all the many reasons for
-abstinence. That the life even of a really useful member of the human
-community should be supported by the slaughter of hundreds of innocent
-and intelligent beings is surely enough to “give us pause.” What,
-then, shall be said of the appalling fact, that every day thousands of
-worthless, and too often worse than useless, human lives go down to
-the grave (to be thenceforth altogether forgotten) after having been
-the cause of the slaughter and suffering of countless beings, surely
-far superior to themselves in all real worth? To object the privilege
-of an “immortal soul” is, in this case, merely a miserable subterfuge.
-Sidney Smith calculated that _forty-four_ wagon-loads of flesh had been
-consumed by himself during a life of seventy years! (See his letter to
-Lord Murray.)
-
-[69] It was the fond belief of the _mediating_ Christian writers that
-the best parts of Greek philosophy were derived, in whole or in part,
-from the Jewish Sacred Scriptures. For this belief, which has prevailed
-so widely, which, perhaps, still lingers amongst us, and which has
-engaged the useless speculation of so many minds, an Alexandrian Jew
-of the age of the later Ptolemies is responsible. It is now well known
-that he deliberately forged passages in the (so-called) Orphic poems
-and “Sybilline” predictions, in order to gain the respect of the Greek
-rulers of his country for the Jewish Scriptures. This patriotic but
-unscrupulous Jew is known by his Greek name of Aristobulus. He was
-preceptor or counsellor of Ptolemy VI.
-
-[70] 2 _Sam._ vi., 19. Clement, in common with all the first Christian
-writers, quotes from the _Septuagint_ version, which differs
-considerably from the Hebrew. The English translators of the latter,
-presuming that “flesh” must have formed part of the royal bounty,
-gratuitously insert that word in the context.
-
-[71] _Pædagogus_ ii. 1, “On Eating.”
-
-[72] These works, which would have been highly interesting, have, with
-so many other valuable productions of Greek genius, long since perished.
-
-[73] _Miscellanies_ vii. “On Sacrifices.”
-
-[74] See Plutarch’s denunciation of the very same practice of the
-butchers of his day, _Essay on Flesh Eating_. Unfortunately for
-the credit of Jewish humanity, it must be added that the method of
-butchering (enjoined, it is alleged, by their religious laws) entails
-a greater amount of suffering and torture to the victim than even the
-Christian. This fact has been abundantly proved by the evidence of many
-competent witnesses. The cruelty of the Jewish method of slaughter was
-especially exposed at one of the recent International Congresses of
-representatives of European Societies for Prevention of Cruelty.
-
-[75] _Miscellanies_ ii., 18. We have used for the most part the
-translation of the writings of Clement, published in the Ante-Nicene
-Library, by Messrs. Clarke, Edinburgh, 1869. The Greek text is corrupt.
-
-[76] Περὶ Ἀποχῆς Τῶν Εμψύχων
-
-[77] “The first book discussed alleged contradictions and other marks
-of human fallibility in the Scriptures; the third treated of Scriptural
-interpretation, and, strangely enough, repudiated the allegories of
-Origen; the fourth examined the ancient history of the Jews; and, the
-twelfth and thirteenth maintained the point now generally admitted by
-scholars--that _Daniel_ is not a prophecy, but a retrospective history
-of the age of Antiochus Epiphanes.”--_Donaldson_ (_Hist. of Gr. Lit._)
-
-[78] In justice to the old Greek Theology which, as it really was,
-has enough to answer for, it must be remarked that its Demonology, or
-belief in the powers of subordinate divinities--in the first instance
-merely the internunciaries, or mediators, or _angels_ between Heaven
-and Earth--was a very different thing from the _Diabolism_ of Christian
-theology, a fact which, perhaps, can be adequately recognised by
-those only who happen to be acquainted with the history of that most
-widely-spread and most fearful of all superstitions. Necessarily, from
-the vague and, for the most part, merely secular character of the
-earlier theologies, the _infernal_ horrors, with the frightful creed,
-tortures, burnings, &c., which characterised the faith of Christendom,
-were wholly unknown to the religion of Apollo and of Jupiter.
-
-[79] Neo or New-Platonism may be briefly defined as a _spiritual_
-development of the Socratic or Platonic teaching. In the hands of some
-of its less judicious and rational advocates it tended to degenerate
-into puerile, though harmless, superstition. With the superior
-intellects of a Plotinus, Porphyry, Longinus, Hypatia, or Proclus, on
-the other hand, it was, in the main at least, a sublime attempt at the
-purification and spiritualisation of the established orthodox creed.
-It occupied a position midway between the old and the new religion,
-which was so soon to celebrate its triumph over its effete rival.
-That Christianity, on its spiritual side (whatever the ingratitude of
-its later authorities), owes far more than is generally acknowledged
-to both the old and newer Platonism, is sufficiently apparent to the
-attentive student of theological history.
-
-[80] Author of a _Treatise on the Abandonment of the Flesh Diet_, 1709.
-He died in the year 1737.
-
-[81] Voltaire might have added the examples of the Greek _Coenobites_.
-There is at least one celebrated and long-established religious
-community, in the Sinaitic peninsula, which has always rigidly excluded
-all flesh from their diet. Like the community of La Trappe, these
-religious Vegetarians are notoriously the most free from disease and
-most long-lived of their countrymen.
-
-[82] Article _Viande_ (_Dict. Phil._) In other passages in his writings
-the philosopher of Ferney, we may here remark, expresses his sympathy
-with the humane diet. See especially his _Essai sur les Mœurs et
-l’Esprit des Nations_ (introduction), and his Romance of _La Princesse
-de Babylone_.
-
-[83] Οἰκειώσις strictly means adoption, admission to intimacy and
-family life, or “domestication.”
-
-[84] The founder of the new Academy at Athens, and the vigorous
-opponent of the Stoics.
-
-[85] That unreasoning arrogance of human selfishness, which pretends
-that all other living beings have come into existence for the sole
-pleasure and benefit of man, has often been exposed by the wiser, and
-therefore more humble, thinkers of our race. Pope has well rebuked this
-sort of monstrous arrogance:--
-
- “Has God, thou fool, worked solely for thy good,
- Thy joy, thy pastime, thy attire, thy food?
-
- * * * * *
-
- Know, Nature’s children all divide her care,
- The fur that warms a monarch, warmed a bear.
- While man exclaims: ‘See, all things for my use!’
- ‘See, man for mine,’ replies a pampered goose.
- And just as short of reason he must fall,
- Who thinks _all made for one, not one for all_.”
-
- _Essay on Man, III._
-
-And, as a commentary upon these truly philosophic verses, we may
-quote the words of a recent able writer, answering the objection,
-“Why were sheep and oxen created, if not for the use of man? replies
-to the same effect as Porphyry 1600 years ago:” It is only pride and
-imbecility in man to imagine all things made for his sole use. There
-exist millions of suns and their revolving orbs which the eye of man
-has never perceived. Myriads of animals enjoy their pastime unheeded
-and unseen by him--many are injurious and destructive to him. All exist
-for purposes but partially known. Yet we must believe, in general, that
-all were created for their own enjoyment, for mutual advantage, and for
-the preservation of universal harmony in Nature. If, merely because we
-can eat sheep pleasantly, we are to believe that they exist only to
-supply us with food, we may as well say that man was created solely
-for various parasitical animals to feed on, “_because_ they do feed on
-him.”--(_Fruits and Farinacea: the Proper Food of Man._ By J. Smith.
-Edited by Professor Newman. Heywood, Manchester; Pitman, London.) See,
-also, amongst other philosophic writers, the remarks of Joseph Ritson
-in his “Essay on Abstinence from Animal Food a Moral Duty”--(Phillips,
-London, 1802). As to Oxen and Sheep, it must be further remarked that
-they have been made what they are by the intervention of man alone. The
-original and wild stocks (especially that of sheep) are very different
-from the metamorphosed and almost helpless domesticated varieties.
-Naturam violant, pacem appellant.
-
-[86] The Artificer or _Creator, par excellence_. In the Platonic
-language, the usual distinguishing name of the subordinate creator of
-our imperfect world.
-
-[87] Cf. Ovid’s _Metam._, xv.; Plutarch’s _Essay on Flesh-Eating_;
-Thomson’s _Seasons_.
-
-[88] Περὶ Ἐποχῆς κ. τ. λ. In the number of the traditionary reformers
-and civilisers of the earlier nations, the name of Orpheus has always
-held a foremost place. In early Christian times Orpheus and the
-literature with which his name is connected occupy a very prominent
-and important position, and some celebrated forged prophecies passed
-current as the utterances of that half-legendary hero. Horace adopts
-the popular belief as to his radical dietetic reform in the following
-verses:--
-
- Silvestres homines sacer, interpresque Deorum,
- _Cædibus et fœdo victu_ deterruit Orpheus.
-
- --_Ars Poetica._
-
-Virgil assigns him a place in the first rank of the Just in the Elysian
-paradise.--_Æn._ vi.
-
-[89] In his witty satire, the _Misopogon_ or _Beard-Hater_--“a sort
-of inoffensive retaliation, which it would be in the power of few
-princes to employ”--directed against the luxurious people of Antioch,
-who had ridiculed his frugal meals and simple mode of living, “he
-himself mentions his vegetable diet, and upbraids the gross and sensual
-appetite” of that orthodox but corrupt Christian city. When they
-complained of the high prices of flesh-meats, “Julian publicly declared
-that a _frugal city ought to be satisfied with a regular supply of
-wine, oil, and bread_.”--_Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire_, xxiv.
-
-[90] Gibbon, _Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire_, xxii. The
-philosophical fable of Julian--_The Cæsars_--has been pronounced by
-the same historian to be “one of the most agreeable and instructive
-productions of ancient wit.” Its purpose is to estimate the merits or
-demerits of the various Emperors from Augustus to Constantine. As for
-the _Enemy of the Beard_, it may be ranked, for sarcastic wit, almost
-with the _Jupiter in Tragedy_ of Lucian.
-
-[91] Article, “Chrysostom,” in the _Penny Cyclopædia_.
-
-[92] Baur’s _Life and Work of St. Paul_. Part ii., chap. 3.
-
-[93] We here take occasion to observe that, while final appeals to
-our sacred Scriptures to determine any sociological question--whether
-of slavery, polygamy, war, or of dietetics--cannot be too strongly
-deprecated, a candid and impartial inquirer, nevertheless, will gladly
-recognise traces of a consciousness of the unspiritual nature of the
-sacrificial altar and shambles. He will gladly recognise that if--as
-might be expected in so various a collection of sacred writings
-produced by different minds in different ages--frequent sanction of the
-materialist mode of living may be urged on the one side; on the other
-hand, the inspiration of the more exalted minds is in accord with the
-practice of the true spiritual life. Cf. _Gen._ i., 29, 30; _Isaiah_
-i., 11-17, and xi., 9 _Ps._ l., 9-14; _Ps._ lxxxi., 14-17; _Ps._
-civ., 14, 15; _Prov._ xxiii., 2, 3, 20, 21; _Prov._ xxvii., 25-27:
-_Prov._ xxx., 8, 22; _Prov._ xxxi., 4; _Eccl._ vi., 7; _Matt._ vi. 31;
-1 _Cor._ viii., 13, and ix., 25; _Rom._ viii., 5-8, 12, 13; _Phil._
-iii., 19, and iv., 8; _James_ ii., 13, 4, and iv., 1-3; 1 _Pet._ ii.,
-11. Perhaps, next to the alleged authority of _Gen._ ix. (noticed
-and refuted by Tertullian, as already quoted), the trance-vision of
-St. Peter is most often urged by the _bibliolaters_ (or those who
-revere the _letter_ rather than the _true inspiration_ of the Sacred
-Books) as a triumphant proof of biblical sanction of materialism. Yet,
-unless, indeed, _literalism_ is to over-ride the most ordinary rules
-of common sense, as well as of criticism, all that can be extracted
-from the “Vision” (in which were presented to the sleeper “all manner
-of four-footed beasts of the earth, and _wild beasts_ and _creeping
-things_,” which it will hardly be contented he was expected to eat)
-is the fact of a mental illumination, by which the Jewish Apostle
-recognises the folly of his countrymen in arrogating to themselves the
-exclusive privileges of the “Chosen People.” Besides, as has already
-been pointed out, the earliest traditions concur in representing St.
-Peter as always a strict abstinent, insomuch that he is stated to have
-celebrated the “Eucharist” with nothing but bread and salt.--_Clement
-Hom._, xiv., 1.
-
-[94] _Homily_, lxix. on _Mat._ xxii., 1-14.
-
-[95] The _male_ sex, according to our ideas, might have been more
-properly apostrophised; and St. Chrysostom may seem, in this passage
-and elsewhere, to be somewhat partial in his invective. Candour,
-indeed, forces us to remark that the “Golden-mouthed,” in common
-with many others of the Fathers, and with the Greek and Eastern
-world in general, depreciated the qualities, both moral and mental,
-of the feminine sex. That the weaker are what the stronger choose
-to make them, is an obvious truth generally ignored in all ages and
-countries--by modern satirists and other writers, as well as by a
-Simonides or Solomon. The _partial_ severity of the Archbishop of
-Constantinople, it is proper to add, may be justified, in some measure,
-by the contemporary history of the Court of Byzantium, where the
-beautiful and licentious empress Eudoxia ruled supreme.
-
-[96] St. Chrysostom seems to have derived this forcible appeal from
-Seneca. Compare the remarks of the latter, Ep. cx.: “At, mehercule,
-ista solicite scrutata varieque condita, cum subierint ventrem, una
-atque cadem fæditas occupabit. Vis ciborum voluptatem contemnere?
-_Exitum specta._”
-
-[97] The _Homilies_ of St. John Chrysostom, Archbishop of
-Constantinople, Translated by Members of the English Church. Parker,
-Oxford. See _Hom._ vii. on _Phil._ ii. for a forcible representation of
-the inferiority, in many points, of our own to other species.
-
-[98] For example, we may refer to the fact of trials of “criminal”
-dogs, and other non-human beings, with all the formalities of ordinary
-courts of justice, and in the gravest manner recorded by credible
-witnesses. The convicted “felons” were actually hanged with all the
-circumstances of human executions. Instances of such trials are
-recorded even so late as the sixteenth century.
-
-[99] His biographer, Marinus, writes in terms of the highest admiration
-of his virtues as well as of his genius, and of the perfection to which
-he had attained by his unmaterialistic diet and manner of living. He
-seems to have had a remarkably cosmopolitan mind, since he regarded
-with equal respect the best parts of all the then existing religious
-systems; and he is said even to have paid solemn honours to all the
-most illustrious, or rather most meritorious, of his philosophic
-predecessors. That his intellect, sublime and exalted as it was, had
-contracted the taint of superstition must excite our regret, though
-scarcely our wonder, in the absence of the light of modern science;
-nor can there be any difficulty in perceiving how the miracles and
-celestial apparitions--which form a sort of halo around the great
-teachers--originated, viz., in the natural enthusiasm of his zealous
-but uncritical disciples. One of his principal works is _On the
-Theology of Plato_, in six books. Another of his productions was a
-Commentary on the _Works and Days of Hesiod_. Both are extant. He
-died at an advanced age in 485, having hastened his end by excessive
-asceticism.
-
-[100] _Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire_, xl. This testimony of
-the great historian to the merits of the last of the New-Platonists is
-all the more weighty as coming from an authority notoriously the most
-unimpassioned and unenthusiastic, perhaps, of all writers. Compare
-his remarkable expression of personal feeling--guardedly stated as it
-is--upon the question of kreophagy in his chapter on the history and
-manners of the Tartar nations (chap. xxvi).
-
-[101] _Trattato della Vita Sobria_, 1548.
-
-[102] _Sævior armis Luxuria._ We may be tempted to ask ourselves
-whether we are reading denunciations of the gluttony and profusion of
-the sixteenth century or contemporary reports of public dinners in our
-own country, _e.g._, of the Lord Mayor’s annual dinner. The vast amount
-of slaughter of all kinds of victims to supply the various dishes of
-_one_ of these exhibitions of national gluttony can be adequately
-described only by the use of the Homeric word _hecatomb_--slaughter of
-hundreds.
-
-[103] _Amorevole Esortazione a Seguire La Vita Ordinata e Sobria._
-
-[104] Cornaro’s heterodoxy in dietetics was not allowed, as may well
-be supposed, to pass unchallenged by his contemporaries. One of his
-countrymen, a person of some note, Sperone Speroni, published a reply
-under the title of “Contra la Sobrietà;” but soon afterwards recanting
-his errors (_rimettendosi spontaneamente nel buon sentiero_) he
-wrote a Discourse in favour of Temperance. About the same time there
-appeared in Paris an “Anti-Cornaro,” written “against all the rules
-of good taste,” and which the editors of the _Biographie Universelle_
-characterise as full of remarks “_tout à fait oiseuses_.”
-
-[105] More points out very forcibly that to hang for theft is
-tantamount to offering a premium for _murder_. Two hundred and fifty
-years later Beccaria and other humanitarians vainly advanced similar
-objections to the criminal code of christian Europe. It is hardly
-necessary to remark that this Draconian bloodthirstiness of English
-criminal law remained to belie the name of “civilisation” so recently
-as fifty years ago.
-
-[106] Erasmus (who, to lash satirically and more effectively the
-various follies and crimes of men places the genius of Folly itself in
-the pulpit) seems to have shared the feeling of his friend in regard to
-the character of “sport.” “When they (the ‘sportsmen’) have run down
-their victims, what strange pleasure they have in cutting them up! Cows
-and sheep may be slaughtered by common butchers, but those animals that
-are killed in hunting must be mangled by none under a gentleman, who
-will fall down on his knees, and drawing out a slashing dagger (for a
-common knife is not good enough) after several ceremonies shall dissect
-all the joints as artistically as the best skilled anatomist, while
-all who stand round shall look very intently and seem to be mightily
-surprised with the novelty, though they have seen the same thing a
-hundred times before; and he that can but dip his finger and taste of
-the blood shall think his own bettered by it. And yet the constant
-feeding on such diet does but assimilate them to the nature (?) of
-those animals they eat,” &c.--_Encomium Moriæ_, or _Praise of Folly_.
-If we recall to mind that three centuries and a half have passed away
-since More and Erasmus raised their voices against the sanguinary
-pursuits of hunting, and that it is still necessary to reiterate the
-denunciation, we shall justly deplore the slow progress of the human
-mind in all that constitutes true morality and refinement of feeling.
-
-[107] _Utopia_ II.
-
-[108] For a full and eloquent exposition of the social evils which
-threaten the country from the natural but mischievous greed of
-landowners and farmers, our readers are referred, in particular,
-to Professor Newman’s admirable Lectures upon this aspect of the
-Vegetarian creed, delivered before the Society at various times.
-(Heywood: Manchester.)
-
-[109] _Utopia._ Translated into English by Ralph Robinson, Fellow of
-Corpus Christi College. London: 1556; reprinted by Edward Arber, 1869.
-We have used this English edition as more nearly representing the style
-of Sir Thomas More than a modern version. It is a curious fact that no
-edition of the _Utopia_ was published in England during the author’s
-lifetime--or, indeed, before that of Robinson, in 1551. It was first
-printed at Louvain; and, after revision by the author, it was reprinted
-at Basle, under the auspices of Erasmus, still in the original Latin.
-
-[110] “With plaintive cries, all covered with blood, and in the
-attitude of a suppliant.” See the story of the death of Silvia’s deer
-(_Æneis_, viii.)--the most touching episode in the whole epic of
-Virgil. The affection of the Tuscan girl for her favourite, her anxious
-care of her, and the deep indignation excited amongst her people by the
-murder of the deer by the son of Æneas and his intruding followers--the
-cause of the war that ensued--are depicted with rare grace and feeling.
-
-[111] “It was in the slaughter, in the primæval times, of wild beasts
-(I suppose) the knife first was stained with the warm life-blood.”--See
-_Ovid Metam._ xv.
-
-[112] _Christian_ theology, to which doubtless Montaigne here refers,
-the force of truth compels us to note, has always uttered a very
-“uncertain sound” in regard to the rights and even to the frightful
-sufferings of the non-human species. Excepting, indeed, two or three
-isolated passages in the Jewish and Christian sacred Scriptures which,
-according to the theologians, bear a somewhat _equivocal_ meaning, it
-is not easy to discover what _particular_ theological or ecclesiastical
-maxims Montaigne could adduce.
-
-[113] We use the term in deference to universal custom, although
-Francis Bacon protested 250 years ago that “Antiquity, as we call
-it, is the young state of the world; for those times are ancient
-when the world is ancient, and not those we vulgarly account ancient
-by computing backwards--so that the present time is the real
-Antiquity.”--_Advancement of Learning, I._ See also _Novum Organum_.
-
-[114] Compare Shakspere’s eloquent indignation:--
-
- “Man, proud Man,
- Dressed in a little brief authority,
- Most ignorant of what he’s most assured--
- His glassy essence--like an angry ape,
- Plays such fantastic tricks before high heaven,” &c.
-
- _Measure for Measure._
-
-[115] With these just and common-sense arguments of Montaigne compare
-the very remarkable treatise (remarkable both by the profession and
-by the age of the author) of Hieronymus or Jerome Rorarius, published
-under the title--“That the [so-called] irrational animals often make
-use of reason better than men.” (_Quod Animalia Bruta Sæpe Utantur
-Ratione Melius Homine._) It was given to the world by the celebrated
-physician, Gabriel Naudé, in 1648, one hundred years after it was
-written, and, as pointed out by Lange, it is therefore earlier than
-the Essais of Montaigne. “It is distinguished,” according to Lange,
-“by its severe and serious tone, and by the assiduous emphasising of
-just such traits of the lower animals as are most generally denied to
-them, as being products of the higher faculties of the soul. With their
-virtues the vices of men are set in sharp contrast. We can therefore
-understand that the MS., although written by a priest, who was a friend
-both of Pope and Emperor, had to wait so long for publication.” (_Hist.
-of Materialism._ Vol. i., 225. Eng. Trans.) It is noteworthy that the
-title, as well as the arguments, of the book of Rorarius reveals its
-original inspiration--the Essay of Plutarch. Equally heterodox upon
-this subject is the _De La Sagesse_ of Montaigne’s friend, Pierre
-Charron.
-
-[116] _Essais_ de Michel de Montaigne, II., 12.
-
-[117] See Article in _English Cyclopædia_.
-
-[118] See _Elémens de la Philosophie de Newton_. The whole passage
-breathes the true spirit of humanity and philosophy, and deserves
-to be quoted in full in this place: “Il y a surtout dans l’homme
-une disposition à la compassion aussi généralement répandue que nos
-autres instincts. Newton avait cultivé ce sentiment d’humanité, et
-il l’etendait jusqu’aux animaux. Il était fortement convaincu avec
-Locke, que Dieu a donné aux animaux une mésure d’idées, et les mêmes
-sentiments qu’à nous. Il ne pouvait penser que Dieu, qui ne fait rien
-en vain, eût donné aux animaux des organes de sentiment, _afin qu’elles
-n’eussent point de sentiment_. Il trouvait une contradiction bien
-affreuse à croire que les animaux sentent, et à les faire souffrir.
-Sa morale s’accordait en ce point avec sa philosophie. _Il ne cédait
-qu’avec répugnance à l’usage barbare de nous nourrir du sang et de
-la chair des êtres semblables à nous_, que nous caressons tous les
-jours. Il ne permit jamais dans sa maison qu’on les fit mourir par
-des morts lentes et recherchées, pour en rendre la nourriture plus
-délicieuse. Cette compassion qu’il avait pour les animaux se tournait
-en vraie charité pour les hommes. En effet, _sans l’humanité--vertu
-qui comprend toutes les vertus--on ne mériterait guère le nom de
-philosophe_.”--_Elémens_ v. An expression of feeling in sufficiently
-striking contrast to the ordinary ideas. Compare _Essay on the Human
-Understanding_, ii., 2.
-
-[119] _History of Materialism._--We may here observe that Descartes
-seems to have adopted his extraordinary theory as to the non-human
-races as a sort of _dernier resort_. In a letter to one of his friends
-(Louis Racine) he declares himself driven to his theory by the rigour
-of the dilemma, that (seeing the innocence of the victims of man’s
-selfishness) it is necessary either that they should he insensible to
-suffering, or that God, who has made them, should be unjust. Upon which
-Gleïzès makes the following reflection: “This reasoning is conclusive.
-One must either be a Cartesian, or allow that man is very vile. Nothing
-is more rigorous than this consequence.”--(_Thalysie Ou La Nouvelle
-Existence_). La Fontaine has well illustrated the absurdity of the
-animated machine theory in _Fables_ x. 1.
-
-[120] See “_Elémens de la Philosophie de Newton_.”
-
-[121] _Suspecta mihi semper fuerit_ (he writes) _ipsa hominis_ φιλαυτία.
-
-[122] See Gassendi’s Letter, _Viro Clarissimo et Philosopho ac Medico
-Expertissimo Joanni Baptistæ Helmontio Amico Suo Singulari_. Dated,
-Amsterdam, 1629.
-
-[123] _Physics._ Book II. _De Virtutibus._
-
-[124] See _Philosophiæ Epicuri Syntagma. De Sobrietate contra Gulam._
-(“View of the Philosophy of Epikurus: On Sobriety as opposed to
-Gluttony.”) Part III. Florentiæ, 1727. Folio. Vol. III.
-
-[125] _Advancement of Learning_, iv., 2. Bacon’s suggestion seems
-to imply that human beings were still vivisected, for the “good” of
-science, in his time. Celsus, the well-known Latin physician of the
-second century, had protested against this cold-blooded barbarity of
-deliberately cutting up a living human body. The wretched victims
-of the vivisecting knife were, it seems, slaves, criminals, and
-captives, who were handed over by the authorities to the physiological
-“laboratory.” Harvey, Bacon’s contemporary, is notorious (and, it ought
-to be added, infamous) for the number and the unrelenting severity of
-his experiments upon the non-human slaves, which, though constantly
-alleged by modern vivisectors to have been the means by which he
-discovered the “circulation of the blood,” have been clearly proved to
-have served merely as demonstrations in physiology to his pupils. But
-we no longer wonder at Harvey’s indifference to the horrible suffering
-of which he was the cause, when we read the similar atrocities of
-vivisection and “pathology” of our own time. From the cold-blooded
-cruelties of Harvey, who was accustomed to amuse Charles I. and his
-family with his demonstrations, it is a pleasant relief to turn to
-the better feeling of Shakspere on that subject. See his _Cymbeline_
-(i., 6), where the Queen, who is experimenting in poisons, tells her
-physician,
-
- “I will try the force of these thy compounds on such creatures as
- We count not worth the hanging--but none human.”
-
-and is reminded that she would “from this practice but make hard
-her heart.” Such a rebuke is in keeping with the true feeling which
-inspired the poet to picture the undeserved pangs of the hunted Deer in
-_As You Like It_, ii., 1.
-
-[126] _Advancement of Learning._ viii., 2.
-
-[127] See _Acetaria_ (page 170). By John Evelyn.
-
-[128] The tract of Samuel Hartlib, entitled, _A Design for Plenty,
-by a Universal Planting of Fruit Trees_, which appeared during the
-Commonwealth Government, no doubt suggested to Evelyn his kindred
-publication. Hartlib (of a distinguished German family) settled in this
-country somewhere about the year 1630. By his writings, in advocacy
-of better agriculture and horticulture, he has deserved a grateful
-commemoration from after-times. Cromwell gave him a pension of £300,
-which was taken away by Charles II., and he died in poverty and
-neglect. It was to him Milton dedicated his _Tractate on Education_.
-
-[129] Locke (one of the very highest names in Philosophy) had already
-exhorted English mothers to make their children abstain “wholly from
-flesh,” at least until the completion of the fourth or fifth year. He
-strongly recommends a very sparing amount of flesh for after years; and
-thinks that many maladies may be traceable to the foolish indulgence of
-mothers in respect to diet.--See _Thoughts on Education_, 1690.
-
-[130] He quotes, amongst others, Tertullian _De Jejuniis_ (On Fasting),
-cap. iv.; Jerome (_Adv. Jovin_); Clemens of Alexandria (_Strom._ vii.);
-Eusebius, _Preparatio Evangelica_ (Preparation for the Gospel), who
-cites several abstinents from amongst the philosophers of the old
-theologies.
-
-[131] _Acetaria_ (“A Discourse of Salads”). Dedicated to Lord Somers,
-of Evesham, Lord High Chancellor of England, and President of the Royal
-Society, London, 1699.
-
-[132] Translated by Cowper from the Latin poems of Milton. In a note
-to the original poem Thomas Warton justly remarks that “Milton’s
-panegyrics on temperance both in eating and in drinking, resulting from
-his own practice, are frequent.”
-
-[133] _Paradise Lost_, v. and xi. Cf. _Queen Mab_.
-
-[134] _Le sang humain abruti ne pouvait plus s’élever aux choses
-intellectuelles._ See _Discours sur L’Histoire Universelle_, a
-historical sketch which, though necessarily infected by the theological
-prejudices of the bishop, is, for the rest, considering the period in
-which it was written, a meritorious production as one of the earliest
-attempts at a sort of “philosophy of history.”
-
-[135] _Penny Cyclopædia_, Article Mandeville.
-
-[136] Upon which Ritson aptly remarks: “The sheep is not so much
-‘designed’ for the _man_ as the _man_ is for the _tiger_, this animal
-being naturally carnivorous, which man is not. But nature, and justice,
-and humanity are not always one and the same thing.” To this remark we
-may add with equal force, that almost all the living beings upon whom
-our species preys have been so artificially changed from their natural
-condition for the gratification of its selfish appetite as to be with
-difficulty identified with the original stocks. So much for this theory
-of creative _design_.
-
-[137] _Fable of the Bees_, i. 187, &c.
-
-[138] _Fable_ xxxvi., _Pythagoras and the Countryman_. This fable of
-Gay may have been suggested by that of Æsop--preserved by Plutarch--who
-represents a wolf watching a number of shepherds eating a sheep,
-and saying to himself--“If _I_ were doing what _you_ are now about,
-what an uproar you would make!” See also the instructive fable of La
-Fontaine--_L’Homme et la Couleuvre_, one of the finest in the whole
-twelve Books (_Livre_ x., 2), in which the Cow and Ox accuse the
-base ingratitude of Man for the cruel neglect, and, finally, for the
-barbarous slaughter of his fellow-labourers. The Cow, appealed to by
-the Adder, replies:--
-
- “Pourquoi dissimuler?
- Je nourris celui-ci depuis longues années:
- Il n’a sans mes bienfaits passé nulles journées.
- Tout n’est que pour lui seul: mon lait et mes enfants
- Le font à la maison revenir les mains pleines.
- Même j’ai rétabli sa santé, que les ans
- Avaient altérée; et mes peines
- Ont pour but son plaisir ainsi que son besoin.
- Enfin me voilà vieille. _Il me laisse
- Sans herbe._ S’il voulait encore me laisser paître!
- Mais je suis attachée.....
- Force coups, peu de gré. Puis, quand il était vieux,
- On croyait l’honorer chaque fois que les hommes
- _Achetaient de son sang l’indulgence des dieux_.”
-
-[139] _The Wild Boar and the Ram._ For admirable rebukes of human
-arrogance, see _The Elephant and the Bookseller_ and _The Man and the
-Flea_.
-
-[140] He was at one time so corpulent that he could not get in and out
-of his carriage in visiting his patients at Bath.
-
-[141] One of the many excellences of the non-flesh dietary is this
-essential quality of fruits and vegetables, that they contain in
-themselves sufficient liquid to allow one to dispense with a large
-proportion of all extraneous drinks, and certainly with all alcoholic
-kinds. Hence it is at once the easiest and the surest preventive of all
-excessive drinking. Much convincing testimony has been collected to
-this effect by the English and German Vegetarian Societies.
-
-[142] It is neither necessary nor possible for everyone to practise
-so extreme abstemiousness; but it is instructive to compare it for a
-moment with the ordinary and prevalent indulgence in eating.
-
-[143] _A Life of George Cheyne, M.D._, Parker and Churchill, 1846. See
-also _Biog. Britannica_.
-
-[144] Dr. Samuel Johnson gave up wine by the advice of Cheyne, and
-drank tea with Mrs. Thrale and Boswell till he died, æt. 75.
-
-[145] Bayle, the author of the great _Dictionnaire Historique et
-Critique_ (1690), to whom belongs the lasting honour of having
-inaugurated the critical method in history and philosophy, which
-has since led to such extensive and important results, seems also
-to have been the first explicitly to state the difficulties of that
-greatest _crux_ of Theology--the problem of the existence, or rather
-dominance, of Evil. His rival Le Clerc, in his _Bibliothéque_, took up
-the orthodox cudgels. Lord Shaftesbury, the celebrated theologian and
-moralist, wrote his dialogue--_The Moralists_ (1709)--in direct answer
-to Bayle, followed the next year by the _Theodike or Vindication of
-the Deity_ of Leibnitz. Two of the most able and distinguished of the
-Anti-Optimists are Voltaire and Schopenhauer, the former of whom never
-wearies of using his unrivalled powers of irony and sarcasm on the
-_Tout est Bien_ theory. As for the latter philosopher, he has carried
-his Anti-Optimism to the extremes of Pessimism.
-
-[146] Pope here is scarcely logical upon his own premiss. It seems
-impossible, upon any grounds of reason or analogy, to deny to the
-lower animals a posthumous existence while vindicating it for
-ourselves, inasmuch as the _essential_ conditions of existence are
-identical for many other beings. To the serious thinker the question
-of a post-terrestrial state of existence must stand or fall for both
-upon the same grounds. Yet what can well be more weak, or more of
-a subterfuge, than the pretence of many well-meaning persons, who
-seek to excuse their indifferentism to the cruel sufferings of their
-humble fellow-beings by the expression of a belief or a hope that
-there is a future retributive state for them? It must be added that
-this idle speculation--whether the non-human races are capable of
-post-terrestrial life or no--might, to any serious apprehension,
-seem to be wholly beside the mark. But what can be more monstrously
-ridiculous (γέλοιον, in Lucian’s language) than the inconsistency
-of those who would maintain the affirmative, and yet persist in
-_devouring_ their clients? _Risum teneatis, amici!_
-
-[147] _Spence’s Anecdotes_ and _The Guardian_, May 21, 1713. His
-indignation was equally aroused by the tortures of the vivisectors of
-the day. And he demands how do men know that they have “a right to kill
-beings whom they [at least, the vast majority] are so little above, for
-their own curiosity, or even for some use to them.”
-
-[148] See _Travels_, &c. Part IV.
-
-[149] _Dict. Phil._, in article _Viande_, where it is lamented that
-his book, as far as appeared, had made no more converts than had the
-Treatise of Porphyry fifteen centuries before.
-
-[150] See the amusing scene of the gourmand Canon Sedillo and Dr.
-Sangrado, who had been called in to the gouty and fever-stricken
-patient: “‘Pray, what is your ordinary diet?’ [asks the physician.] ‘My
-usual food,’ replied the Canon, ‘is broth and juicy meat.’ ‘Broth and
-juicy meat!’ cried the doctor, alarmed. ‘I do not wonder to find you
-sick; such dainty dishes are poisoned pleasures and snares that luxury
-spreads for mankind, so as to ruin them the more effectually.... What
-an irregularity is here! what a frightful regimen! You ought to have
-been dead long ago. How old are you, pray?’ ‘I am in my sixty-ninth
-year,’ replied the Canon. ‘Exactly,’ said the physician; ‘an early old
-age is always the fruits of intemperance. If you had drunk nothing
-else than pure water all your life, and had been satisfied with
-simple nourishment--such as boiled apples, for example--you would
-not now be tormented with the gout, and all your limbs would perform
-their functions with ease. I do not despair, however, of setting you
-to rights, provided that you be wholly resigned to my directions.’”
-(_Adventures of Gil Blas_, ii., 2.) We may comment upon the satire
-of the novelist (for so it was intended), that irony or sarcasm is a
-legitimate and powerful weapon when directed against falsehood; that
-there was, and is, only too much in the practice and principles of the
-profession open to ridicule; but that the attempted ridicule of the
-better living does not redound to the penetration or good sense of the
-satirist.
-
-[151] Compare the similar thoughts of the Latin poet, _Metam._ xv.
-
-[152] _Autumn._ Read the verses which immediately follow, describing,
-with profound pathos, the sufferings and anguish of the hunted Deer and
-Hare.
-
-[153] _Summer._
-
-[154] _Observations on Man, II., 3._
-
-[155] Quam vehementes haberent tirunculi impetus primos ad optima
-quæque _si quis exhortaretur, si quis impelleret_! The general failure
-Seneca traces partly to the fault of the schoolmasters, who prefer to
-instil into the minds of their pupils a knowledge of _words_ rather
-than of _things_--of _dialectics_ rather than of _dietetics_ (nos
-docent disputare non vivere), and partly to the fault of parents who
-expect a head in place of a heart training. (See _Letters to Lucilius_,
-cviii.) _Quis doctores docebit?_
-
-[156] An instance of the common confusion of thought and logic. The too
-obvious fact that a large proportion of animals are carnivorous neither
-proves nor justifies the carnivorousness of the _human_ species.
-The real question is, is the human race originally _frugivorous_ or
-_carnivorous_? Is it allied to the Tiger or to the Ape?
-
-[157] “Who is this female personification ‘Nature’? What are ‘her
-principles,’ and where does she reside?” asks Ritson quoting this
-passage.
-
-[158] _The World._ No. 190, as quoted by Ritson.
-
-[159] Persian poets of the tenth and thirteenth centuries of our era.
-
-[160] _Asiatic Researches._ iv. 12
-
-[161] _Elémens de la Philosophie de Newton_, v. Haller, the founder
-of modern physiology, assures us that “Newton, while he was engaged
-upon his _Optics_, lived almost entirely on bread, and wine, and
-water” (_Newtonus, dum_ Optica _scribebat, solo pœnè vino pane et aquâ
-vixit_).--_Elements of Physiology_, vi., 198.
-
-[162] A fact which brings out into strong relief the entirely
-superfluous luxuries of living of the English residents.
-
-[163] _Essai sur les Mœurs et l’Esprit des Nations_, introduction
-section xvi., and chap. iii. and iv.
-
-[164] See _Gen._ ix. and _Ecclesiastes_ iii., 18, 19.--Note by Voltaire.
-
-[165] See _Lettres d’Amabed à Shastasid_. See also article _Viande_ in
-the _Dictionnaire Philosophique_.
-
-[166] _La Princesse de Babylone._ Cf. _Dialogue du Chapon et de la
-Poularde_.
-
-[167] See article _Bêtes_ in the _Dict. Phil._
-
-[168] _Elements of Physiology._
-
-[169] Cf. Virgil’s “Magna parens frugum.”
-
-[170] See the _Nouvelle Biographie Universelle_. Didot, Paris.
-
-[171] _Græcorum Chirurgici Libri._ Firenze, 1754.
-
-[172] _Dissertazione sopra l’uso esterno appresso gli Antichi
-dell’acqua fredda sul corpo umano._ Firenze, 1747.
-
-[173] _Del Vitto Pithagorico Per Uso Della Medicina: Discorso D’Antonio
-Cocchi._ Firenze, 1743. A translation appeared in Paris in 1762 under
-the title of _Le Régime de Pythagore_.
-
-[174] _Del Vitto Pithagorico._ Amongst the heralds and forerunners
-of Cocchi deserve to be mentioned with honour Ramazzini (1633-1714),
-who earned amongst his countrymen the title of Hippokrates the Third;
-Lessio (in his _Hygiastricon_, or Treatise on Health), in the earlier
-part of the 17th century; and Lemcry, the French Physician and Member
-of the Académie, author of _A Treatise on all Sorts of Food_, which was
-translated into English by D. Hay, M.D., in 1745.
-
-[175] Rousseau adds in a note: “I know that the English boast loudly of
-their humanity and of the good disposition of their nation, which they
-term ‘good nature,’ but it is in vain for them to proclaim this far and
-wide. Nobody repeats it after them.” Gibbon, in the well-known passage
-in his xxvith chapter, in which he speculates upon the influence of
-flesh-eating in regard to the savage habits of the Tartar tribes,
-quoting this remark of Rousseau, in his ironical way, says: “Whatever
-we may think of the general observation, _we_ shall not easily allow
-the truth of his example.”--_Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire_,
-xxvi.
-
-[176] He corrects this mistake in a note: “One of my English
-translators has pointed out this error, and both [of my translators]
-have rectified it. Butchers and surgeons are received as witnesses, but
-the former are not admitted as jurymen or peers in _criminal_ trials,
-while surgeons are so.” Even this amended statement needs revision.
-
-[177] How the French apostle of humanitarianism and refinement of
-manners, if he were living, would regard the recently reported practice
-of French and other physicians of sending their patients to the
-slaughter-houses to drink the blood of the newly-slaughtered oxen may
-be more easily imagined than expressed.
-
-[178] Rather _carnes consumere nati_--“born simply to devour.”--See
-_Hor._, Ep. I., 2.
-
-[179] _Emile: ou de l’Education_, II.
-
-[180] _Julie_ IV., _Lettre_ 10. See also her protests against shooting
-and fishing.
-
-[181] _Confessions._ One of his friends, Dussault, surprised him, it
-seems, on one occasion eating a “cutlet.” Rousseau, conscious of the
-betrayal of his principles, “blushed up to the whites of his eyes.”
-(See Gleïzè’s _Thalysic_.) In truth, as we have already observed, his
-principles on the subject of _dietetics_, as on some other matters,
-were better than his practice. His sensibility was always greater than
-his strength of mind.
-
-[182] _Amœnitates Academicæ_, x., 8.
-
-[183] This little word “seems” here, as in very many other
-controversies, has a vast importance and needs a double emphasis.
-
-[184] Buffon here entirely ignores the true cause of the “inanition” of
-the poor classes of the community. It is not the want of _flesh_-meats,
-but the want of all solid and nutritious _meat_ of any kind, which
-is to be found amply in the abundant stores supplied by Nature at
-first hand in the various parts of the vegetable world. Were the poor
-able to procure, and were they instructed how best to use, the most
-nourishing of the various _farinacea_, fruits, and kitchen herbs,
-supplied by the home and foreign markets, we should hear nothing or
-little of the scandalous scenes of starvation which are at present of
-daily occurrence in our midst. The example of the Irish living upon
-a few potatoes and buttermilk, or of the Scotch peasantry, instanced
-by Adam Smith, proves how all-sufficient would be a diet judiciously
-selected from the riches of the vegetable world. For, _à fortiori_, if
-the Irish, living thus meagrely, not only support life, but exhibit
-a _physique_ which, in the last century, called forth the admiration
-of the author of _The Wealth of Nations_, might not our English poor
-thrive upon a richer and more substantial vegetable diet which could
-easily be supplied but for the astounding indifference of the ruling
-classes?
-
-[185] _Hist. Naturelle, Le Bœuf._
-
-[186] Edition of Swift’s Works. Canon Sydney Smith, equally celebrated
-as a _bon-vivant_ and as a wit, at the termination of his life writes
-thus to his friend Lord Murray: “You are, I hear, attending more to
-diet than heretofore. If you wish for anything like happiness in the
-_fifth_ act of life _eat and drink about one-half what you could
-eat and drink_. Did I ever tell you my calculation about eating and
-drinking? Having ascertained the weight of what I could live upon, so
-as to preserve health and strength, and what I did live upon, I found
-that, between ten and seventy years of age, I had eaten and drunk
-_forty-four horse wagon-loads of meat and drink more than would have
-preserved me in life and health_! The value of this mass of nourishment
-I considered to be worth seven thousand pounds sterling. It occurred
-to me _that I must, by my voracity, have starved to death fully a
-hundred persons_. This is a frightful calculation, but irresistibly
-true.” Commentary upon this candid statement is superfluous. _Ab uno
-disce omnes._ If amongst the richer classes the ordinary liver may
-consume a somewhat smaller quantity of life during his longer or
-shorter existence, at all events the _sum total_ must be a sufficiently
-startling one for all who may have the courage and candour to reflect
-upon this truly appalling subject. Another thought irresistibly
-suggests itself. What _proportion_ of human lives thus supported is of
-any real value in the world?
-
-[187] In reply to this sort of apology it is obvious to ask--“Have
-the _frugivorous_ races, who form no inconsiderable proportion of the
-_mammals_, no claim to be considered?”
-
-[188] To this very popular fallacy it is necessary only to object that
-Nature may very well be supposed able to maintain the proper balance
-for the most part. For the rest, man’s proper duty is to harmonise and
-regulate the various conditions of life, as far as in him lies, not
-indeed by satisfying his selfish propensities, but by assuming the
-part of a benevolent and beneficent superior. To this we may add with
-some force, that man appeared on the scene within a comparatively very
-recent geological period, so that the Earth fared, it seems, very well
-without him for countless ages.
-
-[189] And, in point of fact, two-thirds at least of the whole human
-population of our globe.
-
-[190] This popular excuse is perhaps the feeblest and most disingenuous
-of all the defences usually made for flesh-eating. Can the mere gift
-of life compensate for all the horrible and frightful sufferings
-inflicted, in various ways, upon their victims by the multiform
-selfishness and barbarity of man? To what unknown, as well as known,
-tortures are not every day the victims of the slaughter-house
-subjected? From their birth to their death, the vast majority--it is
-too patent a fact--pass an existence in which freedom from suffering of
-one kind or other--whether from insufficient food or confined dwellings
-on the one hand, or from the positive sufferings endured _in transitu_
-to the slaughter-house by ship or rail, or by the brutal savagery of
-cattle-drivers, &c.--is the exception rather than the rule.
-
-[191] _Moral and Political Philosophy_, i., 2. It is deeply to be
-deplored that Dr. Paley is in a very small minority amongst christian
-theologians, of candour, honesty, and feeling sufficient to induce
-them to dispute at all so orthodox a thesis as the right to slaughter
-for food. That he is compelled, by the force of truth and honesty, to
-abandon the popular pretexts and subterfuges, and to seek refuge in the
-_supposed_ authority of the book of _Genesis_, is significant enough.
-Of course, to all reasonable minds, such a course is tantamount to
-giving up the defence of kreophagy altogether; and, if it were not for
-theological necessity, it would be sufficiently surprising that Paley’s
-intelligence or candour did not discover that if flesh-eating is to be
-defended on biblical grounds, so, by parity of reasoning, are also to
-be defended--slavery, polygamy, wars of the most cruel kind, &c.
-
-[192] _The Principles of Moral and Political Philosophy_, xii., 11.
-See, amongst others, the philosophical reflections of Mr. Greg in his
-_Enigmas of Life_, Appendix. But the subject has been most fully and
-satisfactorily dealt with by Professor Newman in his various Addresses.
-
-[193] Compare the similar observation of Flourens, Secretary of the
-French Academy of Sciences, in his _Treatise on the Longevity of Man_
-(Paris, 1812). He quotes Cornaro, Lessio, Haller, and other authorities
-on the reformed regimen.
-
-[194] He well exposes the fatal mischief of _emulation_ (in place of
-love of truth and of love of knowledge, for its own sake) in schools
-which tends to intensify, if not produce, the _selfism_ dominant in all
-ranks of the community. Not the least meritorious of his exhortations
-to Governments is his desire that they would employ themselves in such
-useful works as the general planting of trees, producing nourishing
-foods, in place of devastating the earth by wars, &c.
-
-[195] The reason, as given by himself, for his abandonment in after
-years of his self-imposed reform, is worthy neither of his philosophic
-acumen nor of his ordinary judgment. It seems that on one occasion,
-while his companions were engaged in sea-fishing, he observed that the
-captured fish, when opened, revealed in its interior the remains of
-another fish recently devoured. The young printer seemed to see in this
-fact the ordinance of Nature, by which living beings live by slaughter,
-and the justification of human carnivorousness. (See _Autobiography_.)
-This was, however, to use the famous Sirian’s phrase, “to reason
-badly;” for the sufficient answer to this alleged justification of
-man’s flesh-eating propensity is simply that the fish in question was,
-by natural organisation, _formed_ to prey upon its fellows of the sea,
-whereas man is _not formed_ by Nature for feeding upon his fellows of
-the land; and, further, that the larger proportion of _terrestrials_ do
-not live by slaughter.
-
-[196] _Wealth of Nations_ iii., 341. See, too, Sir Hans Sloane
-(_Natural History of Jamaica_, i., 21, 22), who enumerates almost
-every species of vegetable food that has been, or may be, used for
-food, in various parts of the globe; the philosophic French traveller,
-Volney (_Voyages_), who, in comparing flesh with non-flesh feeders, is
-irresistibly forced to admit that the “habit of shedding blood, or even
-of seeing it shed, corrupts all sentiment of humanity;” the Swedish
-traveller Sparrman, the disciple of Linné, who corrects the astonishing
-physiological errors of Buffon as to the human digestive apparatus;
-Anquetil (_Récherches sur les Indes_), the French translator of the
-_Zend-Avesta_ who, from his sojourn with the vegetarian Hindus and
-Persians, derived those more refined ideas which caused him to discard
-the coarser Western living; and Sir F. M. Eden (_State of the Poor_).
-
-[197] _History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire_, xxvi.
-Notwithstanding Gibbon’s expression of horror, we shall venture to
-remark that the “unfeeling murderers” of the Tartar steppes, in
-slaughtering each for himself, are more just than the _civilised_
-peoples of Europe, with whom a pariah-class is set apart to do the
-cruel and degrading work of the community.
-
-[198] _The Task._ When Cowper wrote this (in 1782) the Law was entirely
-silent upon the rights of the lower animals to protection. It was not
-until nearly half a century later that the British Legislature passed
-the first Act (and it was a very partial one) which at all considered
-the rights of any non-human race. Yet Hogarth’s _Four Stages of
-Cruelty_--to say nothing of literature--had been several years before
-the world. It was passed by the persistent energy and courage of one
-man--an Irish member--who braved the greatest amount of scorn and
-ridicule, both within and without the Legislature, before he succeeded
-in one of the most meritorious enterprises ever undertaken. Martin’s
-Act has been often amended or supplemented, and always with no little
-opposition and difficulty.
-
-[199] The term “Mercy,” it is important to observe, is one of those
-words of ambiguous meaning, which are liable, in popular parlance, to
-be misused. It seems to have a double origin--from _misericordia_,
-“Pity” (its better parentage), and _merces_, “Gain,” and, by deduction,
-“Pardon” granted for some consideration. It is in this latter sense
-that the term seems generally to be used in respect of the non-human
-races. But it is obvious to object that “pardon,” applicable to
-_criminals_, can have no meaning as applied to the innocent. _Pity_
-or _Compassion_, still more _Justice_--these are the terms properly
-employed.
-
-[200] The observation of a _non-Christian_ moralist (_Juvenal_, xv.) It
-is the motto chosen by Oswald for his title page.
-
-[201] In the Hindu sacred scriptures, and especially in the teaching
-of the great founder of the most extensive religion on the globe, this
-regard for non-human life, however originating, is more obvious than
-in any other sacred books. But it is most charmingly displayed in that
-most interesting of all Eastern poetry and drama--_Sakuntala; or The
-Fatal Ring_, of the Hindu Kalidâsa, the most frequently translated of
-all the productions of Hindu literature. We may refer our readers also
-to _The Light of Asia_, an interesting versification of the principal
-teaching of Sakya-Muni or Gautama.
-
-[202] _The Cry of Nature: an Appeal to Mercy and to Justice on behalf
-of the Persecuted Animals._ By John Oswald. London, 1791.
-
-[203] _Long Life, or the Art of Prolonging Human Existence._
-
-[204] See the _Nouvelle Biographie Universelle_ for complete
-enumeration of his writings.
-
-[205] _Makrobiotik._
-
-[206] Afterwards Sir Richard Phillips, whose admirable exposition of
-his reasons for abandoning flesh-eating, published in the _Medical
-Journal_, July 1811, is quoted in its due place.
-
-[207] _Abstinence from Animal Food a Moral Duty_, IX. Ritson, in a
-note, quotes the expression of surprise of a French writer, that
-whereas abstinence “from blood and from things strangled” is especially
-and solemnly enjoined by the immediate successors of Christ, in a
-well-known prohibition, yet this sacred obligation is daily “made of
-none effect” by those calling themselves _Christians_.
-
-[208] “I have known,” says Dr. Arbuthnot, “more than one instance of
-irascible passions having been much subdued by a vegetable diet.”--Note
-by Ritson.
-
-[209] Written in 1802. Since that time the “pastime” of worrying
-bulls and bears, has in this country become illegal and extinct.
-Cock-fighting, though illegal, seems to be still popular with the
-“sporting” classes of the community.
-
-[210] _General Advertiser_, March 4th, 1784. Since Ritson quoted this
-from the newspaper of his day, 80 years ago, the same scenes of equal
-and possibly of still greater barbarity have been recorded in our
-newspapers, season after season, of the royal and other hunts, with
-disgusting monotony of detail. Voltaire’s remarks upon this head are
-worthy of quotation: “It has been asserted that Charles IX. was the
-author of a book upon hunting. It is very likely that if this prince
-had cultivated less the art of torturing and killing other animals,
-and had not acquired in the forests the habit of seeing blood run,
-there would have been more difficulty in getting from him the order of
-St. Bartholomew. The chase is one of the most sure means for blunting
-in men the sentiment of pity for their own species; an effect so much
-the more fatal, as those who are addicted to it, placed in a more
-elevated rank, have more need of this bridle.”--_Œuvres_ LXXII., 213.
-In Flaubert’s remarkable story of _La Légende de St. Julien_ the hero
-“developes by degrees a propensity to bloodshed. He kills the mice in
-the chapel, the pigeons in the garden, and soon his advancing years
-gave him opportunity of indulging this taste in hunting. He spends
-whole days in the chase, caring less for the ‘sport’ than for the
-slaughter.” One day he shoots a Fawn, and while the despairing mother,
-“looking up to heaven, cried with a loud voice, agonising and human,”
-St. Julien remorselessly kills her also. Then the male parent, a
-noble-looking Stag, is shot last of all; but, advancing, nevertheless,
-he comes up to the terrified murderer, and “stopped suddenly, and with
-flaming eyes and solemn tone, as of a just judge, he spoke three times,
-while a bell tolled in the distance, ‘Accursed one! ruthless of heart!
-thou shalt slay thy father and mother also,’ and tottering and closing
-his eyes he expired.” The blood-stained man on one occasion is followed
-closely by all the victims of his wanton cruelty, who press around him
-with avenging looks and cries. He fulfils the prophecy of the Stag, and
-murders his parents.--See _Fortnightly Review_, April, 1878.
-
-[211] It is scarcely necessary to remind our readers that a quarter of
-a century later (1827), when Martin had the courage to introduce the
-first bill for the prevention of cruelty to certain of the domesticated
-animals (a very partial measure after all), the humane attempt was
-greeted by an almost universal shout of ridicule and derision, both in
-and out of the Legislature.
-
-[212] See Appendix.
-
-[213] Quoted from an article in the _Gentleman’s Magazine_, (August,
-1787), signed _Etonensīs_, who, amongst other particulars, states of
-the hero of his sketch that he was “one of the most original geniuses
-who have ever existed.... He was well skilled in natural philosophy,
-and might be said to have been a moral philosopher, not in _theory_
-only, but in strict and uniform _practice_. He was remarkably humane
-and charitable; and, though poor, was a bold and avowed enemy to every
-species of oppression.... Certain it is, that he accounted the murder
-(as he called it) of the meanest animal, except in self defence, a
-very criminal breach of the laws of nature; insisting that the creator
-of all things had constituted man not the _tyrant_, but the lawful
-and limited _sovereign_, of the inferior animals, who, he contended,
-answered the ends of their being better than their little despotic
-lord.... He did not think it
-
- ‘Enough
- In this late age, advent’rous to have touched
- Light on the precepts of the Samian Sage,’
-
-for he acted in strict conformity with them.... His vegetable and milk
-diet afforded him, in particular, very sufficient nourishment; for
-when I last saw him, he was still a tall, robust, and rather corpulent
-man, though upwards of fourscore.” He was reported it seems, to be a
-believer in the _Metempsychosis_. “It was probably so said,” remarks
-Ritson, “by ignorant people who cannot distinguish justice or humanity
-from an absurd and impossible system. The compiler of the present book,
-like Pythagoras and John Williamson, abstains from flesh-food, but he
-does not believe in the _Metempsychosis_, and much doubts whether it
-was the _real_ belief of either of those philosophers.”--_Abstinence
-from Animal Food a Moral Duty_, by Joseph Ritson. R. Phillips, London,
-1802.
-
-[214] In a sketch of the life of George Nicholson, contributed to a
-Manchester journal, by Mr. W. E. A. Axon.
-
-[215] Perhaps the fallacy of this line of apology, on the part of the
-ordinary dietists, cannot be better illustrated than by the example
-of the man-eating tribes of New Zealand, Central Africa, and other
-parts of the world, who confessedly are (or were) _hominivorous_, and
-who have been by travellers quoted as some of the finest races of men
-on the globe. The “wholesome nutriment” of their human food was as
-forcible an argument for their stomach as the “agreeable flavour” was
-attractive for their palates. Such glaring fallacy might be illustrated
-further by the example of the man-eating tiger who, we may justly
-imagine, would use similar apologies for his practice.
-
-[216] _On the Conduct, &c._, and _The Primeval Diet of Man_, &c., by
-George Nicholson, Manchester and London, 1797, 1801. The author assumes
-as his motto for the title-page the words of Rousseau--_Hommes, soyez
-humains! C’est votre premier devoir. Quelle sagesse y a-t-il pour vous
-hors de l’humanité?_ “Humans, be _humane_! It is your first duty. What
-wisdom is there for you without humanity?”
-
-[217] _Surgical Observations on Tumours._ John Abernethy, M.D., F.R.C.S.
-
-[218] Excessive poverty of blood, it is obvious to remark, is caused,
-not by abstaining from flesh but by abstaining from a _sufficient_
-amount of _nutritious_ non-flesh foods.
-
-[219] _Additional Reports_, 1814. Amongst valuable diagnoses of this
-kind the reader may be referred in particular to the highly interesting
-one of the Rev. C. H. Collyns, M.A., Oxon, which originally appeared
-in the _Times_ newspaper, and which twice has been republished by the
-Vegetarian Society. The success of the pure regimen in first mitigating
-and, finally, in altogether subduing long-inherited gouty affections,
-was complete and certain. The recently published evidence of the
-President of the newly-formed French Society, Dr. A. H. de Villeneuve,
-is equally satisfactory. (See _Bulletin de la Société Végétarienne_ of
-Paris, as quoted in _Nature_, Jan., 1881.)
-
-[220] See, too, the testimony of Newton, _Return to Nature_, and of
-Shelley in his _Essay on the Vegetable Diet_, in which he describes
-these children as “the most beautiful and healthy beings it is possible
-to conceive. The girls are the most perfect models for a sculptor.
-Their dispositions, also, are the most gentle and conciliating.”
-
-[221] _The Life of William Lambe, M.D., Fellow of the Royal College of
-Physicians._ By E. Hare, C.S.I., Inspector-General of Hospitals, to
-which valuable biography we are indebted for the present sketch. In
-Mr. Hare’s memoir will be found, among other testimonies to the truths
-of Vegetarianism, a highly-interesting letter, written to him by his
-friend Dr. H. G. Lyford, an eminent physician of Winchester.
-
-[222] _Life of Shelley_, by Jefferson Hogg, quoted by Mr. Hare in Life
-of Dr. Lambe. Hogg adds that he conformed for good fellowship, and
-found the purer food an agreeable change.
-
-[223] See the _Dietetic Reformer and Vegetarian Messenger_, August,
-1873.
-
-[224] _Pythagoran, Anytique reum, doctumque Platona_: “Pythagoras and
-the Man accused by Anytus [Socrates] and the learned Plato.”--_Satires_
-of Horace.
-
-[225] This is, perhaps, scarcely just to Pythagoras and his school. It
-is, without doubt, deeply to be lamented that they did not more widely
-promulgate a doctrine of such vital importance to the world; but the
-reasons of their reserve and partial reticence have been indicated
-already in our notice of the founder of _Akreophagy_. In a word--like
-the Founder of Christianity in a later age--they had many things to say
-which the world could not then learn. Moreover, as Gleïzès remarks, the
-teachers themselves could not have, from the nature of the case, the
-full knowledge of later times.
-
-[226] The eloquence and style of Buffon, it need scarcely be remarked,
-are more indisputable than his scientific accuracy. Amongst his many
-errors, none, however, is more surprising than his assertion of the
-carnivorous anatomical organisation of man, which has been corrected
-over and over again by physiologists and _savants_ more profound than
-Buffon.
-
-[227] “_Lachrymas--nostri pars optima sensus._”
-
-[228] In newly-discovered countries, no decided predominance of one
-species over another has been found; and the reason is, that qualities
-are pretty nearly equally divided, and that the strongest animal is not
-at the same time the most agile or the most intelligent.--_Note_ by
-Gleïzès.
-
-[229] Upon this, not the least interesting and important of the
-side views of Vegetarianism, we refer our readers, amongst numerous
-authorities, to the opinions of Paley, Adam Smith, Prof. Newman,
-Liebig, and W. R. Greg (in _Social Problems_).
-
-[230] That the victims of the Slaughter-House have, in fact, a full
-presentiment of the fate in store for them, must be sufficiently
-evident to every one who has witnessed a number of oxen or sheep
-driven towards the scene of slaughter--the frantic struggles to escape
-and rush past the horrible locality, the exertions necessary on the
-part of the drovers or slaughtermen to force them to enter as well as
-the frequent breaking away of the maddened victim--maddened alike by
-the blows and clamours of its executioners and the presentiment of
-its destiny--who frantically rushes through the public streets and
-scatters the terrified human passengers--all this abundantly proves
-the transparent falsity of the assertion of the unconsciousness or
-indifference of the victims of the shambles. See a terribly graphic
-description of a scene of this kind in _Household Words_, No. 14,
-quoted in _Dietetic Reformer_ (1852), in _Thalysie_, and in the
-_Dietetic Reformer_, _passim_. Also in _Animal World_, &c., &c.
-
-[231] _Thalysie: ou La Nouvelle Existence_: Par J. A. Gleïzès. Paris,
-1840, in 3 vols., 8vo. See also preface to the German version of R.
-Springer, Berlin, 1872. Our English readers will be glad to learn
-that a translation by the English Vegetarian Society is now being
-contemplated.
-
-[232] _Poeta_, in its original Greek meaning, marks out a _creator_ of
-new, and, therefore, (it is presumable) true ideas.
-
-[233] Compare the fate of Gibbon, who, at the same age, found himself
-an outcast from the University for a very opposite offence--for having
-embraced the dogmas of Catholicism. (See _Memoirs of my Life and
-Writings_, by Edw. Gibbon.) The future historian of _The Decline and
-Fall_, it may be added, speedily returned to Protestantism, though not
-to that of his preceptors.
-
-[234] _Shelley._ By J. A. Symonds. Macmillan, 1887.
-
-[235] Hogg’s _Life of Shelley_. Moxon (1858).
-
-[236] _Shelley._ By J. A. Symonds.
-
-[237] Cuvier’s _Leçons d’Anatomie Comp._, Tom. III., pages 169, 373,
-443, 465, 480. Rees’ _Cyclop._, Art Man.
-
-[238] Inasmuch as at this moment there are in this country more than
-two thousand persons of all classes, very many for thirty or forty
-years strict abstinents from flesh-meat, enrolled members of the
-Vegetarian Society (not to speak of a probably large number of isolated
-individual abstinents scattered throughout these islands, who, for
-whatever reason, have not attached themselves to the Society), and
-that there have long been Anti-flesh eating Societies in America and
-in Germany, the _à fortiori_ argument in the present instance will be
-allowed to be of _double_ weight.
-
-[239] “See Mr. Newton’s Book [_Return, to Nature._ Cadell, 1811.] His
-children are the most beautiful and healthy creatures it is possible
-to conceive. The girls are perfect models for a sculptor; their
-dispositions also are the most gentle and conciliating. The judicious
-treatment they receive may be a correlative cause of this. In the first
-five years of their life, of 18,000 children that are born, 7,500
-die of various diseases--and how many more that survive are rendered
-miserable by maladies not immediately mortal! The quality and quantity
-of a mother’s milk are materially injured by the use of dead flesh.
-On an island, near Iceland, where no vegetables are to be got, the
-children invariably die of _tetanus_ before they are three weeks old,
-and the population is supplied from the mainland.--Sir G. Mackenzie’s
-_History of Iceland_--note by Shelley.”
-
-[240] _Revolt of Islam_, v. 51, 55, 56.
-
-[241] Lately given to the world by Mr. Forman who has carefully
-collated and printed from Shelley’s MSS.
-
-[242] _English Cyclopædia._
-
-[243] _Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley._ Edited by Mrs. Shelley. Moxon.
-
-[244] _Shelley._ By J. A. Symonds.
-
-[245] See preface to _The Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley_.
-Edited by Mrs. Shelley. New edition. London, 1869. The increasing
-reputation of Shelley is proved, at the present time, by the increasing
-number of editions of his writings, and by the increasing number of
-thoughtful criticisms and biographies of the poet, by some of the most
-cultured minds of the day. Since the time, indeed, when a popular
-writer but sometimes rash critic, with condemnable want of discernment
-and still more condemnable prejudice, so egregiously misrepresented to
-his readers the character as well of the poet as of his poems--which
-latter, nevertheless, he was constrained to admit to be the most
-“melodious” of all English poetry excepting Shakespere, and (their
-“utopian” inspiration apart) the most “perfect”--(_Thoughts on Shelley
-and Byron_, by Rev. C. Kingsley, “Fraser,” 1853,) the pre-eminence
-of the poet, both morally and æsthetically, has been sufficiently
-established.
-
-[246] In another place he indulges his ironical wit at the expense of
-the beef-eaters, in representing a certain Cretan personage in Greek
-story to have
-
- “Promoted breeding cattle,
- To make the Cretans bloodier in battle;
- For we all know that English people are
- _Fed upon beef_.....
- We know, too, _they are very fond of war_--
- A pleasure--like all pleasures--rather dear.”
-
-[247] See _Life and Letters_. Murray.
-
-[248] _Memoirs of the Public and Private Life of Sir R. Phillips._
-London, 1808.
-
-[249] They had been published by him several years earlier in the
-_Medical Journal_ for July 27 1811.
-
-[250] _Golden Rules of Social Philosophy: being a System of Ethics._
-1826.
-
-[251] _A Dictionary of the Arts of Life and Civilisation._ 1833.
-London: Sherwood & Co. It will be seen that the origin of his revolt
-from orthodox dietetics, given by himself, differs from that narrated
-in the Life from which we have quoted above. It is possible that both
-incidents may have equally affected him at the moment, but that the
-spectacle of the London slaughter-house remained most vividly impressed
-upon his mind.
-
-[252] _Million of Facts_, p. 176. For the substance of the greater part
-of this biography, our acknowledgments are due to the researches of Mr.
-W. E. A. Axon, F.R.S.L., F.S.S.
-
-[253] _La Chute d’un Ange. Huitième Vision._
-
-[254] _Les Confidences_, par Alphonse de Lamartine, Paris, 1849-51,
-quoted in _Dietetic Reformer_, August, 1881. It is in this book,
-too, that he commemorates some of the many atrocities perpetrated by
-schoolboys with impunity, or even with the connivance of their masters,
-for their amusement, upon the helpless victims of their unchecked
-cruelty of disposition.
-
-[255] The question of kreophagy and anti-kreophagy had already been
-mooted, it appears, in the _Institut_, at the period of the great
-Revolution of 1789, as a legitimate consequence of the apparent general
-awakening of the human conscience, when slavery also was first publicly
-denounced. What was the result of the first raising of this question in
-the French Chamber of Savans does not appear, but, as Gleïzès remarks,
-we may easily divine it. One interesting fact was published by the
-discussion in the Deputies’ Chamber--viz., that in the year 1817, in
-Paris, the consumption of flesh was less than that of the year 1780 by
-40,000,000lb., in proportion to the population (see Gleïzès, _Thalysie,
-Quatrième Discours_), a fact which can only mean that the rich, who
-support the butchers, had been _forced_ by reduced means to live less
-_carnivorously_.
-
-[256] In the same strain an eminent _savan_, Sir D. Brewster, has given
-expression to his feeling of aversion from the slaughter-house--a
-righteous feeling which (strange perversion of judgment) is so
-constantly repressed in spite of all the most forcible promptings of
-conscience and reason! These are his words: “But whatever races there
-be in other spheres, we feel sure that there must be one amongst whom
-there are no man-eaters--no heroes with red hands--no sovereigns with
-bloody hearts--and no statesmen who, leaving the people untaught,
-educate them for the scaffold. In the Decalogue of that community will
-stand pre-eminent, in letters of burnished gold, the highest of all
-social obligations--‘_Thou shalt not kill_, neither for territory,
-for fame, for lucre, _nor for food_, _nor for raiment_, _nor for
-pleasure_.’ The lovely forms of life, and sensation, and instinct, so
-delicately fashioned by the Master-hand, shall no longer be destroyed
-and trodden under foot, but shall be the objects of increasing love and
-admiration, the study of the philosopher, the theme of the poet, and
-the companions and auxiliaries of Man.”--_More Worlds than One._
-
-[257] _Bible de l’Humanité--Redemption de la Nature, VI._
-
-[258] Cf. a recently published Essay, in the form of a letter to the
-present Premier, Mr. Gladstone, entitled _The Woman and the Age_. The
-author, one of the most refined thinkers of our times, has at once
-admirably exposed the utter sham as well as cruelty of a vivisecting
-science, and demonstrated the necessary and natural results to the
-human race from its shameless outrage upon, and cynical contempt for,
-the first principles of morality.
-
-[259] _The Bird_, by Jules Michelet. English Translation. Nelson,
-London, 1870. See, too, his eloquent exposure of the scientific or
-popular error which, denying conscious reason and intelligence, in
-order to explain the mental constitution of the non-human races (as
-well that of the higher mammals as of the inferior species), has
-invented the vague and mystifying term “instinct.”
-
-[260] _La Femme_, vi. Onzième Edition. Paris, 1879.
-
-[261] This memorable building has been succeeded by the present
-well-known one in Cross Lane, where the Rev. James Clark, one of the
-most esteemed, as well as one of the oldest, members of the Vegetarian
-Society is the able and eloquent officiating minister.
-
-[262] These biographical facts we have transferred to our pages from an
-interesting notice by Mr W. E. A. Axon, F.R.S.L.
-
-[263] _Memoir of the Rev. William. Metcalfe, M.D._ By his son, Rev.
-Joseph Metcalfe, Philadelphia, 1865.
-
-[264] See _Memoir of the Rev. William Metcalfe_. By his son, the Rev J.
-Metcalfe. Philadelphia; J. Capen. 1866.
-
-[265] See Memoir in _Sylvester Graham’s Lectures on the Science
-of Human Life_. Condensed by T. Baker, Esq., of the Inner Temple,
-Barrister-at-Law. Manchester: Heywood; London: Pitman.
-
-[266] _The New American Cyclopædia._ Appleton, New York, 1861. It
-deserves remark in this place that, in no English cyclopædia or
-biographical dictionary, as far as our knowledge extends, is any
-sort of notice given of this great sanitary reformer. The same
-disappointment is experienced in regard to not a few other great names,
-whether in hygienic or humanitarian literature. The absence of the
-names of such true benefactors of the world in these books of reference
-is all the more surprising in view of the presence of an infinite
-number of persons--of all kinds--who have contributed little to the
-stock of true knowledge or to the welfare of the world.
-
-[267] The Greek story of the savage horses of the Thracian king who
-were fed upon human flesh, therefore, may very well be true.
-
-[268] Graham here quotes various authorities--Linné, Cuvier, Lawrence
-Bell, and others.
-
-[269] Professor Lawrence instances particularly “the Laplanders,
-Samoides, Ostiacs, Tungooses, Burats, and Bamtschatdales, in
-Northern Europe and Asia, as well as the Esquimaux in the northern,
-and the natives of Tierra del Fuego in the southern, extremity of
-America, who, although they live almost entirely on flesh, and
-that often raw, are the smallest, weakest, and least brave people
-of the globe.”--_Lectures on Physiology._ Of all races the North
-American native tribes, who subsist almost entirely by the chase, are
-notoriously one of the most ferocious and cruel. That the _omnivorous_
-classes in “civilised” Europe--in this country particularly--have
-attained their present position, political or intellectual, _in spite
-of their kreophagistic habits_ is attributable to a complex set of
-conditions and circumstances (an extensive inquiry, upon which it is
-impossible to enter here) which have, _in some measure_, mitigated
-the evil results of a barbarous diet, will be sufficiently clear to
-every unprejudiced inquirer. If flesh-eating be the cause, or one of
-the principal causes, of the present dominance of the European, and
-especially English-speaking peoples, it may justly be asked--how is
-to be explained, _e.g._, the dominance of the Saracenic power (in S.
-Europe) during seven centuries--a dominance in arms as well as in arts
-and sciences--when the semi-barbarous Christian nations (at least as
-regards the ruling classes) were _wholly_ kreophagistic.
-
-[270] For one of the ablest and most exhaustive scientific arguments
-on the same side ever published we refer our readers to _The Perfect
-Way in Diet_, by Mrs. Algernon Kingsford, M.D. (Kegan Paul, London,
-1881). Originally written and delivered as a Thesis for _le Doctorat en
-Médicine_ at the Paris University, under the title of _L’Alimentation
-Végétale Chez L’Homme_ (1880), it was almost immediately translated
-into German by Dr. A. Aderholdt under the same title of _Die
-Pfanzennahrung bei dem Menschen_. It is, we believe, about to be
-translated into Russian. The humane and moral argument of this eloquent
-work is equally admirable and equally persuasive with the scientific
-proofs.
-
-[271]
-
- “Sai, che là corre il mondo ove più versi
- Di sue dolcesse il lusinghier Parnaso,
- E che’l Vero condito in molli versi
- I più schivi allettando ha persuaso.
- Cosi all’ egro fanciul porgiamo aspersi
- Di soave licor gli orli del vaso:
- Succhi amari ingannato intanto ei beve,
- E dall’ inganno sua vita riceve.”
-
- Gerusalemme Liberata, I.
-
-[272] See _Pflanzenkost; oder die Grundlage einer Neuen
-Weltanschauung_, Von Gustav Struve, Stuttgart, 1869. For the substance
-of the brief sketch of the life of Struve we are indebted to the
-courtesy of Herr Emil Weilshaeuser, the recently-elected President of
-the Vegetarian Society of Germany (Jan., 1882), himself the author of
-some valuable words on Reformed Dietetics.
-
-[273] See _Sakuntalà, or the Fatal Ring_, of the Hindu Shakspere
-Kalidâsa, the most interesting production of the Hindu Poetry. It has
-been translated into almost every European language.
-
-[274] _Mandaras’ Wanderungen._ Zweite Ausgabe. Mannheim. Friedrich
-Götz. 1845. For a copy of this now scarce book we are indebted to the
-courtesy of Herr A. von Seefeld, of Hanover.
-
-[275] _Pflanzenkost, die Grundlage einer neuen Weltanschauung._
-Stuttgart, 1869. Cf. Liebig’s _Chemische Briefe_ (“Letters on
-Chemistry.”)
-
-[276] _Das Seelenleben; oder die Naturgeschichte des Menschen._ Von
-Gustav Struve. Berlin: Theobald Grieben. 1869.
-
-[277]
-
- “Weh’ denen, die dem _Ewigblinden_
- Des Lichtes Himmelsfackel leihen!”
-
- SCHILLER. _Das Lied von der Glocke._
-
-[278] Quoted in _Die Naturgemässe Diät: die Diät der Zukunft_, von
-Theodor Hahn, Cöthen, 1859. For the substance of biographical notice
-prefixed to this article we are again indebted to the kindness of Herr
-Emil Weilshäuser, of Oppeln.
-
-[279] _Das Menschendasein in seinen Weltewigen Zügen und Zeichen._ Von
-Bogumil Goltz. Frankfurt.
-
-[280] Compare the remarks of Jean Paul Richter (1763-1825), in his
-treatise on Education, _Levana_, in which he, too, in scarcely less
-emphatic language, protests against the general neglect of this
-department of morals. Among other references to the subject, the
-celebrated novelist thus writes: “Love is the second hemisphere of the
-moral heaven. Yet is the sacred being of love little established. Love
-is an inborn but differently distributed force and blood-heat of the
-heart (_blutwärme des herzens_). There are cold and warm-blooded souls,
-as there are animals. As for the child, so for the lower animal, love
-is, in fact, an essential impulse; and this central fire often, in the
-form of compassion, pierces its earth-crust, but not in every case....
-The child (under proper education) learns to regard all animal life as
-sacred--in brief, they impart to him the feeling of a Hindu in place
-of the heart of a Cartesian philosopher. There is here a question of
-something more even than compassion for other animals; but this also
-is in question. Why is it that it has so long been observed that the
-cruelty of the child to the lower animals presages cruelty to men,
-just as the Old-Testament sacrifice of animals preshadowed that of the
-sacrifice of a man? It is for _himself only_ the undeveloped man can
-experience pains and sufferings, which speak to him with the native
-tones of his own experience. Consequently, the inarticulate cry of the
-tortured animal comes to him just as some strange, amusing sound of
-the air; and yet he sees there life, conscious movement, both which
-distinguish them from the inanimate substances. Thus he sins against
-his own life, whilst he sunders it from the rest, as though it were a
-piece of machinery. Let life be to him [the child] sacred (_heilig_),
-even that which may be destitute of reason; and, in fact, does the
-child know any other? Or, because the heart beats under bristles,
-feathers, or wings, is it, _therefore_, to be of no account?”
-
-[281] See a pamphlet upon this subject by Dr. V.
-Gützlaff--_Schopenhauer ueber die Thiere und den Thierschutz: Ein
-Beitrag zur ethischen Seite der Vivisectionsfrage_. Berlin, 1879.
-
-[282] _Le Fondement de La Morale_, par Arthur Schopenhauer, traduit de
-l’Allemand par A. Burdeau. Paris, Baillière et Cie, 1879.
-
-[283] Quoted in _Die Naturgemässe Diät, die Diät der Zukunft_, von
-Theodor Hahn, 1859. We may note here that Moleschott, the eminent Dutch
-physiologist, and a younger contemporary of Liebig, alike with the
-distinguished German Chemist and with the French zoologist, Buffon, is
-chargeable with a strange inconsistency in choosing his place among
-the apologists of kreophagy, in spite of his conviction that “the
-legumes are superior to flesh-meat in abundance of solid constituents
-which they contain; and, while the amount of albuminous substances may
-surpass that in flesh-meat by one-half, the constituents of fat and the
-salts are also present in a greater abundance.” (See _Die Naturgemässe
-Diät_, von Theodor Hahn, 1859). But, in fact, it is only too obvious
-_why_ at present the large majority of Scientists, while often fully
-admitting the virtues, or even the superiority of the purer diet,
-yet after all enrol themselves on the orthodox side. Either they are
-altogether indifferent to humane teaching, or they want the courage of
-their convictions to proclaim the Truth.
-
-[284] Among English philosophic writers, the arguments and warnings
-(published in the _Dietetic Reformer_ during the past fifteen years) of
-the present head of the Society for the promotion of Dietary Reform in
-this country, Professor Newman, in regard to National Economy and to
-the enormous evils, present and prospective, arising from the prevalent
-insensibility to this aspect of National Reform are at once the most
-forcible and the most earnest. It would be well if our public men, and
-all who are in place and power, would give the most earnest heed to
-them. But this, unhappily, under the _present_ prevailing political and
-social conditions, experience teaches to be almost a vain expectation.
-
-[285] Μήλοισι Grævius, the famous German Scholar of the 17th century,
-maintains to mean here _Fruits_, not “Flocks,” according to the vulgar
-interpretation, and the translation of Grævius, it will be allowed, is
-at least more consistent with the context than is the latter. It must
-be added that the whole verse bracketed is of doubtful genuineness.
-
-[286] This remarkable passage, it is highly interesting to note, is the
-earliest indication of the idea of “guardian angels,” which afterwards
-was developed in the Platonic philosophy; and which, considerably
-modified by Jewish belief, derived from the Persian theology, finally
-took form in the Christian creed. Compare the beautiful idea of
-guardian angels, or spirits in the Prologue of the _Shipwreck_ of
-Plautus.
-
-[287] See _Poetæ Minores Græci ... Aliisque Accessionibus Aucta._
-Edited by Thomas Gaisford. Vol. III. Lipsiæ, 1823.
-
-[288]
-
- “Quum sis ipse nocens, moritur cur victima pro te?
- Stultitia est, _morte alterius_ sperare Salutem.”
-
-[289] _The Light of Asia: or, The Great Renunciation_
-(_Mahâbhinishkramana_). Being the Life and Teaching of Gautama, Prince
-of India, and Founder of Buddhism (as told in verse by an Indian
-Buddhist). By Edwin Arnold. London: Trübner.--In the Hindu Epic, the
-_Mahâbhârata_, the same great principle is apparent, though less
-conspicuously:--
-
- “The constant virtue of the Good is tenderness and love
- To all that live in earth, air, sea--great, small--below, above:
- Compassionate of heart, they keep a gentle will to each:
- _Who pities not, hath not the Faith_. Full many a one so lives.”
-
- III.--Story of Savîtri
-
-[290] Compare the beautiful verses of Lucretius--who, almost alone
-amongst the poets, has indignantly denounced the vile and horrible
-practice of sacrifice--picturing the inconsolable grief the Mother Cow
-bereft of her young, who has been ravished from her for the sacrificial
-altar:--
-
- “Sæpe ante Deûm vitulus delubra decora
- Thuricremas propter mactatus concidit aras
- Sanguinis expirans calidum de pectore flumen,
- At mater viridis saltus orbata peragrans
- Noacit humi pedibus vestigia pressa bisulcis,
- Omnia convisens oculis loca, si queat usquam
- Conspicere amissum fœtum, completque querellis
- Frondiferum nemus absistens, et crebra revisit
- Ad stabulum desiderio perfixa Juvenci;
- Nec teneræ salices atque herbæ rore vigentes,
- Fluminaque illa queunt summis labentia ripis
- Oblectare animum, subitamque avertere curam,
- Nee vitulorum aliæ species per pabula læta
- Derivare queunt animum curâque levare.”
-
- (_De Rerum Naturâ II._)
-
-See also the memorable verses in which the rationalist poet stigmatises
-the vicarious sacrifice of Iphigeneia.--_Tantum Religio potuit suadere
-Malorum_ (L).
-
-[291] See, also, _Fasti_, already quoted above.
-
- “Pace Ceres læta est......
- A Bove succincti cultros removete Ministri, &c.” IV. 407-416.
-
-[292] _Florilegium_ of Stobæus--(17-43 and 18-38), quoted by Professor
-Mayor in _Dietetic Reformer_, July, 1881. In the erudite and exhaustive
-edition of Juvenal, by Professor Mayor (Macmillan, Cambridge), will be
-found a large number of quotations from Greek and Latin writers, and a
-great deal of interesting matter upon frugal living.
-
-[293] “_Hygiasticon: On the Right Course of Preserving Life and Health
-unto Extreme Old Age; together with Soundness and Integrity of the
-Senses, Judgment, and Memory._ Written in Latin by Leonard Lessius, and
-now done into English. The second edition. Printed by the printers to
-the Universitie of Cambridge, 1634.” Lessio, like his master Cornaro,
-Haller, and many other advocates of a reformed diet, was influenced not
-at all by humanitarian, but by health reasons only.
-
-[294] Cf. Plutarch--_Essay on Flesh-Eating_.
-
-[295] _Some Memoirs of the Life of Mr. Thomas Tryon, late of London,
-Merchant. Written by Himself._ London, 1705.
-
-[296] Os homini sublime dedit, cœlumque tueri.--Ovid, _Met._ I.
-
-[297] Compare Seneca and Chrysostom, above.
-
-[298] If Tryon could point to diseases among the victims of the
-shambles in the 17th century, what use might he not make of the
-epidemics or endemics of the present day?
-
-[299] _The Way to Health, Long Life, and Happiness: or a Discourse
-of Temperance, and the Particular Nature of all things Requisite for
-the Life of Man.... The Like never before Published. Communicated to
-the World, for the General Good, by Philotheos Physiologus_ [Tryon’s
-_nom de plume_.] _London, 1683_. It is (in its best parts) the worthy
-precursor of _The Herald of Health_, and of the valuable hygienic
-philosophy of its able editor--Dr. T. L. Nichols.
-
-[300] See _Biog. Universelle_, Art. _Philippe Hecquet_
-
-[301] _Traité des Dispenses, &c._ Par Philippe Hecquet, M.D., Paris.
-Ed. 1709.
-
-[302]
-
- “That lies beneath the knife,
- Looks up, and from her butcher begs her life.”
-
- Æn. VII. (Pope’s translation.) Quoted first by Montaigne. _Essais._
-
-[303] And, Pope might have added, a more diabolical torture
-still--calves bled to death by a slow and lingering process--hung
-up (as they often are) head downwards. Although not universal as
-it was some ten years ago, this, among other Christian practices,
-yet flourishes in many parts of the country, unchecked by legal
-intervention.
-
-[304] See Article, Plutarch, above.
-
-[305] So far, at least, as the _natural and necessary wants_ of each
-species are concerned.--That “Nature” is regardless of suffering, is
-but too apparent in all parts of our globe. It is the opprobrium and
-shame of the human species that, placed at the head of the various
-races of beings, it has hitherto been the _Tyrant_, and not the
-_Pacificator_.
-
-[306] _The Four Stages of Cruelty_, in which, beginning with the
-torture of other animals, the legitimate sequence is fulfilled in the
-murder of the torturer’s mistress or wife.
-
-[307] Which is the accomplice _really guilty_? The ignorant, untaught,
-wretch who has to gain his living some way or other, or those who
-have been entrusted with, or who have assumed, the control of the
-public conscience--the statesman, the clergy, and the schoolmaster?
-Undoubtedly it is upon these that almost all the guilt lies, and always
-will lie.
-
-[308] Bull-baiting, in this country, has been for some years illegal;
-but that moralists, and other writers of the present day, while
-boasting the abolition of that popular _pastime_, are silent, upon the
-equally barbarous, if more fashionable _sports_ of Deer-hunting, &c.,
-is one of those inconsistencies in logic which are as unaccountable as
-they are common.
-
-[309] “That is,” remarks Ritson, “in a state of Society influenced by
-Superstition, Pride, and a variety of prejudices equally unnatural and
-absurd.”
-
-[310] “The converse of all this is true. He is certainly taught by
-example, and by temptation, and prompted by (what he thinks is)
-interest.”--Note by Ritson in _Abstinence from Flesh a Moral Duty_.
-
-[311] Among living enlightened medical authorities of the present
-day, Dr. B. W. Richardson, F.R.S., perhaps the most eminent hygeist
-and sanitary reformer in the country now living, has delivered his
-testimony in no doubtful terms to the superiority of the purer
-diet. In his recent publication _Salutisland_ he has banished the
-slaughter-house, with all its abominations, from that model State. See
-also his _Hygieia_.
-
-[312] _L’Art de Prolonger la Vie et de Conserver la Santé: ou, Traité
-d’Hygiène._ Par M. Pressavin, Gradué de l’Université de Paris; Membre
-du Collège Royal de Chirurgie de Lyon, et Ancien Demonstrateur en
-Matière Medicale-Chirurgicale. A Lyon, 1786.
-
-[313] _Die Eleusische Fest._
-
-[314] _Der Alpenjäger._ See also Göthe--_Italienische Reise_, XXIII.
-42; _Aus Meinem Leben_, XXIV. 23; _Werther’s Leiden_; Brief 12.
-
-[315] _Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation_
-(page 311). By Jeremy Bentham, M.A., Bencher of Lincoln’s Inn, &c.;
-Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1876. It must be added that the assumption
-(on the same page on which this cogent reasoning is found), that
-man has the right to _kill_ his fellow-beings, for the purpose of
-feeding upon their flesh, is one more illustration of the strange
-inconsistencies into which even so generally just and independent a
-thinker as the author of the _Book of Fallacies_ may be forced by
-the “logic of circumstances.” Among recent notable Essays upon the
-Rights of the Lower Animals (the _right to live_ excepted) may here be
-mentioned--_Animals and their Masters_, by Sir Arthur Helps (1873), and
-_The Rights of an Animal_, by Mr. E. B. Nicholson, librarian of the
-Bodleian, Oxford (1877).
-
-[316] Compare the _Voyages_ of Volney, one of the most philosophical
-of the thinkers of the eighteenth century, who himself for some time
-seems to have lived on the non-flesh diet. Attributing the ferocious
-character of the American savage, “hunter and butcher, who, in every
-animal sees but an object of prey, and who is become an animal of the
-species of wolves and of tigers,” to such custom, this celebrated
-traveller adds the reflection that “the habit of shedding blood, or
-simply of seeing it shed, corrupts all sentiments of humanity.” (See
-_Voyage en Syrie et en Egypte_.) See, too, Thevenot (the younger), an
-earlier French traveller, who describes a Banian hospital, in which
-he saw a number of sick Camels, Horses, and Oxen, and many invalids
-of the feathered race. Many of the lower Animals, he informs us, were
-maintained there for life, those who recovered being sold to Hindus
-exclusively.
-
-[317] This feeling occasionally appears in his poems, as, for instance,
-when describing a “banquet” and its flesh-eating guests, he wonders how
-“Such bodies could have souls, or souls such bodies.”
-
-[318] Note on this point the words of the late W. R. Greg, to the
-effect that “the amount of human life sustained on a given area may
-be almost indefinitely increased by the substitution of vegetable for
-animal food;” and his further statement--“A given acreage of wheat
-will feed at least ten times as many men as the same acreage employed
-in growing ‘mutton.’ It is usually calculated that the consumption of
-wheat by an adult is about one quarter per annum, and we know that good
-land produces four quarters. But let us assume that a man living on
-grain would require two quarters a year; still one acre would support
-two men. But, a man living on [flesh] meat would need 3lbs. a day, and
-it is considered a liberal calculation if an acre spent in grazing
-sheep and cattle will yield in ‘beef’ and ‘mutton’ more than 50lb. on
-an average--the best farmer in Norfolk having averaged 90lb., but a
-great majority of farms in Great Britain only reach 20lb. On these data
-it would require 22 acres of pasture land to sustain one adult person
-living on [flesh] meat. It is obvious that in view of the adoption of a
-vegetable diet lies the indication of a vast increase in the population
-sustainable on a given area.”--_Social and Political Problems_
-(_Trübner_).
-
-[319] “Of the Cruelty connected with he Culinary Arts” in _Philozoa;
-or, Moral Reflections on the Actual Condition of the Animal Kingdom,
-and on the Means of Improving the Same_; with numerous Anecdotes and
-Illustrative Notes, addressed to Lewis Gompertz, Esq., President of
-the Animals’ Friend Society: By T. Forster, M.B., F.R.A.S., F.L.S.,
-&c. Brussels, 1839. The writer well insists that, however remote may
-be a _universal_ Reformation, every individual person, pretending
-to any culture or refinement of mind, is morally bound to abstain
-from sanctioning, by his dietetic habits, the revolting atrocities
-“connected with the culinary arts, of which Mr. Young, in his Book on
-Cruelty, has given a long catalogue.”
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ethics of Diet, by Howard Williams
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ETHICS OF DIET ***
-
-***** This file should be named 55785-0.txt or 55785-0.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/5/7/8/55785/
-
-Produced by Jane Robins, Reiner Ruf, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
-will be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
-one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
-(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
-permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
-set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
-copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
-protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
-Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
-charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
-do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
-rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
-such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
-research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
-practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
-subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
-redistribution.
-
-
-
-*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
-http://gutenberg.org/license).
-
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
-all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
-If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
-terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
-entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
-and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
-or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
-collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
-individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
-located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
-copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
-works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
-are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
-Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
-freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
-this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
-the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
-keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
-a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
-the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
-before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
-creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
-Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
-the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
-States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
-access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
-whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
-copied or distributed:
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
-from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
-posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
-and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
-or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
-with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
-work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
-through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
-Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
-1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
-terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
-to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
-permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
-word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
-distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
-"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
-posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
-you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
-copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
-request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
-form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
-that
-
-- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
- owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
- has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
- Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
- must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
- prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
- returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
- sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
- address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
- the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or
- destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
- and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
- Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
- money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
- of receipt of the work.
-
-- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
-forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
-both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
-Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
-Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
-collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
-"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
-corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
-property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
-computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
-your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
-your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
-the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
-refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
-providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
-receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
-is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
-opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
-WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
-WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
-If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
-law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
-interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
-the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
-provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
-with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
-promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
-harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
-that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
-or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
-work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
-Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
-
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
-including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
-because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
-people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
-To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
-and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
-Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
-http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
-permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
-Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
-throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
-809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
-business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
-information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
-page at http://pglaf.org
-
-For additional contact information:
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
-SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
-particular state visit http://pglaf.org
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
-To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
-
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
-with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
-Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
-
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
-unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
-keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
-
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
-
- http://www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/55785-0.zip b/old/55785-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 22d7133..0000000
--- a/old/55785-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55785-h.zip b/old/55785-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 7cf84ad..0000000
--- a/old/55785-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55785-h/55785-h.htm b/old/55785-h/55785-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index 6b083f8..0000000
--- a/old/55785-h/55785-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,23169 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
- <title>
- The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Ethics of Diet, by Howard Williams.
- </title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css">
-
-body {
- margin-left: 10%;
- margin-right: 10%;
-}
-
-div.chapter,div.section {page-break-before: always;}
-
-div.title {width: 60%; margin: auto 20%;}
-
-div.index {width: 70%; margin: auto 15%;}
-
-h1,h2,h3 {
- text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
- clear: both;
- font-weight: normal;}
-
-h1,.s1 {font-size: 225%;}
-h2,.s2 {font-size: 175%;}
-h3,.s3 {font-size: 125%;}
-.s4 {font-size: 110%;}
-.s5 {font-size: 90%;}
-
-h1 {
- page-break-before: always;
- margin-bottom: 1.5em;}
-
-h2.nobreak {
- page-break-before: avoid;
- padding-top: 3em;}
-
-h3 {padding-top: 1em;}
-
-p {
- margin-top: .51em;
- text-align: justify;
- margin-bottom: .49em;
- text-indent: 1.5em;}
-
-p.p0,p.center {text-indent: 0;}
-
-.mtop1 {margin-top: 1em;}
-.mtop2 {margin-top: 2em;}
-.mbot1 {margin-bottom: 1em;}
-.mbot2 {margin-bottom: 2em;}
-.mbot3 {margin-bottom: 3em;}
-.mleft1 {margin-left: 1em;}
-.mleft2 {margin-left: 2em;}
-.mleft3 {margin-left: 3em;}
-.mleft4 {margin-left: 4em;}
-.mleft5 {margin-left: 5em;}
-.mleft6 {margin-left: 6em;}
-.mleft7 {margin-left: 7em;}
-.mleft8 {margin-left: 8em;}
-.mleft9 {margin-left: 9em;}
-.mleft10 {margin-left: 10em;}
-.mleft11 {margin-left: 11em;}
-.mleft12 {margin-left: 12em;}
-.mleft13 {margin-left: 13em;}
-.mleft14 {margin-left: 14em;}
-.mleft15 {margin-left: 15em;}
-.mright3 {margin-right: 3em;}
-
-.padtop1 {padding-top: 1em;}
-.padtop2 {padding-top: 2em;}
-.padtop3 {padding-top: 3em;}
-.padtop5 {padding-top: 5em;}
-
-hr {
- width: 33%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 2em;
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
- color: #cccccc;
- clear: both;}
-
-hr.tb {width: 45%; margin: 1.5em 27.5%;}
-hr.full {width: 95%; margin: 2.5em 2.5%;}
-
-ul.index { list-style-type: none; }
-li.ifrst { margin-top: 2em; }
-li.indx { margin-top: .5em; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em; }
-
-table {
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;}
-
-td > p {
- margin: auto;
- padding-right: 1em;}
-
-td.w5em {width: 5em;}
-
-.tdr {text-align: right;}
-
-.pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
- /* visibility: hidden; */
- position: absolute;
- left: 95%;
- font-size: 70%;
- text-align: right;
- text-indent: 0;
- letter-spacing: 0;
- font-style: normal;
- color: #999999;} /* page numbers */
-
-.blockquot {
- margin: 1.5em 5%;
- font-size: 90%;}
-
-.center {text-align: center;}
-
-.right {text-align: right;}
-
-.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
-
-.smaller {font-size: 70%;}
-
-.goth {font-family: "Old English Text MT",serif;}
-
-.hang2 {
- padding-left: 2em;
- text-indent: -2em;}
-
-/* Images */
-.figcenter {
- margin: auto;
- text-align: center;}
-
-img {max-width: 100%; height: auto;}
-
-.img_deco {width: 15em;}
-
-/* Footnotes */
-.footnotes {
- border: thin black dotted;
- background-color: #ffffcc;
- color: black;
- margin-bottom: 2em;}
-
-.footnote {
- margin-left: 10%;
- margin-right: 10%;
- font-size: 0.9em;}
-
-.footnote .label {
- position: absolute;
- right: 84%;
- text-align: right;}
-
-.fnanchor {
- vertical-align: top;
- font-size: 70%;
- text-decoration: none;}
-
-/* Poetry */
-.poetry-container {text-align: center;}
-
-.poetry {
- display: inline-block;
- text-align: left;}
-
-.poetry .stanza {margin: 1em auto;}
-
-.poetry .verse {
- text-indent: -3em;
- padding-left: 3em;}
-
-/* Transcriber's notes */
-.transnote {
- background-color: #E6E6FA;
- color: black;
- font-size:smaller;
- padding:0.5em;
- margin-bottom:5em;}
-
-@media handheld {
-
-div.title,div.index {width: 100%; margin: auto;}
-
-table.toc {
- width: 100%;
- margin: auto;}
-
-.poetry {
- display: block;
- text-align: left;
- margin-left: 2.5em;}
-
-}
-
- </style>
- </head>
-<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ethics of Diet, by Howard Williams
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Ethics of Diet
- A Catena of Authorities Deprecatory of the Practice of Flesh Eating
-
-Author: Howard Williams
-
-Release Date: October 21, 2017 [EBook #55785]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ETHICS OF DIET ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Jane Robins, Reiner Ruf, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="transnote mbot3">
-
-<p class="s3 center"><b>Transcriber’s Notes</b></p>
-
-<p>This e-text is based on ‘The Ethics of Diet,’ from 1883.
-Inconsistent and uncommon spelling and hyphenation have been retained;
-punctuation and typographical errors have been corrected. Quotations,
-particularly in languages other than English, have not been changed.
-Some footnote anchors are missing in the original text. They have
-been restored in the position where they make sense on the page in
-question.</p>
-
-<p>The succession of chapter titles in the table of contents has been
-rearranged for chapters XLIII.&ndash;XLVII. to match the order of chapters
-printed in the text. Neither the author Louis Lémery, referred to in the
-index, nor any of his works could be located in the text; the reference has
-been retained, though.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="title">
-
-<h1>THE ETHICS OF DIET.</h1>
-
-<p class="s2 center goth">A Catena</p>
-
-<p class="s5 center mbot2 mtop2">OF</p>
-
-<p class="s4 center mbot2">AUTHORITIES DEPRECATORY OF THE PRACTICE
-OF FLESH-EATING.</p>
-
-<p class="s5 center padtop2">BY</p>
-
-<p class="s3 center mbot2">HOWARD WILLIAMS, M.A.</p>
-
-<p class="s5 center padtop2 mbot1">“Man by Nature was never made to be a
-carnivorous animal, nor is he armed at all for prey and rapine.”</p>
-
-<p class="s5 right mright3 mbot2">&mdash;<i>Ray.</i></p>
-
-<p class="s5 center mbot1">“Hommes, soyez <i>humains</i>! c’est
-votre premier devoir. Quelle sagesse y-a-t-il pour vous hors de
-l’humanité?”</p>
-
-<p class="s5 right mright3 mbot2">&mdash;<i>Rousseau.</i></p>
-
-<p class="s5 center mbot1">“Der Mensch ist was er isst.”</p>
-<p class="s5 right mright3 mbot2">&mdash;<i>German Proverb.</i></p>
-
-<p class="s5 center padtop2">L<span class="smaller">ONDON</span>: F.
-P<span class="smaller">ITMAN</span>, 20, P<span class="smaller">ATERNOSTER</span>
-R<span class="smaller">OW</span>; J<span class="smaller">OHN</span>
-H<span class="smaller">EYWOOL</span>, 11, P<span class="smaller">ATERNOSTER</span>
-B<span class="smaller">UILDINGS</span>, M<span class="smaller">ANCHESTER</span>:
-J<span class="smaller">OHN</span> H<span class="smaller">EYWOOD</span>,
-D<span class="smaller">EANSGATE AND</span> R<span class="smaller">IDGEFIELD</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="s4 center mtop1">1883.</p>
-
-<p class="s5 center mtop1">[<i>All Rights Reserved.</i>]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<table class="toc" summary="table of contents">
- <tr>
- <td class="s5 tdr">
- C<span class="smaller">HAP</span>.
- </td>
- <td class="s5">
- &nbsp;
- </td>
- <td class="s5 w5em tdr">
- P<span class="smaller">AGE</span>.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- &nbsp;
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#PREFACE">Preface</a>
- </td>
- <td class="w5em tdr">
- i.&ndash;vi.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- I.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#I_HESIOD">Hesiod</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 1
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- II.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#II_PYTHAGORAS">Pythagoras</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 4
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- III.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#III_PLATO">Plato</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 12
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- IV.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#IV_OVID">Ovid</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 23
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- V.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#V_SENECA">Seneca</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 27
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- VI.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#VI_PLUTARCH">Plutarch</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 41
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- VII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#VII_TERTULLIAN">Tertullian</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 51
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- VIII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#VIII_CLEMENT_OF_ALEXANDRIA">Clement of Alexandria</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 56
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- IX.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#IX_PORPHYRY">Porphyry</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 63
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- X.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#X_CHRYSOSTOM">Chrysostom</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 76
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XI.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XI_CORNARO">Cornaro</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 83
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XII_SIR_THOMAS_MORE">Thomas More</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 90
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XIII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XIII_MONTAIGNE">Montaigne</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 94
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XIV.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XIV_GASSENDI">Gassendi</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 100
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XV.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XV_RAY">Ray</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 106
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XVI.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XVI_EVELYN">Evelyn</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 107
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XVII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XVII_BERNARD_DE_MANDEVILLE">Mandeville</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 113
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XVIII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XVIII_GAY">Gay</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 115
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XIX.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XIX_CHEYNE">Cheyne</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 120
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XX.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XX_POPE">Pope</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 128
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXI.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXI_THOMSON">Thomson</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 134
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXII_HARTLEY">Hartley</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 138
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXIII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXIII_CHESTERFIELD">Chesterfield</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 139
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXIV.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXIV_VOLTAIRE">Voltaire</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 141
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXV.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXV_HALLER">Haller</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 156
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXVI.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXVI_COCCHI">Cocchi</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 157
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXVII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXVII_ROUSSEAU">Rousseau</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 159
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXVIII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXVIII_LINNE">Linné</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 164
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXIX.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXIX_BUFFON">Buffon</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 166
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXX.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXX_HAWKESWORTH">Hawkesworth</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 168
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXXI.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXXI_PALEY">Paley</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 169
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXXII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXXII_ST_PIERRE">St. Pierre</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 173
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXXIII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXXIII_OSWALD">Oswald</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 179
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXXIV.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXXIV_HUFELAND">Hufeland</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 184
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXXV.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXXV_RITSON">Ritson</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 185
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXXVI.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXXVI_NICHOLSON">Nicholson</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 190
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXXVII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXXVII_ABERNETHY">Abernethy</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 196
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXXVIII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXXVIII_LAMBE">Lambe</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 198
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XXXIX.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XXXIX_NEWTON">Newton</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 205
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XL.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XL_GLEIZES">Gleïzès</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 208
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XLI.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XLI_SHELLEY">Shelley</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 218
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XLII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XLII_PHILLIPS">Phillips</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 235
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XLIII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XLIII_LAMARTINE">Lamartine</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 245
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XLIV.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XLIV_MICHELET">Michelet</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 252
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XLV.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XLV_COWHERD">Cowherd</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 258
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XLVI.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XLVI_METCALFE">Metcalfe</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 260
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XLVII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XLVII_GRAHAM">Graham</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 264
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XLVIII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XLVIII_STRUVE">Struve</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 271
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XLIX.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XLIX_DAUMER">Daumer</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 282
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- L.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#L_SCHOPENHAUER">Schopenhauer</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 286
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="s3 center mtop2 mbot1">APPENDIX.</p>
-
-<table class="toc" summary="table of contents">
- <tr>
- <td class="s5 tdr">
- C<span class="smaller">HAP</span>.
- </td>
- <td class="s5">
- &nbsp;
- </td>
- <td class="s5 w5em tdr">
- P<span class="smaller">AGE</span>.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- I.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#Ia_HESIOD">Hesiod</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 293
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- II.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#II_Golden_Verses">The Golden Verses</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 294
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- III.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#III_Buddhist_Canon">The Buddhist Canon</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 295
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- IV.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#IVa_OVID">Ovid</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 299
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- V.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#V_MUSONIUS">Musonius</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 303
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- VI.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#VI_LESSIO">Lessio</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 305
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- VII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#VII_COWLEY">Cowley</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 308
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- VIII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#VIII_TRYON">Tryon</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 309
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- IX.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#IX_HECQUET">Hecquet</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 314
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- X.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#Xa_POPE">Pope</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 318
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XI.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XIa_CHESTERFIELD">Chesterfield</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 320
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XII_JENYNS">Jenyns</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 322
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XIII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XIII_PRESSAVIN">Pressavin</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 324
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XIV.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XIV_SCHILLER">Schiller</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 326
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XV.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XV_BENTHAM">Bentham</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 327
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XVI.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XVI_SINCLAIR">Sinclair</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 329
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">
- XVII.
- </td>
- <td>
- <a href="#XVII_BYRON">Byron</a>
- </td>
- <td class="tdr">
- 331
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[Pg iv]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="PREFACE">PREFACE.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">A<span class="smaller">T</span> the present day, in all parts of the civilised world, the once
-orthodox practices of cannibalism and human sacrifice universally are
-regarded with astonishment and horror. The history of human development
-in the past, and the slow but sure progressive movements in the present
-time, make it absolutely certain that, with the same astonishment
-and horror will the now prevailing habits of living by the slaughter
-and suffering of the inferior species&mdash;habits different in degree
-rather than in kind from the old-world barbarism&mdash;be regarded by an
-age more enlightened and more refined than ours. Of such certainty
-no one, whose <i>beau idéal</i> of civilisation is not a State crowded
-with jails, penitentiaries, reformatories, and asylums, and who does
-not measure Progress by the imposing but delusive standard of an
-ostentatious Materialism&mdash;by the statistics of commerce, by the amount
-of wealth accumulated in the hands of a small part of the community,
-by the increase of populations which are mainly recruited from the
-impoverished classes, by the number and popularity of churches and
-chapels, or even by the number of school buildings and lecture halls,
-or the number and variety of charitable institutions throughout the
-country&mdash;will pretend to have any reasonable doubt.</p>
-
-<p>In searching the records of this nineteenth century&mdash;the minutes
-and proceedings of innumerable learned and scientific societies,
-especially those of Social and Sanitary Science Congresses&mdash;our more
-enlightened descendants (let us suppose, of the 2001st century of the
-Christian era), it is equally impossible to doubt, will observe with
-amazement that, amid all the immeasurable talking and writing upon
-social and moral science, there is discoverable little or no trace of
-serious inquiry in regard to a subject which the more thoughtful Few,
-in all times, have agreed in placing at the very foundation of all
-public or private well-being. Nor, probably, will the astonishment
-diminish when, further, it is found that, amid all the vast mass of
-theologico-religious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[Pg v]</a></span> publications, periodical or other (supposing,
-indeed, any considerable proportion of them to survive to that age),
-no consciousness appeared to exist of the reality of such virtues as
-Humaneness and Universal Compassion, or of any obligation upon the
-writers to exhibit them to the serious consideration of the world: and
-this, notwithstanding the contemporary existence of a long-established
-association of humanitarian reformers who, though few in number, and
-not in the position of dignity and power which compels the attention
-of mankind, none the less by every means at their disposal&mdash;upon the
-platform and in the press, by pamphlets and treatises appealing at once
-to physical science, to reason, to conscience, to the authority of
-the most earnest thinkers, to the logic of facts&mdash;had been protesting
-against the cruel barbarisms, the criminal waste, and the demoralising
-influences of Butchery; and demonstrating by their own example, and
-by that of vast numbers of persons in the most different parts of the
-globe, the entire practicability of Humane Living.</p>
-
-<p>When, further, it is revealed in the popular literature, as well as in
-the scientific books and journals of this nineteenth century, that the
-innocent victims of the luxurious gluttony of the richer classes in
-all communities, subjected as they were to every conceivable kind of
-brutal atrocity, were yet, by the science of the time, acknowledged,
-without controversy, to be beings essentially of the same physical and
-mental organisation with their human devourers; to be as susceptible
-to physical suffering and pain as they; to be endowed&mdash;at all events,
-a very large proportion of them&mdash;with reasoning and mental faculties
-in very high degrees, and far from destitute of moral perceptions, the
-amazement may well be conjectured to give way to incredulity, that
-such knowledge and such practices could possibly co-exist. That the
-outward signs of all this gross barbarism&mdash;the entire or mangled bodies
-of the victims of the Table&mdash;were accustomed to be put up for public
-exhibition in every street and thoroughfare, without manifestations of
-disgust or abhorrence from the passers-by&mdash;even from those pretending
-to most culture or fashion&mdash;such outward proofs of extraordinary
-insensibility on the part of all classes to finer feeling may,
-nevertheless, scarcely provoke so much astonishment from an enlightened
-posterity as the fact that every public gathering of the governors or
-civil dignitaries of the country; every celebration of ecclesiastical
-or religious festivals appeared to be made the special occasion of the
-sacrifice and suffering of a greater number and variety than usual
-of their harmless<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[Pg vi]</a></span> fellow-beings; and all this often in the near
-neighbourhood of starving thousands, starving from want of the merest
-necessaries of life.</p>
-
-<p>Happily, however, there will be visible to the philosopher of the
-Future signs of the dawn of the better day in this last quarter of the
-nineteenth century. He will find, in the midst of the general barbarism
-of life, and in spite of the prevailing indifferentism and infidelity
-to truth, that there was a gradually increasing number of dissenters
-and protesters; that already, at the beginning of that period, there
-were associations of dietary reformers&mdash;offshoots from the English
-parent society, founded in 1847&mdash;successively established in America,
-in Germany, in Switzerland, in France, and, finally, in Italy; small
-indeed in numbers, but strenuous in efforts to spread their principles
-and practice; that in some of the larger cities, both in this country
-and in other parts of Europe, there had also been set on foot <i>Reformed
-Restaurants</i>, which supplied to considerable numbers of persons at once
-better food and better knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>If the truth or importance of any Principle or Feeling is to be
-measured, not by its popularity, indeed&mdash;not by the <i>quod ab
-omnibus</i>&mdash;but by the extent of its recognition by the most refined
-and the most earnest thinkers in all the most enlightened times&mdash;by
-the <i>quod a sapientibus</i>&mdash;the value of no principle has better been
-established than that which insists upon the vital importance of a
-radical reform in Diet. The number of the protesters against the
-barbarism of human living who, at various periods in the known history
-of our world, have more or less strongly denounced it, is a fact
-which cannot fail to arrest the attention of the most superficial
-inquirer. But a still more striking characteristic of this large body
-of protestation is the <i>variety</i> of the witnesses. Gautama Buddha and
-Pythagoras, Plato and Epikurus, Seneca and Ovid, Plutarch and Clement
-(of Alexandria), Porphyry and Chrysostom, Gassendi and Mandeville,
-Milton and Evelyn, Newton and Pope, Ray and Linné, Tryon and Hecquet,
-Cocchi and Cheyne, Thomson and Hartley, Chesterfield and Ritson,
-Voltaire and Swedenborg, Wesley and Rousseau, Franklin and Howard,
-Lambe and Pressavin, Shelley and Byron, Hufeland and Graham, Gleïzès
-and Phillips, Lamartine and Michelet, Daumer and Struve&mdash;such are some
-of the more or less famous, or meritorious, names in the Past to be
-found among the prophets of Reformed Dietetics, who, in various degrees
-of abhorrence, have shrunk from the <i>régime</i> of blood. Of many of those
-who have revolted from it, it may almost be said that they revolted <i>in
-spite of themselves</i>&mdash;in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span> spite, that is to say, of the most cherished
-prejudices, traditions, and sophisms of Education.</p>
-
-<p>If we seek the historical origin of anti-kreophagist philosophy, it is
-to the Pythagorean School, in the later development of the Platonic
-philosophy especially, that the western world is indebted for the
-first systematic enunciation of the principle, and inculcation of the
-practice, of anti-materialistic living&mdash;the first historical protest
-against the <i>practical</i> materialism of every-day eating and drinking.
-How Christianity, which, in its first origin, owes so much to, and was
-so deeply imbued with, on the one hand, Essenian, and, on the other,
-Platonic principles, to the incalculable loss of all the succeeding
-ages, has failed to propagate and develope this true and vital
-spiritualism&mdash;in spite, too, of the convictions of some of its earliest
-and best exponents, an Origen or Clemens, seems to be explained, in
-the first instance, by the hostility of the triumphant and orthodox
-Church to the “Gnostic” element which, in its various shapes, long
-predominated in the Christian Faith, and which at one time seemed
-destined to be the ruling sentiment in the Church; and, secondly,
-by the natural growth of materialistic principles and practice in
-proportion to the growth of ecclesiastical wealth and power; for,
-although the virtues of “asceticism,” derived from Essenism and
-Platonism, obtained a high reputation in the orthodox Church, they were
-relegated and appropriated to the ecclesiastical order (theoretically
-at least), or rather to certain departments of it.</p>
-
-<p>Such was what may be termed the sectarian cause of this fatal
-abandonment of the more spiritual elements of the new Faith, operating
-in conjunction with the corrupting influences of wealth and power.
-As regards the <i>humanitarian</i> reason of anti-materialistic living,
-the failure and seeming incapacity of Christianity to recognise this,
-the most significant of all the underlying principles of reformation
-in Diet&mdash;the cause is not far to seek. It lay, essentially, in the
-(theoretical) depreciation of, and contempt for, <i>present</i> as compared
-with <i>future</i> existence. All the fatal consequence of this theoretical
-teaching (which yet has had no extensive influence, even in the way
-it might have been supposed to act beneficially), in regard to the
-status and rights of the non-human species, has been well indicated
-by a distinguished authority. “It should seem,” writes Dr. Arnold,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span>
-“as if the primitive Christians, by laying so much stress upon a
-future life, and placing the lower beings out of the pale of hope [of
-extended existence], placed them at the same time out of the pale of
-sympathy, and thus laid the foundation for this utter disregard of
-[other] animals in the light of our fellow-beings. Their definition
-of <i>Virtue</i> was the same as that of Paley&mdash;that it was good performed
-for the sake of ensuring everlasting happiness; which, of course,
-excluded all the [so-called] brute creatures.”<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> Hence it comes about
-that Humanitarianism and, in particular, Humane Dietetics, finds no
-place whatever in the religionism or pseudo-philosophy of the whole
-of the ages distinguished as the <i>Mediæval</i>&mdash;that is to say, from
-about the fifth or sixth to the sixteenth century&mdash;and, in fact,
-there existed not only a negative indifferentism, but even a positive
-tendency towards the still further depreciation and debasement of the
-extra-human races, of which the great doctor of mediæval theology,
-St. Thomas Aquinas (in his famous <i>Summa Totius Theologiæ</i>&mdash;the
-standard text book of the orthodox church), is especially the exponent.
-After the revival of reason and learning in the sixteenth century,
-to Montaigne, who, following Plutarch and Porphyry, reasserted the
-rights of the non-human species in general; and to Gassendi, who
-reasserted the right of innocent beings to life, in particular,
-among philosophers, belongs the supreme merit of being the first
-to dispel the long-dominant prejudices, ignorance, and selfishness
-of the common-place teachers of Morals and Religion. For orthodox
-Protestantism, in spite of its high-sounding name, so far at least as
-its theology is concerned, has done little in <i>protesting</i> against the
-infringement of the moral rights of the most helpless and the most
-harmless of all the members of the great commonwealth of Living Beings.</p>
-
-<p>The principles of Dietary Reform are widely and deeply founded upon the
-teaching of (1) Comparative Anatomy and Physiology; (2) Humaneness, in
-the two-fold meaning of Refinement of Living, and of what is commonly
-called “Humanity;” (3) National Economy; (4) Social Reform; (5)
-Domestic and Individual Economy; (6) Hygienic Philosophy, all of which
-are amply displayed in the following pages. Various minds are variously
-affected by the same arguments, and the force of each separate one
-will appear to be of different weight according to the special bias
-of the inquirer. The <i>accumulated</i> weight of all, for those who are
-able to form a calm and impartial judgment, cannot but cause the
-subject to appear one which demands and requires the most serious
-attention. To the present writer, the humanitarian argument appears
-to be of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span> double weight; for it is founded upon the irrefragable
-principles of Justice and Compassion&mdash;universal Justice and universal
-Compassion&mdash;the two principles most essential in any system of ethics
-worthy of the name. That this argument seems to have so limited an
-influence&mdash;even with persons otherwise humanely disposed, and of finer
-feeling in respect to their own, and, also, in a general way, to other
-species&mdash;can be attributed only to the deadening power of custom and
-habit, of traditional prejudice, and educational bias. If they could be
-brought to reflect upon the simple ethics of the question, divesting
-their minds of these distorting media, it must appear in a light very
-different from that in which they accustom themselves to consider it.
-This subject, however, has been abundantly insisted upon with eloquence
-and ability much greater than the present writer has any pretensions
-to. It is necessary to add here, upon this particular branch of the
-subject, only one or two observations. The popular objections to the
-disuse of the flesh-diet may be classified under the two heads of
-fallacies and subterfuges. Not a few candid inquirers, doubtless,
-there are who sincerely allege certain <i>specious</i> objections to the
-humanitarian argument, which have a considerable amount of <i>apparent</i>
-force; and these fallacies seem alone to deserve a serious examination.</p>
-
-<p>In the general constitution of life on our globe, suffering and
-slaughter, it is objected, are the normal and constant condition
-of things&mdash;the strong relentlessly and cruelly preying upon the
-weak in endless succession&mdash;and, it is asked, why, then, should the
-human species form an exception to the general rule, and hopelessly
-fight against Nature? To this it is to be replied, first: <i>that</i>,
-although, too certainly, an unceasing and cruel internecine warfare
-has been waged upon this atomic globe of ours from the first origin
-of Life until now, yet, apparently, there has been going on a slow,
-but not uncertain, progress towards the ultimate elimination of the
-crueller phenomena of Life; <i>that</i>, if the <i>carnivora</i> form a very
-large proportion of Living Beings, yet the <i>non-carnivora</i> are in the
-majority; and, lastly, what is still more to the purpose, <i>that</i> Man,
-most evidently, by his origin and physical organisation, belongs not
-to the former but to the latter; besides and beyond which, <i>that</i> in
-proportion as he boasts himself&mdash;and as he is seen <i>at his best</i> (and
-only so far) he boasts himself with justness&mdash;to be the highest of
-all the gradually ascending and co-ordinated series of Living Beings,
-so is he, in that proportion, bound to prove his right to the supreme
-place and power, and his asserted claims to moral as well as mental
-superiority, by his conduct.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span> In brief, in so far only as he proves
-himself to be the <i>beneficent ruler and pacificator</i>&mdash;and not the
-selfish Tyrant&mdash;of the world, can he have any just title to the moral
-pre-eminence.</p>
-
-<p>If the philosophical fallacy (the <i>eidolon specûs</i>) thus vanishes under
-a near examination; the next considerable objection, upon a superficial
-view, not wholly unnatural, that, if slaughtering for food were to be
-abolished, there would be a failure of manufacturing material for the
-ordinary uses of social life, is, in reality, based upon a contracted
-apprehension of facts and phenomena. For it is a reasonable and
-sufficient reply, that the whole history of civilisation, as it has
-been a history of the slow but, upon the whole, continuous advance
-of the human race in the arts of Refinement, so, also, has it proved
-that <i>demand creates supply</i>&mdash;that it is the absence of the former
-alone which permits the various substances, no less than the various
-forces, yet latent in Nature to remain uninvestigated and unused. Nor
-can any thoughtful person, who knows anything of the history of Science
-and Discovery, doubt that the resources of Nature and the mechanical
-ingenuity of man are all but boundless. Already, notwithstanding
-the absence of any demand for them, excepting within the ranks of
-anti-kreophagists, various non-animal substances have been proposed, in
-some cases used, as substitutes for the prepared skins of the victims
-of the Slaughter-house; and that, in the event of a general demand
-for such substitutes, there would spring up an active competition
-among inventors and manufacturers in this direction there is not the
-least reason for doubt. Besides, it must be taken into account that
-the process of conversion of the flesh-eating (that is to say, of the
-richer) sections of communities to the bloodless diet will, only too
-certainly, be very slow and gradual.</p>
-
-<p>As for the popular&mdash;perhaps the most popular&mdash;fallacy (the <i>eidolon
-fori</i>), which exhibits little of philosophical accuracy, or, indeed,
-of common reason, involved in the questions: “What is to become of
-<i>the animals</i>?” and, “Why were they created, if they are not intended
-for Slaughter and for human food?”&mdash;it is scarcely possible to
-return a grave reply. The brief answer, of course, is&mdash;that those
-variously-tortured beings have been brought into existence, and their
-numbers maintained, by selfish human invention only. Cease to breed
-for the butcher, and they will cease to exist beyond the numbers
-necessary for lawful and innocent use; they were “created” indeed,
-but they have been created by man, since he has vastly modified and,
-by no means, for the benefit of his helpless dependants, the natural
-form and organisation of the original types, the parent stocks of the
-domesticated Ox, Sheep,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span> and Swine, now very remote from the native
-grandeur and vigour of the Bison, the Mouflon, and the wild Boar.</p>
-
-<p>There remains one fallacy of quite recent origin. An association has
-been formed&mdash;somewhat late in the day, it must be allowed&mdash;consisting
-of a few sanitary reformers, who put forward, also, humane reasons, for
-“Reform of the Slaughter-Houses,” one of the secondary propositions
-of which is, that the savagery and brutality of the Butchers’ trade
-could be obviated by the partial or general use of less lingering and
-revolting modes of killing than those of the universal knife and axe.
-No humanitarian will refuse to welcome any sign, however feeble, of
-the awakening of the conscience of the Community, or rather of the
-more thoughtful part of it, to the paramount obligations of common
-Humanity, and of the recognition of the claims of the subject species
-to <i>some</i> consideration and to <i>some</i> compassion, if not of the
-recognition of the claims of Justice; or will refuse to welcome any
-sort of proposition to lessen the enormous sum total of atrocities to
-which the lower animals are constantly subjected by human avarice,
-gluttony, and brutality. But, at the same time, no earnest humanitarian
-can accept the sophism, that an attempt at a mitigation of cruelty and
-suffering which, fundamentally, are <i>unnecessary</i>, ought to satisfy
-the educated conscience or reason. Vainly do the more feeling persons,
-who happen to have some scruples of conscience in respect to the
-sanction of the barbarous practice of Butchering, think to abolish the
-cruelties, while still indulging the appetite for the flesh luxuries,
-of the Table. The vastness of the demands upon the butchers&mdash;demands
-constantly increasing with the pecuniary resources of the nation,
-and stimulated by the pernicious example of the wealthy classes; the
-immensity of the traffic in “live stock” (as they complacently are
-termed) by rail and by ship,<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> the frightful horrors of which it has
-often been attempted, though inadequately, to describe; the utter
-impossibility of efficiently supervising and regulating such traffic
-and such slaughter&mdash;even supposing the desire to do so to exist to
-any considerable extent&mdash;and the inveterate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</a></span> indifferentism of the
-Legislature and of the influential classes, sufficiently declare the
-futility of such expectation and of the indulgence of such comfortable
-hope. It is, in brief, as with other attempts at patching and mending,
-or at applying salves to a hopelessly festered and gangrened wound,
-merely to put the “flattering unction” of compromise to the conscience.
-“Diseases, desperate grown, by desperate appliances are relieved, or
-not at all;” the foul stream of cruelty must be stopped at its source;
-the fountain and origin of the evil&mdash;the Slaughter-House itself&mdash;must
-be abolished. <i>Delendum est Macellum.</i></p>
-
-<p>It has been well said by one of the most eloquent of the prophets
-of Humane Living, that there are steps on the way to the summit of
-Dietetic Reform, and, if only one step be taken, yet that that single
-step will be not without importance and without influence in the world.
-The step, which leaves for ever behind it the barbarism of slaughtering
-our fellow-beings, the Mammals and Birds, is, it is superfluous to add,
-the most important and most influential of all.</p>
-
-<p>As for the plan of the present work, living writers and
-authorities&mdash;numerous and important as they are&mdash;necessarily have been
-excluded. Its bulk, already extended beyond the original conception
-of its limits, otherwise would have been swollen to a considerably
-larger size. For its entire execution, as well as for the collection
-and arrangement of the matter, the compiler alone is responsible;
-and, conscious that it must fall short of the completeness at which
-he aimed, he can pretend only to the merits of careful research and
-an eclectic impartiality. To the fact that the work already has
-appeared in the pages of the <i>Dietetic Reformer</i>, to which it has been
-contributed periodically during a space of time extending over five
-years, is owing some repetition of matter, which also, necessarily, is
-due to the nature of the subject. Errors of inadvertence, it is hoped,
-will be found to be few and inconsiderable. For the rest, he leaves the
-<i>Ethics of Diet</i> to the candour of the critics and of the public.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="s1 center padtop5">THE ETHICS OF DIET.</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="I_HESIOD">I.<br />
-<span class="s5">HESIOD. E<span class="smaller">IGHTH</span>
-C<span class="smaller">ENTURY</span> B.C.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">H<span class="smaller">ESIOD</span>&mdash;the poet <i>par excellence</i> of peace and of agriculture,
-as Homer is of war and of the “heroic” virtues&mdash;was born at Ascra, a
-village in Bœotia, a part of Hellas, which, in spite of its proverbial
-fame for beef-eating and stupidity, gave birth to three other eminent
-persons&mdash;Pindar, the lyric poet, Epameinondas, the great military
-genius and statesman, and Plutarch, the most amiable moralist of
-antiquity.</p>
-
-<p>The little that is known of the life of Hesiod is derived from his
-<i>Works and Days</i>. From this celebrated poem we learn that his father
-was an emigrant from Æolia, the Greek portion of the north-west corner
-of the Lesser Asia; that his elder brother, Perses, had, by collusion
-with the judges, deprived him of his just inheritance; that after this
-he settled at Orchomenos, a neighbouring town&mdash;in the pre-historical
-ages a powerful and renowned city. This is all that is certainly known
-of the author of the <i>Works and Days</i>, and <i>The Theogony</i>. Of the
-genuineness of the former there has been little or no doubt; that of
-the latter&mdash;at least in part&mdash;has been called in question. Besides
-these two chief works, there is extant a piece entitled <i>The Shield
-of Herakles</i>, in imitation of the Homeric Shield (<i>Iliad</i> xviii.) The
-<i>Catalogues of Women</i>&mdash;a poem commemorating the heroines beloved by the
-gods, and who were thus the ancestresses of the long line of heroes,
-the reputed founders of the ruling families in Hellas&mdash;is lost.</p>
-
-<p>The charm of the <i>Works and Days</i>&mdash;the first didactic poem extant&mdash;is
-its apparent earnestness of purpose and simplicity of style. The
-author’s frequent references to, and rebuke of, legal injustices&mdash;his
-sense of which had been quickened by the iniquitous decisions of the
-judges already referred to&mdash;are as <i>naïve</i> as they are pathetic.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Of the <i>Theogony</i>, the subject, as the title implies, is the history of
-the generation and successive dynasties of the Olympian divinities&mdash;the
-objects of Greek worship. It may, indeed, be styled the Hellenic Bible,
-and, with the Homeric Epics, it formed the principal theology of the
-old Greeks, and of the later Romans or Latins. The “Proœmium,” or
-introductory verses&mdash;in which the Muses are represented as appearing
-to their votary at the foot of the sacred Helicon, and consecrating
-him to the work of revealing the divine mysteries by the gift of a
-laurel-branch&mdash;and the following verses, describing their return to the
-celestial mansions, where they hymn the omnipotent Father, are very
-charming. To the long description of the tremendous struggle of the
-warring gods and Titans, fighting for the possession of heaven, Milton
-was indebted for his famous delineation of a similar conflict.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Works and Days</i>, in striking contrast with the military spirit
-of the Homeric epic, deals in plain and simple verse with questions
-ethical, political, and economic. The ethical portion exhibits much
-true feeling, and a conviction of the evils brought upon the earth by
-the triumph of injustice and of violence. The well-known passages in
-which the poet figures the gradual declension and degeneracy of men
-from the golden to the present iron race, are the remote original of
-all the later pleasing poetic fictions of golden ages and times of
-innocence.</p>
-
-<p>According to Hesiod, there are two everlastingly antagonistic agents
-at work on the Earth; the spirit of war and fighting, and the peaceful
-spirit of agriculture and mechanical industry. And in the apostrophe in
-which he bitterly reproaches his unrighteous judges&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“O fools! they know not, in their selfish soul,</div>
- <div class="verse">How far the half is better than the whole:</div>
- <div class="verse">The good which Asphodel and Mallows yield,</div>
- <div class="verse">The feast of herbs, the dainties of the field”&mdash;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">he seems to have a profound conviction of the truth taught by
-Vegetarianism&mdash;that luxurious living is the fruitful parent of
-selfishness in its manifold forms.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
-
-<p>That Hesiod regarded that diet which depends mainly or entirely upon
-agriculture and upon fruits as the highest and best mode of life is
-sufficiently evident in the following verses descriptive of the “Golden
-Age” life:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Like gods, they lived with calm, untroubled mind,</div>
- <div class="verse">Free from the toil and anguish of our kind,</div>
- <div class="verse">Nor did decrepid age mis-shape their frame.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Pleased with earth’s unbought feasts: all ills removed,</div>
- <div class="verse">Wealthy in flocks,<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> and of the Blest beloved,</div>
- <div class="verse">Death, as a slumber, pressed their eyelids down:</div>
- <div class="verse">All Nature’s common blessings were their own.</div>
- <div class="verse">The life-bestowing tilth its fruitage bore,</div>
- <div class="verse">A full, spontaneous, and ungrudging store.</div>
- <div class="verse">They with abundant goods, ’midst quiet lands,</div>
- <div class="verse">All willing, shared the gatherings of their hands.</div>
- <div class="verse">When Earth’s dark breast had closed this race around,</div>
- <div class="verse">Great Zeus, as demons,<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> raised them from the ground;</div>
- <div class="verse">Earth-hovering spirits, they their charge began&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">The ministers of good, and guards of men.</div>
- <div class="verse">Mantled with mist of darkling air they glide,</div>
- <div class="verse">And compass Earth, and pass on every side;</div>
- <div class="verse">And mark, with earnest vigilance of eyes,</div>
- <div class="verse">Where just deeds live, or crooked ways arise,</div>
- <div class="verse">And shower the wealth of seasons from above.”<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The second race&mdash;the “Silver Age”&mdash;inferior to the first and wholly
-innocent people, were, nevertheless, guiltless of bloodshed in the
-preparation of their food; nor did they offer sacrifices&mdash;in the poet’s
-judgment, it appears, a damnable error. For the third&mdash;the “Brazen
-Age”&mdash;it was reserved to inaugurate the feast of blood:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Strong with the ashen spear, and fierce and bold,</div>
- <div class="verse">Their thoughts were bent on violence alone,</div>
- <div class="verse">The deed of battle, and the dying groan.</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Bloody their feasts, with wheaten food unblessed.</i>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>According to Hesiod, who is followed by the later poets, the “immortals
-inhabiting the Olympian mansions” feast ever on the pure and bloodless
-food of <i>Ambrosia</i>, and their drink is <i>Nectar</i>, which may be taken to
-be a sort of refined dew. He represents the divine Muses of Helicon,
-who inspire his song, as reproaching the shepherds, his neighbours,
-“that tend the flocks,” with the possession of “mere fleshly appetites.”</p>
-
-<p>Ovid, amongst the Latins, is the most charming painter of the innocence
-of the “Golden Age.” Amongst our own poets, Pope, Thomson, and
-Shelley&mdash;the last as a prophet of the future and actual rather than the
-poet of a past and fictitious age of innocence&mdash;have contributed to
-embellish the fable of the Past and the hope of the Future.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="II_PYTHAGORAS">II.<br />
-<span class="s5">PYTHAGORAS. 570&ndash;470 B.C.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“A <span class="smaller">GREATER</span> good never came, nor ever will come, to mankind, than
-that which was imparted by the gods through Pythagoras.” Such is the
-expression of enthusiastic admiration of one of his biographers. To
-those who are unacquainted with the historical development of Greek
-thought and Greek philosophy it may seem to be merely the utterance
-of the partiality of hero-worship. Those, on the other hand, who know
-anything of that most important history, and of the influence, direct
-or indirect, of Pythagoras upon the most intellectual and earnest
-minds of his countrymen&mdash;in particular upon Plato and his followers,
-and through them upon the later Jewish and upon very early Christian
-ideas&mdash;will acknowledge, at least, that the name of the prophet of
-Samos is that of one of the most important and influential factors in
-the production and progress of higher human thought.</p>
-
-<p>There is a true and there is a false hero-worship. The latter, whatever
-it may have done to preserve the blind and unreasoning subservience
-of mankind, has not tended to accelerate the progress of the world
-towards the attainment of truth. The old-world occupants of the popular
-Pantheon&mdash;“the patrons of mankind, gods and sons of gods, destroyers
-rightlier called and plagues of men”&mdash;are indeed fast losing, if they
-have not entirely lost, their ancient credit, but their vacant places
-have yet to be filled by the representatives of the most exalted
-ideals of humanity. Whenever, in the place of the representatives of
-mere physical and mental force, the <i>true</i> heroes shall be enthroned,
-amongst the moral luminaries and pioneers who have contributed to
-lessen the thick darkness of ignorance, barbarism, and selfishness,
-the name of the first western apostle of humanitarianism and of
-spiritualism must assume a prominent position.</p>
-
-<p>It is a natural and legitimate curiosity which leads us to wish to
-know, with something of certainty and fulness, the outer and inner life
-of the master spirits of our race. Unfortunately, the <i>personality</i>
-of many of the most interesting and illustrious of them is of a vague
-and shadowy kind. But when we reflect that little more is known of the
-personal life of Shakspere than of that of Pythagoras or Plato&mdash;not to
-mention other eminent names&mdash;our surprise is lessened that, in an age
-long preceding the discovery of printing, the records of a life even so
-important and influential as that of the founder of Pythagoreanism are
-meagre and scanty.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The earliest account of his teaching is given by Philolaus (“Lover of
-the People,” an auspicious name) of Tarentum, who, born about forty or
-fifty years after the death of his master&mdash;was thus contemporary with
-Sokrates and Plato. His <i>Pythagorean System</i>, in three books, was so
-highly esteemed by Plato that he is said to have given £400 or £500
-for a copy, and to have incorporated the principal part of it in his
-<i>Timæus</i>. Sharing the fate of so many other valuable products of the
-Greek genius, it has long since perished. Our remaining authorities
-for the Life are Diogenes of Laerte, Porphyry, one of the most erudite
-writers of any age, and Iamblichus. Of these, the biography of the
-last is the fullest, if not the most critical; that of Porphyry wants
-the beginning and the end; whilst of the ten books of Iamblichus <i>On
-the Pythagorean Sect</i> (Περὶ Πυθαγόρου Αἱρέσεως), of which only five
-remain, the first was devoted to the life of the founder. Diogenes,
-who seems to have been of the school of Epikurus, belongs to the
-second, while Porphyry and Iamblichus, the well-known exponents of
-Neo-Platonism, wrote in the third and fourth centuries of our era.</p>
-
-<p>Pythagoras was born in the Island of Samos, somewhere about the year
-570 <span class="smaller">B.C.</span> At some period in his youth, Polykrates&mdash;celebrated
-by the fine story of Herodotus&mdash;had acquired the <i>tyranny</i> of Samos,
-and his rule, like that of most of his compeers, has deserved the
-stigma of the modern meaning of the Greek equivalent for princely and
-monarchical government. The future philosopher, we are told, unable to
-descend to the ordinary arts of sycophancy and dissimulation, left his
-country, and entered, like the Sirian philosopher of Voltaire, upon an
-extensive course of travels&mdash;extensive for the age in which he lived.
-How far he actually travelled is uncertain. He visited Egypt, the great
-nurse of the old-world science, and Syria, and it is not impossible
-that he may have penetrated eastwards as far as Babylon, perhaps as the
-captive of the recent conqueror of Egypt&mdash;the Persian Kambyses. It was
-in the East, and particularly in Egypt, that he probably imbibed the
-dogma of the immortality of the soul, or, as he chose to represent it
-to the public, that of the <i>metempsychosis</i>&mdash;a fancy widely spread in
-the eastern theologies.</p>
-
-<p>It has been asserted that he had already abandoned the orthodox diet
-at the age of nineteen or twenty. If this was actually the fact, he
-has the additional merit of having adopted the higher life by his
-own original force of mind and refinement of feeling. If not, he may
-have derived the most characteristic as well as the most important
-of his teachings from the Egyptians or Persians, or, through them,
-even from the Hindus&mdash;the most religiously strict abstainers from
-the flesh of animals. It is remarkable that the two great apostles
-of abstinence&mdash;Pythagoras<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span> and Sakya-Muni, or Buddha&mdash;were almost
-contemporaries; nor is it impossible that the Greek may, in whatever
-way, have become acquainted with the sublime tenets of the Hindu
-prophet, who had lately seceded from Brahminism, the established
-sacerdotal and exclusive religion of the Peninsula, and promulgated his
-great revelation&mdash;until then new to the world&mdash;that religion, at least
-his religion, was to be “a religion of mercy to all beings,” human and
-non-human.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
-
-<p>As the natural and necessary result of his pure living, we are told
-by Iamblichus that “his sleep was brief, his soul vigilant and pure,
-and his body confirmed in a state of perfect and invariable health.”
-He appears to have passed the period of middle life when he returned
-to Samos, where his reputation had preceded him. Either, however,
-finding his countrymen hopelessly debased by the corrupting influence
-of despotism, or believing that he would find a better field for the
-propagandism of his new revelation, he not long afterwards set out for
-Southern Italy, then known as “Great Greece,” by reason of its numerous
-Greek colonies, or, rather, autonomous communities. At Krotona his
-fame and eloquence soon attracted, it seems, a select if not numerous
-auditory; and there he founded his famous society&mdash;the first historical
-anti-flesh-eating association in the western world&mdash;the prototype, in
-some respects, of the ascetic establishments of Greek and Catholic
-Christendom. It consisted of about three hundred young men belonging to
-the most influential families of the city and neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p>It was the practice of the Egyptian priestly caste and of other
-exclusive institutions to reserve their better ideas (of a more
-satisfactory sort, at all events, than the system of theology that was
-promulgated to the mass of the community), into which only privileged
-persons were initiated. This esoteric method, which under the name
-of the <i>mysteries</i> has exercised the learned ingenuity of modern
-writers&mdash;who have, for the most part, vainly laboured to penetrate the
-obscurity enveloping the most remarkable institution of the Hellenic
-theology&mdash;was accompanied with the strictest vows and circumstances of
-silence and secrecy. As for the priestly order, it was their evident
-policy to maintain the superstitious ignorance of the people and to
-overawe their minds, while in regard to the philosophic sects, it was
-perhaps to shield themselves from the priestly or popular suspicion
-that they shrouded their scepticism in this dark and convenient
-disguise. The parabolic or esoteric method was, perhaps, almost a
-necessity of the earlier ages. It is to be lamented that it should be
-still in favour in this safer age, and that the old exclusiveness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span> of
-the <i>mysteries</i> is in esteem with many modern authorities, who seem to
-hold that to unveil the spotless Truth to the multitude is “to cast
-pearls before swine.”</p>
-
-<p>It was probably from the philosophic motive that the founder of the new
-society instituted his grades of catechumens and probationary course,
-as well as vows of the strictest secrecy. The exact nature of all his
-interior instruction is necessarily very much matter of conjecture,
-inasmuch as, whether he committed his system to writing or not, nothing
-from his own hand has come down to us. However this may be, it is
-evident that the general spirit and characteristic of his teaching
-was self-denial or self-control, founded upon the great principles of
-justice and temperance; and that communism and asceticism were the
-principal aim of his sociology. He was the founder of communism in the
-West&mdash;his communistic ideas, however, being of an aristocratic and
-exclusive rather than of a democratic and cosmopolitan kind. “He first
-taught,” says Diogenes, “that the property of friends was to be held in
-common&mdash;that friendship is equality&mdash;and his disciples laid down their
-money and goods at his feet, and had all things common.”</p>
-
-<p>The moral precepts of the great master were much in advance of the
-conventional morality of the day. He enjoined upon his disciples, the
-same biographer informs us, each time they entered their houses to
-interrogate themselves&mdash;“How have I transgressed? What have I done?
-What have I left undone that I ought to have done?” He exhorted them to
-live in perfect harmony, to do good to their enemies and by kindness
-to convert them into friends. “He forbade them either to pray for
-themselves, seeing that they were ignorant of what was best for them;
-or to offer slain victims (σφαγια) as sacrifices; and taught them to
-respect a <i>bloodless</i> altar only.” Cakes and fruits, and other innocent
-offerings were the only sacrifices he would allow. This, and the
-sublime commandment “Not to kill or injure any innocent animal,” are
-the grand distinguishing doctrines of his moral religion. So far did he
-carry his respect for the beautiful and beneficent in Nature, that he
-specially prohibited wanton injury to cultivated and useful trees and
-plants.</p>
-
-<p>By confining themselves to the innocent, pure, and spiritual dietary
-he promised his followers the enjoyment of health and equanimity,
-undisturbed and invigorating sleep, as well as a superiority of mental
-and moral perceptions. As for his own diet, “he was satisfied,” says
-Porphyry, “with honey or the honeycomb, or with bread only, and he did
-not taste wine from morning to night (μεθ’ἣμεραν); or his principal
-dish was often kitchen herbs, cooked or uncooked. Fish he ate rarely.”</p>
-
-<p>Humanitarianism&mdash;the extension of the sublime principles of justice
-and of compassion to all innocent sentient life, irrespective of
-nationality,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span> creed, or species&mdash;is a very modern and even now very
-inadequately recognised creed; and, although there have been here and
-there a few, like Plutarch and Seneca, who were “splendidly false,”
-to the spirit of their age, the recognition of the obligation (the
-<i>practice</i> has always been a very different thing) of benevolence and
-beneficence, so far from being extended to the non-human races, until
-a comparatively recent time has been limited to the narrow bounds of
-country and citizenship; and patriotism and internationalism are,
-apparently, two very opposite principles.</p>
-
-<p>The obligation to abstain from the flesh of animals was founded by
-Pythagoras on mental and spiritual rather than on humanitarian grounds.
-Yet that the latter were not ignored by the prophet of <i>akreophagy</i> is
-evident equally by his prohibition of the infliction of pain, no less
-than of death, upon the lower animals, and by his injunction to abstain
-from the bloody sacrifices of the altar. Such was his abhorrence of
-the Slaughter-House, Porphyry tells us, that not only did he carefully
-abstain from the flesh of its victims, but that he could never bring
-himself to endure contact with, or even the sight of, butchers and
-cooks.</p>
-
-<p>While thus careful of the lives and feelings of the innocent non-human
-races, he recognised the necessity of making war upon the ferocious
-<i>carnivora</i>. Yet to such a degree had he become familiar with the
-habits and dispositions of the lower animals that he is said, by the
-exclusive use of vegetable food, not only to have tamed a formidable
-bear, which by its devastations on their crops had become the terror
-of the country people, but even to have accustomed it to eat that
-food only for the remainder of its life. The story may be true or
-fictitious, but it is not incredible; for there are well-authenticated
-instances, even in our own times, of true <i>carnivora</i> that have been
-fed, for longer or shorter periods, upon the non-flesh diet.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
-
-<p>“Amongst other reasons, Pythagoras,” says Iamblichus, “enjoined
-abstinence from the flesh of animals because it is conducive to
-peace. For those who are accustomed to abominate the slaughter of
-other animals, as iniquitous and unnatural, will think it still more
-unjust and unlawful to kill a man or to engage in war.” Specially, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
-“exhorted those politicians who are legislators to abstain. For if they
-were willing to act justly in the highest degree, it was indubitably
-incumbent upon them not to injure any of the lower animals. Since how
-could they persuade others to act justly, if they themselves were
-proved to be indulging an insatiable avidity by devouring these animals
-that are allied to us. For through the communion of life and the
-same elements, and the sympathy thus existing, they are, as it were,
-conjoined to us by a fraternal alliance.”<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> Maxims how different
-from those in favour in the present “year of grace,” 1877! If the
-refined thinker of the sixth century <span class="smaller">B.C.</span> were now living,
-what would be his indignation at the enormous slaughter of innocent
-life for the public banquets at which our statesmen and others are
-constantly <i>fêted</i>, and which are recorded in our journals with so much
-magniloquence and minuteness? His hopes for the regeneration of his
-fellow-men would surely be terribly shattered. We may apply the words
-of the great Latin satirist, Juvenal, who so frequently denounces in
-burning language the luxurious gluttony of his countrymen under the
-Empire&mdash;“What would not Pythagoras denounce, or whither would he not
-flee, could he see these monstrous sights&mdash;he who abstained from the
-flesh of all other animals as though they were human?” (<i>Satire</i> xv.)</p>
-
-<p>How long the communistic society of Krotona remained undisturbed is
-uncertain. Inasmuch as its reputation and influence were widely spread,
-it may be supposed that the outbreak of the populace (the origin of
-which is obscure), by which the society was broken up and his disciples
-massacred, did not happen until many years after its establishment.
-At all events, it is commonly believed that Pythagoras lived to an
-advanced age, variously computed at eighty, ninety, or one hundred
-years.</p>
-
-<p>It is not within our purpose to discuss minutely the scientific or
-theological theories of Pythagoras. In accordance with the abstruse
-speculative character of the Ionic school of science, which inclined
-to refer the origin of the universe to some one primordial principle,
-he was led by his mathematical predilections to discover the cosmic
-element in numbers, or proportion&mdash;a theory which savours of John
-Dalton’s philosophy, now accepted in chemistry, and a virtual
-enunciation of what we now call <i>quantitative</i> science. Pythagoras
-taught the Kopernican theory prematurely. He regarded the sun as more
-<i>divine</i> than the earth, and therefore set it in the <i>centre</i> of the
-earth and planets. The argument was surely a mark of genius, but it
-was too transcendental for his contemporaries, even for Plato and
-Aristotle. His elder contemporary, the celebrated Thales of Miletus,
-with whom in his early youth he may have been acquainted, may claim,
-indeed, to be the remote originator of the famous nebular hypothesis
-of Laplace and modern astronomy. Another cardinal doctrine of the
-Pythagorean school was the musical, from whence the idea, so popular
-with the poets, of the “music of the spheres.” To<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span> music was attributed
-the greatest influence in the control of the passions. In its larger
-sense, by the Greeks generally, the term “Music” (<i>Musice</i>&mdash;pertaining
-to the Muses) denoted, it is to be remembered, not alone the “concord
-of sweet sounds,” but also an artistic and æsthetic education in
-general&mdash;all humanising and refining instruction.</p>
-
-<p>The famous doctrine of the Metempsychosis or Transmigration of
-Souls also was, doubtless, a prominent feature in the Pythagorean
-system; but it is probable that we may presume that by it Pythagoras
-intended merely to convey to the “uninstructed,” by parable, the
-sublime idea that the soul is gradually purified by a severe course
-of discipline until finally it becomes fitted for a fleshless life
-of immortality.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> We are chiefly concerned with his attitude in
-regard to flesh eating. There can be no question that abstinence was
-a fundamental part of his system, yet certain modern critics&mdash;little
-in sympathy with so practical a manifestation of the higher life,
-or, indeed, with self-denial of any kind&mdash;have sometimes affected
-either to doubt the fact or to pass it by in contemptuous silence,
-thus ignoring what for the after ages stands out as by far the most
-important residuum of Pythagoreanism. In support of this scepticism
-the fact of the celebrated athlete Milo, whose prodigies of strength
-have become proverbial, has been quoted. Yet if these critics had been
-at the pains of inquiring somewhat further, they would have learned,
-on the contrary, that the non-flesh diet is exactly that which is
-most conducive to physical vigour; that in the East there are at this
-day non-flesh eaters, who in feats of strength might put even our
-strongest men to the blush. The extraordinary powers of the porters
-and boatmen of Constantinople have been remarked by many travellers;
-and the Chinese coolies and others are almost equally notorious for
-their marvellous powers of endurance. Yet their food is not only of
-the simplest&mdash;rice, dhourra (<i>i.e.</i>, millet), onions, &amp;c.&mdash;but of the
-scantiest possible. Moreover, the elder Greek athletes themselves, for
-the most part, trained on vegetarian diet. Not to multiply details,
-the fact that, upon a moderate calculation, two-thirds at least of the
-population of our globe&mdash;including the mass of the inhabitants of these
-islands&mdash;live, <i>nolentes, volentes</i>, on a dietary from which flesh is
-almost altogether necessarily excluded, is on the face of it sufficient
-proof in itself of the non-necessity of the diet of the rich.</p>
-
-<p>While the general consent of antiquity and of later times has received
-as undoubted the obligation of strict abstinence on the part of the
-immediate followers of Pythagoras, it seems that as regards the
-un<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>initiated, or (to use the ecclesiastical term) <i>catechumens</i>, the
-obligation was not so strict. Indeed relaxation of the rules of the
-higher life was simply a <i>sine quâ non</i> of securing the attention of
-the mass of the community at all; and, like one still more eminent than
-himself in an after age, he found it a matter of necessity to present
-a teaching and a mode of living not too exalted and unattainable by
-the grossness and “hardness of heart” of the multitude. Hence, in all
-probability, the seeming contradictions in his teaching on this point
-found in the narratives of his followers.</p>
-
-<p>If his critics had been more intent on discovering the excellence of
-his rules of abstinence than on discussing, with frivolous diligence,
-the probable or possible reasons of his alleged prohibition of beans,
-it would have redounded more to their credit for wisdom and love of
-truth. Assuming the fact of the prohibition, in place of collecting
-all the most absurd gossip of antiquity, they might perhaps have found
-a more rational and more solid reason in the hypothesis that the bean
-being, as used in the ballot, a symbol and outward and visible sign of
-political life, was employed by Pythagoras parabolically to dissuade
-his followers from participating in the idle strife of party faction,
-and to exhort them to concentrate their efforts upon an attempt to
-achieve the solid and lasting reformation of mankind.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> But to be
-much concerned in a patient inquiry after truth unhappily has been not
-always the characteristic of professional commentators.</p>
-
-<p>Blind hero-worship or idolatry of genius or intellect, even when
-directed to high moral aims, is no part of our creed; and it is
-sufficient to be assured that he was human, to be free to confess
-that the historical founder of <i>akreophagy</i> was not exempt from human
-infirmity, and that he could not wholly rise above the wonder-loving
-spirit of an uncritical age. Deducting all that has been imputed to
-him of the fanciful or fantastic, enough still remains to force us to
-recognise in the philosopher-prophet of Samos one of the master-spirits
-of the world.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="III_PLATO">III.<br />
-<span class="s5">PLATO. 428&ndash;347 B.C.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">T<span class="smaller">HE</span> most renowned of all the prose writers of antiquity may be said to
-have been almost the lineal descendant, in philosophy, of the teacher
-of Samos. He belonged to the aristocratic families of Athens&mdash;“the
-eye of Greece”&mdash;then and for long afterwards the centre of art and
-science. His original name was Aristokles, which he might well have
-retained. Like another equally famous leader in literature, François
-Marie Arouet, he abandoned his birth-name, and he assumed or acquired
-the name by which he is immortalised, to characterise, as it is said,
-either the breadth of his brow or the extensiveness of his mental
-powers. In very early youth he seems to have displayed his literary
-aptitude and tastes in the various kinds of poetry&mdash;epic, tragic, and
-lyric&mdash;as well as to have distinguished himself as an athlete in the
-great national contests or “games,” as they were called, the grand
-object of ambition of every Greek. He was instructed in the chief
-and necessary parts of a liberal Greek education by the most able
-professors of the time. He devoted himself with ardour to the pursuit
-of knowledge, and sedulously studied the systems of philosophy which
-then divided the literary world.</p>
-
-<p>In his twentieth year he attached himself to Sokrates, who was then
-at the height of his reputation as a moralist and dialectician. After
-the judicial murder of his master, 399, he withdrew from his native
-city, which, with a theological intolerance extremely rare in pagan
-antiquity, had already been disgraced by the previous persecution of
-another eminent teacher&mdash;Anaxagoras&mdash;the instructor of Euripides and of
-Perikles. Plato then resided for some time at Megara, at a very short
-distance from Athens, and afterwards set out, according to the custom
-of the eager searchers after knowledge of that age, on a course of
-travels.</p>
-
-<p>He traversed the countries which had been visited by Pythagoras, but
-his alleged visit to the further East is as traditional as that of
-his predecessor. The most interesting fact or tradition in his first
-travels is his alleged intimacy with the Greek prince of Syracuse,
-the elder Dionysius, and his invitation to the western capital of
-the Hellenic world. The story that he was given up by his perfidious
-host to the Spartan envoy, and by him sold into slavery, though not
-disprovable, may be merely an exaggerated account of the ill-treatment
-which he actually received.</p>
-
-<p>His grand purpose in going to Italy was, without doubt, the desire to
-become personally known to the eminent Pythagoreans whose head<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>quarters
-were in the southern part of the Peninsula, and to secure the best
-opportunities of making himself thoroughly acquainted with their
-philosophic tenets. At that time the most eminent representative of
-the school was the celebrated Archytas, one of the most extraordinary
-mathematical geniuses and mechanicians of any age. Upon his return to
-Athens, at about the age of forty, he established his ever-memorable
-school in the suburban groves or “gardens” known as Ἀκαδημία&mdash;whence
-the well-known <i>Academy</i> by which the Platonic philosophy is
-distinguished, and which, in modern days, has been so much vulgarised.
-All the most eminent Athenians, present and future, attended his
-lectures, and among them was Aristotle, who was destined to rival the
-fame of his master. From about 388 to 347, the date of his death, he
-continued to lecture in the Academy and to compose his Dialogues.</p>
-
-<p>In the intervals of his literary and didactic labours he twice visited
-Sicily; the first time at the invitation of his friend Dion, the
-relative and minister of the two Dionysii, the younger of whom had
-succeeded to his father’s throne, and whom Dion hoped to win to justice
-and moderation by the eloquent wisdom of the Athenian sage. Such hopes
-were doomed to bitter disappointment. His second visit to Syracuse
-was undertaken at the urgent entreaties of his Pythagorean friends,
-of whose tenets and dietetic principles he always remained an ardent
-admirer. For whatever reason, it proved unsuccessful. Dion was driven
-into exile, and Plato himself escaped only by the interposition of
-Archytas. Thus the only chance of attempting the realisation of his
-ideal of a communistic commonwealth&mdash;if he ever actually entertained
-the hope of realising it&mdash;was frustrated. Almost the only source of the
-biographies of Plato are the <i>Letters</i> ascribed to him, commonly held
-to be fictitious, but maintained to be genuine by Grote. The narrative
-of the first visit to Sicily is found in the seventh Letter.</p>
-
-<p>We can refer but briefly to the nature of the philosophy and
-writings of Plato. In the notice of Pythagoras it has been stated
-that Plato valued very highly that teacher’s methods and principles.
-Pythagoreanism, in fact, enters very largely into the principal
-writings of the great disciple and exponent (and, it may safely
-be added, improver) of Sokrates, especially in the <i>Republic</i>
-and the <i>Timæus</i>. The four cardinal virtues inculcated in the
-<i>Republic</i>&mdash;justice or righteousness (Δικαιοσύνη), temperance or
-self-control (Εγκρατεία or Σωφροσύνη), prudence or wisdom (Φρονήσις),
-fortitude (Ἀνδρεία)&mdash;are eminently pythagorean.</p>
-
-<p>The characteristic of the purely speculative portion of Platonism
-is the theory of <i>ideas</i> (used by the author in the new sense of
-<i>unities</i>, the original meaning being <i>forms</i> and <i>figures</i>), of which
-it may be said that its merit depends upon its poetic fancy rather
-than upon its scientific value.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span> Divesting it of the verbiage of the
-commentators, who have not succeeded in making it more intelligible,
-all that need be said of this abstruse and fantastic notion is, that by
-it he intended to convey that all sensible objects which, according to
-him, are but the shadows and phantoms of things unseen, are ultimately
-referable to certain abstract conceptions or ideas, which he termed
-<i>unities</i>, that can only be reached by pure thinking. Hence he asserted
-that “not being in a condition to grasp the idea of the Good with
-full distinctness, we are able to approximate to it only so far as
-we elevate the power of thinking to its proper purity.” Whatever may
-be thought of the premiss, the truth and utility of the deduction
-may be allowed to be as unquestionable as they are unheeded. This
-characteristic theory may be traced to the belief of Plato not only
-in the immortality, but also in the past eternity of the soul. In the
-<i>Phædrus</i>, under the form of allegory, he describes the soul in its
-former state of existence as traversing the circuit of the universe
-where, if reason duly control the appetite, it is initiated, as it
-were, into the essences of things which are there disclosed to its
-gaze. And it is this ante-natal experience, which supplies the fleshly
-mind or soul with its ideas of the beautiful and the true.</p>
-
-<p>The subtlety of the Greek intellect and language was, apparently, an
-irresistible temptation to their greatest ornaments to indulge in the
-nicest and most mystic speculation, which, to the possessors of less
-subtle intellects and of a far less flexible language, seems often
-strangely unpractical and hyperbolic. Thus while it is impossible
-not to be lost in admiration of the marvellous powers of the Greek
-<i>dialectics</i>, one cannot but at the same time regret that faculties so
-extraordinary should have been expended (we will not say altogether
-wasted) in so many instances on unsubstantial phantoms. If, however,
-the transcendentalism of the Platonic and other schools of Greek
-thought is matter for regret, how must we not deplore the enormous
-waste of time and labour apparent in the theological controversies
-of the first three or four centuries of Christendom&mdash;at least of
-Greek Christendom&mdash;when the omission or insertion of a single letter
-could profoundly agitate the whole ecclesiastical world and originate
-volumes upon volumes of refined, indeed, but useless verbiage. Yet
-even the ecclesiastical Greek writers of the early centuries may lay
-claim to a certain originality and merit of style which cannot be
-conceded to the “schoolmen” of the mediæval ages, and of still later
-times, whose solemn trifling&mdash;under the proud titles of Platonists and
-Aristotelians, or Nominalists and Realists, and the numerous other
-appellations assumed by them&mdash;for centuries was received with patience
-and even applause. Nor, unfortunately, is this war of Phantoms by any
-means unknown or extinct in our day. It was the lament of Seneca,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
-often echoed by the most earnest minds, that all, or at least the
-greater part of, our learning is expended upon words rather than upon
-the acquisition of wisdom.<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></p>
-
-<p>Plato deserves his high place among the Immortals not so much on
-account of any very definite results from his philosophy as on
-account of its general <i>tendency</i> to elevate and direct human
-thought and aspirations to sublime speculations and aims. Of all his
-<i>Dialogues</i>, the most valuable and interesting, without doubt, is
-the <i>Republic</i>&mdash;the one of his writings upon which he seems to have
-bestowed the most pains, and in which he has recorded the outcome of
-his most mature reflections. Next may be ranked the <i>Phædo</i> and the
-<i>Phædrus</i>&mdash;the former, it is well known, being a disquisition on the
-immortality of the soul. In spite of certain fantastic conceptions,
-it must always retain its interest, as well by reason of its
-speculations on a subject which is (or rather which ought to be) the
-most interesting that can engage the mind, as because it purports to
-be the last discourse of Sokrates, who was expecting in his prison the
-approaching sentence of death. The <i>Phædrus</i> derives its unusual merit
-from the beauty of the language and style, and from the fact of its
-being one of the few writings of antiquity in which the charms of rural
-nature are described with enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Republic</i>, with which we are here chiefly concerned, since it
-is in that important work that the author reproduces the dietetic
-principles of Pythagoras, may have been first published amongst his
-earlier writings, about the year 395; but that it was published in a
-larger and revised edition at a later period is sufficiently evident.
-It consists of ten Books. The question of Dietetics is touched upon
-in the second and third, in which Plato takes care to point out the
-essential importance to the well-being of his ideal state, that both
-the mass of the community and, in a special degree, the <i>guardians</i> or
-rulers, should be educated and trained in proper dietetic principles,
-which, if not so definitely insisted upon as we could wish them to have
-been, sufficiently reveal the bias of his mind towards Vegetarianism.
-In the second Book the discussion turns principally upon the nature
-of Justice; and there is one passage which, still more significant
-for the age in which it was written, is not without instruction
-for the present. While Sokrates is discussing the subject with his
-interlocutors, one of them is represented as objecting:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“With much respect be it spoken, you who profess to be admirers
-of justice, beginning with the heroes of old, have every one
-of you, without exception, made the praise of Justice and the
-condemnation of Injustice turn solely upon the reputation and
-honour and gifts resulting from them. But what each is in itself,
-by its own peculiar force as it resides in the soul of its
-possessor, unseen either by gods or men, has never, in poetry or
-prose, been adequately discussed, so as to show that Injustice is
-the greatest bane that a soul can receive into itself, and Justice
-the greatest blessing. Had this been the language held by you all
-from the first, and had you tried to persuade us of this from our
-childhood, we should not be on the watch to check one another in
-the commission of injustice, because everyone would be his own
-watchman, fearful lest by committing injustice he might attach to
-himself the greatest of evils.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Very useful and necessary for those times, and not wholly inapplicable
-to less remote ages, is the incidental remark in the same book, that
-“there are quacks and soothsayers who flock to the rich man’s doors,
-and try to persuade him that they have a power at command which
-they procure from heaven, and which enables them, by sacrifices and
-incantations, performed amid feasting and indulgence, to make amends
-for any crime committed either by the individual himself or by his
-ancestors.... And in support of all these assertions they produce the
-evidence of poets&mdash;some, to exhibit the facilities of vice, quoting the
-words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Whoso wickedness seeks, may even in masses obtain it</div>
- <div class="verse">Easily. Smooth is the way, and short, for nigh is her dwelling.</div>
- <div class="verse">Virtue, heaven has ordained, shall be reached by the sweat of the forehead.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft15">&mdash;<i>Hesiod</i>, <i>Works and Days</i>, 287.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is the fifth Book, however, which has always excited the greatest
-interest and controversy, for therein he introduces his Communistic
-views. Our interest in it is increased by the fact that it is the
-original of the ideal Communisms of modern writers&mdash;the prototype of
-the <i>Utopia</i> of More, of the <i>New Atlantis</i> of Francis Bacon, the
-<i>Oceanica</i> of Harrington, and the <i>Gaudentio</i> of Berkeley, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>In maintaining the perfect natural equality of women to men,<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> and
-insisting upon an identity of education and training, he advances
-propositions which perhaps only the more advanced of the assertors
-of women’s rights might be prepared to entertain. Whatever may have
-been said by the various admirers of Plato, who have been anxious to
-present his political or social views in a light which might render
-them less in conflict with modern Conservatism, there can be no doubt
-for any candid reader of the <i>Republic</i> that the author published to
-the world his <i>bonâ fide</i> convictions. One of the <i>dramatis personæ</i>
-of the dialogue, while expressing his concurrence in the Communistic
-legislation of Sokrates, at the same time objects to the difficulty of
-realising it in actual life, and desires Sokrates to point out whether,
-and how, it could be really practicable. Whereupon Sokrates (who it is
-scarcely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span> necessary to remark, is the convenient mouthpiece of Plato)
-replies: “Do you think any the worse of an artist who has painted the
-<i>beau idéal</i> of human beauty, and has left nothing wanting in the
-picture, because he cannot prove that such a one as he has painted
-might possibly exist? Were not we, likewise, proposing to construct,
-in theory, the pattern of a perfect State? Will our theory suffer at
-all in your good opinion if we cannot prove that it is <i>possible</i> for a
-city to be organised in the manner proposed?”</p>
-
-<p>As has been well paraphrased by the interpreters to whom we are
-indebted for the English version: “The possibilities of realising such
-a commonwealth in actual practice is quite a secondary consideration,
-which does not in the least affect the soundness of the method or the
-truth of the results. All that can fairly be demanded of him is to
-show how the imperfect politics at present existing may be brought
-most nearly into harmony with the perfect State which has just been
-described. To bring about this great result one fundamental change
-is necessary, and only one: the highest political power must, by
-some means or other, be vested in philosophers.” The next point
-to be determined is, What is, or ought to be, implied by the term
-<i>philosopher</i>, and what are the characteristics of the true philosophic
-disposition? “They are&mdash;(1) an eager desire for the knowledge of all
-real existence; (2) hatred of falsehood, and devoted love of truth; (3)
-contempt for the pleasures of the body; (4) indifference to money; (5)
-high-mindedness and liberality; (6) justice and gentleness; (7) a quick
-apprehension and a good memory; (8) a musical, regular, and harmonious
-disposition.” But how is this disposition to be secured? Under the
-present condition of things, and the corrupting influences of various
-kinds, where temptations abound to compromise truth and substitute
-expediency and self-interest, it would seem wellnigh impossible and
-Utopian to expect it.</p>
-
-<p>“How is this evil to be remedied? The State itself must regulate the
-study of philosophy, and must take care that the students pursue it on
-right principles, and at a right age. And now, surely, we may expect
-to be believed when we assert that if a State is to prosper it must be
-governed by philosophers. If such a contingency should ever take place
-(and why should it not?), our ideal State will undoubtedly be realised.
-So that, upon the whole, we come to this conclusion: The constitution
-just described is the best, if it can be realised; and to realise it is
-difficult, but not impossible.” At this moment, when the question of
-compulsory education, under the immediate superintendence of the State,
-is being fought with so much fierceness&mdash;on one side, at least&mdash;to
-recur to Plato might not be without advantage.</p>
-
-<p>In the most famous dialogue of Plato&mdash;the <i>Republic</i>, or, as it might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
-be termed <i>On Justice</i>&mdash;the principal interlocutors, besides Sokrates,
-are Glaukon, Polymachus, and Adeimantus; and the whole piece originates
-in the chance question which rose between them, “What is Justice?”
-In the second Book, from which the following passage is taken, the
-discussion turns upon the origin of society, which gives opportunity
-to Sokrates to develop his opinions upon the diet best adapted for the
-community&mdash;at all events, for the great majority:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“‘They [the artisans and work-people generally] will live, I
-suppose, on barley and wheat, baking cakes of the meal, and
-kneading loaves of the flour. And spreading these excellent cakes
-and loaves upon mats of straw or on clean leaves, and themselves
-reclining on rude beds of yew or myrtle-boughs, they will make
-merry, themselves and their children, drinking their wine, weaving
-garlands, and singing the praises of the gods, enjoying one
-another’s society, and not begetting children beyond their means,
-through a prudent fear of poverty or war.’</p>
-
-<p>“Glaukon here interrupted me, remarking, ‘Apparently you describe
-your men feasting, without anything to relish their bread.’<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a></p>
-
-<p>“‘True,’ I said, ‘I had forgotten. Of course they will have
-something to relish their food. Salt, no doubt, and olives, and
-cheese, together with the country fare of boiled onions and
-cabbage. We shall also set before them a dessert, I imagine,
-of figs, pease, and beans: they may roast myrtle-berries and
-beech-nuts at the fire, taking wine with their fruit in moderation.
-And thus, passing their days in tranquillity and sound health,
-they will, in all probability, live to an advanced age, and dying,
-bequeath to their children a life in which their own will be
-reproduced.’</p>
-
-<p>“Upon this Glaukon exclaimed, ‘Why, Sokrates, if you were founding
-a community of swine, this is just the style in which you would
-feed them up!’</p>
-
-<p>“‘How, then,’ said I, ‘would you have them live, Glaukon?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘In a civilised manner,’ he replied. ‘They ought to recline on
-couches, I should think, if they are not to have a hard life of it,
-and dine off tables, and have the usual dishes and dessert of a
-modern dinner.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Very good: I understand. Apparently we are considering the
-growth, not of a city merely, but of a <i>luxurious</i> city. I dare
-say it is not a bad plan, for by this extension of our inquiry we
-shall perhaps discover how it is that justice and injustice take
-root in cities. Now, it appears to me that the city which we have
-described is the <i>genuine</i> and, so to speak, <i>healthy</i> city. But
-if you wish us also to contemplate a city that is suffering from
-inflammation, there is nothing to hinder us. Some people will not
-be satisfied, it seems, with the fare or the mode of life which we
-have described, but must have, in addition, couches and tables and
-every other article of furniture, as well as viands.... Swineherds
-again are among the additions we shall require&mdash;a class of persons
-not to be found, because not wanted, in our former city, but needed
-among the rest in this. We shall also need great quantities of all
-kinds of cattle for those who may wish to eat them, shall we not?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Of course we shall.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Then shall we not experience the need of medical men also to a
-much greater extent under this than under the former <i>régime</i>?’</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
-
-<p>“‘Yes, indeed.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘The country, too, I presume, which was formerly adequate to
-the support of its then inhabitants, will be now too small, and
-adequate no longer. Shall we say so?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Certainly.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Then must we not cut ourselves a slice of our neighbours’
-territory, if we are to have land enough both for pasture and
-tillage? While they will do the same to ours if they, like us,
-permit themselves to overstep the limit of necessaries, and plunge
-into the unbounded acquisition of wealth.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It must inevitably be so, Sokrates.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Will our next step be to go to war, Glaukon, or how will it be?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘As you say.’</p>
-
-<p>“At this stage of our inquiry let us avoid asserting either that
-war does good or that it does harm, confining ourselves to this
-statement&mdash;that we have further traced the origin of war to causes
-which are the most fruitful sources of whatever evils befall a
-State, either in its corporate capacity or in its individual
-members.” (Book II.)<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Justly holding that the best laws will be of little avail unless the
-administrators of them shall be just and virtuous, Sokrates, in the
-Third Book, proceeds to lay down rules for the education and diet of
-the magistrates or executive, whom he calls&mdash;in conformity with the
-Communistic system&mdash;<i>guardians</i>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“‘We have already said,’ proceeds Sokrates, ‘that the persons in
-question must refrain from drunkenness; for a guardian is the last
-person in the world, I should think, to be allowed to get drunk,
-and not know where he is.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Truly it would be ridiculous for a guardian to require a guard.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘But about eating: our men are combatants in a most important
-arena, are they not?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘They are.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Then will the habit of body which is cultivated by the trained
-fighters of the Palæstra be suitable to such persons?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Perhaps it will.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, but this is a sleepy kind of regimen, and produces a
-precarious state of health; for do you not observe that men in the
-regular training sleep their life away, and, if they depart only
-slightly from the prescribed diet, are attacked by serious maladies
-in their worst form?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I do.’</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“‘In fact, it would not be amiss, I imagine, to compare this whole
-system of feeding and living to that kind of music and singing
-which is adapted to the panharmonicum, and composed in every
-variety of rhythm.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Undoubtedly it would be a just comparison.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Is it not true, then, that as in music variety begat
-dissoluteness in the soul, so here it begets disease in the body,
-while simplicity in gymnastic [diet] is as productive of health as
-in music it was productive of temperance?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Most true.’</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
-
-<p>“‘But when dissoluteness and diseases abound in a city, are not
-law courts and surgeries opened in abundance, and do not Law
-and Physic begin to hold their heads high, when numbers even
-of well-born persons devote themselves with eagerness to these
-professions?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘What else can we expect?’</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“‘And do you not hold it disgraceful to require medical aid, unless
-it be for a wound, or an attack of illness incidental to the time
-of the year&mdash;to require it, I mean, owing to our laziness and the
-life we lead, and to get ourselves so stuffed with humours and
-wind, like quagmires, as to compel the clever sons of Asklepios to
-call diseases by such names as <i>flatulence</i> and <i>catarrh</i>?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘To be sure, these are very strange and new-fangled names for
-disorders.’” (Book III.)</p></div>
-
-<p>Elsewhere, in a well-known passage (in <i>The Laws</i>), Plato pronounces
-that the springs of human conduct and moral worth depend principally
-on diet. “I observe,” says he, “that men’s thoughts and actions are
-intimately connected with the threefold need and desire (accordingly as
-they are properly used or abused, virtue or its opposite is the result)
-of eating, drinking, and sexual love.” He himself was remarkable for
-the extreme frugality of his living. Like most of his countrymen, he
-was a great eater of figs; and so much did he affect that frugal repast
-that he was called, <i>par excellence</i>, the “lover of figs” (φιλόσυκος).</p>
-
-<p>The Greeks, in general, were noted among the Europeans for their
-abstemiousness; and Antiphanes, the comic poet (in Athenæus), terms
-them “leaf-eaters” (φυλλοτρῶγες). Amongst the Greeks, the
-Athenians and Spartans were specially noted for frugal living. That of
-the latter is proverbial. The comic poets frequently refer, in terms
-of ridicule, to what seemed to them so unaccountable an indifferentism
-to the “good things” of life on the part of the witty and refined
-people of Attica. See the <i>Deipnosophists</i> (dinner-philosophers) of
-Athenæus (the great repertory of the <i>bon-vivantism</i> of the time), and
-Plutarch’s <i>Symposiacs</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It has been pointed out by Professor Mahaffy, in his recent work on
-old Greek life, that slaughter-houses and butchers are seldom, or
-never, mentioned in Greek literature. “The eating of [flesh] meat,” he
-observes, “must have been almost confined to sacrificial feasts; for,
-in ordinary language, butchers’ meat was called <i>victim</i> (ἱερεῖον).
-The most esteemed, or popular, dishes were <i>madsa</i>, a sort of porridge
-of wheat or barley; various kinds of bread (see <i>Deipn.</i> iii.); honey,
-beans, lupines, lettuce and salad, onions and leeks. Olives, dates,
-and figs formed the usual fruit portion of their meals. In regard to
-non-vegetable food, fish was the most sought after and preferred to
-anything else; and the well-known term <i>opson</i>, which so frequently
-recurs in Greek literature, was specially appropriated to it.</p>
-
-<p>Contemporary with the great master of language was the great master of
-medicine, Hippokrates, (460&ndash;357) who is to his science what Homer is
-to poetry and Herodotus to history&mdash;the first historical founder of
-the art of healing. He was a native of Kōs, a small island of the S.W.
-coast of Lesser Asia, the traditional cradle and home of the disciples
-of Asklepios, or Æsculapius (as he was termed by the Latins), the
-semi-divine author and patron of medicine. And it may be remarked, in
-passing, that the College of Asklepiads of Kōs were careful to exercise
-a despotism as severe and exclusive as that which obtains, for the most
-part, with the modern orthodox schools.</p>
-
-<p>Amongst a large number of writings of various kinds attributed to
-Hippokrates is the treatise <i>On Regimen in Acute Diseases</i> (περὶ
-Διαίτης Ὀξέων), which is generally received as genuine; and <i>On the
-Healthful Regimen</i> (περὶ Διαίτης Ὑγιεινῆς), which belongs to the same
-age, though not to the <i>canonical</i> writings of the founder of the
-school himself. He was the author, real or reputed, of some of the
-most valuable apophthegms of Greek antiquity. <i>Ars longa&mdash;Vita brevis</i>
-(education is slow; life is short) is the best known, and most often
-quoted. What is still more to our purpose is his maxim&mdash;“Over-drinking
-is <i>almost as bad</i> as over-eating.” Of all the productions of this most
-voluminous of writers, his <i>Aphorisms</i> (Ἀφορισμοί), in which these
-specimens of laconic wisdom are collected, and which consists of some
-four hundred short practical sentences, are the most popular.</p>
-
-<p>About a century after the death of Plato appeared a popular exposition
-of the Pythagorean teaching, in hexameters, which is known by the title
-given to it by Iamblichus&mdash;the <i>Golden Verses</i>. “More than half of
-them,” says Professor Clifford, “consist of a sort of versified ‘Duty
-to God and my Neighbour,’ except that it is not designed by the rich to
-be obeyed by the poor; that it lays stress on the laws of health; and
-that it is just such sensible counsel for the good and right conduct of
-life as an Englishman might now-a-days give to his son.”</p>
-
-<p>Hierokles, an eminent Neo-Platonist of the fifth century,
-<span class="smaller">A.D.</span>, gave a course of lectures upon them at Alexandria&mdash;which
-since the time of the Ptolemies had been one of the chief centres
-of Greek learning and science&mdash;and his commentary is sufficiently
-interesting. Suïdas, the lexicographer, speaks of his matter and
-style in the highest terms of praise. “He astonished his hearers
-everywhere,” he tells us, “by the calm, the magnificence, the width of
-his superlative intellect, and by the sweetness of his speech, full of
-the most beautiful words and things.” The Alexandrian lecturer quotes
-the old Pythagorean maxims:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“You shall honour God best by becoming godlike in your thoughts.
-Whoso giveth God honour as to one that needeth it, that man in his
-folly hath made himself greater than God. The wise man only is a
-priest, is a lover of God, is skilful to pray; ... for that man
-only knows how to worship, who begins by offering himself as the
-victim, fashions his own soul into a divine image, and furnishes
-his mind as a temple for the reception of the divine light.”</p></div>
-
-<p>The following extracts will serve as a specimen of the religious or
-moral character of the <i>Golden Verses</i>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Let not sleep come upon thine eyelids till thou hast pondered thy
-deeds of the day.</p>
-
-<p>“Wherein have I sinned? What work have I done, what left undone
-that I ought to have done?</p>
-
-<p>“Beginning at the first, go through even unto the last, and then
-let thy heart smite thee for the evil deeds, but rejoice in the
-good work.</p>
-
-<p>“Work at these commandments and think upon them: these commandments
-shalt thou love.</p>
-
-<p>“They shall surely set thee in the way of divine righteousness:
-yea, by Him who gave into our soul the <i>Tetrad</i>,<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> well-spring of
-life everlasting.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“Know so far as is permitted thee, that Nature in all things is
-like unto herself:</p>
-
-<p>“That thou mayest not hope that of which there is no hope, nor be
-ignorant of that which may be.</p>
-
-<p>“Know thou also, that <i>the woes of men are the work of their own
-hands</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Miserable are they, <i>because they see not and hear not the good
-that is very nigh them</i>: and the way of escape from evil few there
-be that understand it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“Verily, Father Zeus, thou wouldst free all men from much evil, if
-thou wouldst teach all men what manner of spirit they are of.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“Keep from the meats aforesaid, using judgment both in cleansing
-and setting free the soul.</p>
-
-<p>“Give heed to every matter, and set reason on high, who best
-holdeth the reins of guidance.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></p>
-
-<p>“Then when thou leavest the body, and comest into the free æther,
-thou shalt be a god undying, everlasting, neither shall death have
-any more dominion over thee.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Referring to these verses, which inculcate that the human race is
-itself responsible for the evils which men, for the most part, prefer
-to regret than to remedy, Professor Clifford, to whom we are indebted
-for the above version of the <i>Golden Verses</i>, remarks on the merits of
-this teaching, that it reminds us that “men suffer from <i>preventible</i>
-evils, that the people perish for lack of knowledge.”<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> Thus we
-find that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span> principal obstructions, in all ages, to human progress
-and perfectibility may be ever found in I<span class="smaller">GNORANCE</span> and
-S<span class="smaller">ELFISHNESS</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IV_OVID">IV.<br />
-<span class="s5">OVID. 43 B.C.&ndash;18 A.D.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">T<span class="smaller">HE</span> school of Pythagoras and of Plato, although it was not the
-fashionable or popular religion of Rome, counted amongst its disciples
-some distinguished Italians, and the name of Cicero, who belonged
-to the “New Academy,” is sufficiently illustrious. The Italians,
-however, who borrowed their religion as well as their literature from
-the Greeks, were never distinguished, like their masters, for that
-refinement of thought which might have led them to attach themselves
-to the Pythagorean teaching. Under the bloody despotism of the Empire,
-the philosophy which was most affected by the <i>literati</i> and those who
-were driven to the consolations of philosophy was the <i>stoical</i>, which
-taught its disciples to consider <i>apathy</i> as the <i>summum bonum</i> of
-existence. This school of philosophy, whatever its other merits, was
-too much centred in self&mdash;paradoxical as the assertion may seem&mdash;to
-have much regard for the rest of mankind, much less for the non-human
-species. Nor, while they professed supreme contempt for the luxuries
-and even comforts of life, did the disciples of the “Porch,” in
-general, practice abstinence from any exalted motive, humanitarian or
-spiritual. They preached indifference for the “good things” of this
-life, not so much to elevate the spiritual and moral side of human
-nature as to show their contempt for human life altogether.</p>
-
-<p>That the Italian was essentially of a more barbarous nature than the
-Greek is apparent in the national spectacles and amusements. The
-savage scenes of gladiatorial and non-human combat and internecine
-slaughter of the Latin amphitheatres, of which the famous Colosseum
-in the capital was the model of many others in the provinces, were
-abhorrent to the more refined Greek mind.<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> In view of scenes so
-sanguinary&mdash;the “Roman holiday”&mdash;it is scarcely necessary to observe
-that humanitarianism was a creed unknown to the Italians; and it
-was not likely that a people, addicted throughout their career as
-a dominant race to the most bloody wars, not only foreign but also
-internecine, with whom fighting and slaughter of their own kind was an
-almost daily occupation, should entertain any feeling of pity (to say
-nothing of justice)<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span> towards their non-human dependants. Nevertheless,
-even they were not wholly inaccessible, on occasion, to the prompting
-of pity. Referring to a grand spectacle given by Pompeius at the
-dedication of his theatre (<span class="smaller">B.C.</span> 55), in which a large number
-of elephants, amongst others, were forced to fight, the elder Pliny
-tells us:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“When they lost the hope of escape, they sought the compassion
-of the crowd with an appearance that is indescribable, bewailing
-themselves with a sort of lamentation so much to the pain of
-the populace that, forgetful of the imperator and the elaborate
-munificence displayed for their honour, they all rose up in tears
-and bestowed imprecations on Pompeius, of which he soon after
-experienced the effect.”<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Cicero, who was himself present at the spectacle of the Circus, in a
-letter to a friend, Marcus Marius, writes:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“What followed, for five days, was successive combats between a
-man and a wild beast. (<i>Venationes binæ.</i>) It was magnificent.
-No one disputes it. But what pleasure can it be to a person of
-refinement, when either a weak man is torn to pieces by a very
-powerful beast, or a noble animal is struck through by a hunting
-spear?... The last day was that of the elephants, in which there
-was great astonishment on the part of the populace and crowd, but
-no enjoyment. Indeed there followed a degree of compassion, and a
-certain idea that there is a sort of fellowship between that huge
-animal and the human race.” (Cicero, <i>Ep. ad Diversos</i> vii., 1.)</p></div>
-
-<p>Testimonies which might induce one almost to think that, had not they
-been systematically and industriously accustomed to these horrible
-and gigantic butcheries by their rulers, even the Roman populace
-might have been susceptible of better feelings and desires than those
-inspired by their amphitheatres, though these savage exhibitions were
-perhaps hardly worse than the combats and slaughter in the bull-rings
-of Seville or Madrid, or at the courts of the Mohammedan princes of
-India recently sanctioned by the presence of English royalty. It is
-worth noting, in passing, that while the <i>gladiatorial</i> slaughters were
-discontinued some years after the triumph of Christianity, the other
-part of the entertainment&mdash;the indiscriminate combats and slaughter
-of the <i>non-human</i> victims&mdash;continued to be exhibited to a much later
-period.</p>
-
-<p>If we reflect that the rise of the humanitarian spirit in Christian
-Europe, or rather in the better section of it, is of very recent
-origin, it might appear unreasonable to look for any distinct
-exhibition of so exalted a feeling in the younger age of the
-world. Yet, to the shame of more advanced civilisations, we find
-manifestations of it in the writings of a few of the more refined
-minds of Greece and Italy; and Plutarch<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span> and Seneca&mdash;the former
-particularly&mdash;occupy a distinguished place amongst the first preachers
-of that sacred truth.<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></p>
-
-<p>Publius Ovidius Naso, the Latin versifier of the Pythagorean
-philosophy, was born <span class="smcap">B.C.</span> 43. He belonged to the equestrian
-order, a position in the social scale which corresponds with the
-“higher middle class” of modern days. Like so many other names eminent
-in literature, he was in the first instance educated for the law,
-for which, also like many other literary celebrities, he soon showed
-his genius to be unfitted and uncongenial. He studied at the great
-University of that age&mdash;Athens&mdash;where he acquired a knowledge of
-the Greek language, and probably of its rich literature. The most
-memorable event in his life&mdash;which, in accordance with the fashion of
-his contemporaries of the same rank, was for the most part devoted
-to “gallantry” and the accustomed amatory licence&mdash;is his mysterious
-banishment from Rome to the inhospitable and savage shores of the
-Euxine, where he passed the last seven years of his existence, dying
-there in the sixtieth year of his age. The cause of his sudden exile
-from the Court of Augustus, where he had been in high favour, is one
-of those secrets of history which have exercised the ingenuity of his
-successive biographers. According to the terms of the imperial edict,
-the freedom of the poet’s <i>Ars Amatoria</i> was the offence. That this was
-a mere pretext is plain, as well from the long interval of time which
-had passed since the publication of the poem as from the character of
-the fashionable society of the capital. Ovid himself attributes his
-misfortune to the fact of his having become the involuntary witness of
-some secret of the palace, the nature of which is not divulged.</p>
-
-<p>His most important poems are (1) <i>The Metamorphoses</i>, in fifteen books,
-so called from its being a collection of the numerous transformations
-of the popular theology. It is, perhaps, the most <i>charming</i> of Latin
-poems that have come down to us. Particular passages have a special
-beauty. (2) <i>The Fasti</i>, in twelve books, of which only six are extant,
-is the Roman Calendar in verse. Its interest, apart from the poetic
-genius of the author, is great, as being the grand repertory of the
-Latin feasts and their popular origin. Besides these two principal
-poems he was the author of the famous <i>Loves</i>, in three books; the
-<i>Letters of the Heroines</i>, <i>The Remedies of Love</i>, and <i>The Tristia, or
-Sad Thoughts</i>. He also wrote a tragedy&mdash;<i>Medea</i>&mdash;which, unfortunately
-has not come down to us. All his poems are characterised by elegance
-and a remark<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>able smoothness and regularity of versification, and in
-much of his productions there is an unusual beauty and picturesqueness
-of poetic ideas.</p>
-
-<p>The following passage from the fifteenth book of the <i>Metamorphoses</i>
-has been justly said by Dryden, his translator, to be the finest part
-of the whole poem. It is almost impossible to believe but that, in
-spite of his misspent life, he must have felt, in his better moments at
-least, something of the truth and beauty of the Pythagorean principles
-which he so exquisitely versifies. In the touching words which he puts
-into the mouth of the jealous Medea&mdash;the murderess of her children&mdash;he
-might have exclaimed in his own case&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft3">“Video meliora proboque</div>
- <div class="verse">Deteriora sequor.”<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“He [Pythagoras], too, was the first to forbid animals to be served
-up at the table, and he was first to open his lips, indeed full
-of wisdom yet all unheeded, in the following words: ‘Forbear, O
-mortals! to pollute your bodies with such abominable food. There
-are the <i>farinacea</i> (<i>fruges</i>), there are the fruits which bear
-down the branches with their weight, and there are the grapes
-swelling on the vines; there are the sweet herbs; there are those
-that may be softened by the flame and become tender. Nor is the
-milky juice denied you; nor honey, redolent of the flower of thyme.
-The lavish Earth heaps up her riches and her gentle foods, and
-offers you dainties without blood and without slaughter. The lower
-animals satisfy their ravenous hunger with flesh. And yet not
-all of them; for the horse, the sheep, the cows and oxen subsist
-on grass; while those whose disposition is cruel and fierce, the
-tigers of Armenia and the raging lions, and the wolves and bears,
-revel in their bloody diet.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Alas! what a monstrous crime it is (<i>scelus</i>) that entrails
-should be entombed in entrails; that one ravening body should grow
-fat on others which it crams into it; that one living creature
-should live by the death of another living creature! Amid so great
-an abundance which the Earth&mdash;that best of mothers&mdash;produces does,
-indeed, nothing delight you but to gnaw with savage teeth the sad
-produce of the wounds you inflict and to imitate the habits of
-the Cyclops? Can you not appease the hunger of a voracious and
-ill-regulated stomach unless you first destroy another being? Yet
-that age of old, to which we have given the name of <i>golden</i>, was
-blest in the produce of the trees and in the herbs which the earth
-brings forth, and the human mouth was not polluted with blood.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Then the birds moved their wings secure in the air, and the hare,
-without fear, wandered in the open fields. Then the fish did not
-fall a victim to the hook and its own credulity. Every place was
-void of treachery; there was no dread of injury&mdash;all things were
-full of peace. In later ages some one&mdash;a mischievous innovator
-(<i>non utilis auctor</i>), whoever he was&mdash;set at naught and scorned
-this pure and simple food, and engulfed in his greedy paunch
-victuals made from a carcase. It was he that opened the road to
-wickedness. I can believe that the steel, since stained with blood,
-was first dipped in the gore of savage wild beasts; and that was
-lawful enough. We hold that the bodies of animals that seek our
-destruction are put to death without any breach of the sacred laws
-of morality. But although they might be put to death<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span> they were
-not to be eaten as well. From this time the abomination advanced
-rapidly. The swine is believed to have been the first victim
-destined to slaughter, because it grubbed up the seeds with its
-broad snout, and so cut short the hopes of the year. For gnawing
-and injuring the vine the goat was led to slaughter at the altars
-of the avenging Bacchus. Its own fault was the ruin of each of
-these victims.</p>
-
-<p>“‘But how have you deserved to die, ye sheep, you harmless
-breed that have come into existence for the service of men&mdash;who
-carry nectar in your full udders&mdash;who give your wool as soft
-coverings for us&mdash;who assist us more by your life than by your
-death? Why have the oxen deserved this&mdash;beings without guile and
-without deceit&mdash;innocent, mild, born for the endurance of labour?
-Ungrateful, indeed, is man, and unworthy of the bounteous gifts of
-the harvest who, after unyoking him from the plough, can slaughter
-the tiller of his fields&mdash;who can strike with the axe that neck
-worn bare with labour, through which he had so often turned up the
-hard ground, and which had afforded so many a harvest.</p>
-
-<p>“‘And it is not enough that such wickedness is committed by men.
-They have involved the gods themselves in this abomination, and
-they believe that a Deity in the heavens can rejoice in the
-slaughter of the laborious and useful ox. The spotless victim,
-excelling in the beauty of its form (for its very beauty is the
-cause of its destruction), decked out with garlands and with gold
-is placed before their altars, and, ignorant of the purport of
-the proceedings, it hears the prayers of the priest. It sees the
-fruits which it cultivated placed on its head between its horns,
-and, struck down, with its life-blood it dyes the sacrificial knife
-which it had perhaps already seen in the clear water. Immediately
-they inspect the nerves and fibres torn from the yet living being,
-and scrutinise the will of the gods in them.</p>
-
-<p>“‘From whence such a hunger in man after unnatural and unlawful
-food? Do you dare, O mortal race, to continue to feed on flesh? Do
-it not, I beseech you, and give heed to my admonitions. And when
-you present to your palates the limbs of slaughtered oxen, know and
-feel that you are feeding on the tillers of the ground.’”&mdash;<i>Metam.</i>
-xv., 73&ndash;142.</p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="V_SENECA">V.<br />
-<span class="s5">SENECA. D<span class="smaller">IED</span> 65 A.D.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">L<span class="smaller">UCIUS</span> A<span class="smaller">NNÆUS</span> S<span class="smaller">ENECA</span>, the greatest name in the stoic school of
-philosophy, and the first of Latin moralists, was born at Corduba
-(Cordova) almost contemporaneously with the beginning of the Christian
-era. His family, like that of Ovid, was of the equestrian order. He was
-of a weakly constitution; and bodily feebleness, as with many other
-great intellects, served to intensify if not originate, the activity
-of the mind. At Rome, with which he early made acquaintance, he soon
-gained great distinction at the bar; and the eloquence and fervour he
-displayed in the Senate before the Emperor Caligula excited the jealous
-hatred of that insane tyrant. Later in life he obtained a prætorship,
-and he was also appointed to the tutorship of the young Domitius,
-afterwards the Emperor Nero. On the accession of that prince, at the
-age of seventeen, to the imperial throne, Seneca became one of his
-chief advisers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately for his credit as a philosopher, while exerting his
-influence to restrain the vicious propensities of his old pupil, he
-seems to have been too anxious to acquire, not only a fair proportion
-of wealth, but even an enormous fortune, and his villas and gardens
-were of so splendid a kind as to provoke the jealousy and covetousness
-of Nero. This, added to his alleged disparagement of the prince’s
-talents, especially in singing and driving, for which Nero particularly
-desired to be famous, was the cause of his subsequent disgrace and
-death. The philosopher prudently attempted to anticipate the will of
-Nero by a voluntary surrender of all his accumulated possessions, and
-he sought to disarm the jealous suspicions of the tyrant by a retired
-and unostentatious life. These precautions were of no avail; his death
-was already decided. He was accused of complicity in the conspiracy of
-Piso, and the only grace allowed him was to be his own executioner. The
-despair of his wife, Pompeia Paulina, he attempted to mitigate by the
-reflection that his life had been always directed by the standard of a
-higher morality. Nothing, however, could dissuade her from sharing her
-husband’s fate, and the two faithful friends laid open their veins by
-the same blow.</p>
-
-<p>Advanced age and his extremely meagre diet had left little blood in
-Seneca’s veins, and it flowed with painful slowness. His tortures were
-excessive and, to avoid the intolerable grief of being witnesses of
-each other’s suffering, they shut themselves up in separate apartments.
-With that marvellous intrepid tranquillity which characterised some
-of the old sages, Seneca calmly dictated his last thoughts to his
-surrounding friends. These were afterwards published. His agonies being
-still prolonged, he took hemlock; and this also failing, he was carried
-into a vapour-stove, where he was suffocated, and thus at length ceased
-to suffer.</p>
-
-<p>In estimating the character of Seneca, it is just that we should
-consider all the circumstances of the exceptional time in which his
-life was cast. Perhaps there has never been an age or people more
-utterly corrupt and abandoned than that of the period of the earlier
-Roman Cæsars and that of Rome and the large cities of the empire.
-Allowing the utmost that his detractors have brought against him, the
-moral character of the author of the <i>Consolations</i> and <i>Letters</i>
-stands out in bright relief as compared with that of the immense
-majority of his contemporaries of equal rank and position, who were
-sunk in the depths of licentiousness and of selfish indifference to
-the miseries of the surrounding world. That his public career was not
-of so exalted a character altogether as are his moral precepts, is
-only too patent to be denied and, in this shortcoming of a loftier
-<i>ideal</i>, he must share reproach with some of the most esteemed of the
-world’s luminaries. If, for instance, we compare him with Cicero or
-with Francis Bacon, the comparison would certainly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span> be not unfavourable
-to Seneca. The darkest stigma on the reputation of the great Latin
-moralist is his connivance at the death of the infamous Agrippina, the
-mother of his pupil Nero. Although not to be excused, we may fairly
-attribute this act to conscientious, if mistaken, motives. His best
-apology is to be found in the fact that, so long as he assisted to
-direct the counsels of Nero, he contrived to restrain that prince’s
-depraved disposition from those outbreaks which, after the death of the
-philosopher, have stigmatised the name of Nero with undying infamy.</p>
-
-<p>The principal writings of Seneca are:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>1. <i>On Anger.</i> His earliest, and perhaps his best known, work.</p>
-
-<p>2. <i>On Consolation.</i> Addressed to his mother, Helvia. An admirable
-philosophical exhortation.</p>
-
-<p>3. <i>On Providence; or, Why evils happen to good men though a divine
-Providence may exist.</i></p>
-
-<p>4. <i>On Tranquillity of Mind.</i></p>
-
-<p>5. <i>On Clemency.</i> Addressed to Nero Cæsar. One of the most meritorious
-writings of all antiquity. It is not unworthy of being classed with the
-humanitarian protests of Beccaria and Voltaire. The stoical distinction
-between clemency and pity (<i>misericordia</i>), in book ii., is, as Seneca
-admits, merely a dispute about words.</p>
-
-<p>6. <i>On the Shortness of Life.</i> In which the proper employment of time
-and the acquisition of wisdom are eloquently enforced as the best
-employment of a fleeting life.</p>
-
-<p>7. <i>On a Happy Life.</i> In which he inculcates that there is no happiness
-without virtue. An excellent treatise.</p>
-
-<p>8. <i>On Kindnesses.</i></p>
-
-<p>9. <i>Epistles to Lucilius.</i> 124 in number. They abound in lessons and
-precepts in morality and philosophy, and, excepting the <i>De Irâ</i>, have
-been the most read, perhaps, of all Seneca’s productions.</p>
-
-<p>10. <i>Questions on Natural History.</i> In seven books.</p>
-
-<p>Besides these moral and philosophic works, he composed several
-tragedies. They were not intended for the stage, but rather as moral
-lessons. As in all his works, there is much of earnest thought and
-feeling, although expressed in rhetorical and declamatory language.</p>
-
-<p>What especially characterises Seneca’s writings is their remarkably
-<i>humanitarian</i> spirit. Altogether he is imbued with this, for the
-most part, very modern feeling in a greater degree than any other
-writer, Greek or Latin. Plutarch indeed, in his noble <i>Essay on Flesh
-Eating</i>, is more expressly denunciatory of the barbarism of the
-Slaughter House, and of the horrible cruelties inseparably connected
-with it, and evidently felt more deeply the importance of exposing
-its evils. The Latin moralist, however, deals with a wider range of
-ethical questions,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span> and on such subjects, as, <i>e.g.</i>, the relations of
-master and slave, is far ahead of his contemporaries. His treatment of
-<i>Dietetics</i>, in common with that of most of the old-world moralists, is
-rather from the spiritual and ascetic than from the purely humanitarian
-point of view. “The judgments on Seneca’s writings,” says the author
-of the article on Seneca in Dr. Smith’s <i>Dictionary of Greek and Latin
-Biography</i>, “have been as various as the opinions about his character,
-and both in extremes. It has been said of him that he looks best in
-quotations; but this is an admission that there is something worth
-quoting, which cannot be said of all writers. That Seneca possessed
-great mental powers cannot be doubted. He had seen much of human life,
-and he knew well what man is. His philosophy, so far as he adopted a
-system, was the stoical; but it was rather an eclecticism of stoicism
-than pure stoicism. His style is antithetical, and apparently laboured;
-and where there is much labour there is generally affectation. Yet his
-language is clear and forcible&mdash;it is not mere words&mdash;there is thought
-always. It would not be easy to name any modern writer, who has treated
-on morality and has said so much that is practically good and true, or
-has treated the matter in so attractive a way.”</p>
-
-<p>Jerome, in his <i>Ecclesiastical Writers</i>, hesitates to include him in
-the catalogue of his saints only because he is not certain of the
-genuineness of the alleged literary correspondence between Seneca and
-St. Paul. We may observe, in passing, on the remarkable coincidence
-of the presence of the two greatest teachers of the old and the new
-faiths in the capital of the Roman Empire at the same time; and it is
-possible, or rather highly probable, that St. Paul was acquainted with
-the writings of Seneca; while, from the total silence of the pagan
-philosopher, it seems that he knew nothing of the Pauline epistles
-or teaching. Amongst many testimonies to the superiority of Seneca,
-Tacitus, the great historian of the empire, speaks of the “splendour
-and celebrity of his philosophic writings,” as well as of his “amiable
-genius”&mdash;<i>ingenium amœnum</i>. (<i>Annals</i>, xii., xiii.) The elder Pliny
-writes of him as “at the very head of all the learned men of that
-time.” (xiv. 4.) Petrarch quotes the testimony of Plutarch, “that great
-man who, Greek though he was freely confesses ‘that there is no Greek
-writer who could be brought into comparison with him in the department
-of <i>morals</i>.’”</p>
-
-<p>The following passage is to be found in a letter to Lucilius, in which,
-after expatiating on the sublimity of the teaching of the philosopher
-Attalus in inculcating moderation and self-control in corporeal
-pleasures, Seneca thus enunciates his <i>dietetic</i> opinions:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Since I have begun to confide to you with what exceeding ardour
-I approached the study of philosophy in my youth, I shall not be
-ashamed to confess the affection<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span> with which Sotion [his preceptor]
-inspired me for the teaching of Pythagoras. He was wont to
-instruct me on what grounds he himself, and, after him, Sextius,
-had determined to abstain from the flesh of animals. Each had a
-different reason, but the reason in both instances was a grand
-one (<i>magnifica</i>). Sotion held that man can find a sufficiency
-of nourishment without blood shedding, and that cruelty became
-habitual when once the practice of butchering was applied to the
-gratification of the appetite. He was wont to add that ‘It is our
-bounden duty to limit the materials of luxury. That, moreover,
-variety of foods is injurious to health, and not natural to our
-bodies. If these maxims [of the Pythagorean school] are true, then
-to abstain from the flesh of animals is to encourage and foster
-<i>innocence</i>; if ill-founded, at least they teach us frugality
-and simplicity of living. And what loss have you in losing your
-cruelty? (Quod istic crudelitatis tuæ damnum est?) I merely deprive
-you of the food of lions and vultures.’</p>
-
-<p>“Moved by these and similar arguments, I resolved to abstain from
-flesh meat, and at the end of a year the habit of abstinence was
-not only easy but delightful. I firmly believed that the faculties
-of my mind were more active,<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> and at this day I will not take
-pains to assure you whether they were so or not. You ask, then,
-‘Why did you go back and relinquish this mode of life?’ I reply
-that the lot of my early days was cast in the reign of the emperor
-Tiberius. Certain foreign religions became the object of the
-imperial suspicion, and amongst the proofs of adherence to the
-foreign cultus or superstition was that of abstinence from the
-flesh of animals. At the entreaties of my father, therefore, who
-had no real fear of the practice being made a ground of accusation,
-but who had a hatred of philosophy,<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> I was induced to return to
-my former dietetic habits, nor had he much difficulty in persuading
-me to recur to more sumptuous repasts....</p>
-
-<p>“This I tell,” he proceeds, “to prove to you how powerful are the
-early impetuses of youth to what is truest and best under the
-exhortations and incentives of virtuous teachers. We err partly
-through the fault of our guides, who teach us <i>how to dispute</i>, not
-<i>how to live</i>; partly by our own fault in expecting our teachers
-to cultivate not so much the <i>disposition of the mind</i> as the
-faculties of the intellect. Hence it is that in place of a love
-of wisdom there is only a love of words (Itaque quæ <i>philosophia</i>
-fuit, facta <i>philologia</i> est).”&mdash;<i>Epistola</i> cviii.<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Seneca here cautiously reveals the jealous suspicion with which the
-first Cæsars viewed all foreign, and especially quasi-religious,
-innovations, and his own <i>public</i> compliance, to some extent, with the
-orthodox dietetic practices. Yet that in private life he continued
-to practise, as well as to preach, a radical dietary reformation
-is sufficiently evident to all who are conversant with his various
-writings. The refinement and gentleness of his ethics are everywhere
-apparent, and exhibit him as a man of extraordinary sensibility and
-feeling.</p>
-
-<p>As for <i>dietetics</i>, he makes it a matter of the first importance, on
-which he is never weary of insisting.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span> “<i>We must so live, not as if we
-ought to live for, but as though we could not do without, the body.</i>”
-He quotes Epikurus: “<i>If you live according to nature, you will never
-be poor; if according to conventionalism, you will never be rich.
-Nature demands little; fashion</i> (opinio) <i>superfluity</i>.” In one of his
-letters he eloquently describes the riotous feasting of the period
-which corresponds to our festival of Christmas&mdash;another illustration of
-the proverb, “History repeats itself”:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“December is the month,” he begins his letter, “when the city
-[Rome] most especially gives itself up to riotous living
-(<i>desudat</i>). Free licence is allowed to the public luxury. Every
-place resounds with the gigantic preparations for eating and
-gorging, just as if,” he adds, “the whole year were not a sort of
-<i>Saturnalia</i>.”</p></div>
-
-<p>He contrasts with all this waste and gluttony the simplicity and
-frugality of Epikurus, who, in a letter to his friend Polyænus,
-declares that his own food does not cost him sixpence a day; while his
-friend Metrodorus, who had not advanced so far in frugality, expended
-the whole of that small sum:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Do you ask if that can supply due nourishment? Yes; and pleasure
-too. Not, indeed, that fleeting and superficial pleasure which
-needs to be perpetually recruited, but a solid and substantial
-one. Bread and pearl-barley (<i>polenta</i>) certainly is not luxurious
-feeding, but it is no little advantage to be able to receive
-pleasure from a simple diet of which no change of fortune can
-deprive one.... Nature demands bread and water only: no one is poor
-in regard to those necessaries.”<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Again, Seneca writes:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“How long shall we weary heaven with petitions for superfluous
-luxuries, as though we had not at hand wherewithal to feed
-ourselves? How long shall we fill our plains with huge cities? How
-long shall the people slave for us unnecessarily? How long shall
-countless numbers of ships from every sea bring us provisions for
-the consumption of a single month? An Ox is satisfied with the
-pasture of an acre or two: one wood suffices for several Elephants.
-Man alone supports himself by the pillage of the whole earth and
-sea. What! Has Nature indeed given us so insatiable a stomach,
-while she has given us so insignificant bodies? No: it is not the
-hunger of our stomachs, but insatiable covetousness (<i>ambitio</i>)
-which costs so much. The slaves of the belly (as says Sallust) are
-to be counted in the number of the lower animals, not of men. Nay,
-not of them, but rather of the dead.... You might inscribe on their
-doors, ‘These have anticipated death.’”&mdash;(<i>Ep.</i> lx.)</p></div>
-
-<p>The extreme difficulty of abstinence is oftentimes alleged:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It is disagreeable, you say, to abstain from the pleasures of
-the customary diet. Such abstinence is, I grant, difficult at
-first. But in course of time the desire for that diet will begin
-to languish; the incentives to our unnatural wants failing, the
-stomach, at first rebellious, will after a time feel an aversion
-for what formerly it eagerly coveted. The desire dies of itself,
-and it is no severe loss to be without those things that you have
-ceased to long for. Add to this that there is no disease, no
-pain, which is not certainly intermitted or relieved, or cured
-altogether. Moreover it is possible for you to be on your guard
-against a threatened return of the disease, and to oppose remedies
-if it comes upon you.”&mdash;(<i>Ep.</i> lxxviii.)</p></div>
-
-<p>On the occasion of a shipwreck, when his fellow-passengers found
-themselves forced to live upon the scantiest fare, he takes the
-opportunity to point out how extravagantly superfluous must be the
-ordinary living of the richer part of the community:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“How easily we can dispense with these superfluities, which, when
-necessity takes them from us, we do not feel the want of....
-Whenever I happen to be in the company of richly-living people I
-cannot prevent a blush of shame, because I see evident proof that
-the principles which I approve and commend have as yet no sure
-and firm faith placed in them.... A warning voice needs to be
-published abroad in opposition to the prevailing opinion of the
-human race: ‘You are out of your senses (<i>insanitis</i>); you are
-wandering from the path of right; you are lost in stupid admiration
-for superfluous luxuries; you value no one thing for its proper
-worth.’”&mdash;(<i>Ep.</i> lxxxvii.)</p></div>
-
-<p>Again:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I now turn to you, whose insatiable and unfathomable gluttony
-(<i>profunda et insatiabilis gula</i>) searches every land and every
-sea. Some animals it persecutes with snares and traps, with
-hunting-nets [the customary method of the <i>battue</i> of that period],
-with hooks, sparing no sort of toil to obtain them. Excepting
-from mere caprice or daintiness, there is no peace allowed to any
-species of beings. Yet how much of all these feasts which you
-obtain by the agency of innumerable hands do you even so much as
-touch with your lips, satiated as they are with luxuries? How much
-of that animal, which has been caught with so much expense or
-peril, does the dyspeptic and bilious owner taste? Unhappy even in
-this! that you perceive not that you hunger more than your belly.
-Study,” he concludes his exhortation to his friend, “not to know
-<i>more</i>, but to know <i>better</i>.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Again:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“If the human race would but listen to the voice of reason, it
-would recognise that [fashionable] cooks are as superfluous as
-soldiers.... Wisdom engages in all useful things, is favourable to
-peace, and summons the whole human species to concord.”&mdash;(<i>Ep.</i> xc.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“In the simpler times there was no need of so large a supernumerary
-force of medical men, nor of so many surgical instruments or of
-so many boxes of drugs. Health was simple for a simple reason.
-Many dishes have induced many diseases. Note how <i>vast a quantity
-of lives one stomach absorbs</i>&mdash;devastator of land and sea.<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> No
-wonder that with so discordant diet disease is ever varying....
-Count the cooks: you will no longer wonder at the innumerable
-number of human maladies.”&mdash;(<i>Ep.</i> xcv.)</p></div>
-
-<p>We must be content with giving our readers only one more of Seneca’s
-exhortations to a reform in diet:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“You think it a great matter that you can bring yourself to live
-without all the apparatus of fashionable dishes; that you do not
-desire wild boars of a thousand pounds weight or the tongues of
-rare birds, and other portents of a luxury which now despises whole
-carcases,<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> and chooses only certain parts of each victim. I
-shall admire you then only when you scorn not plain bread, when
-you have persuaded yourself that herbs exist not for other animals
-only, but for man also&mdash;if you shall recognise that vegetables are
-sufficient food for the stomach into which we now stuff valuable
-lives, as though it were to keep them for ever. For what matters
-it what it receives, since it will soon lose all that it has
-devoured? The apparatus of dishes, containing the spoils of sea and
-land, gives you pleasure, you say.... The splendour of all this,
-heightened by art, gives you pleasure. Ah! those very things so
-solicitously sought for and served up so variously&mdash;no sooner have
-they entered the belly than one and the same foulness shall take
-possession of them all. Would you contemn the pleasures of the
-table? Consider their final destination” (<i>exitum specta</i>).<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>If Seneca makes <i>dietetics</i> of the first importance, he at the same
-time by no means neglects the other departments of <i>ethics</i>, which, for
-the most part, ultimately depend upon that fundamental reformation; and
-he is equally excellent on them all. Space will not allow us to present
-our readers with all the admirable <i>dicta</i> of this great moralist. We
-cannot resist, however, the temptation to quote some of his unique
-teaching on certain branches of humanitarianism and philosophy little
-regarded either in his own time or in later ages. Slaves, both in pagan
-and Christian Europe, were regarded very much as the domesticated
-non-human species are at the present day, as born merely for the will
-and pleasure of their masters. Such seems to have been the universal
-estimate of their <i>status</i>. While often superior to their lords,
-nationally and individually, by birth, by mind, and by education,
-they were at the arbitrary disposal of too often cruel and capricious
-owners:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Are they slaves?” eloquently demands Seneca. “Nay, they are
-men. Are they slaves? Nay, they live under the same roof
-(<i>contubernales</i>). Are they slaves? Nay, they are humble friends.
-Are they slaves? Nay, they are fellow-servants (<i>conservi</i>),
-if you will consider that both master and servant are equally
-the creatures of chance. I smile, then, at the prevalent opinion
-which thinks it a disgrace for one to sit down to a meal with
-his servant. Why is it thought a disgrace, but because arrogant
-<i>Custom</i> allows a master a crowd of servants to stand round him
-while he is feasting?”</p></div>
-
-<p>He expressly denounces their cruel and contemptuous treatment, and
-demands in noble language (afterwards used by Epictetus, himself a
-slave):&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Would you suppose that he whom you call a slave has the same
-origin and birth as yourself? has the same free air of heaven with
-yourself? that he breathes, lives, and dies like yourself?”</p></div>
-
-<p>He denounces the haughty and insulting attitude of masters towards
-their helpless dependants, and lays down the precept: “So live with
-your dependant as you would wish your superior to live with you.” He
-laments the use of the term “slaves,” or “servants” (<i>servi</i>), in place
-of the old “domestics” (<i>familiares</i>). He declaims against the common
-prejudice which judges by the <i>outward</i> appearance:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“That man,” he asserts, “is of the stupidest sort who values
-another either by his dress or by his condition.” Is he a slave?
-He is, it may be, <i>free in mind</i>. He is the <i>true</i> slave who is a
-slave to cruelty, to ambition, to avarice, to pleasure. “Love,”
-he declares, insisting upon humanity, “cannot co-exist with
-fear.”&mdash;(<i>Ep.</i> xlviii.)</p></div>
-
-<p>He is equally clear upon the ferocity and barbarity of the gladiatorial
-and other shows of the <i>Circus</i>, which were looked upon by his
-contemporaries as not only interesting spectacles, but as a useful
-school for war and endurance&mdash;much for the same reason as that on
-which the “sports” of the present day are defended. Cicero uses this
-argument, and only expresses the general sentiment. Not so Seneca. He
-speaks of a chance visit to the Circus (the gigantic Colosseum was
-not yet built), for the sake of mental relaxation, expecting to see,
-at the period of the day he had chosen, only innocent exercises. He
-indignantly narrates the horrid and bloody scenes of suffering, and
-demands, with only too much reason, whether it is not evident that such
-evil examples receive their righteous retribution in the deterioration
-of character of those who encourage them:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Ah! what dense mists of darkness do power and prosperity cast
-over the human mind. He [the magistrate] believes himself to be
-raised above the common lot of mortality, and to be at the pinnacle
-of glory, when he has offered so many crowds of wretched human
-beings to the assaults of wild beasts; when he forces animals of
-the most different species to engage in conflict; when in the
-full presence of the Roman populace he causes torrents of blood
-to flow, a fitting school for the future scenes of still greater
-bloodshed.”<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a></p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In his treatise <i>On Clemency</i>, dedicated to his youthful pupil Nero,
-he anticipates the very modern theory&mdash;<i>theory</i>, for the prevalent
-<i>practice</i> is a very different thing&mdash;that <i>prevention</i> is better than
-<i>punishment</i>, and he denounces the cruel and selfish policy of princes
-and magistrates, who are, for the most part, concerned only to punish
-the criminals produced by unjust and unequal laws:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Will not that man,” he asks, “appear to be a very bad father
-who punishes his children, even for the slightest causes, with
-constant blows? Which preceptor is the worthier to teach&mdash;the one
-who scarifies his pupils’ backs if their memory happens to fail
-them, or if their eyes make a slight blunder in reading, or he
-who chooses rather to correct and instruct by admonition and the
-influence of shame?... You will find that those crimes are most
-often committed which are most often punished.... Many capital
-punishments are no less disgraceful to a ruler than are many deaths
-to a physician. Men are more easily governed by mild laws. The
-human mind is naturally stubborn and inclined to be perverse, and
-it more readily follows than is forced. The disposition to cruelty
-which takes delight in blood and wounds is the characteristic of
-wild beasts; it is to throw away the human character and to pass
-into that of a denizen of the woods.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Speaking of giving assistance to the needy, he says that the genuine
-philanthropist will give his money&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Not in that insulting way in which the great majority of those who
-wish to seem merciful disdain and despise those whom they help, and
-shrink from contact with them, but as one mortal to a fellow-mortal
-he will give as though out of a treasury that should be common to
-all.”<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Next to the <i>De Clementiâ</i> and the <i>De Irâ</i> (“On Anger”), his treatise
-<i>On the Happy Life</i> is most admirable. In the abundance of what is
-unusually good and useful it is difficult to choose. His warning (so
-unheeded) against implicit confidence in authority and tradition cannot
-be too often repeated:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“There is nothing against which we ought to be more on our guard
-than, like a flock of sheep, following the crowd of those who have
-preceded us&mdash;going, as we do, not where we ought to go, but where
-men have walked before. And yet there is nothing which involves
-us in greater evils than following and settling our faith upon
-authority&mdash;considering those dogmas or practices best which have
-been received heretofore with the greatest applause, and which have
-a multitude of great names. We live not according to reason, but
-according to mere fashion and tradition, from whence that enormous
-heap of bodies, which fall one over the other. It happens as in a
-great slaughter of men, when the crowd presses upon itself. Not
-one falls without dragging with him another. The first to fall are
-the cause of destruction to the succeeding ranks. It runs through
-the whole of human life. No-one’s error is limited to himself
-alone, but he is the author and cause of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> another’s error.... We
-shall recover our sound health if only we shall separate ourselves
-from the herd, for the crowd of mankind stands opposed to right
-reason&mdash;the defender of its own evils and miseries.<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> ... Human
-history is not so well conducted, that the better way is pleasing
-to the mass. The very fact of the approbation of the multitude is
-a proof of the badness of the opinion or practice. Let us ask what
-is <i>best</i>, not what is <i>most customary</i>; what may place us firmly
-in the possession of an everlasting felicity, not what has received
-the approbation of the vulgar&mdash;the worst interpreter of the
-truth. Now I call “the vulgar” <i>the common herd of all ranks and
-conditions</i>” (<i>Tam chlamydatos quam coronatos</i>).&mdash;(<i>De Vitâ Beatâ</i>
-i. and ii.)</p></div>
-
-<p>Again:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I will do nothing for the sake of opinion; everything for the sake
-of conscience.”</p></div>
-
-<p>He repudiates the doctrines of Egoism for those of Altruism:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I will so live, as knowing myself to have come into the world for
-others.... I shall recognise the <i>world</i> as my proper country.
-Whenever nature or reason shall demand my last breath I shall
-depart with the testimony that I have loved a good conscience,
-useful pursuits&mdash;that I have encroached upon the liberty of no one,
-least of all my own.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Very admirable are his rebukes of unjust and insensate anger in regard
-to the non-human species:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“As it is the characteristic of a madman to be in a rage with
-lifeless objects, so also is it to be angry with dumb animals,<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a>
-inasmuch as there can be no injury unless <i>intentional</i>. Hurt
-us they can&mdash;as a stone or iron&mdash;<i>injure</i> us they cannot.
-Nevertheless, there are persons who consider themselves insulted
-when horses that will readily obey one rider are obstinate in
-the case of another; just as if they are more tractable to some
-individuals than to others of <i>set purpose</i>, not from custom or
-<i>owing to treatment</i>.”&mdash;(<i>De Irâ</i> ii., xxvi.)</p></div>
-
-<p>Again, of anger, as between human beings:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The faults of others we keep constantly before us; our own we hide
-behind us.... A large proportion of mankind are angry, not with the
-<i>sins</i>, but with the <i>sinners</i>. In regard to reported offences;
-<i>many speak falsely to deceive, many because they are themselves
-deceived</i>.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Of the use of self-examination, he quotes the example of his excellent
-preceptor, Sextius, who strictly followed the Pythagorean precept to
-examine oneself each night before sleep:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Of what bad practice have you cured yourself to-day? What vice
-have you resisted? In what respect are you the better? Rash anger
-will be moderated and finally cease when it finds itself daily
-confronted with its judge. What, then, is more useful than this
-custom of thoroughly weighing the actions of the entire day?”</p></div>
-
-<p>He adduces the feebleness and shortness of human life as one of the
-most forcible arguments against the indulgence of malevolence:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Nothing will be of more avail than reflections on the nature of
-mortality. Let each one say to himself, as to another, ‘What good
-is it to declare enmity against such and such persons, as though
-we were born to live for ever, and to thus waste our very brief
-existence? What profit is it to employ time which might be spent
-in honourable pleasures in inflicting pain and torture upon any of
-our fellow-beings?’ ... Why rush we to battle? Why do we provoke
-quarrels? Why, forgetful of our mortal weakness, do we engage in
-huge hatreds? Fragile beings as we are, why will we rise up to
-crush others?... Why do we tumultuously and seditiously set life
-in an uproar? Death stands staring us in the face, and approaches
-ever nearer and nearer. That moment which you destine for another’s
-destruction perchance may be for your own.... Behold! death comes,
-which makes us all equal. Whilst we are in this mortal life, let
-us cultivate humanity; let us not be a cause of fear or of danger
-to any of our fellow-mortals. Let us contemn losses, injuries,
-insults. Let us bear with magnanimity the brief inconveniences of
-life.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Again, in dealing with the weak and defenceless:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Let each one say to himself, whenever he is provoked, ‘What right
-have I to punish with whips or fetters a slave who has offended me
-by voice or manner? Who am I, whose ears it is such a monstrous
-crime to offend? Many grant pardon to their enemies; shall I not
-pardon simply idle, negligent, or garrulous slaves?’ Tender years
-should shield childhood&mdash;their sex, women&mdash;individual liberty, a
-stranger&mdash;the common roof, a domestic. Does he offend now for the
-first time? Let us think how often he may have pleased us.”&mdash;(<i>De
-Irâ</i> iii., passim.)</p></div>
-
-<p>As to the conduct of life:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“We ought so to live, as though in the sight of all men. We ought
-so to employ our thoughts, as though someone were able to inspect
-our inmost soul&mdash;and there is one able. For what advantages it that
-a thing is hidden from men; nothing is hidden from God. (<i>Ep.</i> 83.)
-... Would you propitiate heaven? Be good. He worships the gods, who
-imitates [the higher ideal of] them. How do we act? What principles
-do we lay down? That we are to refrain from human bloodshed? Is it
-a great matter to refrain from injuring him to whom you are bound
-to do good? The whole of human and divine teaching is summed up in
-this one principle&mdash;we are all members of one mighty body. Nature
-has made us of one kin (<i>cognatos</i>), since she has produced us
-from the same elements and will resolve us into the same elements.
-She has implanted in us love one for another, and made us for
-living together in society. She has laid down the laws of right
-and justice, by which ordinance it is more wretched to injure than
-to be injured; and by her ordering, our hands are given us to help
-each the other.... Let us ask what things <i>are</i>, not what they <i>are
-called</i>. Let us value each thing on its own merits, without thought
-of the world’s opinion. Let us love temperance; let us, before all
-things, cherish justice.... Our actions will not be right unless
-the will is first right, for from that proceeds the act.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Again:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The will will not be right unless the <i>habits</i> of mind are right,
-for from these results the will. The habits of thought, however,
-will not be at the best unless they shall have been based upon <i>the
-laws of the whole of life</i>; unless they shall have tried all things
-by the test of truth.”&mdash;(<i>Ep.</i> xcv.)</p></div>
-
-<p>Excellent is his advice on the choice of books and of reading:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Be careful that the reading of many authors, and of every sort of
-books, does not induce a certain vagueness and uncertainty of mind.
-We ought to linger over and nourish our minds with, writers of
-assured genius and worth, if we wish to extract something which may
-usefully remain fixed in the mind. A multitude of books distracts
-the mind. Read always, then, books of approved merit. If ever you
-have a wish to go for a time to other kinds of books, yet always
-return to the former.”<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a>&mdash;(<i>Ep.</i> ii.)</p></div>
-
-<p>In his 88th Letter Seneca well exposes the folly of a learning which
-begins and ends in <i>mere words</i>, which has no real bearing on the
-conduct of life and the instruction of the <i>moral</i> faculties:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“In testing the value of books and writers, let us see whether
-or no they teach <i>virtue</i>.... You inquire minutely about the
-wanderings of Ulysses rather than work for the prevention of error
-in your own case. We have no leisure to hear exactly how and where
-he was tossed about between Italy and Sicily.... The tempests of
-the soul are ever tossing us, and evildoing urges us into all the
-miseries of Ulysses.... Oh marvellously excellent education! By
-it you can measure circles and squares, and all the distances of
-the stars. There is nothing that is not within the reach of your
-geometry. Since you are so able a mechanician, measure the human
-mind. Tell me how great it is, how small it is (<i>pusillus</i>). You
-know what a straight line is. What does it profit you, if you
-know not what is straight (<i>rectum</i>) in life.”<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> What then? Are
-liberal studies of no avail? For other things much; for virtue
-nothing.... They do not lead the mind to virtue&mdash;they only clear
-the way.</p>
-
-<p>“Humanity forbids us to be arrogant towards our fellows; forbids us
-to be grasping; shows itself kind and courteous to all, in word,
-deed, and thought; thinks no evil of another, but rather loves its
-own highest good, chiefly because it will be of good to another.
-Do liberal studies [always] inculcate these maxims? No more than
-they do simplicity of character and moderation; no more than they
-do frugality and economy of living; no more than they do mercy,
-which is as sparing of another’s blood as it is of its own, and
-recognises that man is not to use the services of his fellows
-unnecessarily or prodigally.</p>
-
-<p>“Wisdom is a great, a vast subject. It needs all the spare time
-that can be given to it.... Whatever amount of natural and moral
-questions you may have mastered, you will still be wearied with the
-vast abundance of questions to be asked and solved. So many, so
-great, are these questions, all superfluous things must be removed
-from the mind, that it may have free scope for exercise. Shall I
-waste my life in mere words (<i>syllabis</i>)? Thus does it come about
-that the learned are more anxious to talk than to live. Mark what
-mischief <i>excessive</i> subtlety of mind produces, and how dangerous
-it may be to truth.”&mdash;(<i>Ep.</i> lxxxviii.)</p></div>
-
-<p>Elsewhere he indignantly demands:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“What is more vile or disgraceful than a learning which catches at
-popular applause (<i>clamores</i>)?”&mdash;(<i>Ep.</i> lii.)</p></div>
-
-<p>Anticipating the ultimate triumph of Truth, he well says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“No virtue is really lost&mdash;that it has to remain hidden for a time
-is no loss to itself. A day will come which will publish the truth
-at present neglected and oppressed by the malignity (<i>malignitas</i>)
-of its age. He who thinks the world to be of his own age only, is
-born for the few. Many thousands of years, many millions of people,
-will supervene. Look forward to that time. Though the envy of
-your own day shall have condemned you to obscurity, there will
-come those who will judge you without fear or favour. If there is
-any reward for virtue from fame, that is imperishable. The talk of
-posterity, indeed, will be nothing to us. Yet it will revere us,
-even though we are insensible to its praise; and it will frequently
-consult us.... What now deceives has not the elements of duration.
-Falsehood is thinly disguised; it is transparent, if only you look
-close enough.”&mdash;(<i>Ep.</i> lxix.)</p></div>
-
-<p>In his <i>Questions on Nature</i>, in which he often shows himself to have
-been much in advance of his contemporaries, and, indeed, of the whole
-mediæval ages, in scientific acumen, he takes occasion to reprobate the
-common practice of glorifying the lives and deeds of worthless princes
-and others, and exclaims in the modern spirit:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“How much better to try to extinguish the evils of our own age than
-to glorify the bad deeds of others to posterity! How much better
-to celebrate the works of Nature [<i>deorum</i>] than the piracies of
-a Philip or Alexander and of the rest who, become illustrious
-by the calamities of nations, have been no less the pests of
-mankind than an inundation which devastates a whole country, or a
-conflagration in which a large proportion of living creatures is
-consumed.”&mdash;(<i>Quæst. Nat.</i> iii.)</p></div>
-
-<p>It will be sufficiently apparent, from what we have presented to our
-readers, that Seneca, though nominally of the Stoic school, belonged in
-reality to no special sect or party. <i>Nullius addictus jurare in verba
-magistri.</i> Bound to the words of no one master, he sought for truth
-everywhere. The authority whom he most frequently quotes with approval
-is Epicurus, the arch-enemy of Stoicism. Wiser and more candid than
-the great mass of sectaries, he scorns the tactics of partisanship. He
-justly recognises the fact that the “luxurious egoists have not derived
-their impulse or sanction from Epicurus; but, abandoned to their vices,
-they disguise their selfishness in the name of his philosophy.” He
-professes his own conviction to be “against the common prejudice of
-the popular writers of my own school, that the teaching of Epicurus
-was just and holy, and, on a close examination, essentially grave
-and sober.... I affirm this, that he is ill-understood, defamed, and
-depreciated.” (<i>De Vitâ Beatâ</i>, xii, xiii.)</p>
-
-<p>It will also be sufficiently clear that the ethics of Seneca consist
-of no mere trials of skill in logomachy; in finely-drawn distinctions
-between words and names, as do so large a proportion both of modern
-and ancient dialectics. If so daring a heresy may possibly be forgiven
-us, we would venture to suggest that the authorities of our schools
-and universities might, with no inconsiderable advantage, substitute
-judicious excerpts from the <i>Morals</i> of Seneca for the <i>Ethics</i> of
-Aristotle; or, as Latin literature is now in question, even for the
-<i>De Officiis</i> of Cicero. This, however, is perhaps to indulge Utopian
-speculation too greatly. The mediæval spirit of scholasticism is not
-yet sufficiently out of favour at the ancient schools of Aquinas and
-Scotus.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VI_PLUTARCH">VI.<br />
-<span class="s5">PLUTARCH. 40&ndash;120 A.D. (?)</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">T<span class="smaller">HE</span> years of the birth and death of the first of biographers and the
-most amiable of moralists are unknown. We learn from himself that he
-was studying philosophy at Athens under Ammonius, the Peripatetic, at
-the time when Nero was making his ridiculous progress through Greece.
-This was in 66 <span class="smcap">A.D.</span>, and the date of his birth may therefore
-be approximately placed somewhere about the year 40. He was thus a
-younger contemporary of Seneca. Chæronea, in Bœotia, claims the honour
-of giving him birth.</p>
-
-<p>He lived several years at Rome and in other parts of Italy, where,
-according to the fashion of the age and the custom of the philosophic
-rhetoricians (of whom, probably, he was one of the very few whose
-<i>prælections</i> were of any real value), he gave public lectures,
-attended by the most eminent literary as well as social personages
-of the time, among whom were Tacitus, the younger Pliny, Quintilian,
-and perhaps Juvenal. These lectures may have formed the basis, if not
-the entire matter, of the miscellaneous essays which he afterwards
-published. When in Italy he neglected altogether the Latin language and
-literature, and the reason he gives proves the estimation in which he
-was held: “I had so many public commissions, and so many people came
-to me to receive instruction in philosophy.... it was, therefore, not
-till a late period in life that I began to read the Latin writers.” In
-fact, the very general indifference, or at least silence, of the Greek
-masters in regard to Latin literature is not a little remarkable.</p>
-
-<p>It is asserted, on doubtful authority (Suidas), that he was preceptor
-of Trajan, in the beginning of whose reign he held the high post
-of Procurator of Greece; and he also filled the honourable office
-of <i>Archon</i>, or Chief Magistrate of his native city, as well as of
-priest of the Delphic Apollo. He passed the later and larger portion
-of his life in quiet retirement at Chæronea. The reason he assigns
-for clinging to that dull and decaying provincial town, although
-residence there was not a little inconvenient for him, is creditable
-to his citizen-feeling, since he believed that by quitting it he,
-as a person of influence, might contribute to its ruin. In all the
-relations of social life Plutarch appears to have been exemplary,
-and he was evidently held in high esteem by his fellow-citizens. As
-husband and father he was particularly admirable. The death of a young
-daughter, one of a numerous progeny, was the occasion of one of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span> his
-most affecting productions&mdash;the <i>Consolation</i>&mdash;addressed to his wife
-Timoxena. He himself died at an advanced age, in the reign of Hadrian.</p>
-
-<p>Plutarch’s writings are sufficiently numerous. The <i>Parallel Lives</i>,
-forty-six in number, in which he brings together a Greek and a Roman
-celebrity by way of comparison, is perhaps the book of Greek and Latin
-literature which has been the most widely read in all languages. “The
-reason of its popularity,” justly observes a writer in Dr. Smith’s
-<i>Dictionary</i>, “is that Plutarch has rightly conceived the business of a
-biographer&mdash;his biography is true portraiture. Other biography is often
-a dull, tedious enumeration of facts in the order of time, with perhaps
-a summing up of character at the end. The reflections of Plutarch are
-neither impertinent nor trifling; his sound good sense is always there;
-his honest purpose is transparent; his love of humanity warms the
-whole. His work is and will remain, in spite of all the fault that can
-be found with it by plodding collectors of facts and small critics, the
-book of those who can nobly think and dare and do.”</p>
-
-<p>His miscellaneous writings&mdash;indiscriminately classed under the title
-<i>Moralia</i>, or <i>Morals</i>, but including historical, antiquarian,
-literary, political, and religious disquisitions&mdash;are about eighty in
-number. As might be expected of so miscellaneous a collection, these
-essays are of various merit, and some of them are, doubtless, the
-product of other minds than Plutarch’s. Next to the <i>Essay on Flesh
-Eating</i><a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> may be distinguished as amongst the most important or
-interesting, <i>That the Lower Animals Reason</i>,<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> <i>On the Sagacity
-of the Lower Animals</i>&mdash;highly meritorious treatises, far beyond the
-ethical or intellectual standard of the mass of “educated” people even
-of our day&mdash;<i>Rules for the Preservation of Health</i>, <i>A Discourse on
-the Training of Children</i>, <i>Marriage Precepts, or Advice to the Newly
-Married</i>, <i>On Justice</i>, <i>On the Soul</i>, <i>Symposiacs</i>&mdash;in which he deals
-with a variety of interesting or curious questions&mdash;<i>Isis and Osiris</i>,
-a theological disquisition; <i>On the Opinions of the Philosophers</i>,
-<i>On the Face that Appears in the Moon</i>,<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> <i>Political Precepts</i>,
-<i>Platonic Questions</i>, and last, not least, his <i>Consolation</i>, addressed
-to Timoxena. Plutarch also wrote his autobiography. If it had come
-down to us it would have been one of the most interesting remains<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
-of Antiquity, dealing, as we may well imagine it did deal, with some
-of the most important phenomena of the age. Possibly we might have
-had the expression of his feeling and attitude in regard to the new
-religion (established some 200 years later), which, strangely enough,
-is altogether overlooked or ignored as well by himself as by the other
-eminent writers of Greece and Italy.<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a></p>
-
-<p>Plutarch was an especial admirer of Plato and his school, but he
-attached himself exclusively to no sect or system. He was essentially
-eclectic: he chose what his reason and conscience informed him to be
-the most good and useful from the various philosophies. As to the
-influence of his literary labours in instructing the world, it has been
-truly remarked by the author of the article in the <i>Penny Cyclopædia</i>
-that, “a kind, humane disposition, and a love of everything that is
-ennobling and excellent, pervades his writings, and gives the reader
-the same kind of pleasure that he has in the company of an esteemed
-friend, whose singleness of heart appears in everything that he says
-or does.” His personal character is, in fact, exactly reflected in his
-publications. That he was somewhat superstitious and of a conservative
-bias is sufficiently apparent;<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> but it is also equally clear, in his
-case, that the moral perceptions were not obscured by a selfishness
-which is too often the product of optimism, or self-complacent
-contentment with things as they are. In metaphysics, with all earnest
-minds oppressed by the terrible fact of the dominance of evil and
-error in the world, he vainly attempted to find a solution of the
-enigma in that prevalent Western Asiatic prejudice of a dualism of
-contending powers. He found consolation in the persuasion that the two
-antagonistic principles are not of <i>equal</i> power, and that the Good
-must eventually prevail over the Evil.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Lives</i> has gone through numerous editions in all languages. Of the
-<i>Morals</i>, the first translation in this country was made by Philemon
-Holland, M.D., London, 1603 and 1657. The next English version was
-published in 1684&ndash;1694, “by several hands.” The fifth edition, “revised
-and corrected from the many errors of the former edition,” appeared
-in 1718. The latest English version is that of Professor Goodwin, of
-Harvard University (1870), with an introduction by R. W. Emerson. It
-is, for the most part, a reprint of the revision of 1718, and consists
-of five octavo volumes. It is a matter equally for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> surprise and
-regret that, in an age of so much literary, or at least publishing,
-enterprise, a judicious selection from the productions of so estimable
-a mind has never yet been attempted in a form accessible to ordinary
-readers.<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a></p>
-
-<p>In his <i>Symposiacs</i>, discussing (<i>Quest.</i> ii.), “whether the sea
-or land affords the better food,” and summing up the arguments, he
-proceeds:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“We can claim no great right over land animals which are nourished
-with the same food, inspire the same air, wash in and drink the
-same water that we do ourselves; and when they are slaughtered
-they make us ashamed of our work by their terrible cries; and
-then, again, by living amongst us they arrive at some degree of
-familiarity and intimacy with us. But sea creatures are altogether
-strangers to us, and are brought up, as it were, in another world.
-Neither does their voice, look, or any service they have done us
-plead for their life. This kind of animals are of no use at all to
-us, nor is there any obligation upon us that we should love them.
-The element we inhabit is a hell to them, and as soon as ever they
-enter upon it they die.”</p></div>
-
-<p>We may infer that Plutarch advanced gradually to the perfect knowledge
-of the truth, and it is probable that his essay on <i>Flesh-eating</i>
-was published at a comparatively late period in his life, since in
-some of his miscellaneous writings, in alluding to the subject,
-he speaks in less decided and emphatic terms of its barbarism and
-inhumanity: <i>e.g.</i>, in his <i>Rules for the Preservation of Health</i>,
-while recommending moderation in eating, and professing abstinence from
-flesh, he does not so expressly denounce the prevalent practice. Yet he
-is sufficiently pronounced even here in favour of the reformed diet on
-the score of health:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Ill-digestion,” says he, “is most to be feared after flesh-eating,
-for it very soon clogs us and leaves ill consequences behind it. It
-would be best to accustom oneself <i>to eat no flesh at all</i>, for the
-earth affords plenty enough of things fit not only for nourishment
-but for delight and enjoyment; some of which you may eat without
-much preparation, and others you may make pleasant by adding
-various other things.”</p></div>
-
-<p>That the non-Christian humanitarian of the first century was far
-ahead&mdash;we will not say of his contemporaries, but of the common crowd
-of writers and speakers of the present age in his estimate of the
-just rights and position of the innocent non-human races&mdash;will be
-sufficiently apparent from the following extract from his remarkable
-essay entitled, <i>That the Lower Animals Reason</i>, to which Montaigne
-seems to have been indebted. The essay is in the form of a dialogue
-between Odysseus (Ulysses) and Gryllus, who is one of the transformed
-captives of the sorceress Circe (see <i>Odyssey</i> ix.) Gryllus maintains
-the superiority<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span> of the non-human races generally in very many
-qualities and in regard to many of their habits&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>, in eating and
-drinking:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Being thus wicked and incontinent in inordinate desires, it is no
-less easy to be proved that men are more intemperate than other
-animals even in those things which are necessary&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>, in eating
-and drinking&mdash;the pleasures of which we [the non-human races]
-always enjoy with some benefit to ourselves. But you, pursuing
-the pleasures of eating and drinking beyond the satisfaction of
-nature, are punished with many and lingering diseases<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> which,
-arising from the single fountain of superfluous gormandising,
-fill your bodies with all manner of wind and vapours not easy for
-purgation to expel. In the first place, all species of the lower
-animals, according to their kind, feed upon one sort of food which
-is proper to their natures&mdash;some upon grass, some upon roots,
-and others upon fruits. Neither do they rob the weaker of their
-nourishment. But man, such is his voracity, <i>falls upon all</i> to
-satisfy the pleasures of his appetite, tries all things, tastes all
-things; and, as if he were yet to seek what was the most proper
-diet and most agreeable to his nature, among all animals is the
-only <i>all-devourer</i>.<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> He makes use of flesh <i>not out of want
-and necessity</i>, seeing that he has the liberty to make his choice
-of herbs and fruits, the plenty of which is inexhaustible; but
-out of luxury and being cloyed with necessaries, he seeks after
-impure and inconvenient diet, purchased by the slaughter of living
-beings; by this showing himself more cruel than the most savage of
-wild beasts. For blood, murder, and flesh are proper to nourish
-the kite, the wolf, and the serpent: <i>to men they are superfluous
-viands</i>. The lower animals abstain from most of other kinds and are
-at enmity with only a few, and that only compelled by necessities
-of hunger; but neither fish, nor fowl, nor anything that lives upon
-the land escapes your tables, though they bear the name of humane
-and <i>hospitable</i>.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Reprobating the harshness and inhumanity of Cato the Censor, who is
-usually regarded as the type of old Roman virtue, Plutarch, with his
-accustomed good feeling, declares:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“For my part, I cannot but charge his using his servants like
-so many horses and oxen, or turning them off or selling them
-when grown old, to the account of a mean and ungenerous spirit,
-which thinks that the sole tie between man and man is interest or
-necessity. But goodness moves in a larger sphere than [so-called]
-justice. The obligations of law and equity reach only to mankind,
-but kindness and beneficence should be extended to beings of every
-species. And these always flow from the breast of a well-natured
-man, as streams that flow from the living fountain.</p>
-
-<p>A good man will take care of his horses and dogs, not only while
-they are young, but when old and past service. Thus the people of
-Athens, when they had finished the temple of <i>Hecatompedon</i>, set at
-liberty the lower animals that had been chiefly employed in that
-work, suffering them to pasture at large, free from any further
-service.... We certainly ought not to treat living beings like
-shoes or household goods, which, when worn out with use, we throw
-away; and <i>were it only to learn benevolence to human kind</i>, we
-should be compassionate to other beings. For my own part, I would
-not sell even an old ox that had laboured for me; much less would
-I remove, for the sake of a little money, a man, grown old in my
-service, from his accustomed place&mdash;for to him, poor man, it would
-be as bad as banishment, since he could be of no more use to the
-buyer than he was to the seller. But Cato, as if he took a pride
-in these things, tells us that, when Consul, he left his war-horse
-in Spain, to save the public the charge of his freight. Whether
-such things as these are instances of greatness or of littleness of
-soul, let the reader judge for himself.”<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>If we shall compare these sentiments of the pagan humanitarian with the
-every-day practices of modern christian society in the matter, <i>e.g.</i>,
-of “knackers’ yards,” and other similar methods of getting rid of dumb
-dependants after a life-time of continuous hard labour&mdash;perhaps of bad
-usage, and even semi-starvation&mdash;the comparison scarcely will be in
-favour of christian ethics. From the essay <i>On Flesh-Eating</i> we extract
-the principal and most significant passages:&mdash;</p>
-
-<h3 id="PLUTARCH_ESSAY_ON_FLESH_EATING">PLUTARCH&mdash;ESSAY ON
-FLESH-EATING.</h3>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“You ask me upon what grounds Pythagoras abstained from feeding
-on the flesh of animals. I, for my part, marvel of what sort of
-feeling, mind, or reason, that man was possessed who was the first
-to pollute his mouth with gore, and to allow his lips to touch the
-flesh of a murdered being: who spread his table with the mangled
-forms of dead bodies, and claimed as his daily food what were but
-now beings endowed with movement, with perception, and with voice.</p>
-
-<p>“How could his eyes endure the spectacle of the flayed and
-dismembered limbs? How could his sense of smell endure the horrid
-<i>effluvium</i>? How, I ask, was his taste not sickened by contact with
-festering wounds, with the pollution of corrupted blood and juices?
-‘The very hides began to creep, and the flesh, both roast and
-raw, groaned on the spits, and the slaughtered oxen were endowed,
-as it might seem, with human voice.’<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> This is poetic fiction;
-but the actual feast of ordinary life is, of a truth, a veritable
-portent&mdash;that a human being should hunger after the flesh of oxen
-actually bellowing before him, and teach upon what parts one should
-feast, and lay down elaborate rules about joints and roastings and
-dishes. The first man who set the example of this savagery is the
-person to arraign; not, assuredly, that great mind which, in a
-later age, determined to have nothing to do with such horrors.</p>
-
-<p>“For the wretches who first applied to flesh-eating may justly be
-alleged in excuse their utter resourcelessness and destitution,
-inasmuch as it was not to indulge in lawless desires, or amidst the
-superfluities of necessaries, for the pleasure of wanton indulgence
-in unnatural luxuries that they [the primeval peoples] betook
-themselves to carnivorous habits.</p>
-
-<p>“If <i>they</i> could now assume consciousness and speech they might
-exclaim, ‘O blest and God-loved men who live at this day! What a
-happy age in the world’s history has fallen to <i>your</i> lot, you who
-plant and reap an inheritance of all good things which grow for
-you in ungrudging abundance! What rich harvests do you not gather
-in? What wealth from the plains, what innocent pleasures is it not
-in your power to reap from the rich vegetation surrounding you on
-all sides! <i>You</i> may indulge in luxurious food without staining
-your hands with innocent blood. While as for us wretches, <i>our</i>
-lot was cast in an age of the world the most savage and frightful
-conceivable. <i>We</i> were plunged into the midst of an all-prevailing
-and fatal want of the commonest necessaries of life from the period
-of the earth’s first genesis, while yet the gross atmosphere of the
-globe hid the cheerful heavens from view, while the stars were yet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
-wrapped in a dense and gloomy mist of fiery vapours, and the sun
-[earth] itself had no firm and regular course. Our globe was then
-a savage and uncultivated wilderness, perpetually overwhelmed with
-the floods of the disorderly rivers, abounding in shapeless and
-impenetrable morasses and forests. Not for us the gathering in of
-domesticated fruits; no mechanical instrument of any kind wherewith
-to fight against nature. Famines gave us no time, nor could there
-be any periods of seed-time and harvest.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What wonder, then, if, contrary to nature, we had recourse to the
-flesh of living beings, when all our other means of subsistence
-consisted in wild corn [or a sort of grass&mdash;ἄγρωστιν], and the
-bark of trees, and even slimy mud, and when we deemed ourselves
-fortunate to find some chance wild root or herb? When we tasted
-an acorn or beech-nut we danced with grateful joy around the
-tree, hailing it as our bounteous mother and nurse. Such was the
-gala-feast of those primeval days, when the whole earth was one
-universal scene of passion and violence, engendered by the struggle
-for the very means of existence.</p>
-
-<p>“‘But what struggle for existence, or what goading madness has
-incited <i>you</i> to imbrue your hands in blood&mdash;you who have, we
-repeat, a superabundance of all the necessaries and comforts of
-existence? Why do you belie the Earth [τὶ καταψεύοεσθε τῆς Γῆς]
-as though it were unable to feed and nourish you? Why do you
-do despite to the bounteous [goddess] Ceres, and blaspheme the
-sweet and mellow gifts of Bacchus, as though you received not a
-sufficiency from them?</p>
-
-<p>“‘Does it not shame you to mingle murder and blood with their
-beneficent fruits? Other <i>carnivora</i> you call savage and
-ferocious&mdash;lions and tigers and serpents&mdash;while yourselves come
-behind them in no species of barbarity. And yet for them murder is
-the only means of sustenance; whereas to you it is a superfluous
-luxury and crime.’</p>
-
-<p>“For, in point of fact, we do not kill and eat lions and wolves,
-as we might do in self-defence&mdash;on the contrary, we leave them
-unmolested; and yet the innocent and the domesticated and helpless
-and unprovided with weapons of offence&mdash;these we hunt and kill,
-whom Nature seems to have brought into existence for their beauty
-and gracefulness....</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing puts us out of countenance [δυσωπεῖ], not the charming
-beauty of their form, not the plaintive sweetness of their voice
-or cry, not their mental intelligence [πανουργία ψυχῆς], not
-the purity of their diet, not superiority of understanding. For
-the sake of a part of their flesh only, we deprive them of the
-glorious light of the sun&mdash;of the life for which they were born.
-The plaintive cries they utter we affect to take to be meaningless;
-whereas, in fact, they are entreaties and supplications and prayers
-addressed to us by each which say, ‘It is not the satisfaction
-of your real necessities we deprecate, but the wanton indulgence
-[ὕβριν] of your appetites. Kill to eat, if you must or will, but do
-not slay me that you may feed <i>luxuriously</i>.’</p>
-
-<p>“Alas for our savage inhumanity! It is a terrible thing to see
-the table of rich men decked out by those layers out of corpses
-[νεκρόκοσμους], the butchers and cooks: a still more terrible sight
-is the same table <i>after</i> the feast&mdash;for the wasted relics are even
-more than the consumption. These victims, then, have given up their
-lives uselessly. At other times, from mere niggardliness, the host
-will grudge to distribute his dishes, and yet he grudged not to
-deprive innocent beings of their existence!</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I have taken away the excuse of those who allege that they
-have the authority and sanction of Nature. For that man is not,
-by nature, carnivorous is proved, in the first place, by the
-external frame of his body&mdash;seeing that to none of the animals
-designed for living on flesh has the human body any resemblance. He
-has no curved beak, no sharp talons and claws, no pointed teeth,
-no intense power of stomach [κοιλίας εὐτονία] or heat of blood
-which might help him to masticate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span> and digest the gross and tough
-flesh-substance. On the contrary, by the smoothness of his teeth,
-the small capacity of his mouth, the softness of his tongue, and
-the sluggishness of his digestive apparatus, Nature sternly forbids
-him [ἐξομνύται] to feed on flesh.</p>
-
-<p>“If, in spite of all this, you still affirm that you were intended
-by nature for such a diet, then, to begin with, kill <i>yourself</i>
-what you wish to eat&mdash;but do it yourself with your own <i>natural</i>
-weapons, without the use of butcher’s knife, or axe, or club. No;
-as the wolves and lions and bears themselves slay all they feed on,
-so, in like manner, do you kill the cow or ox with a gripe of your
-jaws, or the pig with your teeth, or a hare or a lamb by falling
-upon and rending them there and then. Having gone through all these
-preliminaries, <i>then</i> sit down to your repast. If, however, you
-wait until the living and intelligent existence be deprived of
-life, and if it would disgust you to have to rend out the heart and
-shed the life-blood of your victim, why, I ask, in the very face
-of Nature, and in despite of her, do you feed on beings endowed
-with sentient life? But more than this&mdash;not even, after your
-victims have been killed, will you eat them just as they are from
-the slaughter-house. You boil, roast, and altogether metamorphose
-them by fire and condiments. You entirely alter and disguise the
-murdered animal by the use of ten thousand sweet herbs and spices,
-that your natural taste may be deceived and be prepared to take the
-unnatural food. A proper and witty rebuke was that of the Spartan
-who bought a fish and gave it to his cook to dress. When the latter
-asked for butter, and olive oil, and vinegar, he replied, ‘Why, if
-I had all these things, I should not have bought the fish!’</p>
-
-<p>“To such a degree do we make luxuries of bloodshed, that we call
-flesh ‘a delicacy,’ and forthwith require delicate sauces [ὄψων]
-for this same flesh-meat, and mix together oil and wine and honey
-and pickle and vinegar with all the spices of Syria and Arabia&mdash;for
-all the world as though we were embalming a human corpse. After all
-these heterogeneous matters have been mixed and dissolved and, in
-a manner, corrupted, it is for the stomach, forsooth, to masticate
-and assimilate them&mdash;if it can. And though this may be, for the
-time, accomplished, the natural sequence is a variety of diseases,
-produced by imperfect digestion and repletion.<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a></p>
-
-<p>“Diogenes (the Cynic) had the courage, on one occasion, to swallow
-a <i>polypus</i> without any cooking preparation, to dispense with the
-time and trouble expended in the kitchen. In the presence of a
-numerous concourse of priests and others, unwrapping the morsel
-from his tattered cloak, and putting it to his lips, ‘For your
-sakes,’ cried he, ‘I perform this extravagant action and incur this
-danger.’ A self-sacrifice truly meritorious! Not like Pelopidas,
-for the freedom of Thebes, or like Harmodius and Aristogeiton,
-on behalf of the citizens of Athens, did the philosopher submit
-to this hazardous experiments; for <i>he</i> acted thus that he might
-<i>unbarbarise</i>, if possible, the life of human kind.</p>
-
-<p>“Flesh-eating is not unnatural to our physical constitution only.
-The mind and intellect are made gross by gorging and repletion;
-for flesh-meat and wine may possibly tend to give robustness
-to the body, but it gives only feebleness to the mind. Not to
-incur the resentment of the prize-fighters [the <i>athletes</i>], I
-will avail myself of examples nearer home. The wits of Athens,
-it is well known, bestow on us Bœotians the epithets ‘gross,’
-‘dull-brained,’ and ‘stupid,’ chiefly on account of our gross
-feeding. We are even called ‘hogs.’ Menander nicknames us the
-‘jaw-people’ [οἱ γνάθους ἔχοντες]. Pindar has it that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span> ‘mind is a
-very secondary consideration with them.’ ‘A fine understanding of
-clouded brilliancy’ is the ironical phrase of Herakleitus....</p>
-
-<p>“Besides and beyond all these reasons, does it not seem admirable
-to foster habits of philanthropy? Who that is so kindly and gently
-disposed towards beings of another species would ever be inclined
-to do injury to his own kind? I remember in conversation hearing,
-as a saying of Xenokrates, that the Athenians imposed a penalty
-upon a man for flaying a sheep alive, and he who tortures a living
-being is little worse (it seems to me) than he who needlessly
-deprives of life and murders outright. We have, it appears, clearer
-perceptions of what is contrary to propriety and custom than of
-what is contrary to nature....</p>
-
-<p>“Reason proves both by our thoughts and our desires that we are
-(comparatively) new to the reeking feasts [ἕωλα] of
-kreophagy. Yet it is hard, as says Cato, to argue with stomachs
-since they have no ears; and the inebriating potion of Custom<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a>
-has been drunk, like Circe’s, with all its deceptions and
-witcheries. Now that men are saturated and penetrated, as it were,
-with love of pleasure, it is not an easy task to attempt to pluck
-out from their bodies the flesh-baited hook. Well would it be if,
-as the people of Egypt turning their back to the pure light of
-day disembowelled their dead and cast away the offal, as the very
-source and origin of their sins, we, too, in like manner, were to
-eradicate bloodshed and gluttony from ourselves and purify the
-remainder of our lives. If the irreproachable diet be impossible to
-any by reason of inveterate habit, at least let them devour their
-flesh as driven to it by hunger, not in luxurious wantonness, but
-with feelings of shame. Slay your victim, but at least do so with
-feelings of pity and pain, not with callous heedlessness and with
-torture. And yet that is what is done in a variety of ways.</p>
-
-<p>“In slaughtering swine, for example, they thrust red-hot irons into
-their living bodies, so that, by sucking up or diffusing the blood,
-they may render the flesh soft and tender. Some butchers jump upon
-or kick the udders of pregnant sows, that by mingling the blood and
-milk and matter of the <i>embryos</i> that have been murdered together
-in the very pangs of parturition, they may enjoy the pleasure of
-feeding upon unnaturally and highly inflamed flesh!<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> Again, it
-is a common practice to stitch up the eyes of cranes and swans, and
-shut them up in dark places to fatten. In this and other similar
-ways are manufactured their dainty dishes, with all the varieties
-of sauces and spices [καρυκείαις&mdash;Lydian sauces, composed of blood
-and spices]&mdash;from all which it is sufficiently evident that men
-have indulged their lawless appetites in the pleasures of luxury,
-not for necessary food, and from no necessity, but only out of the
-merest wantonness, and gluttony, and display....”<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a>
-</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Among the illustrious earlier contemporaries of Plutarch who practised
-no less than preached rigid abstinence, Apollonius of Tyana, the
-Pythagorean, one of the most extraordinary men of any age, deserves
-particular notice. He came into the world in the same year with the
-founder of Christianity, <span class="smcap">B.C.</span> 4. The facts and fictions of
-his life we owe to Philostratus, who wrote his memoirs at the express
-desire of the Empress Julia Domna, the wife of Severus.</p>
-
-<p>Apollonius, according to his biographer, came of noble ancestry. He
-early applied himself to severe study at the ever memorable Tarsus,
-where he may have known the great persecutor, and afterwards second
-founder, of Christianity. Disgusted with the luxury of the people, he
-soon exiled himself to a more congenial atmosphere, and applied himself
-to the examination of the various schools of philosophy&mdash;the Epicurean,
-the Stoic, the Peripatetic, &amp;c.&mdash;finally giving the preference to the
-Pythagorean. He embraced the strictest ascetic life, and travelled
-extensively, visiting, in the first instance, Nineveh, Babylon, and, it
-is said, India, and afterwards Greece, Italy, Spain, and Roman Africa
-and Ethiopia. At the accession of Domitian, he narrowly escaped from
-the hands of that tyrant, after having voluntarily given himself up
-to his tribunal, by an exertion of his reputed supernatural power. He
-passed the last years of his life at Ephesus, where, according to the
-well-known story, he is said to have announced the death of Domitian
-at the very moment of the event at Rome. His alleged miracles were so
-celebrated, and so curiously resemble the Christian miracles, that they
-have excited an unusual amount of attention.<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, the life by Philostratus, in accordance with the taste
-of a necessarily uncritical age, is so full of the preternatural and
-marvellous that the real fact that the pythagorean philosopher had
-acquired and possessed extraordinary mental as well as moral faculties,
-which might well be deemed supernatural at that period, is too apt to
-be discredited. The Life was composed long after the death of the hero,
-and thus a considerable amount of inventive license was possible to the
-biographer; but that it rested upon an undoubted substratum of actual
-occurrences will scarcely be disputed. There is one passage which
-deserves to be transcribed as of wider application. The people of a
-town in Pamphylia (in the Lesser Asia), where the great Thaumaturgist
-chanced to be staying, were starving in the midst of plenty by the
-selfish policy of the monopolists of grain, and, driven to desperation,
-were on the point of attacking the responsible authorities. Apollonius,
-at this crisis, wrote the following address, and gave it to the
-magistrates to read aloud:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Apollonius to the Monopolists of Corn in Aspendos, greeting: The
-Earth is the common mother of all, for she is just.<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> You are
-unjust, for you have made her the mother of <i>yourselves only</i>.
-If you will not cease from acting thus, I will not suffer you to
-remain upon her.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Philostratus assures us that “intimidated by these indignant words they
-filled the market with grain, and the city recovered from its distress.”</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VII_TERTULLIAN">VII.<br />
-<span class="s5">TERTULLIAN. 160&ndash;240 (?) A.D.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">T<span class="smaller">HE</span> earliest of the Latin Fathers extant is, also, one of the most
-esteemed by the Church,<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> notwithstanding the well-known heterodoxy
-of his later life, as the first Apologist of Christianity in the
-Western and Latin world. He was a native of Carthage, the son of an
-officer holding an important post under the imperial government. The
-facts of his life known to us are very few, nor is it ascertained at
-what period he became a convert to the new religion, or when he was
-ordained as <i>presbyter</i>. The ill-treatment to which he was subjected by
-his clerical brethren at Rome induced him, it seems, to throw in his
-lot with the Montanist sect, in whose defence he wrote several books.
-He lived to an advanced age.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Of his numerous works the best known (by name at least) is his
-<i>Apologeticus</i> (“An Apology for Christianity”). Amongst his other
-treatises we may enumerate <i>De Spectaculis</i> (“On Shows”), <i>On
-Idolatry</i>, <i>On the Soldier’s Crown</i> (in which Tertullian raises
-the question of the lawfulness of the “violent and sanguinary
-occupation” of the soldier, but rather, however, for the reason of
-the circumstances of the pagan ceremonial), <i>On Monogamy</i>, <i>On the
-Dress of Women</i> (upon the extravagance of which the “Old Fathers” were
-eloquently denunciative), <i>Address to his Wife</i>. The treatise which
-here concerns us is his <i>De Jejuniis Adversus Psychicos</i>.<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a></p>
-
-<p>Tertullian sets himself to expose the subterfuge of a large
-proportion of the professing Christians in his day who appealed
-to the pretended authority of Christ and his Apostles for the
-lawfulness of flesh-eating. Especially does he refute the (supposed)
-defence of kreophagy in I. <i>Tim.</i> iv., 3.<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> As to the celebrated
-verse in <i>Genesis</i> which solemnly enjoins the vegetable diet, the
-opponents of abstinence allege the permission afterwards given to the
-“post-diluvians.”</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“To this we reply,” says Tertullian, “that it was not proper that
-man should be burdened with an express command to abstain, who had
-not been able in fact, to support even so slight a prohibition as
-that of not to eat one single species of fruit; and, therefore,
-he was released from that stringency that, by the very enjoyment
-of freedom, he might learn to acquire strength of mind; and after
-the ‘flood,’ in the reformation of the human species, the simple
-command to abstain from blood sufficed, and the use of other things
-was freely left to his choice. Inasmuch as God had displayed
-his judgment through the ‘flood,’ and had threatened, moreover,
-exquisition of blood, whether at the hand of man or of beast,
-giving evident proof beforehand of the justice of his sentence,
-he left them liberty of choice and responsibility, supplying the
-material for discipline by the freedom of will, intending to enjoin
-abstinence by the very indulgence granted, in order, as we have
-said, that the primordial offence might be the better expiated
-by greater abstinence under the opportunity of greater license.”
-(<i>Quo magis, ut diximus, primordiale delictum expiaretur majoris
-abstinentiæ operatione in majoris licentiæ occasione.</i>)</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He quotes the various passages in the Jewish Scriptures, in which the
-causes of the idolatrous proclivities and the crimes of the earlier
-Jews are connected by Jehovah and his prophets with flesh-eating and
-gross living:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Whether or no,” he proceeds, “I have unreasonably explained the
-cause of the condemnation of the ordinary food by God, and of the
-obligation upon us, through the divine will, to denounce it, let us
-consult the common conscience of men. Nature herself will inform
-us whether, before gross eating and drinking, we were not of much
-more powerful intellect, of much more sensitive feeling, than
-when the entire domicile of men’s interior has been stuffed with
-meats, inundated with wines, and, fermenting with filth in course
-of digestion, turned into a mere preparatory place for the draught
-(<i>Præmeditatorium latrinarum</i>).<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a></p>
-
-<p>“I greatly mistake (<i>mentior</i>) if God himself, upbraiding the
-forgetfulness of himself by Israel, does not attribute it to
-fulness of stomach. In fine, in the book of Deuteronomy, bidding
-them to be on their guard against the same cause, he says, ‘Lest
-when thou hast eaten and art full&mdash;when thy flocks and thy herds
-multiply,’ &amp;c. He makes the enormity of gluttony an evil superior
-to any other corrupting result of riches.... So great is the
-privilege (prerogative) of a circumscribed diet that it makes God
-a dweller with men (<i>contubernalem</i>&mdash;literally, ‘a fellow-guest’),
-and, indeed, to live (as it were) on equal terms with them. For if
-the eternal God&mdash;as he testifies through Isaiah&mdash;feels no hunger,
-man, too, may become equal to the Deity when he subsists without
-gross nourishment.”</p></div>
-
-<p>He instances Daniel and his countrymen, “who preferred vegetable
-food and water to the royal dishes and goblets, and so became more
-comely than the rest, in order that no one might fear for his personal
-appearance; while, at the same time, they were still more improved in
-understanding.” As to the priesthood:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“God said to Aaron, ‘Wine and strong liquor shall ye not drink,
-you and your sons after you,’ &amp;c. So, also, he upbraids Israel:
-‘And ye gave the Nazarites wine to drink.’ (Amos ii., 3.) Now this
-prohibition of drink is essentially connected with the vegetable
-diet. Thus, where abstinence from wine is required by God, or is
-vowed by man, there, too, may be understood suppression of gross
-feeding, <i>for as is the eating, so is the drinking</i> (<i>qualis enim
-esus, talis et potus</i>). It is not consistent with truth that a man
-should sacrifice <i>half</i> of his stomach (<i>gulam</i>) only to God&mdash;that
-he should be sober in drinking, but intemperate in eating.<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a></p>
-
-<p>“You reply, finally, that this [abstinence] is to be observed
-according to the will of each individual, not by imperious
-obligation. But what sort of thing is this, that you should allow
-to your arbitrary inclinations what you will not allow to the will
-of God? Shall more licence be conceded to the human inclinations
-than to the divine power? I, for my part, hold that, free from
-obligation to follow the fashions of the world, I am not free from
-obligation to God.”</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In regard to St. Paul’s well-known sentences (<i>Rom.</i> xiv., 1, &amp;c.),
-Tertullian maintains that he refers to certain teachers of abstinence
-who acted from pride, not from a sense of right:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“And even if he has handed over to you the keys of the
-slaughter-house or butcher’s shop (<i>Macelli</i>) in permitting you
-to eat all things, excepting sacrifices to idols, at least he
-has not made the kingdom of heaven to consist in <i>butchery</i>;
-‘for,’ says he, ‘eating and drinking is not the kingdom of God,
-and food commends us not to God.’ You are not to suppose it said
-of vegetable, but of gross and luxurious, food, since he adds,
-‘Neither if we eat have we anything the more, nor if we eat not
-have we anything the less.’<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> How unworthily, too, do you press
-the example of Christ as having come ‘eating and drinking’ into the
-service of your lusts. I think that He who pronounced not the full
-but the hungry and thirsty ‘blessed,’ who professed His work to be
-(not as His disciples understood it) the completion of His Father’s
-will, I think that He was wont to abstain&mdash;instructing them to
-labour for that ‘meat’ which lasts to eternal life, and enjoining
-in their common prayers petition, not for rich and gross food, but
-for bread only.</p>
-
-<p>“And if there be One who prefers the works of justice, not,
-however, without sacrifice&mdash;that is to say, a spirit exercised by
-abstinence&mdash;it is surely that God to whom neither a gluttonous
-people nor priest was acceptable&mdash;monuments of whose concupiscence
-remain to this day, where was buried [a large proportion of] a
-people greedy and clamorous for flesh-meats, gorging quails even to
-the point of inducing jaundice.<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Your belly is your god,” [thus he indignantly reproaches the
-apologists of kreophagy,] “your liver is your temple, your paunch
-is your altar, the cook is your priest, and the fat steam is your
-Holy Spirit; the seasonings and the sauces are your chrisms,
-and your eructations are your prophesyings. I ever,” continues
-Tertullian with bitter irony, “recognise Esau the hunter as a man
-of taste (<i>sapere</i>), and as his were so are your whole skill and
-interest given to hunting and trapping&mdash;just like him you come in
-‘from the field’ of your licentious chase. Were I to offer you
-‘a mess of pottage,’ you would, doubtless, straightway sell all
-your ‘birthright.’ It is in the cooking-pots that your love is
-inflamed&mdash;it is in the kitchen that your faith grows fervid&mdash;it is
-in the flesh dishes that all your hope lies hid.... Who is held in
-so much esteem with you as the frequent giver of dinners, as the
-sumptuous entertainer, as the practised toaster of healths?</p>
-
-<p>“Consistently do you men of flesh reject the things of the spirit.
-But if your prophets are complacent towards such persons, they are
-not <i>my</i> prophets. Why preach <i>you</i> not constantly, ‘Let us eat
-and drink, <i>for</i> to-morrow we die,’ just as <i>we</i> preach, ‘Let us
-abstain, brothers and sisters, <i>lest</i> to-morrow, perchance, we die’?</p>
-
-<p>“Let us openly and boldly vindicate our teaching. We are sure
-that they ‘who are in the flesh cannot please God.’<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> Not,
-surely, meaning ‘in the covering or substance of the flesh,’
-but in the care, the affection, the desire for it. As for us,
-less grossness (<i>macies</i>) of the body is no cause of regret, for
-neither does God give <i>flesh by weight</i> any more than he gives
-<i>spirit by measure</i>.... Let prize-fighters and pugilists fatten
-themselves up (<i>saginentur</i>)&mdash;for them a mere corporeal ambition
-suffices. And yet even they become stronger by living on vegetable
-food (<i>xerophagia</i>&mdash;literally, ‘eating of dry foods’). But other
-strength and vigour is our aim, as other contests are ours, who
-fight not against flesh and blood. Against our antagonists we
-must fight&mdash;not by means of flesh and blood, but with faith and
-a strong mind. For the rest, a grossly-feeding Christian is akin
-(<i>necessarius</i>) to lions and bears rather than to God, although
-even as against wild beasts it should be our interest to practice
-abstinence.”<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <a id="deco_p55" name="deco_p55">
- <img class="mtop2 img_deco" src="images/deco_p55.jpg"
- alt="Ornamental Image" /></a>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VIII_CLEMENT_OF_ALEXANDRIA">VIII.<br />
-<span class="s5">CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA. D<span class="smaller">IED</span>
-220 (?) A.D.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">T<span class="smaller">HE</span> attitude of the first great Christian writers and apologists in
-regard to total abstinence was somewhat peculiar. Trained in the
-school of Plato, in the later development of neo-platonism, their
-strongest convictions and their personal sympathies were, naturally,
-anti-kreophagistic. The traditions, too, of the earliest period in the
-history of Christianity coincided with their pre-Christian convictions,
-since the immediate and accredited representatives of the Founder
-of the new religion, who presided over the first Christian society,
-were commonly held to have been, equally with their predecessors and
-contemporaries the Essenes, strict abstinents from flesh-eating.<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a></p>
-
-<p>Moreover, the very numerous party in the Church&mdash;the most diametrically
-opposed in other respects to the Jewish or Ebionite Christians&mdash;the
-Gnostics or philosophical Christians, “the most polite, the most
-learned, and the most wealthy of the Christian name,” for the most
-part agreed with their rivals for orthodox supremacy in aversion from
-flesh, and, as it seems, for nearly the same reason&mdash;a belief in the
-essential and inherent evil of matter, a persuasion, it may be said,
-however unscientific, not unnatural, perhaps, in any age, and certainly
-not surprising in an age especially characterised by the grossest
-materialism,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span> selfishness, and cruelty. But the creed of the Christian
-church, which eventually became the prevailing and ruling dogma, like
-that of the English Church at the Revolution of the sixteenth century,
-was a compromise&mdash;a compromise between the two opposite parties of
-those who received and those who rejected the old Jewish revelation.</p>
-
-<p>On the one hand Christianity, in its later and more developed form,
-had insensibly cast off the rigid formalism and exclusiveness of
-Mosaism, and, on the other, had stamped with the brand of heresy the
-Greek infusion of philosophy and liberalism. Unfortunately, unable
-clearly to distinguish between the true and the false&mdash;between the
-accidental and fanciful and the permanent and real&mdash;timidly cautious
-of approving anything which seemed connected with heresy&mdash;the leaders
-of the dominant body were prone to seek refuge in a middle course, in
-regard to the question of flesh-eating, scarcely consistent with strict
-logic or strict reason. While advocating abstinence as the highest
-spiritual exercise or aspiration, they seem to have been unduly anxious
-to disclaim any motives other than <i>ascetic</i>&mdash;to disclaim, in fine,
-humanitarian or “secular” reason, such as that of the Pythagoreans.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the feeling, apparently, of the later orthodox church, at
-least in the West. While, however, we thus find, occasionally, a
-certain constraint and even contradiction in the <i>theory</i> of the
-first great teachers of the Church, the <i>practice</i> was much more
-consistent. That, in fact, during the first three or four centuries
-the most esteemed of the Christian heroes and saints were not only
-non-flesh-eaters but Vegetarians of the extremest kind (far surpassing,
-if we give any credit to the accounts we have of them, the <i>most
-frugal</i> of modern abstainers) is well known to everyone at all
-acquainted with ecclesiastical and, especially, eremitical history&mdash;and
-it is unnecessary to further insist upon a notorious fact.<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a></p>
-
-<p>Titus Flavius Clemens, the founder of the famous Alexandrian school of
-Christian theology, and at once the most learned and most philosophic
-of all the Christian Fathers, is generally supposed to have been a
-native of Athens. His Latin name suggests some connexion with the
-family of Clemens, cousin of the emperor Domitian, who is said to have
-been put to death for the crime of <i>atheism</i>, as the new religion was
-commonly termed by the orthodox pagans.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He travelled and studied the various philosophies in the East and West.
-On accepting the Christian faith he sought information in the schools
-of its most reputed teachers, of whom the name of Pantænus is the only
-one known to us. At the death of Pantænus, in 190, Clement succeeded
-to the chair of theology in Alexandria, and at the same time, perhaps,
-he became a presbyter. He continued to lecture with great reputation
-till the year 202, when the persecution under Severus forced him to
-retire from the Egyptian capital. He then took refuge in Palestine, and
-appears not to have returned to Alexandria. The time and manner of his
-death are alike unknown. He is supposed to have died in the year 220.
-Amongst his pupils by far the most famous, hardly second to himself
-in learning and ability, was Origen, his successor in the Alexandrian
-professorship.</p>
-
-<p>His three great works are: <i>A Hortatory Discourse Addressed to
-the Greeks</i> (Λόγος Προτρεπτικὸς πρὸς Ἓλληνας), <i>The Instructor</i>
-(<i>Paidagogos</i>&mdash;strictly, <i>Tutor</i>, or Conductor to school), and the
-<i>Miscellanies</i> (<i>Stromateis</i>, or <i>Stromata</i>&mdash;lit. “Patch-work”).<a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a>
-The three works were intended to form a graduated and complete
-initiation and instruction in Christian theology and ethics. The
-first is addressed to the pagan Greek world, the second to the recent
-convert, and in the last he conducts the initiated to the higher
-<i>gnosis</i>, or knowledge. The <i>Miscellanies</i> originally consisted
-of eight books, the last of which is lost. The whole series is of
-unusual value, not only as the record of the opinions of the ablest
-and most philosophical of the mediators between Greek philosophy and
-the Christian creed, but also as containing an immense amount of
-information on Greek life and literature. Eloquence, earnestness, and
-erudition equally characterise the writings of Clement.</p>
-
-<p>He assumes the name and character of a <i>Gnostic</i>,<a name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> or philosophic
-Christian, not in the historical but in his own sense of the word,
-and professes himself an eclectic&mdash;as far as a liberal interpretation
-of his religion admitted. “By philosophy,” he says,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span> “I do not mean
-the Stoic, the Platonic, the Epicurean, or the Aristotelian, but all
-that has been well said in each of those sects teaching righteousness
-with religious science&mdash;all this selected truth (τοῦτο σύμπαν τὸ
-ἐκλεκτικὸν) I call philosophy.” Again, he echoes the sentiments of
-Seneca in lamenting that “we incline more to beliefs that are in
-repute (τὰ ἔνδοξα), even when they are contradictory, than to the
-truth” (<i>Miscellanies</i>, i. and vii.). “It would have been well for
-Christianity if the principles, which he set forth with such an array
-of profound scholarship and ingenious reasoning, had been adopted
-more generally by those who came after him.... If anyone, even in a
-Protestant community, were to assert the liberal and comprehensive
-principles of the great Father of Alexandria, he would be told that he
-wished to compromise the distinctive claims of theology, and that he
-was little better than a heathen and a publican.”<a name="FNanchor_67_67" id="FNanchor_67_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a></p>
-
-<p>It is in his second treatise, the <i>Instructor</i> or <i>Tutor</i>, that Clement
-displays his opinions on the subject of flesh-eating:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Some men live that they may eat, as the irrational beings ‘whose
-life is their belly and nothing else.’ But the Instructor enjoins
-us to eat that we may live. For neither is food our business,
-nor is pleasure our aim. Therefore discrimination is to be used
-in reference to food: it must be plain, truly simple, suiting
-precisely simple and artless children&mdash;as ministering to life
-not to luxury. And the life to which it conduces consists of two
-things, health and strength: to which plainness of fare is most
-suitable, being conducive both to digestion and lightness of
-body, from which come growth, and health, and right strength: not
-strength that is violent or dangerous, and wretched, as is that of
-the <i>athletes</i> which is produced by artificial feeding.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Referring to the injunction of Jesus, “When thou makest an
-entertainment, call the poor,” for “whose sake chiefly a supper ought
-to be made,” Clement says of the rich:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“They have not yet learned that God has provided for his creature
-(man, I mean) food and drink for <i>sustenance</i> not for pleasure:
-since the body derives no advantage from extravagance in viands. On
-the contrary, those <i>who use the most frugal fare are the strongest
-and the healthiest, and the noblest</i>: as domestics are healthier
-and stronger than their masters, and agricultural labourers than
-proprietors, and not only more vigorous but wiser than rich men.
-For they have not buried the mind beneath food. Wholly unnatural
-and inhuman is it for those who are of the earth, fattening,
-themselves like cattle, to <i>feed themselves up for death</i>.<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a>
-Looking downwards on the earth, bending ever over tables, leading
-a life of gluttony, burying all the good of existence here in a
-life that by and by will end for ever: so that cooks are held in
-higher esteem than the tillers of the ground. We do not abolish
-social intercourse, but we look with suspicion on the snares of
-Custom and regard them as a fatal mischief. Therefore daintiness
-must be spurned, and we are to partake of few and necessary
-things.... Nor is it suitable to eat and drink simultaneously. For
-it is the very extreme of intemperance to confound the times whose
-uses are discordant. And ‘whether ye eat or drink, do all to the
-glory of God,’ aiming after true frugality, which Christ also seems
-to me to have hinted at when he blessed the loaves and the cooked
-fishes with which he feasted the disciples, introducing a beautiful
-example of simple diet. And the fish which, at the command of the
-Lord, Peter caught, points to digestible and God-given and moderate
-food....</p>
-
-<p>We must guard against those sorts of food which persuade us to
-eat when we are not hungry, bewitching the appetite. For is
-there not, within a temperate simplicity, a wholesome variety of
-eatables&mdash;vegetables, roots, olives, herbs, milk, cheese, fruits,
-and all kinds of dry food? ‘Have you anything here to eat?’ said
-the Lord to the disciples after the resurrection: and they, as
-taught by Him to practice frugality, ‘gave him a piece of broiled
-fish,’ and besides this, it is not to be overlooked that those who
-feed according to the Word are not debarred from dainties&mdash;such as
-honey combs. For of sorts of food those are the most proper which
-are fit for immediate use without fire, since they are readiest:
-and second to these <i>are those which are the simplest</i>, as we said
-before. But those who bend around inflammatory tables, nourishing
-their own diseases, are ruled by a most licentious disease which
-I shall venture to call the demon of the belly: and the worst and
-most vile of demons. It is far better to be happy than to have a
-devil dwelling in us: and happiness is found only in the practice
-of virtue. Accordingly the Apostle Matthew lived upon seeds and
-nuts, (Ακρόδρυα&mdash;hard-shelled fruits) and vegetables without the
-use of flesh. And John, who carried temperance to the extreme, ‘ate
-locusts and wild honey.’”
-</p></div>
-
-<p>As to the Jewish laws: “The Jews,” says Clement, “had frugality
-enjoined on them by the Law in the most systematic manner. For the
-Instructor, by Moses, deprived them of the use of innumerable things,
-adding reasons&mdash;the spiritual ones hidden, the carnal ones apparent&mdash;to
-which latter, indeed, they have trusted”:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“So that, altogether, but a few [animals] were left proper for
-their food. And of those which he permitted them to touch, he
-prohibited such as had died, or were offered to idols, or had been
-strangled: inasmuch as to touch these was unlawful.... Pleasure
-has often produced in men harm and pain, and full feeding begets
-in the soul uneasiness, and forgetfulness, and foolishness. It is
-said, moreover, that the bodies of children, when shooting up to
-their height, are made to grow right by abstinence in diet; for
-then the spirit which pervades the body, in order to its growth,
-is not checked by abundance of food obstructing the freedom of
-its course. Whence that truth-seeking philosopher, Plato, fanning
-the spark of the Hebrew philosophy, when condemning a life of
-luxury, says: ‘On my coming hither [to Syracuse] the life which
-is here called happy pleased me not by any means. For not one man
-under heaven, if brought up from his youth in such practices, will
-ever turn out a <i>wise</i> man, with however admirable genius he may
-be endowed.’ For Plato was not unacquainted with David,<a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> who
-placed the sacred ark in his city in the midst of the tabernacle,
-and bidding all his subjects rejoice ‘before the Lord, divided to
-the whole host of Israel, men and women, to each a loaf of bread,
-and baked bread, and a cake from the frying-pan.’<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> This was the
-<i>sufficient</i> sustenance of the Israelites. But that of the Gentiles
-was over-abundant, and no one who uses it will ever study to
-become temperate, burying, as he does, his mind in his belly, very
-like the fish called <i>onos</i> which, Aristotle says, alone of all
-creatures has its heart in its stomach. This fish Epicharmus, the
-comic poet, calls ‘monster-paunch.’ Such are the men who believe in
-their stomach, ‘whose God is their belly, whose glory is in their
-shame, who mind earthly things.’ To them the apostle predicted no
-good when he said ‘whose end is destruction.’”<a name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>In treating of the subject of sacrifices, upon which he uses a good
-deal of sarcasm (in regard to the <i>pagan</i> sacrifices at least), Clement
-incidentally allows us to see, still further, his opinion respecting
-gross feeding. He quotes several of the Greek poets who ridicule the
-practice and pretence of sacrificial propitiation, <i>e.g.</i>, Menander:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft10">“the end of the loin,</div>
- <div class="verse">The gall, the bones uneatable, they give</div>
- <div class="verse">Alone to Heaven: the rest <i>themselves</i> consume.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“If, in fact,” remarks Clement, “the savour is the special desire of
-the Gods of the Greeks, should they not first deify the <i>cooks</i>, and
-worship the Chimney itself which is still closer to the much-prized
-savour?”</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“If,” he justly adds, “the deity need nothing, what need has he
-of food? Now, if nourishing matters taken in by the nostrils
-are diviner than those taken in by the mouth, yet they imply
-respiration. What then do they say of God? Does He <i>exhale</i>, like
-the oaks, or does he only <i>inhale</i>, like the aquatic animals by the
-dilatation of the gills, or does he breathe all around like the
-insects?”</p></div>
-
-<p>The only innocent altar he asserts to be the one allowed by
-Pythagoras:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The very ancient altar in Delos was celebrated for its purity, to
-which alone, as being undefiled by slaughter and death, they say
-that Pythagoras would permit approach. And will they not believe
-us when we say that the righteous soul is the truly sacred altar?
-But I believe that sacrifices were invented by men <i>to be a pretext
-for eating flesh</i>, and yet, without such idolatry, they might have
-partaken of it.”</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He next glances at the <i>popular</i> reason for the Pythagorean abstinence,
-and declares:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“If any righteous man does not burden his soul by the eating
-of flesh, he has the advantage of a rational motive, not, as
-Pythagoras and his followers dream, of the transmigration of the
-soul. Now Xenokrates, treating of ‘Food derived from Animals,’<a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a>
-and Polemon in his work ‘On Life according to Nature,’<a name="FNanchor_72a_72a" id="FNanchor_72a_72a"></a><a href="#Footnote_72a_72a" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> seem
-clearly to affirm that animal food is unwholesome. If it be said
-that the lower animals were assigned to man&mdash;and we partly admit
-it&mdash;yet it was not entirely for food; nor were all animals, but
-<i>such as do not work</i>. And so the comic poet, Plato, says not badly
-in the drama of <i>The Feasts</i>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">‘For of the quadrupeds we should not slay</div>
- <div class="verse">In future aught but swine. For they have flesh</div>
- <div class="verse">Most delicate: and about the swine is nought</div>
- <div class="verse">For us: excepting bristles, dirt, and noise.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Some eat them as being useless, others as destructive of fruits,
-and others do not eat them because they are said to have strong
-propensity to coition. It is alleged that the greatest amount of
-fatty substance is produced by swine’s flesh: it may, then, be
-appropriate for those whose ambition is for the body; it is not so
-for those who cultivate the soul, by reason of the dulling of the
-faculties resulting from eating of flesh. The Gnostic, perhaps,
-too, will abstain for the sake of training, and that the body
-may not grow wanton in amorousness. ‘For wine,’ says Andokides,
-‘and gluttonous feeds of flesh make the body strong, but the
-soul more sluggish.’ Accordingly such food, in order to a clear
-understanding, is to be rejected.”<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>In a chapter in his <i>Miscellanies</i>, discussing the comparative merits
-of the Pagan and of the Jewish code of ethics, he displays much
-eloquence in attempting to prove the superiority of the latter. In the
-course of his argument he is led to make some acknowledgment of the
-claims of the lower animals which, however incomplete, is remarkable
-as being almost unique in Christian theology. He quotes certain of the
-“Proverbs,” <i>e.g.</i>, ‘The merciful man is long-suffering, and in every
-one who shows solicitude there is wisdom,’ and proceeds (assuming the
-indebtedness of the Greeks to the Jews):&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Pythagoras seems to me to have derived his mildness towards
-irrational animals from the Law. For instance, he interdicted the
-employment of the young of sheep and goats and cows for some time
-after their birth; not even on the pretext of sacrifice allowing
-it, on account both of the young ones and of the mother; training
-men to gentleness by their conduct towards those beneath them.
-‘Resign,’ he says, ‘the young one to the mother for the proper
-time.’ For if nothing takes place without a cause, and milk is
-produced in large quantity in parturition for the sustenance of the
-progeny, he who tears away the young one from the supply of the
-milk and the breast of the mother, dishonours Nature.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Reverting to the Jewish religion, he asserts:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The Law, too, expressly prohibits the slaying of such animals as
-are pregnant till they have brought forth, remotely restraining the
-proneness of men to do wrong to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span> men; and thus also it has extended
-its clemency to the irrational animals, that by the exercise of
-humanity to beings of different races we may practise amongst those
-of the same species a larger abundance of it. Those too that kick
-the bellies of certain animals before parturition, in order to
-feast on flesh mixed with milk, make the womb created for the birth
-of the fœtus its grave, though the Law expressly commands ‘but
-neither shalt thou seethe a lamb in his mother’s milk.’<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> For the
-nourishment of the living animal, it is meant, may not be converted
-into sauce for that which has been deprived of life; and that which
-is the cause of life may not co-operate in the consumption of its
-flesh.”<a name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IX_PORPHYRY">IX.<br />
-<span class="s5">PORPHYRY. 233&ndash;306 (?) A.D.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">O<span class="smaller">NE</span> of the most erudite, as well as one of the most spiritual, of the
-<i>literati</i> of any age or people, and certainly the most estimable of
-all the extant Greek philosophers after the days of Plutarch, was
-born either at Tyre or at some neighbouring town. His original name,
-Malchus, the Greek form of the Syrian Melech (king), and the name by
-which he is known to us, Porphyrius (purple-robed), we may well take
-deservedly to mark his philosophic superiority. He was exceptionally
-fortunate in his preceptors&mdash;Longinus, the most eloquent and elegant
-of the later Greek critics, under whom he studied at Athens; Origen,
-the most independent and learned of the Christian Fathers, from whom,
-probably, he derived his vast knowledge of theological literature;
-and, finally, Plotinus, the famous founder of New-Platonism, who had
-established his school at Rome in the year 244.</p>
-
-<p>Upon first joining the school of Plotinus, he had ventured to contest
-some of the characteristic doctrines of his new teacher, and he even
-wrote a book to refute them. Amerius, his fellow-disciple,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span> was
-chosen to reply to this attack. After a second trial of strength by
-each antagonist, Amerius, by weight of argument induced Porphyry to
-confess his errors, and to read his recantation before the assembled
-Platonists. Porphyry ever after remained an attached and enthusiastic
-follower of the beloved master, with the final revision and edition
-of whose voluminous works he was entrusted. He had lived with him
-six years when, becoming so far unsettled in his mind as even to
-contemplate suicide in order to free himself from the shackles of the
-flesh, by the persuasion of his preceptor he made a voyage to Sicily
-for the restoration of his health and serenity of mind. This was in
-270, in the thirty-seventh year of his age. Returning to the capital
-upon the death of his master, he continued the amiable but vain work
-of attempting the reform of the established religion, which had then
-sunk to its lowest degradation, and to this labour of love he may be
-said to have devoted his whole life. At an advanced age he married
-Marcella, the widow of one of his friends, who was a Christian and the
-mother of a rather numerous progeny, with the view, as he tells us, of
-superintending the education of her children.</p>
-
-<p>About sixty separate works of Porphyry are enumerated by Fabricius,
-published, unpublished, or lost; the last numbering some forty-three
-distinct productions. The most important of his writings are&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>(1) <i>On Abstinence from the Flesh of Living Beings</i>,<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a> in four books,
-addressed to a certain Firmus Castricius, a Pythagorean, who for some
-reason or other had become a renegade to the principles, or at least to
-the practice, of his old faith. Next to the inculcation of abstinence
-as a spiritual or moral obligation, Porphyry’s “chief object seems to
-have been to recommend a more spiritual worship in the place of the
-sacrificial system of the pagan world, with all its false notions and
-practical abuses. This work,” adds Dr. Donaldson, “is valuable on many
-accounts, and full of information.”</p>
-
-<p>(2) His criticism on Christianity, which he entitled a <i>Treatise
-against the Christians</i>&mdash;his most celebrated production. It was divided
-into fifteen books. All our knowledge of it is derived from Eusebius,
-Jerome, and other ecclesiastical writers. Several years after its
-appearance the courtly Bishop of Cæsarea, the well-known historian of
-the first ages of Christianity, replied to it in a work extending to
-twenty-five books. More than a century later, Theodosius II. caused
-the obnoxious volume to be publicly burned, and Porphyry’s criticism
-shared the fate of those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span> “many elaborate treatises which have since
-been committed to the flames” by the theological or political zeal of
-orthodox emperors and princes.<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a></p>
-
-<p>(3) <i>The Life of Pythagoras</i>&mdash;a fragment, but, as far as it goes, the
-most interesting of the Pythagorean biographies.</p>
-
-<p>(4) <i>On the Life of Plotinus and the Arrangement of his Works.</i> It is
-to this biography we are indebted for our knowledge of the estimable
-elaborator of New-Platonism. We learn that he was the pupil of
-Ammonius, who disputes with Numenius the fame of having originated
-the principles of the new school of thought of which Plotinus,
-however, was the St. Paul&mdash;the actual founder. Of a naturally feeble
-constitution, he had early betaken himself to the consolations of
-divine philosophy. After vainly seeking rest for his truth-loving and
-aspiring spirit in other systems, he at last found in Ammonius the
-teacher and teaching which his intellectual and spiritual sympathies
-demanded. His great ambition was to visit the country of Buddha and of
-Zerdusht or Zoroaster, and, for that purpose, he joined the expedition
-of the Emperor Gordian against the Persians. The defeat and death
-of that prince frustrated his plans. He then settled at Rome, where
-he established his school, and he remained in Italy until his death
-in 270. By the earnest solicitations of his disciples, Porphyry and
-Amerius, he was induced with much reluctance to publish his oral
-discourses, and eventually they appeared in fifty-four books, edited by
-Porphyry, who gave them the name of the <i>Enneads</i>, as being arranged in
-six groups of <i>nine</i> treatises. Perhaps no teacher ever engaged to so
-unbounded an extent the admiration and affection of his followers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“During the long period of his residence at Rome, Plotinus enjoyed
-an estimation almost approaching to a belief in his superhuman
-wisdom and sanctity. His ascetic virtue, and the mysterious
-transcendentalism of his conversation, which made him the Coleridge
-of the day, seems to have carried away the minds of his associates,
-and raised them to a state of imaginative exaltation. He was
-regarded as a sort of prophet, divine himself, and capable of
-elevating his disciples to a participation in his divinity....
-These coincidences or collusions [his alleged miracles] show how
-sacred a character had attached to Plotinus. And we see the same
-evidenced in his social influence. Men and women of the highest
-rank crowded round him, and his house was filled with young persons
-of both sexes whom their parents when dying had committed to his
-care. Rogatian, a senator and prætor-elect, gave up his wealth
-and dignities, and lived as the humble bedesman of his friends,
-devoting himself to ascetic and contemplative philosophy. His
-self-denial obtained for him the approbation of Plotinus, who
-held him up as a pattern of philosophy; and he gained the more
-solid advantage of a perfect cure from the worst kind of rheumatic
-gout. The influence of Plotinus extended to the imperial throne
-itself. The weak-minded Gallienus, and his Empress Salonina, were
-so completely guided by the philosopher, that he had actually
-obtained permission to convert a ruined City of Campania into a
-<i>Platonopolis</i>, in which the laws of Plato’s <i>Republic</i> were to be
-tested by a practical experiment; and the philosopher had promised
-to retire thither accompanied by his chief friends.”</p></div>
-
-<p>The “practical common sense” (which usually may be interpreted to mean
-cynical indifferentism), of the statesmen and politicians of the day
-interposed to prevent this attempt at a realisation of Plato’s great
-ideal; and, considering the prematurity of such ideas in the then
-condition of the world&mdash;and, it must be added, the extravagance of some
-of them&mdash;we can, perhaps, hardly regret that his “Republic” was never
-instituted. As to the essence and spirit of the teaching of Plotinus,</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“He cannot be termed, strictly or exclusively, a Neo-Platonist: he
-is equally a Neo-Aristotelian and a <i>Neo-Philosopher</i> in general.
-He has himself one pervading idea, to which he is always recurring,
-and to which he accommodates, as far as he can, the reasonings of
-all his predecessors. It is his object to proclaim and exalt the
-immanent divinity of man, and to raise the soul to a contemplation
-of the good and the true, and to vindicate its independence of
-all that is sensuous, transitory, and special. With an enthusiasm
-bordering on fanaticism, he proclaims his philosophical faith in
-an unseen world: and, rejecting with indignation the humiliating
-attempt to make out that the spiritual world is no better than an
-essence or elixir drained off from the material&mdash;that thoughts
-are ‘merely the shadows and ghosts of sensations,’ he tells his
-disciples that the inward eyes of consciousness and conscience were
-to be purged and unsealed at the fountain of heavenly radiance,
-before they can discern the true form and colours and value of
-spiritual objects.”</p></div>
-
-<p>The personal humility of this sublime teacher, we may add, seems to
-have equalled the loftiness of his inspiration.</p>
-
-<p>Of the other writings of Porphyry, space allows us to refer only to
-his <i>Epistle to Anebo</i>&mdash;a critical refutation of some of the popular
-prejudices of Pagan theology, such as the grosser dæmonism, necromancy,
-and incantation,<a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a> and, above all, animal sacrifice, to which his
-keen spiritual sense was essentially antagonistic. It is known only by
-fragments preserved in Eusebius. As to the theological or metaphysical
-opinions of Porphyry, “it is clear,” remarks Dr. Donaldson,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span> “that he
-had but little faith in the old polytheism of the Greeks. He expressly
-tells his wife (Letter to Marcella) that outward worship does neither
-good nor harm.” In truth, as regards the better parts of Christianity,
-he was nearer to the religion of Jesus than of Jupiter, although he
-found himself in opposition to what he considered the evils or errors
-of dogmatic Christian theology. In common with most of the principal
-expounders of Neo-Platonism,<a name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> his sympathies were with much that
-was contained in the Christian Scriptures, and, in particular, with
-the fourth Gospel, the sublime beginning of which, we are assured,
-the disciples of Plato regarded as “an exact transcript of their own
-opinions,” and which, as St. Augustin informs us (<i>De Civ. Dei</i> x.,
-29), they declared to be worthy to be written in letters of gold, and
-inscribed in the most conspicuous place in every Christian church.</p>
-
-<p>As for the learning, as well as lofty ideas, of the author of the
-treatise <i>On Abstinence</i>, there has been a general consensus of opinion
-even from his theological opponents. Augustin, himself among the most
-learned of the Latin Fathers, styles him <i>doctissimus philosophorum</i>
-(“the most learned of the philosophers”), and, again, <i>philosophus
-nobilis</i> (“a noble philosopher”), “a man of no common mind” (<i>De
-Civit. Dei</i>); and elsewhere he calls him “the great philosopher of the
-heathen.” Even Eusebius, his immediate antagonist, concedes to him
-the titles of “the noble philosopher,” “the wonderful theologian,”
-“the great prophet of ineffable doctrines” (ὁ τῶν ἀποῤῥητων μύστης).
-Donaldson, endorsing the common admiration of the moderns, describes
-his learning and erudition as “stupendous.”</p>
-
-<p>Amongst modern testimonies to the merits of Porphyry’s treatise,
-<i>On Abstinence</i>, the sympathising remarks of Voltaire are worth
-transcribing:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It is well known that Pythagoras embraced this humane doctrine
-[of abstinence from flesh-eating] and carried it into Italy. His
-disciples followed it through a long period of time. The celebrated
-philosophers, Plotinus, Iamblichus, and Porphyry, recommended
-and practised it, although it is sufficiently rare to practice
-what one preaches. The work of Porphyry, written in the middle of
-our third century, and very well translated into our language by
-M. de Burigni, is much esteemed by the learned&mdash;but he has made
-no more converts amongst us than has the book of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span> physician
-Hecquet.<a name="FNanchor_80_80" id="FNanchor_80_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a> It is in vain that Porphyry alleges the example of
-the Buddhists and Persian Magi of the first class, who held in
-abhorrence the practice of engulfing the entrails of other beings
-in their own&mdash;he is followed at present only by the Fathers of La
-Trappe.<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a> The treatise of Porphyry is addressed to one of his old
-disciples, named Firmus, who became a Christian, it is said, to
-recover his liberty to eat flesh and drink wine.</p>
-
-<p>“He remonstrates with Firmus, that in abstaining from flesh and
-from strong liquors the health of the soul and of the body is
-preserved; that one lives longer and with more innocence. All
-his reflections are those of a scrupulous theologian, of a rigid
-philosopher, and of a gentle and sensitive spirit. One might
-believe, in reading him, that this great enemy of the Church is a
-Father of the Church. He does not speak of the <i>Metempsychosis</i>,
-but he regards other animals as our brothers&mdash;<i>because</i> they are
-endowed with life as we, <i>because</i> they have the same <i>principles</i>
-of life, the same feelings, ideas, memory, industry, as we. Speech
-alone is wanting to them. If they had it, should we dare to kill
-and eat them? Should we dare to commit those fratricides? What
-barbarian is there who would cause a lamb to be slaughtered and
-roasted, if that lamb conjured him, by an affecting appeal, not to
-be at once assassin and cannibal?</p>
-
-<p>“This book, at least, proves that there were, among the ‘Gentiles,’
-philosophers of the strictest and purest virtue. Yet they could
-not prevail against the butchers and the <i>gourmands</i>. It is to
-be remarked that Porphyry makes a very beautiful eulogy on the
-Essenians. At that time the rivalship was who could be the most
-virtuous&mdash;Essenians, Pythagoreans, Stoics, Christians. When
-churches form but a small flock their manners are pure; they
-degenerate as soon as they get powerful.”<a name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Of this famous treatise there is, it appears, only one English
-translation, that of Taylor (1851), long out of print; and there is
-a German version by Herr Ed. Baltzer, President of the Vegetarian
-Society of Germany; thus we have to lament for Porphyry, no less than
-for Plutarch, the indifferentism of the publishers, or rather of the
-public, which allows a production, of an inspiration far above that of
-the common herd of writers, to continue to be a sealed book for the
-community in general.</p>
-
-<p>It has been already stated that it consists of four Divisions. The
-first treats of Abstinence from the point of view of Temperance and
-Reason. In the second is considered the lawfulness or otherwise of
-animal sacrifice. In the third Porphyry treats the subject from the
-side of Justice. In the fourth he reviews the practice of some of
-the nations of antiquity and of the East&mdash;of the Egyptians, Hindus,
-and others. This last Book, by its abrupt termination, is evidently
-unfinished.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Porphyry begins with an expression of surprise and regret at the
-apostasy of the Pythagorean renegade:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“For when I reflect with myself upon the cause of your change of
-mind [so he addresses his former associate], I cannot believe,
-as the vulgar herd will suppose, that it has anything to do
-with reasons of health or strength, inasmuch as you yourself
-were used to assert that the fleshless diet is more consonant
-to healthfulness and to an even and proportionate endurance of
-philosophic toils (σύμμετρον ὑπομονὴν τῶν περὶ φιλοσοφίαν πόνων),
-and experience fully proved the truth of your conviction. Whether
-then it was through some other fallacy or delusion, or through a
-later notion that this or that diet makes no difference to the
-intellectual powers, or whether it was from the fear of incurring
-odium by opposition to orthodox customs, or what the reason may
-have been, I am unable to conjecture.”</p></div>
-
-<p>He expresses his hope, or rather his belief, that, at least, the lapse
-was not due in this case to natural intemperance, or regret for the
-gluttonous habits (λαιμαργίας) of flesh-eating.</p>
-
-<p>He then proceeds to quote and refute the fallacies of the ordinary
-systems and sects, and, in particular, the objections of one Clodius,
-a Neapolitan, who had published a treatise against Pythagoreanism. He
-professes that he does not hope to influence those who are engaged in
-sordid and selfish, or in sanguinary, pursuits. Rather he addresses
-himself to the man</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Who considers what he is, whence he came, and whither he ought
-to tend; and who, in what pertains to the nourishment of the body
-and other necessary concerns, is of really thoughtful and earnest
-mind&mdash;who resolves that he shall not be led astray and governed
-by his passions. And let such a man tell me whether a rich flesh
-diet is more easily procured, or incites less to the indulgence of
-irregular passions and appetites, than a light vegetable dietary.
-But if neither he, nor a physician, nor, indeed, any reasonable man
-whosoever, dares to affirm this, why do we persist in oppressing
-ourselves with gross feeding? And why do we not, together with that
-luxurious indulgence, throw off the encumbrances and snares which
-attend it?</p>
-
-<p>“It is not from those who have lived on innocent foods that
-murderers, tyrants, robbers, and sycophants have come, but from
-eaters of flesh. The necessaries of life are few and easily
-procured, without violation of justice, liberty, or peace of mind;
-whereas luxury obliges those ordinary souls who take delight in
-it to covet riches, to give up their liberty, to sell justice, to
-misspend their time, to ruin their health, and to renounce the
-satisfaction of an upright conscience.”</p></div>
-
-<p>In condemning animal sacrifice, he declares that “it is by means of
-an exalted and purified intellect alone that we can approximate to
-the Supreme Being, to whom nothing material should be offered.” He
-distinguishes four degrees of virtue, the lowest being that of the man
-who attempts to moderate his passions; the highest, the life of pure
-reason, by which man becomes one with the Supreme Existence.</p>
-
-<p>In the third book, maintaining that other animals are endowed with high
-degrees of reasoning and of mental faculties, and, in some measure,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
-even with moral perception, Porphyry proceeds logically to insist that
-they are, <i>therefore</i>, the proper objects of Justice:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“By these arguments, and others which I shall afterwards adduce in
-recording the opinions of the old peoples, it is demonstrated that
-[many species of] the lower animals are rational. In very many,
-reason is imperfect indeed&mdash;of which, nevertheless, they are by no
-means destitute. Since then justice is due to rational beings, as
-our opponents allow, how is it possible to evade the admission also
-that we are bound to act justly towards the races of beings below
-us? We do not extend the obligations of justice to plants, because
-there appears in them no indication of reason; although, even in
-the case of these, while we eat the fruits we do not, with the
-fruits, cut away the trunks. We use corn and leguminous vegetables
-when they have fallen on the earth and are dead. But no one uses
-for food the flesh of dead animals, unless they have been killed by
-violence, so that there is in these things a radical injustice. As
-Plutarch says, it does not follow, because we are in need of many
-things, that we should therefore act unjustly towards <i>all beings</i>.
-Inanimate things we are allowed to injure to a certain extent, to
-procure the necessary means of existence&mdash;if to take anything from
-plants while they are growing can be said to be an injury&mdash;but to
-destroy living and conscious beings merely for luxury and pleasure
-is truly barbarous and unjust. And to refrain from killing them
-neither diminishes our sustenance nor hinders our living happily.
-If indeed the destruction of other animals and the eating of flesh
-were as requisite as air and water, plants and fruits, then there
-could be no injustice, as they would be necessary to our nature.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Porphyry, it is scarcely necessary to remark, by these arguments proves
-himself to have been, in moral as well as mental perception, as far
-ahead of the average thinkers of the present day as he was of his own
-times. He justly maintains that</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Sensation and perception are the principle of the kinship of
-all living beings. And [he reminds his opponents] Zeno and
-his followers [the Stoics] admit that alliance or <i>kinship</i>
-(οἰκειώσις)<a name="FNanchor_83_83" id="FNanchor_83_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a> is the foundation of justice. Now, to the lower
-animals pertain perception and the sensations of pain and fear
-and injury. Is it not absurd, then, whereas we see that many of
-our own species live by brute sense alone, and exhibit neither
-reason nor intellect, and that very many of them surpass the most
-terrible wild beasts in cruelty, rage, rapine; that they murder
-even their own relatives; that they are tyrants and the tools of
-tyrants&mdash;seeing all this, is it not absurd, I say, to hold that
-we are obliged by nature to act leniently towards them, while no
-kindness is due from us to the Ox that ploughs, the Dog that is
-brought up with us, and those who nourish us with their milk and
-cover our bodies with their wool? Is not such a prejudice most
-irrational and absurd?”</p></div>
-
-<p>To the objection of Chrysippus (the second founder of the school of the
-Porch) that the gods made us for themselves and for the sake of each
-other, and that they made the non-human species for us&mdash;a convenient
-subterfuge by no means unknown to writers and talkers of our own
-times&mdash;Porphyry unanswerably replies:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Let him to whom this sophism may appear to have weight
-or probability, consider<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span> how he would meet the dictum of
-Karneades<a name="FNanchor_84_84" id="FNanchor_84_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a> that ‘everything in nature is benefited, when it
-obtains the ends to which it is adapted and for which it was
-generated.’ Now, <i>benefit</i> is to be understood in a more general
-way as meaning what the Stoics call <i>useful</i>. ‘The hog, however,’
-says Chrysippus, ‘was produced by nature for the purpose of being
-slaughtered and used for food, and when it undergoes this, it
-obtains the end for which it is adapted, and it is therefore
-benefited!’ But if God brought other animals into existence for the
-use of men, what use do we make of flies, beetles, lice, vipers,
-and scorpions? Some of these are hateful to the sight, defile the
-touch, are intolerable to the smell, while others are actually
-destructive to human beings who fall in their way.<a name="FNanchor_85_85" id="FNanchor_85_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a> With respect
-to the <i>cetacea</i>, in particular, which Homer tells us live by
-myriads in the seas, does not the Demiurgus<a name="FNanchor_86_86" id="FNanchor_86_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a> teach us that they
-have come into being for the good of things in general? And unless
-they affirm that all things were indeed made for us and on our
-sole account, how can they escape the imputation of wrong-doing in
-treating injuriously beings that came into existence according to
-the <i>general arrangement</i> of Nature?</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
-
-<p>“I omit to insist on the fact that, if we depend on the argument of
-necessity or utility, we cannot avoid admitting by implication that
-we ourselves were created only for the sake of certain destructive
-animals, such as crocodiles and snakes and other monsters, for
-we are not in the least <i>benefited</i> by them. On the contrary,
-they seize and destroy and devour men whom they meet&mdash;in so doing
-acting not at all more cruelly than we. Nay, <i>they</i> act thus
-savagely through want and hunger; <i>we</i> from insolent wantonness
-and luxurious pleasure<a name="FNanchor_87_87" id="FNanchor_87_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a>, amusing ourselves as we do also in the
-Circus and in the murderous sports of the chase. By thus acting,
-a barbarous and brutal nature becomes strengthened in us, which
-renders men insensible to the feeling of pity and compassion.
-Those who first perpetrated these iniquities fatally blunted the
-most important part of the civilised mind. Therefore it is that
-Pythagoreans consider kindness and gentleness to the lower animals
-to be an exercise of philanthropy and gentleness.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Porphyry unanswerably and eloquently concludes this division of his
-subject with the <i>à fortiori</i> argument:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“By admitting that [selfish] pleasure is the legitimate end of our
-action, justice is evidently destroyed. For to whom must it not be
-clear that the feeling of justice is fostered by abstinence? He
-who abstains from injuring other species will be so much the more
-careful not to injure his own kind. For he who loves all animated
-Nature will not hate any one tribe of innocent beings, and by how
-much greater his love for the whole, by so much the more will he
-cultivate justice towards a part of them, and to that part to which
-he is most allied.”</p></div>
-
-<p>In fine, according to Porphyry, he who extends his sympathies to <i>all</i>
-innocent life is nearest to the Divine nature. Well would it have
-been for all the after-ages had this, the only sure foundation of any
-code of ethics worthy of the name, found favour with the constituted
-instructors and rulers of the western world. The fourth and final
-Book reviews the dietetic habits of some of the leading peoples of
-antiquity, and of certain of the philosophic societies which practised
-abstinence more or less rigidly. As for the Essenes, Porphyry describes
-their code of morals and manner of living in terms of high praise. We
-can here give only an abstract of his eloquent eulogium:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“They are despisers of mere riches, and the communistic principle
-with them is admirably carried out. Nor is it possible to find
-amongst them a single person distinguished by the possession of
-wealth, for all who enter the society are obliged by their laws
-to divide property for the common good. There is neither the
-humiliation of poverty nor the arrogance of wealth. Their managers
-or guardians are elected by vote, and each of them is chosen with
-a view to the welfare and needs of all. They have no city or town,
-but dwell together in separate communities.... They do not discard
-their dress for a new one, before the first is really worn out by
-length of time. There is no buying and selling amongst them. Each
-gives to each according to his or her wants, and there is a free
-interchange between them.... They come to their dining-hall as to
-some pure and undefiled temple, and when they have taken their
-seats quietly, the baker sets their loaves before them in order,
-and the cook gives them one dish each of one sort, while their
-priest first recites a form of thanksgiving for their pure and
-refined food (τροφῆς ἁγνῆς οὖσης καὶ καθαρᾶς).”</p></div>
-
-<p>The testimony of the national historian of the Jews, it is interesting
-to observe, is equally favourable to those pioneers of the modern
-communisms. “The Essenes, as we call a sect of ours,” writes
-Josephus,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span> “pursue the same kind of life as those whom the Greeks call
-Pythagoreans. They are long-lived also, insomuch that many of them
-exist above a hundred years by means of their simplicity of diet and
-the regular course of their lives” (<i>Antiquities of the Jews.</i>). Upon
-entering the society and partaking of the common meal (which, with
-baptism, was the outward and visible sign of initiation) three solemn
-oaths were administered to each aspirant:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“First, that he would reverence the divine ideal (τὸ θεῖον);
-second, that he would carefully practise justice towards his
-fellow-beings and refrain from injury, whether by his own or
-another’s will; that he would always hate the Unjust and fight
-earnestly on the side of (συναγωνιζεσθαι) the Just and lovers of
-justice; keep faith with all men; if in power, never use authority
-insolently or violently; nor surpass his subordinates in dress and
-ornaments; above all things always to love Truth.”</p></div>
-
-<p>As for their food, while they seem not to have been bound to total
-abstinence from every kind of flesh, they may be considered to have
-been almost Vegetarian in practice. To kill any innocent individual
-of the non-human species that had sought refuge or an asylum amongst
-them was a breach of the most sacred laws: to spare the domesticated
-races, or fellow-workers with man, even in an enemy’s country, was a
-solemn duty. For, says Porphyry, their founder had no groundless fear
-that there could be any overabundance of life productive of famine to
-ourselves, inasmuch as he knew, first, that those animals who bring
-forth many young at a time are short lived, and, secondly, that their
-too rapid increase is kept down by other hostile animals. “A proof of
-which is,” he continues, “that though we abstain from eating very many,
-such as dogs, wild beasts, rats, lizards, and others, there is yet no
-fear that we should ever suffer from famine in consequence of their
-excessive multiplication; and, again, it is one thing to have to kill,
-and another to eat, since we have to kill many ferocious animals whom
-we do not also eat.”</p>
-
-<p>He quotes the historians of Syria who allege that, in the earlier
-period, the inhabitants of that part of the world abstained from all
-flesh, and, therefore, from sacrifice; and that when, afterwards,
-to avert some impending misfortune they were induced to offer up
-propitiatory victims, the practice of flesh-eating was by no means
-general. And Asklepiades says, in his History of Cyprus and Phœnicia,
-that “no living being was sacrificed to heaven, nor was there even
-any express law on the subject, <i>since it was forbidden by the law
-of Nature</i> (νομῷ φυσικῷ):” that, in course of time, they took to
-occasional propitiatory sacrifice: and that, at one of these times,
-the sacrificing priest happened to place his blood-smeared finger on
-his mouth, was tempted to repeat the action, and thus<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span> introduced
-the habit of flesh-eating, whence the general practice. As for the
-Persian <i>Magi</i> (the successors of Zerdusht), we are informed that the
-principal and most esteemed of their order neither eat nor kill any
-living being, while those of the second class eat the flesh of some,
-but not of domesticated, animals; nor do even the third order eat
-indiscriminately. Instances are adduced of certain peoples who, being
-compelled by necessity to live upon flesh, have evidently deteriorated
-and been rendered savage and ferocious, “from which examples it is
-clearly unbecoming men of good disposition to belie their human nature
-(τῆς ἀνθρωπίνης καταψεύδεσθαι φύσεως).”</p>
-
-<p>Amongst individuals he instances the example of the traditionary
-Athenian legislator Triptolemus&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Of whom Hermippus, in his second book on the legislators, writes:
-Of his laws, according to Xenokrates the philosopher, the three
-following remain in force at Eleusis&mdash;‘to gratify Heaven with
-the offering of fruits,’ ‘to harass or harm no [innocent] living
-being.’ ... As to the third, he is in doubt for what particular
-reason Triptolemus charged them to abstain&mdash;whether from believing
-it to be criminal to kill those that have an identical origin with
-ourselves (ὁμογενὲς), or from a consciousness that the slaughter
-of all the most useful animals would be the inevitable consequence
-of addiction to it, and wishing to render human life mild and
-innocent, and to preserve those species that are tame and gentle
-and domesticated with man.”<a name="FNanchor_88_88" id="FNanchor_88_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a></p></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Somewhat later than Porphyry, the name of Julian (331&ndash;363), the
-Roman emperor, may here be fitly introduced. During his brief reign
-of sixteen months he proved himself, if not always a judicious, yet a
-sincere and earnest reformer of abuses of various kinds, and he may
-claim to be one of the very few virtuous princes, pagan or christian.
-Unfortunately the just blame attaching to his ill-judged attempt to
-suppress the religion of Constantine, from whose family his relatives
-and himself had suffered the greatest injury and insult, has enabled
-the lovers of party rather than of truth successfully to conceal from
-view his undoubted merits.</p>
-
-<p>In his manner of living, with which alone we are now concerned, he
-seems to have almost rivalled the most ascetic of the Platonists
-or of the Christian anchorets. One of his most intimate friends,
-the celebrated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> orator, Libanius, who had often shared the frugal
-simplicity of his table, has remarked that his “light and sparing diet,
-which was usually of the vegetable kind, left his mind and body always
-free and active for the various and important business of an author,
-a pontiff, a magistrate, a general, and a prince.” That his <i>frugal</i>
-diet had not impaired his powers, either physical or mental, may
-sufficiently appear from the fact that&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“In one and the same day he gave audience to several ambassadors,
-and wrote or dictated a great number of letters to his generals,
-his civil magistrates, his private friends, and the different
-cities of his dominions. He listened to the memorials which had
-been received, considered the subject of the petitions, and
-signified his intentions more rapidly than they could be taken in
-shorthand by the diligence of his secretaries. He possessed such
-flexibility of thought, and such firmness of attention, that he
-could employ his hand to write, his ear to listen, and his voice to
-dictate, and pursue at once three several trains of ideas without
-hesitation and without error. While his ministers reposed, the
-prince flew with agility from one labour to another, and, after a
-hasty dinner, retired into his library till the public business,
-which he had appointed for the evening, summoned him to interrupt
-the prosecution of his studies. The supper of the emperor was
-still less substantial than the former meal; his sleep was never
-clouded by the fumes of indigestion.... He was soon awakened by
-the entrance of fresh secretaries who had slept the preceding day,
-and his servants were obliged to wait alternately, while their
-indefatigable master allowed himself scarcely any other refreshment
-than the change of occupation. The predecessors of Julian, his
-uncle, his brother, and his cousin, indulged their puerile taste
-for the games of the circus under the specious pretence of
-complying with the inclination of the people, and they frequently
-remained the greater part of the day as idle spectators.... On
-solemn festivals Julian, who felt and professed an unfashionable
-dislike to these frivolous amusements, condescended to appear
-in the Circus, and, after bestowing a careless glance on five
-or six of the races, he hastily withdrew with the impatience of
-a philosopher who considered every moment as lost that was not
-devoted to the advantage of the public, or the improvement of
-his own mind. By this avarice of time he seemed to protract the
-short duration of his reign, and, if the dates were less securely
-ascertained, we should refuse to believe that only <i>sixteen months</i>
-elapsed between the death of Constantius and the departure of his
-successor for the Persian war in which he perished.”<a name="FNanchor_89_89" id="FNanchor_89_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Following the principles of Platonism,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span> “he justly concluded that the
-man who presumes to reign should aspire to the perfection of the divine
-nature&mdash;that he should purify his soul from her mortal and terrestrial
-part&mdash;that he should extinguish his appetites, enlighten his
-understanding, regulate his passions, and subdue the wild beast which,
-according to the lively metaphor of Aristotle, seldom fails to ascend
-the throne of a despot.” With all these virtues, unfortunately for his
-credit as a philosopher and humanitarian, the imperial Stoic allowed
-his natural goodness of heart to be corrupted by superstition and
-fanaticism. Conceiving himself to be the special and chosen instrument
-of the Deity for the restoration of the fallen religion, which he
-regarded as the true faith, he made it the foremost object of his
-pious but misdirected ambition to re-establish its sumptuous temples,
-priesthoods, and sacrificial altars with all their imposing ritual, and
-“he was heard to declare, with the enthusiasm of a missionary, that
-if he could render each individual richer than Midas and every city
-greater than Babylon, he should not esteem himself the benefactor of
-mankind, unless at the same time he could reclaim his subjects from
-their impious revolt against the immortal gods.”<a name="FNanchor_90_90" id="FNanchor_90_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a> Inspired by this
-religious zeal, he forgot the maxims of his master, Plato, so far as to
-rival, if not surpass, the ancient Jewish or Pagan ritual in the number
-of the sacrificial victims offered up in the name of religion and of
-the Deity. Happily for the future of the world, the fanatical piety of
-this youthful champion of the religion of Homer proved ineffectual to
-turn back the slow onward march of the Western mind, through fearful
-mazes of evil and error indeed, towards that “diviner day” which is yet
-to dawn for the Earth.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="X_CHRYSOSTOM">X.<br />
-<span class="s5">CHRYSOSTOM. 347&ndash;407 A.D.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">T<span class="smaller">HE</span> most eloquent, and one of the most estimable, of the “Fathers” was
-born at Antioch, the Christian city <i>par excellence</i>. His family held
-a distinguished position, and his father was in high command in the
-Syrian division of the imperial army. He studied for the law, and was
-instructed in oratory by the famous rhetorician Libanius (the intimate
-friend and counsellor of the young Emperor Julian), who pronounced
-his pupil worthy to succeed to his chair, if he had not adopted the
-Christian faith. He soon gave up the law for theology, and retired to a
-monastery, near Antioch, where he passed four years, rigidly abstaining
-from flesh-meat and, like the Essenes, abandoning the rights of private
-property and living a life of the strictest asceticism.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Having submitted himself in solitude to the severest austerities during
-a considerable length of time, he entered the Church, and soon gained
-the highest reputation for his extraordinary eloquence and zeal. On the
-death of the Archbishop of Constantinople, he was unanimously elected
-to fill the vacant Primacy. The <i>nolo me episcopari</i> seems, in his
-case, to have been no unmeaning formula. His beneficence and charity
-in the new position attracted general admiration. From the revenues of
-his See he founded a hospital for the sick&mdash;one of the very first of
-those rather modern institutions. The fame of the “Golden-mouthed” drew
-to his cathedral immense crowds of people, who before had frequented
-the theatre and the circus rather than the churches, and the building
-constantly resounded with their enthusiastic plaudits. He was, however,
-no mere popular preacher; he fearlessly exposed the corrupt and selfish
-life of the large body of the clergy. At one time he deposed, it is
-said, no less than thirteen bishops, in Lesser Asia, from their Sees;
-and in one of his <i>Homilies</i> he does not hesitate to charge “the whole
-ecclesiastical body with avarice and licentiousness, asserting that the
-number of bishops who could be saved bore a very small proportion to
-those who would be damned.”<a name="FNanchor_91_91" id="FNanchor_91_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_91_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a></p>
-
-<p>At length, his repeated denunciations of the too notorious scandals
-of the Court and the Church excited the bitter enmity of his
-brother-prelates, and, by their intrigues at the Imperial Court of
-Constantinople, he was deposed from his See and exiled to the wildest
-parts of the Euxine coasts, where, exposed to every sort of privation,
-he caught a violent fever and died. So far did the hostility of the
-Episcopacy extend, that one of his rivals, a bishop, named Theophilus,
-in a book expressly written against him, amongst other vituperative
-epithets had proceeded to the length of styling him “a filthy demon,”
-and of solemnly consigning his soul to Satan. With the poor, however,
-Chrysostom enjoyed unbounded popularity and esteem. His greatest fault
-was his theological intolerance&mdash;a fault, it is just to add, of the age
-rather than of the man.</p>
-
-<p>The writings of Chrysostom are exceedingly voluminous&mdash;700 homilies,
-orations, doctrinal treatises, and 242 epistles. Their “chief value
-consists in the illustrations they furnish of the manners of the
-fourth and fifth centuries&mdash;of the moral and social state of the
-period. The circus, spectacles, theatres, baths, houses, domestic
-economy, banquets, dresses, fashions, pictures, processions, tight-rope
-dancing, funerals&mdash;in fine, everything has a place in the picture of
-licentious luxury which it is the object of Chrysostom to denounce.”
-Next to his profession of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span> faith in the efficacy and virtues of a
-non-flesh diet, amongst the most interesting of his productions is
-his <i>Golden Book</i> on the education of the young. He recommends that
-children should be inured to habits of temperance, by abstaining, at
-least, twice a week from the ordinary grosser food with which they
-are supplied. As might be expected from the age, and from his order,
-the practice of Chrysostom, and of the numerous other ecclesiastical
-abstinents from the gross diet of the richer part of the community,
-reposed upon ascetic and traditionary principles, rather than on the
-more secular and modern motives of justice, humanity, and general
-social improvement. So, in fact, Origen, one of the most learned
-of the Fathers, expressly says (<i>Contra Celsum</i>, v.): “We [the
-Christian leaders] practise abstinence from the flesh of animals
-to buffet our bodies and treat them as slaves (ὑπωπιάζομεν καί
-δουλαγωγοῦμεν), and we wish to mortify our members upon earth,” &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, the <i>Apostolical Canons</i> distinguished, as Bingham
-(<i>Antiquities of the Christian Church</i>) reports them, between
-abstinents, διὰ τὴν ἀσκησιν and διὰ τὴν βδελυπίαν, <i>i.e.</i>, between
-those who abstained to exercise self-control, and those who did so from
-disgust and abhorrence of what, in ordinary and orthodox language,
-are too complacently and confidently termed “the good creatures of
-God.” This distinction, it must be added, holds only of the prevailing
-sentiment of the Orthodox Church as finally established. During several
-centuries&mdash;even so late as the Paulicians in the seventh, or even
-as the Albigeois of the thirteenth, century&mdash;<i>Manicheism</i>, as it is
-called, or a belief in the inherent evil of all matter, was widely
-spread in large and influential sections of the Christian Church&mdash;nor,
-indeed, were some of its most famous Fathers without suspicion of this
-heretical taint. According to the <i>Clementine Homilies</i>, “the unnatural
-eating of flesh-meat is of demoniacal origin, and was introduced by
-those giants who, from their bastard nature, took no pleasure in
-pure nourishment, and only lusted after blood. Therefore the eating
-of flesh is as polluting as the heathen worship of demons, with its
-sacrifices and its impure feasts; through participation in which, a man
-becomes a fellow-dietist (ὁμοδίαιτος) with demons.”<a name="FNanchor_92_92" id="FNanchor_92_92"></a><a href="#Footnote_92_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a> That
-superstition was often, in the minds of the followers both of Plato
-and of St. Paul, mixed up with, and, indeed, usually dominated over,
-the reasonable motives of the more philosophic advocates of the higher
-life, there can be no sort of doubt; nor can we claim a monopoly of
-rational motives for the mass of the adherents of either Christian or
-Pythagorean abstinence. Yet an impartial judgment must allow almost
-equal credit to the earnestness of mind and purity of motive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span> which,
-mingled though they undoubtedly were with (in the pre-scientific
-ages) a necessary infusion of superstition, urged the followers of
-the better way&mdash;Christian and non-Christian&mdash;to discard the “social
-lies” of the dead world around them. At all events, it is not for the
-selfish egoists to sneer at the sublime&mdash;if error-infected&mdash;efforts of
-the earlier pioneers of moral progress for their own and the world’s
-redemption from the bonds of the prevailing vile materialism in life
-and dietary habits.</p>
-
-<p>We have already shown that the earliest Jewish-Christian communities,
-both in Palestine and elsewhere&mdash;the immediate disciples of the
-original Twelve&mdash;enjoined abstinence as one of the primary obligations
-of the New Faith; and that the earliest traditions represent the
-foremost of them as the strictest sort of Vegetarians.<a name="FNanchor_93_93" id="FNanchor_93_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_93_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a> If then we
-impartially review the history of the practice, the teaching, and the
-traditions of the first Christian authorities, it cannot but appear
-surprising that the Orthodox Church, ignoring the practice and highest
-ideal of the most sacred period of its annals, has, even within its own
-Order, deemed it consistent with its claim of being representative of
-the Apostolic period to substitute partial and periodic for total and
-constant abstinence.</p>
-
-<p>The following passages in the <i>Homilies</i>, or Congregational Discourses,
-of Chrysostom will serve as specimens of his feeling on the propriety
-of dietary reform. The eloquent but diffusive style of the Greek
-Bossuet, it must be noted, is necessarily but feebly represented in the
-literal English version:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“No streams of blood are among them [the ascetics]; no butchering
-and cutting up of flesh; no dainty cookery; no heaviness of head.
-Nor are there horrible smells of flesh-meats among them, or
-disagreeable fumes from the kitchen. No tumult and disturbance and
-wearisome clamours, but bread and water&mdash;the latter from a pure
-fountain, the former from honest labour. If, at any time, however,
-they may wish to feast more sumptuously, the sumptuousness consists
-in fruits, and their pleasure in these is greater than at royal
-tables. With this repast [of fruits and vegetables], even angels
-from Heaven, as they behold it, are delighted and pleased. For if
-over one sinner who repents they rejoice, over so many just men
-imitating them what will they not do? No master and servant are
-there. All are servants&mdash;all free men. And think not this a mere
-form of speech, for they are servants one of another and masters
-one of another. Wherein, therefore, are we different from, or
-superior to, Ants, if we compare ourselves with them? For as they
-care for the things of the body only, so also do we. And would
-it were for these alone! But, alas! it is for things far worse.
-For not for necessary things only do we care, but also for things
-superfluous. Those animals pursue an innocent life, while we follow
-after all covetousness. Nay, we do not so much as imitate the ways
-of Ants. <i>We follow the ways of Wolves, the habits of Tigers; or,
-rather, we are worse even than they. To them Nature has assigned
-that they should be thus</i> [carnivorously] <i>fed, while God has
-honoured us with rational speech and a sense of equity. And yet we
-are become worse than the wild beasts.</i>”<a name="FNanchor_94_94" id="FNanchor_94_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_94_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Again he protests:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Neither am I leading you to the lofty peak of total renunciation
-of possessions [ἀκτημοσύνη]; but for the present I require you to
-cut off superfluities, and to desire a sufficiency alone. Now,
-the boundary of sufficiency is the using those things which it
-is impossible to live without. No one debars you from these, nor
-forbids you your daily food. I say ‘food,’ not ‘luxury’ [τροφὴν οὐ
-τρυφὴν λέγω]&mdash;‘raiment,’ not ‘ornament.’ Rather, this frugality&mdash;to
-speak correctly&mdash;is, in the best sense, luxury. For consider who
-should we say more truly feasted&mdash;he whose diet is herbs, and who
-is in sound health and suffered no uneasiness, or he who has the
-table of a Sybarite and is full of a thousand disorders? Clearly,
-the former. Therefore let us seek nothing more than these, if we
-would at once live luxuriously and healthfully. And let him who
-can be satisfied with pulse, and can keep in good health, seek for
-nothing more. But let him who is weaker, and needs to be [more
-richly] dieted with other vegetables and fruits, not be debarred
-from them.... We do not advise this for the harm and injury of men,
-but to lop off what is superfluous&mdash;and that is superfluous which
-is more than we need. When we are able to live without a thing,
-healthfully and respectably, certainly the addition of that thing
-is a superfluity.”&mdash;<i>Hom.</i> xix. 2 <i>Cor.</i></p></div>
-
-<p>Denouncing the grossness of the ordinary mode of living, he eloquently
-descants on the evil results, physical as well as mental:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“A man who lives in pleasure [<i>i.e.</i>, in selfish luxury] is dead
-while he lives, for he lives only to his belly. In his other senses
-he lives not. He sees not what he ought to see; he hears not what
-he ought to hear; he speaks not what he ought to speak.... Look not
-at the superficial countenance, but examine the interior, and you
-will see it full of deep dejection. If it were possible to bring
-the soul into view, and to behold it with our bodily eyes, that of
-the luxurious would seem depressed, mournful, miserable, and wasted
-with leanness, for the more the body grows sleek and gross, the
-more lean and weakly is the soul. The more the one is pampered,
-the more is the other hampered [θάλπεται&mdash;θάπτεται: the latter
-meaning, literally, buried]. As when the pupil of the eye has the
-external envelope too thick, it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span> cannot put forth the power of
-vision and look out, because the light is excluded by the dense
-covering, and darkness ensues; so when the body is constantly full
-fed, the soul must be invested with grossness. The dead, say you,
-corrupt and rot, and a foul pestilential humour distils from them.
-So in her who lives in pleasure may be seen rheums, and phlegm,
-and catarrh, hiccough, vomiting, eructations, and the like, which,
-as too unseemly, I forbear to name. For such is the despotism of
-luxury, it makes us endure things which we do not think proper even
-to mention....</p>
-
-<p>“‘She that lives in pleasure is dead while she lives.’ Hear this,
-ye women<a name="FNanchor_95_95" id="FNanchor_95_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_95_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a> who pass your time in revels and intemperance, and who
-neglect the poor, pining and perishing with hunger, whilst you are
-destroying yourselves with continual luxury. Thus you are the cause
-of two deaths&mdash;of those who are dying of want and of your own, both
-through ill-measure. If, out of your fulness, you tempered their
-want, you would save two lives. Why do you thus gorge your own body
-with excess, and waste that of the poor with want? Consider what
-comes of food&mdash;into what it is changed. Are you not disgusted at
-its being named? Why, then, be eager for such accumulations? The
-increase of luxury is but the multiplication of filth.<a name="FNanchor_96_96" id="FNanchor_96_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_96_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a> For
-Nature has her limits, and what is beyond these is not nourishment,
-but injury and the increase of ordure.</p>
-
-<p>“Nourish the body, but do not destroy it. Food is called
-nourishment, to show that its purpose is not to hurt, but to
-support us. For this reason, perhaps, food passes into excrement
-that we may not be lovers of luxury. If it were not so&mdash;if it were
-not useless and injurious to the body, we should hardly abstain
-from devouring one another. If the belly received as much as it
-pleased, digested it, and conveyed it to the body, we should see
-battles and wars innumerable. Even as it is, when part of our food
-passes into ordure, part into blood, part into spurious and useless
-phlegm, we are, nevertheless, so addicted to luxury that we spend,
-perhaps, whole estates on a meal. The more richly we live, the more
-noisome are the odours with which we are filled.”&mdash;<i>Hom.</i> xiii.
-<i>Tim.</i> v.<a name="FNanchor_97_97" id="FNanchor_97_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_97_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a></p></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>From this period&mdash;the fifth century <span class="smcap">A.D.</span> down to the
-sixteenth&mdash;Christian and Western literature contains little or
-nothing which comes within the purpose of this work. The merits of
-monastic asceticism were more or less preached during all those ages,
-although constant abstinence from flesh was by no means the general
-practice even with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span> the inmates of the stricter monastic or conventual
-establishments&mdash;at all events in the Latin Church. But we look in vain
-for traces of anything like the humanitarian feeling of Plutarch or
-Porphyry. The mental intelligence as well as capacities for physical
-suffering of the non-human races&mdash;necessarily resulting from an
-organisation in all essential points like to our own&mdash;was apparently
-wholly ignored; their just rights and claims upon human justice were
-disregarded and trampled under foot. Consistently with the universal
-estimate, they were treated as beings destitute of all feeling&mdash;as
-if, in fine, they are the “automatic machines” they are alleged to
-be by the Cartesians of the present day. In those terrible ages of
-gross ignorance, of superstition, of violence, and of injustice&mdash;in
-which human rights were seldom regarded&mdash;it would have been surprising
-indeed if any sort of regard had been displayed for the <i>non-human</i>
-slaves. And yet an underlying and latent consciousness of the falseness
-of the general estimate sometimes made itself apparent in certain
-extraordinary and perverse fancies.<a name="FNanchor_98_98" id="FNanchor_98_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_98_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a> To Montaigne, the first to
-revive the humanitarianism of Plutarch, belongs the great merit of
-reasserting the natural rights of the helpless slaves of human tyranny.</p>
-
-<p>While Chrysostom seems to have been one of the last of Christian
-writers who manifested any sort of consciousness of the inhuman, as
-well as unspiritual nature of the ordinary gross foods, Platonism
-continued to bear aloft the flickering torch of a truer spiritualism;
-and “the golden chain” of the prophets of the dietary reformation
-reached down even so late as to the end of the sixth century.
-Hierokles, author of the commentary on the <i>Golden Verses</i> of
-Pythagoras, to which reference has already been made, and who lectured
-upon them with great success at Alexandria; Hypatia, the beautiful and
-accomplished daughter of Theon the great mathematician, who publicly
-taught the philosophy of Plato at the same great centre of Greek
-science and learning, and was barbarously murdered by the jealousy
-of her Christian rival Cyril, Archbishop of Alexandria; Proklus,
-surnamed the Successor, as having been considered the most illustrious
-disciple of Plato in the latter times, who left several treatises
-upon the Pythagorean system, and “whose sagacious mind explored the
-deepest questions of morals and metaphysics”;<a name="FNanchor_99_99" id="FNanchor_99_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_99_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a> Olympiodorus, who
-wrote a life of Plato and commentaries on several of his dialogues,
-still extant, and lived in the reign of Justinian,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span> by whose edict the
-illustrious school of Athens was finally closed, and with it the last
-vestiges of a sublime, if imperfect, attempt at the purification of
-human life&mdash;such are some of the most illustrious names which adorned
-the days of expiring Greek philosophy. Olympiodorus and six other
-Pythagoreans determined, if possible, to maintain their doctrines
-elsewhere; and they sought refuge with the Persian Magi, with whose
-tenets, or, at least, manner of living, they believed themselves
-to be most in accord. The Persian customs were distasteful to the
-purer ideal of the Platonists, and, disappointed in other respects,
-they reluctantly relinquished their fond hopes of transplanting the
-doctrines of Plato into a foreign soil, and returned home. The Persian
-prince, Chosroes, we may add, acquired honour by his stipulation with
-the bigoted Justinian, that the seven sages should be allowed to
-live unmolested during the rest of their days. “Simplicius and his
-companions ended their lives in peace and obscurity; and, as they left
-no disciples, they terminated the long list of Grecian philosophers who
-may be justly praised, notwithstanding their defects, as the wisest and
-most virtuous of their contemporaries. The writings of Simplicius are
-now extant. His physical and metaphysical commentaries on Aristotle
-have passed away with the fashion of the times, but his moral
-interpretation of Epiktetus is preserved in the library of nations as
-a classical book excellently adapted to direct the will, to purify the
-heart, and to confirm the understanding, by a just confidence in the
-nature both of God and Man.”<a name="FNanchor_100_100" id="FNanchor_100_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_100_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XI_CORNARO">XI.<br />
-<span class="s5">CORNARO. 1465&ndash;1566.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">A<span class="smaller">FTER</span> the extinction of Greek and Latin philosophy in the fifth
-century, a mental torpor seized upon and, during some thousand years,
-with rare exceptions, dominated the whole Western world. When this
-torpor was dispelled by the influence of returning knowledge and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
-reason evoked by the various simultaneous discoveries in science and
-literature&mdash;in particular by the achievements of Gutenberg, Vasco da
-Gama, Christopher Colon, and, above all, Copernik&mdash;the moral sense
-then first, too, began to show signs of life. The renascence of the
-sixteenth century, however, with all the vigour of thought and action
-which accompanied it, proved to be rather a revival of mere verbal
-learning than of the higher moral feeling of the best minds of old
-Greece and Italy. Men, fettered as they were in the trammels of
-theological controversy and metaphysical subtleties, for the most part
-expended their energies and their intellect in the vain pursuit of
-phantoms. With the very few splendid exceptions of the more enlightened
-and earnest thinkers, <i>Ethics</i>, in the real and comprehensive meaning
-of the word, was an unknown science; and a long period of time was
-yet to pass away before a perception of the universal obligations of
-Justice and of Right dawned upon the minds of men. In truth, it could
-not have been otherwise. Before the moral instincts can be developed,
-reason and knowledge must have sufficiently prepared the way. When
-attention to the importance of the neglected science of <i>Dietetics</i> had
-been in some degree aroused, the interest evoked was little connected
-with the higher sentiments of humanity.</p>
-
-<p>Of all dietary reformers who have treated the subject from an
-exclusively sanitarian point of view, the most widely known and most
-popular name, perhaps, has been that of Luigi Cornaro; and it is as
-a vehement protester against the follies, rather than against the
-barbarism, of the prevailing dietetic habits that he claims a place
-in this work. He belonged to one of the leading families of Venice,
-then at the height of its political power. Even in an age and in a
-city noted for luxuriousness and grossness of living of the rich and
-dominant classes, he had in his youth distinguished himself by his
-licentious habits in eating and drinking, as well as by other excesses.
-His constitution had been so impaired, and he had brought upon himself
-so many disorders by this course of living, that existence became a
-burden to him. He informs us that from his thirty-fifth to his fortieth
-year he passed his nights and days in continuous suffering. Every sort
-of known remedy was exhausted before his new medical adviser, superior
-to the prejudices of his profession and of the public, had the courage
-and the good sense to prescribe a total change of diet. At first
-Cornaro found his enforced regimen almost intolerable, and, as he tells
-us, he occasionally relapsed.</p>
-
-<p>These relapses brought back his old sufferings, and, to save his life,
-he was driven at length to practise entire and uniform abstinence, the
-yolk of an egg often furnishing him the whole of his meal. In this way
-he assures us that he came to relish dry bread more than formerly he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
-had enjoyed the most exquisite dishes of the ordinary table. At the
-end of the first year he found himself entirely freed from all his
-multiform maladies. In his eighty-third year he wrote and published his
-first exhortation to a radical change of diet under the title of <i>A
-Treatise on a Sober Life</i>,<a name="FNanchor_101_101" id="FNanchor_101_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_101_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a> in which he eloquently narrates his own
-case, and exhorts all who value health and immunity from physical or
-mental sufferings to follow his example. And his <i>exordium</i>, in which
-he takes occasion to denounce the waste and gluttony of the dinners of
-the rich, might be applied with little, or without any, modification of
-its language to the public and private tables of the present day:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It is very certain,” he begins, “that Custom, with time, becomes
-a second nature, forcing men to use that, whether good or bad, to
-which they have been habituated; and we see custom or habit get
-the better of reason in many things.... Though all are agreed that
-intemperance (<i>la crapula</i>) is the offspring of gluttony, and sober
-living of abstemiousness, the former nevertheless is considered a
-virtue and a mark of distinction, and the latter as dishonourable
-and the badge of avarice. Such mistaken notions are entirely owing
-to the power of Custom, established by our senses and irregular
-appetites. These have blinded and besotted men to such a degree
-that, leaving the paths of virtue, they have followed those of
-vice, which lead them imperceptibly to an old age burdened with
-strange and mortal diseases....</p>
-
-<p>“O wretched and unhappy Italy! [thus he apostrophises his own
-country] can you not see that gluttony murders every year more of
-your inhabitants than you could lose by the most cruel plague or
-by fire and sword in many battles? Those truly shameful feasts (<i>i
-tuoi veramente disonesti banchetti</i>), now so much in fashion and
-so intolerably profuse that no tables are large enough to hold
-the infinite number of the dishes&mdash;those feasts, I say, are so
-many battles.<a name="FNanchor_102_102" id="FNanchor_102_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_102_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a> And how is it possible <i>to live</i> amongst such a
-multitude of jarring foods and disorders? Put an end to this abuse,
-in heaven’s name, for there is not&mdash;I am certain of it&mdash;a vice more
-abominable than this in the eyes of the divine Majesty. Drive away
-this plague, the worst you were ever afflicted with&mdash;this new [?]
-kind of death&mdash;as you have banished that disease which, though it
-formerly used to make such havoc, now does little or no mischief,
-owing to the laudable practice of attending more to the goodness
-of the provisions brought to our markets. Consider that there are
-means still left to banish intemperance, and such means, too, that
-every man may have recourse to them without any external assistance.</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
-
-<p>“Nothing more is requisite for this purpose than to live up to the
-simplicity, dictated by nature, which teaches us to be content with
-little, to pursue the practice of holy abstemiousness and divine
-reason, and <i>accustom ourselves to eat no more than is absolutely
-necessary to support life</i>; considering that what exceeds this
-is disease and death, and done merely to give the palate a
-satisfaction which, though but momentary, brings on the body a long
-and lasting train of disagreeable diseases, and at length kills it
-along with the soul. How many friends of mine&mdash;men of the finest
-understanding and most amiable disposition&mdash;have I seen carried off
-by this plague in the flower of their youth! who, were they now
-living, would be an ornament to the public, and whose company I
-should enjoy with as much pleasure as I am now deprived of it with
-concern.”</p></div>
-
-<p>He tells us that he had undertaken his arduous task of proselytising
-with the more anxiety and zeal that he had been encouraged to it by
-many of his friends, men of “the finest intellect” (<i>di bellissimo
-intelletto</i>), who lamented the premature deaths of parents and
-relatives, and who observed so manifest a proof of the advantages of
-abstinence in the robust and vigorous frame of the dietetic missionary
-at the age of eighty. Cornaro was a thorough-going hygeist, and he
-followed a reformed <i>diet</i> in the widest meaning of the term, attending
-to the various requirements of a healthy condition of mind and body:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I likewise,” he says with much candour, “did all that lay in my
-power to avoid those evils which we do not find it so easy to
-remove&mdash;melancholy, hatred, and other violent passions which appear
-to have the greatest influence over our bodies. However, I have not
-been able to guard so well against either one or the other kind of
-these disorders [passions] as not to suffer myself now and then to
-be hurried away by many, not to say all, of them; but I reaped one
-great benefit from my weakness&mdash;that of knowing by experience that
-these passions have, in the main, no great influence over bodies
-governed by the two foregoing rules of eating and drinking, and
-therefore can do them but very little harm, so that it may, with
-great truth, be affirmed that whoever observes these two capital
-rules is liable to very little inconvenience from any other excess.
-This Galen, who was an eminent physician, observed before me.
-He affirms that so long as he followed these two rules relative
-to eating and drinking (<i>perchè si guardava da quelli due della
-bocca</i>) he suffered but little from other disorders&mdash;so little that
-they never gave him above a day’s uneasiness. That what he says is
-true I am a living witness; and so are many others who know me, and
-have seen how often I have been exposed to heats and colds and such
-other disagreeable changes of weather, and have likewise seen me
-(owing to various misfortunes which have more than once befallen
-me) greatly disturbed in mind. For not only can they say of me that
-such mental disturbance has affected me little, but they can aver
-of many others who did not lead a frugal and regular life that such
-failure proved very prejudicial to them, among whom was a brother
-of my own and others of my family who, trusting to the goodness of
-their constitution, did not follow my way of living.”</p></div>
-
-<p>At the age of seventy a serious accident befel him, which to the vast
-majority of men so far advanced in life would probably have been fatal.
-His coach was overturned, and he was dragged a considerable distance
-along the road before the horses could be stopped. He was taken up
-insensible, covered with severe wounds and bruises and with an arm and
-leg dislocated, and altogether he was in so dangerous a state that his
-physicians gave him only three days to live. As a matter of course
-they prescribed bleeding and purging as the only proper and effectual
-remedies:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“But I, on the contrary, who knew that the sober life I had led
-for many years past had so well united, harmonised, and dispersed
-my humours as not to leave it in their power to ferment to such
-a degree [as to induce the expected high fever], refused to be
-either bled or purged. I simply caused my leg and arm to be set,
-and suffered myself to be rubbed with some oils, which they said
-were proper on the occasion. Thus, without using any other kind
-of remedy, I recovered, as I thought I should, without feeling
-the least alteration in myself or any other bad effects from the
-accident, a thing which appeared no less than miraculous in the
-eyes of the physicians.”</p></div>
-
-<p>It is, perhaps, hardly to be expected that “The Faculty” will endorse
-the opinions of Cornaro, that any person by attending strictly to
-his regimen “could never be sick again, as it removes every cause of
-illness; and so, for the future, would never want either physician or
-physic”:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Nay, by attending duly to what I have said he would become his own
-physician, and, indeed, the best he could have, since, in fact, no
-man can be a perfect physician to anyone but himself. The reason of
-which is that any man may, by repeated trials, acquire a perfect
-knowledge of his own constitution and the most hidden qualities of
-his body, and what food best agrees with his stomach. Now, it is
-so far from being an easy matter to know these things perfectly
-of another that we cannot, without much trouble, discover them
-in ourselves, since a great deal of time and repeated trials are
-required for that purpose.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Cornaro’s second publication appeared three years later than his
-first, under the title of <i>A Compendium of a Sober Life</i> and the
-third, <i>An Earnest Exhortation to a Sober and Regular Life</i>,<a name="FNanchor_103_103" id="FNanchor_103_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_103_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a> in
-the ninety-third year of his age. In these little treatises he repeats
-and enforces in the most earnest manner his previous exhortations
-and warnings. He also takes the opportunity of exposing some of the
-plausible sophisms employed in defence of luxurious living:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Some allege that many, without leading such a life, have lived
-to a hundred, and that in constant health, although they ate a
-great deal and used indiscriminately every kind of viands and
-wine, and therefore flatter themselves that they shall be equally
-fortunate. But in this they are guilty of two mistakes. The first
-is, that it is not one in one hundred thousand that ever attains
-that happiness; the other mistake is, that such persons, in the
-end, most assuredly contract some illness which carries them off,
-nor can they ever be sure of ending their days otherwise, so that
-the safest way to obtain a long and healthy life is, at least after
-forty, to embrace abstinence. This is no difficult matter, since
-history informs us of very many who, in former times, lived with
-the greatest temperance, and I know that the present Age furnishes
-us with many such instances, reckoning myself one of the number.
-Now let us remember that we are human beings, and that man, being a
-rational animal, is himself master of his actions.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Amongst others:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“There are old gluttons (<i>attempati</i>) who say that it is necessary
-they should eat and drink a great deal to keep up their natural
-heat, which is constantly diminishing as they advance in years,
-and that it is therefore necessary for them to eat heartily and of
-such things as please their palates, and that were they to lead a
-frugal life it would be a short one. To this I answer that our kind
-mother, Nature, in order that old men may live to a still greater
-age, has contrived matters so that they should be able to subsist
-on little, as I do, for large quantities of food cannot be digested
-by old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span> and feeble stomachs. Nor should such persons be afraid of
-shortening their lives by eating too little, <i>since when they are
-indisposed they recover by eating the smallest quantities</i>. Now,
-if by reducing themselves to a very small quantity of food they
-recover from the jaws of death, how can they doubt but that, with
-an increase of diet, still consistent, however, with sobriety, they
-will be able to support nature when in perfect health?</p>
-
-<p>“Others say that it is better for a man to suffer every year three
-or four returns of his usual disorders, such as gout, sciatica, and
-the like than to be tormented the whole year by not indulging his
-appetite, and eating everything his palate likes best, since by a
-good regimen alone he is sure to get the better of such attacks. To
-this I answer that, our natural heat growing less and less as we
-advance in years, no regimen can retain virtue enough to conquer
-the malignity with which disorders of repletion are ever attended,
-so that he must die at last of these periodical disorders, because
-they abridge life as health prolongs it. Others pretend that it is
-much better to live ten years less than not indulge one’s appetite.
-My reply is that longevity ought to be highly valued by men of
-genius and intellect; as to others it is of no great matter if it
-is not duly prized by them, since it is they who brutalise the
-world (<i>perchè questi fanno brutto il mondo</i>), so that <i>their</i>
-death is rather of service to mankind.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Cornaro frequently interrupts his discourse with apostrophes to the
-genius of Temperance, in which he seems to be at a loss for words to
-express his feeling of gratitude and thankfulness for the marvellous
-change effected in his constitution, by which he had been delivered
-from the terrible load of sufferings of his earlier life, and by which
-moreover he could fully appreciate, as he had never dreamed before,
-the beauties and charms of nature of the external world, as well as
-develope the mental faculties with which he had been endowed:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“O thrice holy Sobriety, so useful to man by the services thou
-renderest him! Thou prolongest his days, by which means he may
-greatly improve his understanding. Thou moreover freest him from
-the dreadful thoughts of death. How greatly is thy faithful
-disciple indebted to thee, since by thy assistance he enjoys this
-beautiful expanse of the visible world, which is really beautiful
-to such as know how to view it with a philosophic eye, as thou
-hast enabled me to do!... O truly happy life which, besides these
-favours conferred on an old man, hast so improved and perfected
-him that he has now a better relish for his dry bread than he had
-formerly for the most exquisite dainties. And all this thou hast
-effected by acting rationally, knowing that bread is, above all
-things, man’s proper food when seasoned by a good appetite.... It
-is for this reason that dry bread has so much relish for me; and
-I know from experience, and can with truth affirm, that I find
-such sweetness in it that I should be afraid of sinning against
-temperance were it not for my being convinced of the absolute
-necessity of eating of it, and that we cannot make use of a more
-natural food.”</p></div>
-
-<p>The fourth and last of his appearances in print was a “Letter to
-Barbaro, Patriarch of Aquileia,” written at the age of ninety-five.
-It describes in a very lively manner the health, vigour, and use
-of all his faculties of mind and body, of which he had the perfect
-enjoyment. He was far advanced in life when his daughter, his only
-child, was born, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span> he lived to see her an old woman. He informs us,
-at the age of ninety-one, with much eloquence and enthusiasm of the
-active interest and pleasure he experienced in all that concerned the
-prosperity of his native city: of his plans for improving its port;
-for draining, recovering, and fertilizing the extensive marshes and
-barren sands in its neighbourhood. He died, having passed his one
-hundredth year, calmly and easily in his arm-chair at Padua in the
-year 1566.<a name="FNanchor_104_104" id="FNanchor_104_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_104_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a> His treatises, forming a small volume, have been “very
-frequently published in Italy, both in the vernacular Italian and in
-Latin. It has been translated into all the civilised languages of
-Europe, and was once a most popular book. There are several English
-translations of it, the best being one that bears the date 1779.
-Cornaro’s system,” says the writer in the <i>English Cyclopædia</i> whom we
-are quoting, “has had many followers.” Recounting his many dignities
-and honours, and the distinguished part he took in the improvement of
-his native city, by which he acquired a great reputation amongst his
-fellow-citizens, the Italian editor of his writings justly adds:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“But all these fine prerogatives of Luigi Cornaro would not have
-been sufficient to render his name famous in Europe if he had not
-left behind him the short treatises upon Temperance, composed at
-various times at the advanced ages of 85, 86, 91, and 95. The
-candour which breathes through their simplicity, the importance
-of the argument, and the fervour with which he urges upon all to
-study the means of prolonging our life, have obtained for them so
-great good fortune as to be praised to the skies by men of the
-best understanding. The many editions which have been published
-in Italy, and the translations which, together with an array of
-physiological and philological notes, have appeared out of Italy,
-at one time in Latin, at another in French, again in German, and
-again in English, prove their importance. These discourses, in
-fact, enjoyed all the reputation of a classical book, and, although
-occasionally somewhat unpolished, as ‘<i>Poca favilla gran fiamma
-seconda</i>,’ they have sufficed to inspire (<i>riscaldare</i>) a Lessio,
-a Bartolini, a Ramazzini, a Cheyne, a Hufeland, and so many others
-who have written works of greater weight upon the same subject.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Addison (<i>Spectator</i> 195) thus refers to him:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The most remarkable instance of the efficacy of temperance
-towards the procuring long life is what we meet with in a little
-book published by Lewis Cornaro, the Venetian, which I the rather
-mention because it is of undoubted credit, as the late Venetian
-Ambassador, who was of the same family, attested more than once in
-conversation when he resided in England.... After having passed
-his one hundredth year he died without pain or agony, and like one
-who falls asleep. The treatise I mention has been taken notice of
-by several eminent authors, and is written with such a spirit
-of cheerfulness, religion, and good sense as are the natural
-concomitants of temperance and sobriety. The mixture of the old man
-in it is rather a recommendation than a discredit to it.”</p></div>
-
-<p>In fact he has exposed himself, it must be confessed, to the taunts of
-the “devotees of the Table” often cast at the <i>abstinents</i>, that they
-are too much given to parading their health and vigour, and certainly
-if any one can be justly obnoxious to them it is Luigi Cornaro.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XII_SIR_THOMAS_MORE">XII.<br />
-<span class="s5">SIR THOMAS MORE. 1480&ndash;1535.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">D<span class="smaller">URING</span> part of the period covered by the long life of Cornaro there
-is one distinguished man, all reference to whose opinions&mdash;intimately
-though indirectly connected as they are with dietary reform&mdash;it would
-be improper to omit&mdash;Sir Thomas More. His eloquent denunciation of the
-grasping avarice and the ruinous policy which were rapidly converting
-the best part of the country into grazing lands, as well as his
-condemnation of the slaughter of innocent life, commonly euphemised by
-the name of “sport,” are as instructive and almost as necessary for the
-present age as for the beginning of the sixteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>Son of Sir John More, a judge of the King’s Bench, he was brought up in
-the palace of the Cardinal Lord Chancellor Morton, an ecclesiastic who
-stands out in favourable contrast with the great majority of his order,
-and, indeed, of his contemporaries in general. In his twenty-first year
-he was returned to the House of Commons, where he distinguished himself
-by opposing a grant of a subsidy to the king (Henry VII.). In 1516 he
-published (in Latin) his world-famed <i>Utopia</i>&mdash;the most meritorious
-production in sociological literature since the days of Plutarch.
-In 1523 he was elected Speaker of the House of Commons, and again
-he displayed his courage and integrity in resisting an illegal and
-oppressive subsidy bill, by which he was not in the way to advance his
-interests with Henry VIII. and his principal minister, Wolsey. Seven
-years later, however, upon the disgrace of the latter personage, Sir
-Thomas More succeeded to the vacant Chancellorship, in which office he
-maintained his reputation for integrity and laborious diligence. When
-the amorous and despotic king had determined upon the momentous divorce
-from Catherine, he resigned the Seals rather than sanction that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
-equivocal proceeding; and soon afterwards he was sent to the Tower for
-refusing the Oath of Supremacy. After the interval of a year he was
-brought to trial before the King’s Bench, and sentenced to the block
-(1535). In private life and in his domestic relations he exhibits a
-pleasing contrast to the ordinary harsh severity of his contemporaries.
-In learning and ability he occupies a foremost place in the annals of
-the period.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately for his reputation with after ages, as Lord Chancellor
-he seems to have forgotten the maxims of toleration (political and
-theological) of his earlier career, so well set forth in his <i>Utopia</i>;
-and he supplies a notable instance, not too rare, of retrogression with
-advancing years and dignities, and of “a head grown grey in vain.” In
-fact, he belonged, ecclesiastically, to the school of conservative
-sceptics, of whom his intimate friend Erasmus was the most conspicuous
-representative, rather than to the party of practical reform. Yet, in
-spite of so lamentable a failure in practical philosophy, More may
-claim a high degree of merit both for his courage and for his sagacity
-in propounding views far in advance of his time.</p>
-
-<p>In the <i>Utopia</i> his ideas in regard to labour and to crime exhibit
-him, indeed, as in advance of the received dogmas even of the present
-day. As to the former he held that the labourer, as the actual basis
-and support of the whole social system, was justly entitled to some
-consideration, and to a more rational existence than usually allowed
-him by the policy of the ruling classes; and, in limiting the daily
-period of labour to nine hours, he anticipated by 350 years the tardy
-legislation on that important matter. In exposing the equal absurdity
-and iniquity of the criminal code he preached the despised doctrine
-of <i>prevention</i> rather than punishment, and denounced the monstrous
-inequality of penalties by which thieving was placed in the same
-category with murder and crimes of violence:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“For great and horrible punishments be awarded to thieves, whereas
-much rather provision should have been made that there were some
-means whereby they might get their living, so that no man should
-be driven to this extreme necessity&mdash;first to steal and then to
-die.... By suffering your youth to be wantonly and viciously
-brought up and to be infected, even from their tender age, by
-little and little with vice&mdash;then, in God’s name, to be punished
-when they commit the same faults after being come to man’s state,
-which from their youth they were ever like to do&mdash;in this point,
-I pray you, <i>what other thing do you than make thieves and then
-punish them</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_105_105" id="FNanchor_105_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_105_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>What we are immediately concerned with here is his feeling in regard to
-slaughter. The Utopians condemn&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Hunters also and hawkers (falconers), for what delight can there
-be, and not rather displeasure, in hearing the barking and howling
-of dogs? Or what greater pleasure is there to be felt when a dog
-follows a hare than when a dog follows a dog? For one thing is done
-by both&mdash;that is to say, running, if you have pleasure in that. But
-if the hope of slaughter and the expectation of tearing the victim
-in pieces pleases you, you should rather be moved with pity to see
-an innocent hare murdered by a dog&mdash;the weak by the strong, the
-fearful by the fierce, the innocent by the cruel and pitiless.<a name="FNanchor_106_106" id="FNanchor_106_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_106_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a>
-Therefore this exercise of hunting, as a thing unworthy to be used
-of free men, the Utopians have rejected to their butchers, to the
-which craft (as we said before) they appoint their bondsmen. For
-they count hunting the lowest, the vilest, and most abject part of
-butchery; and the other parts of it more profitable and more honest
-as bringing much more commodity, in that they (the butchers) kill
-their victims from necessity, whereas the hunter seeks nothing
-but pleasure of the seely [simple, innocent] and woful animal’s
-slaughter and murder. The which pleasure in beholding death, they
-say, doth rise in wild beasts, either of a cruel affection of mind
-or else by being changed, in continuance of time, into cruelty by
-long use of so cruel a pleasure. These, therefore, and all such
-like, which be innumerable, though the common sort of people do
-take them for pleasures, yet they, seeing that there is no natural
-pleasantness in them, plainly determine them to have no affinity
-with true and right feeling.”</p></div>
-
-<p>In telling us that his model people “permit not their free citizens to
-accustom themselves to the killing of ‘beasts’ through the use whereof
-they think clemency, gentlest affection of our nature, by little and
-little to decay and perish,”<a name="FNanchor_107_107" id="FNanchor_107_107"></a><a href="#Footnote_107_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a> More for ever condemns the immorality
-of the Slaughter-House, whether he intended to do so <i>in toto</i> or no.
-In relegating the business of slaughter to their bondsmen (criminals
-who had been degraded from the rights of citizenship), the Utopians,
-we may observe, exhibit less of justice than of refinement. To devolve
-the trade of slaughter upon a pariah-class is not the least immoral of
-the necessary concomitants of the shambles. That the author of <i>Utopia</i>
-should feel an instinctive aversion from the coarseness and cruelty of
-the shambles is not surprising; that he should have failed to banish
-it entirely from his ideal commonwealth is less to be wondered at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
-than to be lamented. That he had at least a <i>latent</i> consciousness of
-the indefensibility of slaughter for food appears sufficiently clear
-from his remark upon the Utopian religion that “they kill no living
-animal in sacrifice, nor do they think that God has delight in blood
-and slaughter, <i>Who has given life to animals to the intent they should
-live</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Wiser than ourselves, the ideal people do not waste their corn in the
-manufacture of alcoholic drinks:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“They sow corn only for bread. For their drink is either wine
-made of grapes, or else of apples or pears, or else it is clear
-water&mdash;and many times mead made of honey or liquorice sodden in
-water, for of that they have great store.”</p></div>
-
-<p>The selfish policy of converting arable into grazing land is
-emphatically denounced by More:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“They (the oxen and sheep) consume, destroy, and devour whole
-fields, houses, and cities. For look in what parts of the realm
-doth grow the finest and therefore the dearest wool. There noblemen
-and gentlemen, yea, and certain abbots, holy men no doubt, not
-contenting themselves with the yearly revenues and profits that
-were wont to grow to their forefathers and predecessors of their
-lands, nor being content that they live in rest and pleasure
-nothing profiting, yea, much annoying, the public weal, leave no
-land for tillage&mdash;they enclose all into pasture, they throw down
-houses, they pluck down towns and leave nothing standing, but only
-the church to be made a sheep house; and, as though you lost no
-small quantity of ground by forests, chases, lands, and parks,
-those good holy men turn dwelling-places and all glebe land into
-wilderness and desolation.... For one shepherd or herdsman is
-enough to eat up that ground with cattle, to the occupying whereof
-about husbandry many hands would be requisite. And this is also the
-cause why victuals be now in many places dearer; yea, besides this,
-the price of wool is so risen that poor folks, which were wont to
-work it and make cloth thereof, be now able to buy none at all,
-and by this means very many be forced to forsake work and to give
-themselves to idleness. For after that so much land was enclosed
-for pasture, an infinite multitude of sheep died of the rot, such
-vengeance God took of their inordinate and insatiable covetousness,
-sending among the sheep that pestiferous murrain which much more
-justly should have fallen on the sheep-masters’ own heads; and
-though the number of sheep increase never so fast, yet the price
-falleth not one mite, because there be so few sellers,” &amp;c.</p></div>
-
-<p>These sagacious and just reflections upon the evil social consequences
-of carnivorousness may be fitly commended to the earnest attention
-of our public writers and speakers of to-day. The periodical cattle
-plagues and foot-and-mouth diseases, which, in theological language,
-are vaguely assigned to national sins, might be more ingenuously and
-truthfully attributed to the one sufficient cause&mdash;to the general
-indulgence of selfish instincts, which closes the ear to all the
-promptings at once of humanity and of reason, and is, in truth, a
-national sin of the most serious character.<a name="FNanchor_108_108" id="FNanchor_108_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_108_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The “wisdom of our ancestors,” which has been so often invoked, both
-before and since the days of More, and which Bentham has so mercilessly
-exposed, apparently did not subdue the reason of the author of
-<i>Utopia</i>; yet, with no little amount of applause it has been made to
-serve as a very conclusive argument against dietetic reformation, as
-against many other changes:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“‘These things,’ say they, ‘pleased our forefathers and
-ancestors&mdash;would to God we could be so wise as they were!’ And, as
-though they had wittily concluded the matter, and with this answer
-stopped every man’s mouth, they sit down again as who should say,
-‘It were a very dangerous matter if a man in any point should be
-found wiser than his forefathers were.’ And yet be we content
-to suffer the best and wittiest [wisest] of their decrees to be
-unexecuted; but if in anything a better order might have been taken
-than by them was, there we take fast hold, finding therein many
-virtues.”<a name="FNanchor_109_109" id="FNanchor_109_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_109_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XIII_MONTAIGNE">XIII.<br />
-<span class="s5">MONTAIGNE. 1533&ndash;1592.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">T<span class="smaller">HE</span> modern Plutarch and the first of essayists deserves his place
-in this work, if not so much for express and explicit denunciation,
-<i>totidem verbis</i>, of the barbarism of the Slaughter-House, at least
-for a sort of argument which logically and necessarily arrives at
-the same conclusion. In truth, if he had not “seen and approved the
-better way” (even though, with too many others, he may not have had the
-courage of his convictions), he would be no true disciple of the great
-humanitarian. It is necessary to remember that the “perfect day” was
-not yet come; that a few rays only here and there enlightened the thick
-darkness of barbarism; that, in fine, not even yet, with the light of
-truth shining full upon us, have reason and conscience triumphed, as
-regards the mass of the community, either in this country or elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>Michel de Montaigne descended from an old and influential house in
-Périgord (modern Périgeaux, in the department of the Dordogne). His
-youth was carefully trained, and his early inclination to learning
-fostered under his father’s diligent superintendence. He became a
-member of the provincial parliament, and, by the universal suffrage of
-his fellow-citizens, was elected chief magistrate of Bordeaux, from the
-official routine of whose duties he soon retired to the more congenial
-atmosphere<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span> of study and philosophic reflection. In his château, at
-Montaigne, his studious tranquillity was violently interrupted by the
-savage contests then raging between the opposing factions of Catholics
-and Huguenots, from both of whom he received ill-treatment and loss.
-To add to his troubles, the plague, which appeared in Guienne in 1586,
-broke up his household and compelled him, with his family, to abandon
-his home. Together they wandered through the country, exposed to the
-various dangers of a civil war; and he afterwards for some time settled
-in Paris. He had also travelled in Italy. Montaigne returned to his
-home when the disturbances and atrocities had somewhat subsided, and
-there he died with the philosophic calmness with which he had lived.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Essais</i>&mdash;that book of “good faith,” “without study and artifice,”
-as its author justly calls it&mdash;appeared in the year 1580. It is a book
-unique in modern literature, and the only other production to which
-it may be compared is the <i>Moralia</i> of Plutarch. “It is not a book we
-are reading, but a conversation to which we are listening.” “It is,”
-as another French critic observes, “less a book than a journal divided
-into chapters, which follow one another without connexion, which bear
-each a title without much regard to the fulfilment of their promise.”</p>
-
-<p>Montaigne treats of almost every phase of human thought and action; and
-upon every subject he has something original and worth saying. Living
-in a savagely sectarian and persecuting age, he kept himself aloof and
-independent of either of the two contending theological sections, and
-contents himself with the <i>rôle</i> of a sceptical spectator. It must be
-admitted that he is not always satisfactory in this character, since
-he sometimes seems to give forth an “uncertain sound.” Considering
-the age, however, his assertion of the proper authority of Reason
-deserves our respectful admiration, and is in pleasing contrast with
-the attitude of most of his contemporaries. A few, like his friend De
-Thou, or the Italian Giordano Bruno&mdash;the latter of whom, indeed, had
-more of the martyr-spirit than Montaigne&mdash;contributed to keep alight
-the torch of Truth and Reason. But we have only to recollect that it
-was the age <i>par excellence</i> of Diabolism in Catholic and Protestant
-theology alike, and of all the horrible superstitions and frightful
-tortures, both bodily and mental, of which the universal belief in the
-Devil’s actual reign on earth was the fruitful cause. About the very
-time of the appearance of the <i>Essais</i>, one of the most learned men of
-the period, the lawyer Jean Bodin published a work which he called the
-<i>Démonomanie des Sorciers</i> (the “Diabolic Inspiration of Witches”), in
-which he protested his unwavering faith in the most monstrous beliefs
-of the creed, and vehemently called upon the judges, ecclesiastical and
-civil, to punish the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span> reputed criminals (accused of an <i>impossible</i>
-crime) with the severest tortures. We have only to recognise this fact
-alone (the most astounding of all the astounding facts and phases in
-the history of Superstition) to do full justice to the reason and
-courage of this small band of protesters.</p>
-
-<p>As for the influence of Montaigne on the modes of thought of after
-times, and especially of his countrymen, it can scarcely be over
-estimated. He is the literary progenitor of the most famous French
-writers of the humanitarian eighteenth century. The most eminent of
-them, Voltaire, perhaps, most resembles him, but naturally the style of
-the eighteenth century philosopher is more concise and incisive, and
-his opinions are more pronounced. “Both,” says a French critic, “laugh
-at the human species; but the laughter of Voltaire is more bitter; his
-railleries are more terrible. Both, nevertheless, breathe the love
-of humanity. That of Voltaire is more ardent, more courageous, more
-unwearied. The hatred of both of them for charlatanism and hypocrisy
-is well known. Their morality has for its first principle benevolence
-towards others, without distinction of country, of manners, or of
-religious beliefs; warning us not to think that we alone hold the
-deposit of justice and of truth. It transports our soul, by contempt of
-mortal things and by enthusiasm for great truths.” It is to be lamented
-that the countrymen of Montaigne and of Voltaire have not profited
-to a larger extent by their humanitarian teaching and tendencies. In
-reference to the almost incredible atrocities of war, and especially of
-civil war, Montaigne protests:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Scarcely could I persuade myself, before I had seen it with
-my own eyes, that there could be souls so ferocious as for the
-simple pleasure of murder to be ready to perpetrate it; to hack
-and dismember the limbs of others; to ransack their invention to
-discover unheard-of tortures and new kinds of deaths&mdash;and that
-without the incentive of enmity or of profit&mdash;with the mere view of
-enjoying the pleasant spectacle of pitiable actions and movements,
-of groans and lamentations, of a man dying in agony. For this is
-the climax to which cruelty can attain&mdash;‘for a man without anger,
-without fear, to kill another merely to witness his sufferings.’</p>
-
-<p>“For my part I have never been able to see, without displeasure, an
-innocent and defenceless animal, from whom we receive no offence
-or harm, pursued and slaughtered. And when a deer, as commonly
-happens, finding herself without breath and strength, without other
-resource, throws herself down and surrenders, as it were, to her
-pursuers, begging for mercy by her tears,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft4">‘Questuque cruentus</div>
- <div class="verse">Atque imploranti similis.’<a name="FNanchor_110_110" id="FNanchor_110_110"></a><a href="#Footnote_110_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
-<p>This has always appeared to me a very displeasing spectacle. I
-seldom, or never, take an animal alive whom I do not restore to the
-fields. Pythagoras was in the habit of buying their victims from
-the fowlers and fishermen for the same purpose.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft7">‘Primâque a cæde ferarum</div>
- <div class="verse">Incaluisse puto maculatum sanguine ferrum.’<a name="FNanchor_111_111" id="FNanchor_111_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_111_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Dispositions sanguinary in regard to other animals testify a
-natural inclination to cruelty towards their own kind. After they
-had accustomed themselves at Rome to the spectacle of the murders
-[<i>meurtres</i>] of other animals, they proceeded to those of men and
-gladiators. Nature has, I fear, herself attached some instinct
-of inhumanity to man’s disposition. No one derives any amusement
-from seeing other animals enjoy themselves and caressing one
-another; and no one fails to take pleasure in seeing them torn in
-pieces and dismembered. That I may not [he is cautious enough to
-add] be ridiculed for this sympathy which I have for them, even
-theology enjoins some respect for them,<a name="FNanchor_112_112" id="FNanchor_112_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_112_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a> and considering that
-one and the same Master has lodged us in this palatial world for
-his service, and that they are, as we, members of His family, it
-is right that it should enjoin some respect and affection towards
-them.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Quoting instances of the extreme respect in which some of the
-non-human races were held by people in Antiquity,<a name="FNanchor_113_113" id="FNanchor_113_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_113_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a> and Plutarch’s
-interpretation of the meaning of the divine honours sometimes paid to
-them&mdash;that they adored certain qualities in them as types of divine
-faculties&mdash;Montaigne declares for himself that:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“When I meet, amongst the more moderate opinions, arguments which
-go to prove our close resemblance to other animals, and how much
-they share in our greatest privileges, and with how much of
-probability they are compared to us, of a truth I abate much from
-our common presumption, and willingly abdicate that <i>imaginary</i>
-royalty which they assign us over other beings.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Wiser than the majority in later times, Montaigne well rebukes the
-arrogant presumption of the human animal who affects to hold all other
-life to be brought into being for his sole use and pleasure:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Let him shew me, by the most skilful argument, upon what
-foundations he has built these excessive prerogatives which he
-supposes himself to have over other existences. Who has persuaded
-him that that admirable impulse of the celestial vault, the eternal
-brightness of those Lights rolling so majestically over our heads,
-the tremendous motions of that infinite sea of Globes, were
-established and have continued so many ages for his advantage and
-for his service. Is it possible to imagine anything so ridiculous
-as that this pitiful [<i>chétive</i>], miserable creature, who is not
-even master of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span> himself, exposed to injuries of every kind, should
-call itself master and lord of the universe, of which, so far from
-being lord of it, he knows but the smallest part?... Who has given
-him this sealed charter? Let him shew us the ‘letters patent’ of
-this grand commission. Have they been issued [<i>octroyées</i>] in
-favour of the wise only? They affect but the few in that case. The
-fools and the wicked&mdash;are they worthy of so extraordinary a favour,
-and being the worst part of the world [<i>le pire pièce du monde</i>],
-do they deserve to be preferred to all the rest? Shall we believe
-all this?</p>
-
-<p>“Presumption is our natural and original disease. The most
-calamitous and fragile of all creatures is man, and yet the most
-arrogant.<a name="FNanchor_114_114" id="FNanchor_114_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_114_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a> It is through the vanity of this same imagination
-that he equals himself to a god, that he attributes to himself
-divine conditions, that he picks himself out and separates himself
-from the crowd of other creatures, curtails the just shares of
-other animals his brethren [<i>confrères</i>] and companions, and
-assigns to them such portions of faculties and forces as seems to
-him good. How does he know, by the effort of his intelligence, the
-interior and secret movements and impulses of other animals? By
-what comparison between them and us does he infer the stupidity
-[<i>la bétise</i>] which he attributes to them?”</p></div>
-
-<p>Montaigne quotes the example of his master, the just and benevolent
-Plutarch, who made it a matter of justice and conscience not to sell
-or send to the slaughter-house (according to the common selfish
-ingratitude) a Cow who had served him faithfully and profitably for so
-many years. With Plutarch and Porphyry he never wearies of denouncing
-the unreasoning opinions, or rather prejudices, prevalent amongst men
-as to the mental qualities of many of the non-human races, and, as we
-have already seen, insists that the difference between them and us is
-of <i>degree</i> and not of <i>kind</i>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Plato, in his picture of the ‘Golden Age,’ reckons amongst the
-chief advantages of the men of that time the communication they had
-with other animals, by investigating and instructing themselves in
-whose nature they learned their true qualities and the differences
-between them, by which they acquired a very perfect knowledge and
-intelligence, and thus made their lives more happy than we can make
-ours. Is a better test needed by which to judge of human folly in
-regard to other species?</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
-
-<p>“I have said all this in order to bring us back and reunite
-ourselves to the crowd [<i>presse</i>]. We are [in the accidents of
-mortality] neither above nor below the rest. ‘All who are under
-the sky,’ says the Jewish sage, ‘experience a like law and fate.’
-There is some difference, <i>there are orders and degrees</i>, but
-they are under the aspect of one and the same nature. Man must be
-constrained and ranged within the barriers of this police [<i>Il
-faut contraindre l’homme, et le ranger dans les barrières de cette
-police</i>]. The wretch has no right to encroach [<i>d’enjamber</i>]
-beyond these; he is fettered, entangled, he is subjected to like
-necessities with other creatures of his order, and in a very
-mean condition without any true and essential prerogative and
-pre-excellence. That which he confers upon himself by his own
-opinion and fancy has neither sense nor substance; and if it be
-conceded to him that he alone of all animals has that freedom of
-imagination and that irregularity of thought representing to him
-what he is, what he is not, and what he wants, the false and the
-true, it is an advantage which has been very dearly sold to him,
-and of which he has very little to boast, for from that springs the
-principal source of the evils which oppress him&mdash;crime, disease,
-irresolution, trouble, despair.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Rejecting the still received prejudice which will not allow our humble
-fellow-beings the privilege of reason, but invents an imaginary faculty
-called “instinct,” he repeats that&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“There is no ground for supposing that other beings do by
-<i>natural and necessary inclination</i> the same things that we do
-by choice, and while we are bound to infer from like effects
-like faculties&mdash;nay, from greater effects, greater faculties&mdash;we
-are forced to confess, consequently, that that same reason, that
-same method which we employ in action are also employed by the
-lower animals, or else that they have some still better reason
-or method. Why do we fancy in them that natural necessity or
-impulse [<i>contrainte</i>]&mdash;<i>we</i> who have no experience of that sort
-ourselves.<a name="FNanchor_115_115" id="FNanchor_115_115"></a><a href="#Footnote_115_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a></p>
-
-<p>“As for use in eating, it is with us as with them, natural
-and without instruction. Who doubts that a child, arrived at
-the necessary strength for feeding itself, could find its own
-nourishment? The earth produces and offers to him enough for his
-needs without artificial labour, and if not for all seasons,
-neither does she for the other races&mdash;witness the provisions
-which we observe the ants and others collecting for the sterile
-seasons of the year. Those nations whom we have lately discovered
-[the peoples of Hindustan and of parts of America], so abundantly
-furnished with natural meat and drink without care and without
-labour, have just instructed us that bread is not our sole food,
-and that without toil our mother Nature has furnished us with every
-plant we need, to shew us, as it seems, how superior she is to all
-our <i>artificiality</i>; while the extravagance of our appetite outruns
-all the inventions by which we seek to satisfy it.”<a name="FNanchor_116_116" id="FNanchor_116_116"></a><a href="#Footnote_116_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XIV_GASSENDI">XIV.<br />
-<span class="s5">GASSENDI. 1592&ndash;1655.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">G<span class="smaller">ASSENDI</span>, one of the most eminent men, and, what is more to the
-purpose, the most meritorious philosophic writer of France in
-the seventeenth century, claims the unique honour of being the
-first directly to revive in modern times the teaching of Plutarch
-and Porphyry. Other minds, indeed, of a high order, like More and
-Montaigne, had, as already shown, implicitly condemned the inveterate
-barbarism. But Gassendi is the writer who first, since the extinction
-of the Platonic philosophy, expressly and unequivocally attempted to
-enlighten the world upon this fundamental truth.</p>
-
-<p>He was born of poor parents, near Digne, in Provence. In his earliest
-years he gave promise of his extraordinary genius. At nineteen he was
-professor of philosophy at Aix. His celebrated “Essays against the
-Aristotleians” (<i>Exercitationes Paradoxicæ Adversus Aristoteleos</i>)
-was his first appearance in the philosophic world. Written some years
-earlier, it was first published, in part, in the year 1624. It divides
-with the <i>Novum Organon</i> of Francis Bacon, with which it was almost
-contemporary, the honour of being the earliest effectual assault upon
-the old scholastic jargon which, abusing the name and authority of
-Aristotle, during some three or four centuries of mediæval darkness
-had kept possession of the schools and universities of Europe. It at
-once raised up for Gassendi a host of enemies, the supporters of the
-old orthodoxy, and, as has always been the case in the exposure of
-falsehood, he was assailed with a torrent of virulent invective. Five
-of the Books of the <i>Exercitationes</i>, by the advice of his friends,
-who dreaded the consequences of his courage, had been suppressed. In
-the Fourth Book, besides the heresy of Kopernik (which Bacon had not
-the courage or the penetration to adopt), the doctrine of the eternity
-of the Earth had been maintained, as already taught by Bruno; while
-the Seventh, according to the table of contents, contained a formal
-recommendation of the Epicurean theory of morals, in which Pleasure and
-Virtue are synonymous terms.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of the obloquy thus aroused the philosopher devoted
-himself, by way of consolation, to the study of anatomy and astronomy,
-as well as to literary studies.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span> “As the result of his anatomical
-researches he composed a treatise to prove that man was intended to
-live upon vegetables, and that animal food, as contrary to the human
-constitution, is baneful and unwholesome.”<a name="FNanchor_117_117" id="FNanchor_117_117"></a><a href="#Footnote_117_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a> He was the first to
-observe the transit of the planet Mercury over the Sun’s disc (1631),
-previously calculated by Kepler. He next appears publicly as the
-opponent of Descartes in his <i>Disquisitiones Anticartesianæ</i> (1643)&mdash;a
-work justly distinguished, according to the remark of an eminent
-German critic, as a model of controversial excellence. The philosophic
-world was soon divided between the two hostile camps. It is sufficient
-to observe here that Descartes, whatever merit may attach to him in
-other respects, by his equally absurd and mischievous paradox that
-the non-human species are possessed only of unconscious sensation and
-perception, had done as much as he well could to destroy his reputation
-for common sense and common reason with all the really thinking part
-of the world. Yet this “animated machine” theory, incredible as it
-may appear, has recently been revived by a well-known physiologist
-of the present day, in the very face of the most ordinary facts and
-experience&mdash;a theory about which it needs only to be said that it
-deserves to be classed with some of the most absurd and monstrous
-conceptions of mediævalism. As though, to quote Voltaire’s admirable
-criticism, God had given to the lower animals reason and feeling to the
-end <i>that they might not feel and reason</i>. It was not thus, as the same
-writer reminds us, that Locke and Newton argued.<a name="FNanchor_118_118" id="FNanchor_118_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_118_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a></p>
-
-<p>In 1646 Gassendi became Regius Professor of Mathematics in the
-University of Paris, where his lecture-room was crowded with listeners
-of all classes. His <i>Life and Morals of Epikurus</i> (<i>De Vitâ et Moribus
-Epicuri</i>), his principal work, appeared in the year 1647. It is a
-triumphant refutation of the prejudices and false representations
-connected with the name of one of the very greatest and most virtuous
-of the Greek Masters, which had been prevalent during so many ages.
-Neither his European reputation, nor the universal respect extorted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
-by his private as well as public merits, could corrupt the simplicity
-of Gassendi; and his sober tastes were little in sympathy with the
-luxurious or literary trifling of Paris:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“He had only with difficulty resolved to quit his southern home,
-and being attacked by a lung complaint, he returned to Digne, where
-he remained till 1653. Within this period falls the greater part
-of his literary activity and zeal in behalf of the philosophy of
-Epikurus, and simultaneously the positive extension of his own
-doctrines. In the same period Gassendi produced, besides several
-astronomical works, a series of valuable biographies, of which
-those of Kopernik and Tycho Brahe are especially noteworthy. He
-is, of all the most prominent representatives of Materialism,
-the only one gifted with a historic sense, and that he has in an
-eminent degree. Even in his <i>Syntagma Philosophicum</i> he treats
-every subject, at first historically from all points of view....
-Gassendi did not fall a victim to Theology, because he was destined
-to fall a victim to Medicine. Being treated for a fever in the
-fashion of the time, he had been reduced to extreme debility. He
-long, but vainly, sought restoration in his southern home. On
-returning to Paris he was again attacked by fever, and thirteen
-fresh blood-lettings ended his life. He died October 24th, 1655.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Lange, from whom we have quoted this brief notice, proceeds to
-vindicate his position as a physical philosopher:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The reformation of Physics and Natural Philosophy, usually
-ascribed to Descartes, was at least as much the work of Gassendi.
-Frequently, in consequence of the fame which Descartes owed to his
-Metaphysics, those very things have been credited to Descartes
-which ought properly to be assigned to Gassendi. It was also a
-result of the peculiar mixture of difference and agreement, of
-hostility and alliance, between the two systems that the influences
-resulting from them became completely interfused.”<a name="FNanchor_119_119" id="FNanchor_119_119"></a><a href="#Footnote_119_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Although of extraordinary erudition his learning did not, as too often
-happens, obscure the powers of original thought and reason. Bayle,
-writing at the end of the seventeenth century, has characterised him as
-“the greatest philosopher amongst scholars, and the greatest scholar
-amongst philosophers;” and Newton conceived the same high esteem for
-the great vindicator of Epikurus.<a name="FNanchor_120_120" id="FNanchor_120_120"></a><a href="#Footnote_120_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a></p>
-
-<p>It is in his celebrated letter to his friend Van Helmont, that Gassendi
-deals with the irrational assertions of certain physiologists,
-apparently more devoted to the defence of the orthodox diet than to the
-discovery of unwelcome truth, as to the character of the human teeth:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I was contending,” he writes to his medical friend, “that from
-the conformation of our teeth we do not appear to be adapted by
-Nature to the use of a flesh diet, since all animals (I spoke of
-terrestrials) which Nature has formed to feed on flesh have their
-teeth long, conical, sharp, uneven, and with intervals between
-them&mdash;of which kind are lions, tigers, wolves, dogs, cats, and
-others. But those who are made to subsist only on herbs and fruits
-have their teeth short, broad, blunt, close to one another, and
-distributed in even rows. Of this sort are horses, cows, deer,
-sheep, goats, and some others. And further&mdash;that men have received
-from Nature teeth which are unlike those of the first class, and
-resemble those of the second. It is therefore probable, since men
-are land animals, that Nature intended them to follow, in the
-selection of their food, not the carnivorous tribes, but those
-races of animals which are contented with the simple productions
-of the earth.... Wherefore, I here repeat that from the primæval
-institution of our nature, the teeth were destined to the
-mastication, not of flesh, but of fruits.</p>
-
-<p>As for flesh, true, indeed, it is that man is sustained on flesh.
-But <i>how many things</i>, let me ask, <i>does man do every day which are
-contrary to, or beside, his nature</i>? So great, and so general, is
-the perversion of his mode of life, which has, as it were, eaten
-into his flesh by a sort of deadly contagion (<i>contagione veluti
-quâdam jam inusta est</i>), that he appears to have put on another
-disposition. Hence, the whole care and concern of philosophy and
-moral instruction ought to consist in leading men back to the paths
-of Nature.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Helmont, it seems, had rested his principal argument for flesh-eating,
-not altogether in accordance with <i>Genesis</i>, and certainly not in
-accordance with Science, on the presumption that man was formed
-expressly for carnivorousness. To this Gassendi replied that, without
-ignoring theological argument, he still maintained comparative Anatomy
-to be a satisfactory and sufficient guide. He then applies himself to
-refute the physiological prejudice of Helmont about the teeth, &amp;c.
-(as already quoted), and begins by warning his friend that he is not
-to wonder if the self-love of men is constantly viewed by him with
-suspicion.<a name="FNanchor_121_121" id="FNanchor_121_121"></a><a href="#Footnote_121_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“For, in fact, we all, with tacit consent, conspire to extol our
-own nature, and we do this commonly with so much arrogance that, if
-people were to divest themselves of this traditional and inveterate
-prejudice, and seriously reflect upon it, their faces must be
-immediately suffused with burning shame.”</p></div>
-
-<p>He repeats Plutarch’s unanswerable challenge:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Man lives very well upon flesh, you say, but, if he thinks this
-food to be natural to him, why does he not use it as it is, as
-furnished to him by Nature? But, in fact, he shrinks in horror from
-seizing and rending living or even raw flesh with his teeth, and
-lights a fire to change its natural and proper condition. Well, but
-if it were the intention of Nature that man should eat <i>cooked</i>
-flesh, she would surely have provided him with ready-made cooks;
-or, rather, she would have herself cooked it as she is wont to
-do fruits, which are best and sweetest without the intervention
-of fire. Nature, surely, does not fail in providing necessary
-provision for her children, according to the common boast. But what
-is more necessary than to make food pleasurable? And, as she does
-in the case of sexual love by which she procures the preservation
-of the <i>species</i>, so would she procure the preservation of the
-<i>genus</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Nor let anyone say that Nature in this is corrected, since, to
-pass over other things, that is tantamount to convicting her of
-a blunder. Consider how much more benevolent she would be proved
-to be, in that case, towards the savage beasts than towards us.
-Again, since our teeth are not sufficient for eating flesh, even
-when prepared by fire, the invention of knives seems to me to be
-a strong proof. Because, in fact, we have no teeth given us for
-rending flesh, and we are therefore forced to have recourse to
-those <i>non-natural</i> organs, in order to accomplish our purpose. As
-if, forsooth, Nature would have left us destitute in so essential
-things! I divine at once your ready reply: ‘think that Nature
-has given man reason to supply defects of this kind.’ But this,
-I affirm, is always to accuse Nature, <i>in order to</i> defend our
-unnatural luxury. So it is about dress&mdash;so it is about other things.</p>
-
-<p>“What is clearer [he sums up] than that man is not furnished for
-hunting, much less for eating, other animals? In one word, we seem
-to be admirably admonished by Cicero that man was destined for
-other things than for seizing and cutting the throats of other
-animals. If you answer that ‘that may be said to be an industry
-ordered by Nature, by which such weapons are invented,’ then,
-behold! it is by the very same artificial instrument that men make
-weapons for mutual slaughter. Do they this at the instigation of
-Nature? Can a use so noxious be called <i>natural</i>? Faculty is given
-by Nature, but it is our own fault that we make a perverse use of
-it.”</p></div>
-
-<p>He, finally, refutes the popular objection about the strength-giving
-properties of flesh-meat, and instances Horses, Bulls, and others.<a name="FNanchor_122_122" id="FNanchor_122_122"></a><a href="#Footnote_122_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a></p>
-
-<p>In his <i>Ethics</i> (affixed to his Books on <i>Physics</i>) he quotes and
-endorses the opinions of Epikurus on the slaughter of innocent life:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“There is no pretence,” he asserts, “for saying that any right has
-been granted us by law to kill any of those animals which are not
-destructive or pernicious to the human race, for there is no reason
-why the innocent species should be allowed to increase to so great
-a number as to be inconvenient to us. They may be restrained within
-that number which would be harmless, and useful to ourselves.”<a name="FNanchor_123_123" id="FNanchor_123_123"></a><a href="#Footnote_123_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>With that Great Master he thus rebukes the fashionable “hospitality”:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I, for my part, to speak modestly of myself, lived contented
-with the plants of my little garden, and have pleasure in that
-diet, and I wish inscribed on my doors: ‘Guest, here you shall
-have good cheer! here the <i>summum bonum</i> is Pleasure. The guardian
-of this house, <i>humanely</i> hospitable, is ready to entertain you
-with pearl-barley (<i>polenta</i>), and will furnish you abundantly
-with water. These little gardens do not increase hunger, but
-extinguish it; nor do they make thirst greater by the very
-potations themselves, but satisfy it by a natural and gratuitous
-remedy.’”<a name="FNanchor_124_124" id="FNanchor_124_124"></a><a href="#Footnote_124_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="mtop2">T<span class="smaller">HERE</span> is one name which, in reputation, occupies a pre-eminent
-position in philosophy, belonging to this period&mdash;Francis Bacon. But,
-for ourselves, for whom true ethical and humanitarian principles have
-a much deeper significance than mere mental force undirected to the
-highest aims of truth and of justice, the name of the modern assertor
-of the truths of Vegetarianism will challenge greater reverence than
-even that of the author of the <i>New Instrument</i>.</p>
-
-<p>That Bacon should exhibit himself in the character of an advocate
-of the rights of the lower races is hardly to be expected from the
-selfish and unscrupulous promoter of his own private interests at the
-expense at once of common gratitude and common feeling. His remarks on
-Vivisection (where he questions whether experiments on human beings
-are defensible, and suggests the limitation of scientific torture to
-the non-human races)<a name="FNanchor_125_125" id="FNanchor_125_125"></a><a href="#Footnote_125_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a> are, in fact, sufficient evidence of his
-indifferentism to so unselfish an object as the advocacy of the claims
-of our defenceless dependants. When we consider his unusual sagacity
-in exposing the absurd quasi-scientific methods of his predecessors,
-and of the prevailing (so-called) philosophical system and the many
-profound remarks to be found in his writings, it must be added that we
-are reluctantly compelled to believe that the opinions elsewhere which
-he publishes inconsistent with those principles were inspired by that
-notorious servility and courtiership by which he flattered the absurd
-and pedantic dogmatism of one of the most contemptible of kings.</p>
-
-<p>One passage there is, however, in his writings which seems to give us
-hope that this eminent compromiser was not altogether insensible to
-higher and better feeling:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Nature has endowed man with a noble and excellent principle of
-compassion, which extends [? ought to extend] itself also to the
-dumb animals&mdash;whence this compassion has some resemblance to
-that of a prince towards his subjects. And it is certain that the
-noblest souls are the most extensively compassionate, for narrow
-and degenerate minds think that compassion belongs not to them; but
-a great soul, the noblest part of creation, is ever compassionate.
-Thus, under the old laws, there were numerous precepts (not merely
-ceremonial) enjoining mercy&mdash;for example, the not eating of
-flesh with the blood, &amp;c. So, also, the sects of the Essenes and
-Pythagoreans totally abstained from flesh, as they do also to this
-day, with an inviolate religion, in some parts of the empire of the
-Mogul [Hindustan]. Nay, the Turks, though a savage nation, both in
-their descent and discipline, give alms to the dumb animals, and
-suffer them not to be tortured.”<a name="FNanchor_126_126" id="FNanchor_126_126"></a><a href="#Footnote_126_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>If Bacon had lived longer (he died in 1626) we may entertain the hope
-that the powerful arguments of his illustrious contemporary might have
-inspired him with more sound and satisfactory ideas on Dietetics than
-the somewhat crude ones which he published in his <i>De Augmentis</i> (iv.,
-2). As for Medicine, he had, reasonably enough, not conceived a high
-opinion of the methods of its ordinary professors. He says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Medicine has been more professed than laboured, and more laboured
-than advanced; rather circular than progressive; for I find great
-repetition, and but little new matter in the writers of Physic.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XV_RAY">XV.<br />
-<span class="s5">RAY. 1627&ndash;1705.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">J<span class="smaller">OHN</span> R<span class="smaller">AY</span>, the founder of Botanical and, only in little less degree, of
-Zoological Science, was an <i>alumnus</i> of the University of Cambridge. He
-was elected Fellow of Trinity College in 1649, and Lecturer in Greek
-in the following year. While at Cambridge he formed a collection of
-plants growing in the neighbourhood, a catalogue of which he published
-in 1660. Three years later, with his friend Francis Willoughby, he
-travelled over a large part of Europe, as during his academical life
-he had traversed the greater part of these islands, in pursuit of
-botanical and zoological science&mdash;an account of which tour he published
-in 1673.</p>
-
-<p>He had been one of the first Fellows of the recently founded Royal
-Society. In 1682 appeared his <i>New Method of Plants</i>, which formed a
-new era in botany, or rather, which was the first attempt at making
-it a real science. It is the basis of the subsequent classification
-of Jussieu, which is still received; and its author was the first to
-propose the division of plants into <i>monocotyledons</i> and <i>dicotyledons</i>.</p>
-
-<p>His principal work is the <i>Historia Plantarum</i>, 1686&ndash;1704.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span> “In it
-he collected and arranged all the species of plants which had been
-described by botanists. He enumerated 18,625 species. Haller, Sprengel,
-Adamson, and others speak of this work as being the produce of immense
-labour, and as containing much acute criticism.”</p>
-
-<p>What, however, is more interesting to us is the fact that “in zoology
-Ray ranks almost as high as in botany, and his works on this subject
-are even more important, as they still, in great measure, preserve
-their utility. Cuvier says that ‘they may be considered as the
-foundation of modern zoology, for naturalists are obliged to consult
-them every instant for the purpose of clearing up the difficulties
-which they meet with in the works of Linnæus and his copyists.’”</p>
-
-<p>Between 1676&ndash;1686 appeared <i>Ornithologia</i> and <i>Historia Piscium</i>,
-the materials of which had been left him by his friend Willoughby.
-To his extraordinary erudition and industry the world was indebted
-for <i>A Methodical Synopsis of Quadrupeds</i> as well as a very valuable
-history of Insects. Conspicuous amongst his merits are his accuracy
-of observation and his philosophical method of classification. With
-others, Buffon is largely indebted to the most meritorious of the
-pioneers of zoological knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>Ray has delivered his profession of faith in the superiority and
-excellence of the non-flesh diet in the following eloquent passage
-which has been quoted with approval by his friend John Evelyn:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The use of plants is all our life long of that universal
-importance and concern that we can neither live nor subsist with
-any decency and convenience, or be said, indeed, to live at
-all without them. Whatsoever food is necessary to sustain us,
-whatsoever contributes to delight and refresh us, is supplied and
-brought forth out of that plentiful and abundant store. And ah! [he
-exclaims] how much more innocent, sweet, and healthful is a table
-covered with those than with all the reeking flesh of butchered and
-slaughtered animals. Certainly man by nature was never made to be
-a carnivorous animal, nor is he armed at all for prey and rapine,
-with jagged and pointed teeth and crooked claws sharpened to rend
-and tear, but with gentle hands to gather fruit and vegetables, and
-with teeth to chew and eat them.”<a name="FNanchor_127_127" id="FNanchor_127_127"></a><a href="#Footnote_127_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XVI_EVELYN">XVI.<br />
-<span class="s5">EVELYN. 1620&ndash;1706.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">J<span class="smaller">OHN</span> E<span class="smaller">VELYN</span>, the representative of the more estimable part of the
-higher middle life of his time, who has so eloquently set forth the
-praises of the vegetable diet, also claims with Ray the honour of
-having first excited, amongst the opulent classes of his countrymen,
-a rational taste for botanical knowledge. Especially meritorious and
-truly patriotic was his appeal to the owners of land, by growing trees
-to provide the country with useful as well as ornamental timber for the
-benefit of posterity. He was one of the first to treat gardening and
-planting in a scientific manner; and his own cultivation of exotic and
-other valuable plants was a most useful example too tardily followed by
-ignorant or selfish land<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>lords of those and succeeding times. It would
-have been well indeed for the mass of the people of these islands,
-had the owners of landed property cared to develope the teaching
-of Evelyn by stocking the country with various fruit trees, and so
-supplied at once an easy and wholesome food. <i>O fortunatos nimium, sua
-si bona nôrint, Agricolas!... Fundit humo facilem victum justissima
-Tellus.</i><a name="FNanchor_128_128" id="FNanchor_128_128"></a><a href="#Footnote_128_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a></p>
-
-<p>The family of Evelyn was settled at Wooton, in Surrey. During the
-struggle between the Parliament and the Court he went abroad, and
-travelled for some years in France and in Italy, where he seems to have
-employed his leisure in a more refined and useful way than is the wont
-of most of his travelling countrymen. He returned home in 1651. At the
-foundation of the Royal Society, some ten years later, Evelyn became
-one of its earliest Fellows. His first work was published in 1664,
-<i>Sylva; or, a Discourse of Forest Trees and the Propagation of Timber</i>.
-Its immediate cause was the application of the Naval Commissioners to
-the Royal Society for advice in view of the growing scarcity of timber,
-especially of oak, in England. A large quantity of the more valuable
-wood now existing is the practical outcome of his timely publication.</p>
-
-<p>In 1675, appeared his <i>Terra: a Discourse of the Earth Relating to the
-Culture and the Improvement of it, to Vegetation and the Propagation
-of Plants</i>. The book by which he is most popularly known is his <i>Diary
-and Correspondence</i>, one of the most interesting productions of the
-kind. Besides its value as giving an insight into the manner of life
-in the fashionable society of the greater part of the seventeenth
-century, it is of importance as an independent chronicle of the public
-events of the day. The work which has the most interest and value for
-us is his <i>Acetaria</i> (Salads, or Herbs eaten with vinegar), in which
-the author professes his faith in the truth and excellence of the
-Vegetarian diet. Unfortunately, according to the usual perversity of
-literary enterprise, it is one of those few books which, representing
-some profounder truth, are nevertheless the most neglected by those who
-undertake to supply the mental and moral needs of the reading public.</p>
-
-<p>Evelyn held many high posts under the varying Governments of the day;
-and being, by tradition and connexion, attached to the monarchical
-party, he attracted (contrary to the general experience) the grateful
-recognition of the restored dynasty.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Having adduced other arguments for abstinence from flesh, Evelyn
-continues:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“And now, after all we have advanced in favour of the herbaceous
-diet, there still emerges another inquiry, viz., whether the use of
-crude herbs and plants is so wholesome as is alleged? What opinion
-the prince of physicians had of them we shall see hereafter; as
-also what the sacred records of olden times seem to infer, before
-there were any flesh-shambles in the world; together with the
-reports of such as are often conversant among many nations and
-people, who, to this day, living on herbs and roots, arrive to
-an incredible age in constant health and vigour, which, whether
-attributable to the air and climate, custom, constitution, &amp;c.,
-should be inquired into.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Cardan&mdash;the pseudo-savant of the sixteenth century&mdash;had written, it
-seems, in favour of flesh-meat. Evelyn informs us that:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“This, [the alleged superiority of flesh] his learned antagonist,
-utterly denies. Whole nations&mdash;flesh devourers, such as the
-farthest northern&mdash;become heavy, dull, inactive, and much more
-stupid than the southern; and such as feed more on plants are more
-acute, subtle, and of deeper penetration. Witness the Chaldeans,
-Assyrians, Egyptians, &amp;c. And he further argues from the short
-lives of most carnivorous animals, compared with grass feeders, and
-the ruminating kind, as the Hart, Camel, and the longævus Elephant,
-and other feeders on roots and vegetables.</p>
-
-<p>“As soon as old Parr came to change his simple homely diet to
-that of the Court and Arundel House, he quickly sank and drooped
-away; for, as we have shewn, the stomach easily concocts plain and
-familiar food, but finds it a hard and difficult task to vanquish
-and overcome meats of different substances. Whence we so often see
-temperate and abstemious persons of a collegiate diet [of a distant
-age, we must suppose] very healthy; husbandmen and laborious
-people more robust and longer-lived than others of an uncertain,
-extravagant habit.”</p></div>
-
-<p>He appeals to the biblical reverence of his readers, and tells them:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Certain it is, Almighty God ordaining herbs and fruit for the food
-of man, speaks not a word concerning flesh for two thousand years;
-and when after, by the Mosaic constitution, there were distinctions
-and prohibitions about the legal uncleanness of animals, plants
-of what kind soever were left free and indifferent for everyone
-to choose what best he liked. And what if it was held indecent
-and unbecoming the excellency of man’s nature, before sin entered
-and grew enormously wicked, that any creature should be put to
-death and pain for him who had such infinite store of the most
-delicious and nourishing fruit to delight, and the tree of life to
-sustain him? Doubtless there was no need of it. Infants sought the
-mother’s nipples as soon as born, and when grown and able to feed
-themselves, ran naturally to fruit, and still will choose to eat it
-rather than flesh, and certainly might so persist to do, did not
-Custom prevail even against the very dictates of Nature.<a name="FNanchor_129_129" id="FNanchor_129_129"></a><a href="#Footnote_129_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a></p>
-
-<p>“And now to recapitulate what other prerogatives the hortulan
-provision has been celebrated for besides its antiquity, and the
-health and longevity of the antediluvians&mdash;viz., that temperance,
-frugality, leisure, ease, and innumerable other virtues and
-advantages which accompany it, are no less attributable to it. Let
-us hear our excellent botanist, Mr. Ray.”</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He then quotes the profession of faith of the father of English
-botany and zoology; and goes on eloquently to expatiate on the varied
-pleasures of a non-flesh and fruit diet:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“To this might we add that transporting consideration, becoming
-both our veneration and admiration, of the infinitely wise and
-glorious Author of Nature, who has given to plants such astonishing
-properties; such fiery heat in some to warm and cherish; such
-coolness in others to temper and refresh; such pinguid juice to
-nourish and feed the body; such quickening acids to compel the
-appetite, and grateful vehicles to court the obedience of the
-palate; such vigour to renew and support our natural strength; such
-ravishing flavours and perfumes to recreate and delight us; in
-short, such spirituous and active force to animate and revive every
-part and faculty to all kinds of human and, I had almost said,
-heavenly capacity.</p>
-
-<p>“What shall we add more? Our gardens present us with them all: and,
-while the Shambles are covered with gore and stench, our Salads
-escape the insults of the summer-fly, purify and warm the blood
-against winter rage. Nor wants there variety in more abundance than
-any of the former ages could show.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Evelyn produces an imposing array of the “Old Fathers”:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“In short, so very many, especially of the Christian profession,
-advocate it [the bloodless food] that some even of the ancient
-fathers themselves have thought that the permission of eating flesh
-to Noah and his sons was granted them no otherwise than repudiation
-of wives was to the Jews&mdash;namely&mdash;for the hardness of their hearts
-and to satisfy a murmuring generation.”<a name="FNanchor_130_130" id="FNanchor_130_130"></a><a href="#Footnote_130_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>He is “persuaded that more blood has been shed between Christians”
-through addiction to the sanguinary food than by any other cause:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Not that I impute it <i>only</i> to our eating blood; but I
-sometimes wonder how it happened that so strict, so solemn, and
-famous a sanction&mdash;not upon a ceremonial account, but (as some
-affirm) a moral and perpetual one, for which also there seem
-to be fairer proofs than for most other controversies agitated
-amongst Christians&mdash;should be so generally forgotten, and give
-place to so many other impertinent disputes and cavils about
-superstitious fopperies which frequently end in blood and cutting
-of throats.”<a name="FNanchor_131_131" id="FNanchor_131_131"></a><a href="#Footnote_131_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a></p></div>
-
-<p class="mtop2">I<span class="smaller">T</span> is opportune here to refer to the sentiments of Evelyn’s
-contemporary and political and ecclesiastical opposite&mdash;the great
-Puritan poet and patriot&mdash;one of the very greatest names in all
-literature. Milton’s feeling, so far as he had occasion to express
-it, is quite in unison with the principles of dietetic reform, and in
-sympathy with aspirations after the more spiritual life.</p>
-
-<p>In one of his earliest writings, on the eve of the production of one
-of the finest poems of its kind in the English language&mdash;the <i>Ode to
-Chris<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>t’s Nativity</i>, composed at the age of twenty-one&mdash;he thus writes
-in Latin verse to his friend Charles Deodati, recommending the purer
-diet at all events to those who aspired to the nobler creations of
-poetry:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Simply let those, like him of Samos, live:</div>
- <div class="verse">Let herbs to them a <i>bloodless</i> banquet give.</div>
- <div class="verse">In beechen goblets let their beverage shine,</div>
- <div class="verse">Cool from the crystal spring their sober wine!</div>
- <div class="verse">Their youth should pass in innocence secure</div>
- <div class="verse">From stain licentious, and in manners pure.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">For these are sacred bards and, from above,</div>
- <div class="verse">Drink large infusions from the mind of Jove.”<a name="FNanchor_132_132" id="FNanchor_132_132"></a><a href="#Footnote_132_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>To readers of his master-piece the <i>Paradise Lost</i>, it is perhaps a
-work of supererogation to point out the charming passages in which he
-sympathetically describes the food of the Age of Innocence:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft3">“Savoury fruits, of taste to please</div>
- <div class="verse">True appetites.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In Raphael’s discourse with his terrestrial entertainers, the ethereal
-messenger utters a prophecy (as we may take it) of the future general
-adoption by our race of “fruit, man’s nourishment,” and we may
-interpret his intimation:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft4">“time may come when men</div>
- <div class="verse">With angels may participate, and find</div>
- <div class="verse">No inconvenient diet, nor too light fare.</div>
- <div class="verse">And from those corporal nutriments perhaps</div>
- <div class="verse">Your bodies may at last turn all to spirit,</div>
- <div class="verse">Improved by tract of time, and winged ascend</div>
- <div class="verse">Ethereal as we; or may, at choice,</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Here</i>, or in heavenly paradises, dwell,”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>as a picture of the true earthly paradise to be&mdash;“the Paradise of
-Peace.”</p>
-
-<p>With these exquisite pictures of the life of bloodless feasts and
-ambrosial food we may compare the fearful picture of the Court of
-Death, displayed in prospective vision before the terror-stricken
-gaze of the traditional progenitor of our species, where, amongst the
-occupants, the largest number are the victims of “intemperance in meats
-and drinks, which on the earth shall bring diseases dire.” In this
-universal lazar-house might be seen&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft9">“all maladies</div>
- <div class="verse">Of ghastly Spasm, or racking torture, Qualms</div>
- <div class="verse">Of heart-sick agony, all Feverous kinds,</div>
- <div class="verse">Convulsions, Epilepsies, fierce Catarrhs,</div>
- <div class="verse">Intestine Stone and Ulcer, Colic pangs,</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
- <div class="verse">Demoniac Phrensy, moping Melancholy,</div>
- <div class="verse">And moon-struck Madness, pining Atrophy,</div>
- <div class="verse">Marasmus, and wide-wasting Pestilence,</div>
- <div class="verse">Dropsies and Asthmas, and joint-racking Rheums.”<a name="FNanchor_133_133" id="FNanchor_133_133"></a><a href="#Footnote_133_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Very different, in other respects, from those of the author of
-the <i>History of the Reformation in England</i> the sentiments of his
-celebrated contemporary Bossuet, whose eloquence gained for him the
-distinguishing title of the “Eagle of Méaux,” as to the degrading
-character of the prevalent human nourishment in the Western world,
-are sufficiently remarkable to deserve some notice. The <i>Oraisons
-Funêbres</i> and, particularly, his <i>Discours sur L’Histoire Universelle</i>
-have entitled him to a high rank in French literature. But a single
-passage in the last work, we shall readily admit, does more credit to
-his heart than his most eloquent efforts in oratory or literature do
-to his intellect. That, in common with other theologians, Catholic and
-Protestant, he has thought it necessary to assume the intervention of
-the Deity to sanction the sustenance of human life by the destruction
-of other innocent life, does not affect the weight of intrinsic
-evidence derivable from the natural feeling as to the debasing
-influence of the Slaughter-House. It is thus that he, impliedly at
-least, condemns the barbarous practice:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Before the time of the Deluge the nourishment which without
-violence men derived from the fruits which fell from the trees
-of themselves, and from the herbs which also ripened with equal
-ease, was, without doubt, some relic of the first innocence and
-of the gentleness (<i>douceur</i>) for which we were formed. Now to
-get food we have to shed blood in spite of the horror which it
-naturally inspires in us; and all the refinements of which we avail
-ourselves, in covering our tables, hardly suffice to disguise
-for us the bloody corpses which we have to devour to support
-life. But this is but the least part of our misery. Life, already
-shortened, is still further abridged by the savage violences which
-are introduced into the life of the human species. Man, whom in
-the first ages we have seen spare the life of other animals,
-is accustomed henceforward to spare the life not even of his
-fellow-men. It is in vain that God forbade, immediately after the
-Deluge, the shedding of human blood; in vain, in order to save some
-vestiges of the first mildness of our nature, while permitting the
-feeding on flesh did he prohibit consumption of the blood. Human
-murders multiplied beyond all calculation.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Bossuet, a few pages later, arrives at the necessary and natural
-consequence of the murder of other animals, when he records that “the
-brutalised human race could no longer rise to the true contemplation of
-intellectual things.”<a name="FNanchor_134_134" id="FNanchor_134_134"></a><a href="#Footnote_134_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XVII_BERNARD_DE_MANDEVILLE">XVII.<br />
-<span class="s5">BERNARD DE MANDEVILLE. 1670&ndash;1733.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">T<span class="smaller">HE</span> most paradoxical of moralists, born at Dort, in Holland. He was
-brought up to the profession of medicine, and took the degree of M.D.
-He afterwards settled and practised in London.</p>
-
-<p>It was in 1714 that he published his short poem called <i>The Grumbling
-Hive: or, Knaves Turned Honest</i>, to which he afterwards added long
-explanatory notes, and then republished the whole under the new and
-celebrated title of <i>The Fable of the Bees</i>. This work “which, however
-erroneous may be its views of morals and of society, is written in a
-proper style, and bears all the marks of an honest and sincere inquiry
-on an important subject, exposed its author to much obloquy, and met
-with answers and attacks.... It would appear that some of the hostility
-against this work, and against Mandeville generally, is to be traced to
-another publication, recommending the public licensing of ‘stews,’ the
-matter and manner of which are certainly exceptionable, though, at the
-same time, it must be stated that Mandeville earnestly and with seeming
-sincerity commends his plan as a means of diminishing immorality, and
-that he endeavoured, so far as lay in his power, by affixing a high
-price and in other ways, to prevent the work from having a general
-circulation.” In fact, Mandeville is one of those injudicious but
-well-meaning reformers who, by their propensity to perverse paradox,
-have injured at once their reputation and their usefulness for after
-times.</p>
-
-<p>A second part of <i>The Fable</i> appeared at a later period. Amongst other
-numerous writings were two entitled, <i>Free Thoughts on Religion, the
-Church, and National Happiness</i>, and <i>An Enquiry into the Origin of
-Honour</i>, and the <i>Usefulness of Christianity in War</i>. He appears to
-have been enabled to pursue his literary career in great measure by the
-liberality of his Dutch friends, and he was a constant guest of the
-first Earl of Macclesfield. “<i>The Fable of the Bees; or, Private Vices
-Public Benefits</i> may be received in two ways,” says the writer in the
-<i>Penny Cyclopædia</i>, whom we have already quoted,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span> “as a satire on men,
-and as a theory of society and national prosperity. So far as it is a
-satire, it is sufficiently just and pleasant, but received in its more
-ambitious character of a theory of society, it is altogether worthless.
-It is Mandeville’s object to show that national greatness depends on
-the prevalence of fraud and luxury; and for this purpose he supposes
-‘a vast hive of bees’ possessing in all respects institutions similar
-to those of men; he details the various frauds, similar to those among
-men, practised by bees one upon another in various professions....
-His hive of bees having thus become wealthy and great, he afterwards
-supposes a mutual jealousy of frauds to arise, and Fraud to be, by
-common consent, dismissed; and he again assumes that wealth and luxury
-immediately disappear, and that the greatness of the society is gone.”
-For our part, in place of “greatness,” we should have rather written
-<i>misery</i>, as far as concerns the mass of communities.</p>
-
-<p>Strange, as it may appear, that views of this kind should be seriously
-put forth, “it is yet more so that they should come from one whose
-object always was, however strange the way in which he set about it, to
-promote good morals, for there is nothing in Mandeville’s writings to
-warrant the belief that he sought to encourage vice.”<a name="FNanchor_135_135" id="FNanchor_135_135"></a><a href="#Footnote_135_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a></p>
-
-<p>Mandeville, like Swift, in the piece entitled <i>An Argument against
-Abolishing Christianity</i>; or like De Foe, in his <i>Shortest Way with the
-Dissenters</i>, which were taken <i>au sérieux</i> almost universally at the
-time of their appearance, may have used the style of grave irony, so
-far as the larger portion of his Fable is concerned, for the purpose of
-making a stronger impression on the public conscience. If such were his
-purpose, the irony is so profound that it has missed its aim. Yet that
-his purpose was true and earnest is sufficiently evident in his opinion
-of the practice of slaughtering for food:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I have often thought [writes Mandeville] if it was not for the
-tyranny which Custom usurps over us, that men of any tolerable
-good nature could never be reconciled to the killing of so many
-animals for their daily food, so long as the bountiful Earth so
-plentifully provides them with varieties of vegetable dainties. I
-know that Reason excites our compassion but faintly, and therefore
-I do not wonder how men should so little commiserate such imperfect
-creatures as cray-fish, oysters, cockles, and, indeed, all fish in
-general, as they are mute, and their inward formation, as well as
-outward figure, vastly different from ours: they express themselves
-unintelligently to us, and therefore ’tis not strange that their
-grief should not affect our understanding which it cannot reach;
-for nothing stirs us to pity so effectually as when the symptoms of
-misery strike immediately upon our senses, and I have seen people
-moved at the noise a live lobster makes upon the spit who could
-have killed half a dozen fowls with pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>“But in such perfect animals as Sheep and Oxen, in whom the heart,
-the brain, and the nerves differ so little from ours, and in whom
-the separation of the spirits from the blood, the organs of sense,
-and, consequently, feeling itself, are the same as they are in
-human creatures, I cannot imagine how a man not hardened in blood
-and massacre, is able to see a violent death, and the pangs of it,
-without concern.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“In answer to this [he continues], most people will think it
-sufficient to say that things being allowed to be made for the
-service of man, there can be no cruelty in putting creatures to the
-use they were designed for,<a name="FNanchor_136_136" id="FNanchor_136_136"></a><a href="#Footnote_136_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a> but I have heard men make this
-reply, while the nature within them has reproached them with the
-falsehood of the assertion.</p>
-
-<p>“There is of all the multitude not one man in ten but will own
-(if he has not been brought up in a slaughter-house) that of all
-trades he could never have been a <i>butcher</i>; and I question whether
-ever anybody so much as killed a chicken without reluctancy the
-first time. Some people are not to be persuaded to taste of any
-creatures they have daily seen and been acquainted with while they
-were alive; others extend their scruples no further than to their
-own poultry, and refuse to eat what they fed and took care of
-themselves; yet all of them feed heartily and without remorse on
-beef, mutton, and fowls when they are bought in the market. In this
-behaviour, methinks, there appears something like a <i>consciousness
-of guilt</i>; it looks as if they endeavoured to save themselves from
-the imputation of a crime (which they know sticks somewhere) by
-removing the cause of it as far as they can from themselves; and I
-discover in it some strong marks of primitive pity and innocence,
-which all the arbitrary power of Custom, and the violence of
-Luxury, have not yet been able to conquer.”<a name="FNanchor_137_137" id="FNanchor_137_137"></a><a href="#Footnote_137_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XVIII_GAY">XVIII.<br />
-<span class="s5">GAY. 1688&ndash;1732.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">T<span class="smaller">HE</span> intimate friend of Pope and Swift is best known by his charming
-and instructive <i>Fables</i>. He was born at Barnstaple, in Devonshire,
-and belonged to the old family of the Le Gays of that county. His
-father, reduced in means, apprenticed him to a silk mercer in the
-Strand, London, in whose employment he did not long remain. The first
-of his poems, <i>Rural Sports</i>, appeared in 1711. In the following year
-he became secretary to the Duchess of Monmouth, and he served for a
-short time as secretary to the English embassy in Hanover. His next
-work was his <i>Shepherd’s Week, in Six Pastorals</i>, in which he ridicules
-the sentimentality of the “pastorals” of his own and preceding age. It
-contains much naturalness as well as humour, and it was the precursor
-of Crabbe’s rural sketches. In 1726 he published the most successful of
-his works, the <i>Beggars’ Opera</i>&mdash;the idea of which had been suggested
-to him by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span> the Dean of St. Patrick’s. It was received with unbounded
-applause, and it originated the (so-called) English opera, which for a
-time supplanted the Italian.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Fables</i> first appeared in 1726. They were supplemented afterwards
-by others, and the volume was dedicated to the young Duke of
-Cumberland, famous in after years by his suppression of the Highland
-rising of 1745. Gay’s death, which happened suddenly, called forth the
-sincere laments of his devoted friends Swift and Pope. The former, in
-his letters, frequently refers to his loss with deep feeling; and Pope
-has characterised him as&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Of manners gentle, of affections mild&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">In wit a man, simplicity a child.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Of his <i>Fables</i>&mdash;the best in the language&mdash;one of the most interesting
-is the well-known <i>Hare and Many Friends</i>, in which he seems to record
-some of his own experiences. <i>The Court of Death</i>, suggested probably
-by Milton’s fine passage in the <i>Paradise Lost</i>, is one of his most
-forcible. When the principal Diseases have severally advanced their
-claims to pre-eminence, Death calls upon <i>Intemperance</i>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“All spoke their claim, and hoped the wand.</div>
- <div class="verse">Now expectation hushed the band,</div>
- <div class="verse">When thus the monarch from the throne:</div>
- <div class="verse">Merit was ever modest known&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">What! no physician speak his right!</div>
- <div class="verse">None here? But fees their toils requite.</div>
- <div class="verse">Let then Intemperance take the wand,</div>
- <div class="verse">Who fills with gold their jealous hand.</div>
- <div class="verse">You, Fever, Gout, and all the rest</div>
- <div class="verse">(Whom wary men as foes detest)</div>
- <div class="verse">Forego your claim. No more pretend&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Intemperance is esteemed a friend.</div>
- <div class="verse">He shares their mirth, their social joys,</div>
- <div class="verse">And as a courted guest destroys.</div>
- <div class="verse">The charge on him must justly fall</div>
- <div class="verse">Who finds employment for you all.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is in the following fable that Gay especially satirises the
-sanguinary diet:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Pythagoras rose at early dawn,</div>
- <div class="verse">By soaring meditation drawn;</div>
- <div class="verse">To breathe the fragrance of the day,</div>
- <div class="verse">Through flow’ry fields he took his way.</div>
- <div class="verse">In musing contemplation warm,</div>
- <div class="verse">His steps misled him to a farm:</div>
- <div class="verse">Where, on the ladder’s topmost round,</div>
- <div class="verse">A peasant stood. The hammer’s sound</div>
- <div class="verse">Shook the weak barn. ‘Say, friend, what care</div>
- <div class="verse">Calls for thy honest labour there?’</div>
- </div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“The clown, with surly voice, replies:</div>
- <div class="verse">‘Vengeance aloud for justice cries.</div>
- <div class="verse">This kite, by daily rapine fed,</div>
- <div class="verse">My hens’ annoy, my turkeys’ dread,</div>
- <div class="verse">At length his forfeit life hath paid.</div>
- <div class="verse">See on the wall his wings displayed,</div>
- <div class="verse">Here nailed, a terror to his kind.</div>
- <div class="verse">My fowls shall future safety find,</div>
- <div class="verse">My yard the thriving poultry feed,</div>
- <div class="verse">And my barn’s refuse fat the breed.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“‘Friend,’ says the Sage, ‘the doom is wise&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">For public good the murderer dies.</div>
- <div class="verse">But if these tyrants of the air</div>
- <div class="verse">Demand a sentence so severe,</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Think how the glutton, man, devours;</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>What bloody feasts regale his hours!</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>O impudence of Power and Might!</i></div>
- <div class="verse">Thus to condemn a hawk or kite,</div>
- <div class="verse">When thou, perhaps, carnivorous sinner,</div>
- <div class="verse">Had’st pullets yesterday for dinner.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“‘Hold!’ cried the clown, with passion heated,</div>
- <div class="verse">‘Shall kites and men alike be treated?</div>
- <div class="verse">When heaven the world with creatures stored,</div>
- <div class="verse">Man was ordained their sovereign lord.’</div>
- <div class="verse">‘Thus tyrants boast,’ the Sage replied,</div>
- <div class="verse">‘Whose murders spring from power and pride.</div>
- <div class="verse">Own then this man-like kite is slain</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Thy greater luxury to sustain</i>&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">For petty rogues submit to fate</div>
- <div class="verse">That great ones may enjoy their state.’”<a name="FNanchor_138_138" id="FNanchor_138_138"></a><a href="#Footnote_138_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This is not the only apologue in which the rhyming moralist exposes
-at once the inconsistency and the injustice of the human animal who,
-himself choosing to live by slaughter, yet hypocritically stigmatises
-with the epithets “cruel” and “bloodthirsty” those animals whom Nature
-has evidently <i>designed</i> to be predaceous. In <i>The Shepherd’s Dog and
-the Wolf</i> he represents the former upbraiding the ravisher of the
-sheepfolds for attacking “a weak, defenceless kind”:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“‘Friend,’ says the Wolf, ‘the matter weigh:</div>
- <div class="verse">Nature designed <i>us</i> beasts of prey.</div>
- <div class="verse">As such, when hunger finds a treat,</div>
- <div class="verse">’Tis necessary wolves should eat.</div>
- <div class="verse">If, mindful of the bleating weal,</div>
- <div class="verse">Thy bosom burn with real zeal,</div>
- <div class="verse">Hence, and thy tyrant lord beseech&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">To <i>him</i> repeat thy moving speech.</div>
- <div class="verse">A wolf eats sheep but now and then&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Ten thousands are devoured by men</i>!</div>
- <div class="verse">An open foe may prove a curse,</div>
- <div class="verse">But a pretended friend is worse.’”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In <i>The Philosopher and the Pheasants</i> the same truth is conveyed with
-equal force:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Drawn by the music of the groves,</div>
- <div class="verse">Along the winding gloom he roves.</div>
- <div class="verse">From tree to tree the warbling throats</div>
- <div class="verse">Prolong the sweet, alternate notes.</div>
- <div class="verse">But where he passed he terror threw;</div>
- <div class="verse">The song broke short&mdash;the warblers flew:</div>
- <div class="verse">The thrushes chattered with affright,</div>
- <div class="verse">And nightingales abhorred his sight.</div>
- <div class="verse">All animals before him ran,</div>
- <div class="verse">To shun the hateful sight of man.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">‘Whence is this dread of every creature?</div>
- <div class="verse">Fly they our figure or our nature?’</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">As thus he walked, in musing thought,</div>
- <div class="verse">His ear imperfect accents caught.</div>
- <div class="verse">With cautious step, he nearer drew,</div>
- <div class="verse">By the thick shade concealed from view.</div>
- <div class="verse">High on the branch a Pheasant stood,</div>
- <div class="verse">Around her all her listening brood:</div>
- <div class="verse">Proud of the blessings of her nest,</div>
- <div class="verse">She thus a mother’s care expressed:&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">‘No dangers here shall circumvent;</div>
- <div class="verse">Within the woods enjoy content.</div>
- <div class="verse">Sooner the hawk or vulture trust</div>
- <div class="verse">Than man, of animals the worst.</div>
- <div class="verse">In him ingratitude you find&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">A vice peculiar to the kind.</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
- <div class="verse">The Sheep, whose annual fleece is dyed</div>
- <div class="verse">To guard his health and serve his pride,</div>
- <div class="verse">Forced from his fold and native plain,</div>
- <div class="verse">Is in the cruel shambles slain.</div>
- <div class="verse">The swarms who, with industrious skill,</div>
- <div class="verse">His hives with wax and honey fill,</div>
- <div class="verse">In vain whole summer days employed&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Their stores are sold, their race destroyed.</div>
- <div class="verse">What tribute from the Goose is paid?</div>
- <div class="verse">Does not her wing all science aid?</div>
- <div class="verse">Does it not lovers’ hearts explain,</div>
- <div class="verse">And drudge to raise the merchant’s gain?</div>
- <div class="verse">What now rewards this general use?</div>
- <div class="verse">He takes the quills and eats the Goose!’”</div>
- <div class="verse">&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In another parable Gay, in some sort, gives the victims of the Shambles
-their revenge:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Against an elm a Sheep was tied:</div>
- <div class="verse">The butcher’s knife in blood was dyed&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">The patient flock, in silent fright,</div>
- <div class="verse">From far beheld the horrid sight.</div>
- <div class="verse">A savage Boar, who near them stood,</div>
- <div class="verse">Thus mocked to scorn the fleecy brood:&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">‘All cowards should be served like you.</div>
- <div class="verse">See, see, your murderer is in view:</div>
- <div class="verse">With purple hands and reeking knife,</div>
- <div class="verse">He strips the skin yet warm with life.</div>
- <div class="verse">Your quartered sires, your bleeding dams,</div>
- <div class="verse">The dying bleat of harmless lambs,</div>
- <div class="verse">Call for revenge. O stupid race!</div>
- <div class="verse">The heart that wants revenge is base.’</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">‘I grant,’ an ancient Ram replies,</div>
- <div class="verse">‘We bear no terror in our eyes.</div>
- <div class="verse">Yet think us not of soul so tame,</div>
- <div class="verse">Which no repeated wrongs inflame&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Insensible of every ill,</div>
- <div class="verse">Because we want thy tusks to kill&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Know, <i>those who violence pursue</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Give to themselves the vengeance due</i>,</div>
- <div class="verse">For in these massacres they find</div>
- <div class="verse">The two chief plagues that waste mankind&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Our skin supplies the wrangling bar:</div>
- <div class="verse">It wakes their slumbering sons to war.</div>
- <div class="verse">And well Revenge may rest contented,</div>
- <div class="verse">Since drums and parchment were invented.’”<a name="FNanchor_139_139" id="FNanchor_139_139"></a><a href="#Footnote_139_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XIX_CHEYNE">XIX.<br />
-<span class="s5">CHEYNE. 1671&ndash;1743.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">O<span class="smaller">NE</span> of the most esteemed of English physicians, and one of the first
-medical authorities in this country who expressly wrote in advocacy of
-the reformed diet, descended from an old Scottish family. He studied
-medicine at Edinburgh&mdash;then and still a principal school of medicine
-and surgery&mdash;where he was a pupil of Dr. Pitcairn. At about the age of
-thirty he removed to London, was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society,
-and took his M.D. degree, commencing practice in the metropolis.</p>
-
-<p>The manner of life of a medical practitioner in the first half of
-the last century differed considerably from the present fashion. Not
-only personal inclination, but even professional interest, usually
-led him to frequent taverns and to indulge in all the excesses of
-“good living;” for in such boon companionship he most easily laid the
-foundation of his practice. Cheyne’s early habits of temperance thus
-gave way to the double temptation, and soon by this indulgence he
-contracted painful disorders which threatened his life. An enormous
-weight of flesh, intermittent fevers, shortness of breath, and lethargy
-combined to enfeeble and depress him.</p>
-
-<p>His first appearance in literature was the publication of his <i>New
-Theory of Fevers</i>, written in defence and at the suggestion of his old
-master Dr. Pitcairn, who was at war with his brethren on the nature of
-epidemics. The author, while in after life holding that it contained,
-though in a crude form, some valuable matter, wisely allowed it to fall
-into oblivion. The Mechanical or <i>Iatro-Mathematical</i> Theory, as it was
-called, of which Cheyne was one of the earliest and most distinguished
-expounders, by which it was attempted to apply the laws of Mechanics to
-vital phenomena, had succeeded to the principles of the old Chemical
-School. On the Continent the new theory had the support of the eminent
-authority of Boerhaave, Borelli, Sauvages, Hoffman, and others. The
-natural desire to discover some definite and simple <i>formulæ</i> of
-medical science lay at the root of this, as of many other hypotheses.
-Cheyne, himself, it is right to observe, ridiculed the notion that all
-vital processes can be explained on mechanical principles.</p>
-
-<p>In 1705 he published his <i>Philosophical Principles of Natural
-Religion</i>, a book which had some repute in its day, apparently, since
-it was in use in the Universities. Between this and his next essay in
-literature a long interval elapsed, during which he had to pay the
-penalty of his old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span> habits in apoplectic giddiness, violent headaches,
-and depression of spirits. Happily, it became for him the turning-point
-in his life, and eventually rendered him so useful an instructor of
-his kind. He had now arrived at a considerable amount of reputation
-in the profession. He seems to have been naturally of agreeable
-manners and of an amiable disposition, as well as of lively wit which,
-improved by study and reading, made him highly popular; and amongst his
-scientific and professional friends he was in great esteem. He had now,
-however&mdash;not too soon&mdash;determined to abandon his <i>bon-vivantism</i>, and
-speedily “even those who had shared the best part of my profusions,”
-he tells us, “who, in their necessities had been relieved by my false
-generosity, and, in their disorders, been relieved by my care, did now
-entirely relinquish and abandon me.” He retired into solitude in the
-country and, almost momentarily expecting the termination of his life,
-set himself to serious and earnest reflection on the follies and vices
-of ordinary living.</p>
-
-<p>At this time it seems that, although he had reduced his food to
-the smallest possible amount, he had not altogether relinquished
-flesh-meat. He repaired to Bath for the waters and, by living in the
-most temperate way and by constant and regular exercise, he seemed to
-have regained his early health. At Bath he devoted himself to cases
-of nervous diseases which most nearly concerned his own state, and
-which were most abundant at that fashionable resort. About the year
-1712, or in the forty-second year of his age, his health was fairly
-re-established, and he began to relax in the milk and vegetable regimen
-which he had previously adopted.</p>
-
-<p>His next publication was <i>An Essay on the Gout and Bath Waters</i> (1720),
-which passed through seven editions in six years. In it he commends the
-vegetable diet, although not so radically as in his latest writings.
-His relaxation of dietetic reform quickly brought back his former
-maladies, and he again suffered severely. During the next ten or
-twelve years he continued to increase in corpulency, until he at last
-reached the enormous weight of thirty-two stones, and he describes his
-condition at this time as intolerable.<a name="FNanchor_140_140" id="FNanchor_140_140"></a><a href="#Footnote_140_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a> In 1725 he left Bath for
-London, to consult his friend Dr. Arbuthnot, whose advice probably
-renewed and confirmed his old inclination for the rational mode of
-living. At all events, within two years, by a strict adherence to the
-milk and vegetable regimen his maladies finally disappeared; nor did he
-afterwards suffer by any relapse into dietetic errors.</p>
-
-<p>In the preceding year had appeared his first important and original<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
-work&mdash;his well-known <i>Essay of Health and a Long Life</i>. In the preface
-he declares that it is published for the benefit of those weakly
-persons who</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“are able and willing to abstain from everything hurtful, and to
-deny themselves anything their appetites craved, to conform to
-any rules for a tolerable degree of health, ease, and freedom
-of spirits. It is for these, and these only,” he proceeds, “the
-following treatise is designed. The robust, the luxurious, the
-pot-companions, &amp;c., have here no business; their time is not yet
-come.”</p></div>
-
-<p>It is generally acknowledged to be one of the best books on the
-subject. Haller pronounced it to be “the best of all the works bearing
-upon the health of sedentary persons and invalids.” It went through
-several editions in the space of two years, and in 1726 was enlarged by
-the author and translated by his friend and pupil John Robertson M.A.
-into Latin, and three or four editions were quickly exhausted in France
-and Germany. In this book, while reducing flesh-meat to a <i>minimum</i>,
-and insisting upon the necessity of abstinence from grosser food and of
-the use of vegetables only, at the morning and evening meals, he had
-not advanced as yet so far as to preach the truth in its entirety. He
-arrived at it only by slow and gradual conviction. Expatiating on the
-follies and miseries of <i>bon-vivantism</i>, he proceeds to affirm that&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“All those who have lived long, and without much pain, have lived
-abstemiously, poor, and meagre. Cornaro prolonged his life and
-preserved his senses by almost starving in his latter days; and
-some others have done the like. They have, indeed, thereby, in some
-measure, weakened their natural strength and qualified the fire
-and flux of their spirits, but they have preserved their senses,
-weakened their pains, prolonged their days, and procured themselves
-a gentle and quiet passage into another state.... All the rest
-will be insufficient without this [a frugal diet]; and this alone,
-without these [medicines, &amp;c.], will suffice to carry on life as
-long as by its natural flame it was made to last, and will make the
-passage easy and calm, as a taper goes out for want of fuel.”</p></div>
-
-<p>While the <i>Essay of Health</i> added greatly to his reputation with all
-thinking people, it also exposed him (as was to be expected) to a storm
-of small wit, ridicule, and misrepresentation:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Some good-natured and ingenious retainers to the Profession,” he
-tells us, “on the publication of my book on <i>Long Life and Health</i>,
-proclaimed everywhere that I was turned mere enthusiast, advised
-people to turn monks, to run into deserts, and to live on roots,
-herbs, and wild fruits! in fine, that I was, at bottom, a mere
-leveller, and for destroying order, ranks, and property, everyone’s
-but my own. But that sneer had its day, and vanished into smoke.
-Others swore that I had eaten my book, recanted my <i>doctrine</i> and
-<i>system</i> (as they were pleased to term it), and was returned again
-to the devil, the world, and the flesh. This joke I have also
-stood. I have been slain again and again, both in prose and verse;
-but, I thank God, I am still alive and well.”</p></div>
-
-<p>His next publication was his <i>English Malady: or, a Treatise of Nervous
-Diseases of all kinds</i>, which was also well received, going<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span> through
-four editions in two years. The incessant ridicule with which the
-<i>gourmands</i> had assailed his last work seems to have made him cautious
-in his next attempt to revolutionise dietetics; and he is careful to
-advertise the public that his milk and vegetable system was for those
-in weak health only. Denouncing the use of sauces and provocatives
-of unnatural appetite, “contrived not only to rouse a sickly stomach
-to receive the unnatural load, but to render a naturally good one
-incapable of knowing when it has enough,” he asks, “Is it any wonder
-then that the diseases which proceed from idleness and fulness of meat
-should increase in proportion?” He is bold enough by this time to
-affirm that, for the cure of many diseases, an entire abstinence from
-flesh is indisputably necessary:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“There are some cases wherein a vegetable and milk diet seems
-absolutely necessary, as in severe and habitual gouts, rheumatisms,
-cancerous, leprous, and scrofulous disorders; extreme nervous
-colics, epilepsies, violent hysteric fits, melancholy, consumptions
-(and the like disorders, mentioned in the preface), and towards the
-last stages of all chronic distempers. In such distempers <i>I have
-seldom seen such a diet fail of a good effect at last</i>.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Six years later, in 1740, appeared his <i>Essay on Regimen: together
-with Five Discourses Medical Moral and Philosophical, &amp;c.</i> Since his
-last exhortation to the world Cheyne had evidently convinced himself,
-by long experience as well as reflection, of the great superiority of
-the vegetable diet for all&mdash;sound as well as sick; and, accordingly,
-he speaks in strong and clear language of the importance of a general
-reform. As a consequence of this plain speaking, his new book met with
-a comparatively cold reception. Perhaps, too, its mathematical and
-somewhat abstruse tone may have affected its popularity. As regards its
-moral tone it was a new revelation, doubtless, for the vast majority of
-his readers. He boldly asserts:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The question I design to treat of here is, whether animal or
-vegetable food was, in the original design of the Creator, intended
-for the food of animals, and particularly of the human race. And I
-am almost convinced it <i>never was intended, but only permitted as
-a curse or punishment</i>.... At what time animal [flesh] food came
-first in use is not certainly known. He was a bold man who made the
-first experiment.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft2"><i>Illi robur et æs triplex</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Circa pectus erat.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>To see the convulsions, agonies, and tortures of a poor
-fellow-creature, whom they cannot restore nor recompense, dying to
-gratify luxury, and tickle callous and rank organs, must require a
-rocky heart, and a great degree of cruelty and ferocity. I cannot
-find any great difference, <i>on the foot of natural reason and
-equity only, between feeding on human flesh and feeding on brute
-animal flesh, except custom and example</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I believe some [more] rational creatures would suffer less in being
-fairly butchered than a strong Ox or red Deer; and, in natural
-morality and justice, the <i>degrees of pain</i> here make the essential
-difference, for as to other differences, <i>they are relative only</i>,
-and can be of no influence with an infinitely perfect Being. Did
-not use and example weaken this lesson, and make the difference,
-reason alone could never do it.”&mdash;<i>Essay on Regimen, &amp;c.</i> 8vo.
-1740. Pages 54 and 70.</p></div>
-
-<p>Noble and courageous words! Courageous as coming from an eminent member
-of a profession&mdash;which almost rivals the legal or even the clerical,
-in opposition to all change in the established order of things. In Dr.
-Cheyne’s days such interested or bigoted opposition was even stronger
-than in the present time. From the period of the final establishment of
-his health, about 1728, little is known of his life excepting through
-his writings. Almost all we know is, that he continued some fifteen
-years to practise in London and in Bath with distinguished reputation
-and success. He had married a daughter of Dr. Middleton of Bristol by
-whom he had several children. His only son was born in 1712. Amongst
-his intimate friends was the celebrated Dr. Arbuthnot, a Scotchman like
-himself, and we find him meeting Sir Hans Sloane and Dr. Mead at the
-bedside of his friend and relative Bishop Burnet. Both Dr. Arbuthnot
-and Sir Hans Sloane, we may remark in passing, have given evidence
-in favour of the purer living. His own diet he thus describes in his
-<i>Author’s Case</i>, written towards the end of his life:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“My regimen, at present, is milk, with tea, coffee, bread and
-butter, mild cheese, salads, fruits and seeds of all kinds, with
-tender roots (as potatoes, turnips, carrots), and, in short,
-<i>everything that has not life</i>, dressed or not, as I like it, <i>in
-which there is as much or a greater variety than in animal foods</i>,
-so that the stomach need never be cloyed. I drink no wine nor any
-fermented liquors, and am rarely dry, most of my food being liquid,
-moist, or juicy.<a name="FNanchor_141_141" id="FNanchor_141_141"></a><a href="#Footnote_141_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a> Only after dinner I drink either coffee
-or green tea, but seldom both in the same day, and sometimes a
-glass of soft, small cider. The thinner my diet, the easier, more
-cheerful and lightsome I find myself; my sleep is also the sounder,
-though perhaps somewhat shorter than formerly under my full animal
-diet; but then I am more alive than ever I was. As soon as I wake I
-get up. I rise commonly at six, and go to bed at ten.”</p></div>
-
-<p>As for the effect of this regimen, he tells us that “since that
-time [his last lapse] I thank God I have gone on in one constant
-tenor of diet, and enjoy as good health as, at my time of life
-(being now sixty), I or any man can reasonably expect.” When we
-remember the complicity of maladies of which he had been the victim
-during his adhesion to the orthodox mode of living, such experience
-is sufficiently significant. Some ten years later he records his
-experiences as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It is now about sixteen years since, for the last time, I entered
-upon a milk and vegetable diet. At the beginning of this period,
-this light food I took as my appetite directed, without any
-measures, and found myself easy under it. After some time, I found
-it became necessary to lessen this quantity, and I have latterly
-reduced it to one-half, at most, of what I at first seemed to
-bear; and if it should please God to spare me a few years longer,
-in order to preserve, in that case, that freedom and clearness
-which by his presence I now enjoy, I shall probably find myself
-obliged to deny myself one-half of my present daily sustenance,
-which, precisely, is three Winchester pints of new milk, and six
-ounces of biscuit, made without salt or yeast, baked in a quick
-oven.”<a name="FNanchor_142_142" id="FNanchor_142_142"></a><a href="#Footnote_142_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a>&mdash;[<i>Natural Method of Curing Diseases</i>, &amp;c., page 298;
-see also Preface to <i>Essay on Regimen</i>].</p></div>
-
-<p>The last production of Dr. Cheyne was his “<i>Natural Method of Curing
-the Diseases of the Body, and the Disorders of the Mind Depending
-on the Body</i>. In three parts. Part I.&mdash;General Reflections on the
-Economy of Nature in Animal Life. Part II.&mdash;The Means and Methods for
-Preserving Life and Faculties; and also Concerning the Nature and Cure
-of Acute, Contagious, and Cephalic Disorders. Part III.&mdash;Reflections
-on the Nature and Cure of Particular Chronic Distempers. 8vo. Strahan,
-London, 1742.” It is dedicated to the celebrated Lord Chesterfield, who
-records his grateful recognition of the benefits he had experienced
-from his methods. He writes: “I read with great pleasure your book,
-which your bookseller sent me according to your direction. The physical
-part is extremely good, and the metaphysical part <i>may be</i> so too, for
-what I know, and I believe it is, for as I look upon all metaphysics
-to be guess work of imagination, I know no imagination likelier to hit
-upon the right than yours, and I will take your guess against any other
-metaphysician’s whatsoever. That part which is founded upon knowledge
-and experience I look upon as a work of public utility, and for which
-the present age and their posterity may be obliged to you, if they will
-be pleased to follow it.” Lord Chesterfield, it will be seen below,
-was one of those more refined minds whose better conscience revolted
-from, even if they had not the courage or self-control to renounce, the
-Slaughter House.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Natural Method</i> its author considers as a kind of supplement
-to his last book, containing “the practical inferences, and the
-conclusions drawn from [its principles], in particular cases and
-diseases, confirmed by forty years’ experience and observation.”
-It is the most practical of all his works, and is full of valuable
-observations. Very just and useful is his rebuke of that sort of
-John-Bullism which affects to hold “good living” not only as harmless
-but even as a sort of merit&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“How it may be in other countries and religions I will not say, but
-among us good Protestants, abstinence, temperance, and moderation
-(at least in eating), are so far from being thought a virtue, and
-their contrary a vice, that it would seem that not eating the
-fattest and most delicious, and <i>to the top</i>, were the only vice
-and disease known among us&mdash;against which our parents, relatives,
-friends, and physicians exclaim with great vehemence and zeal. And
-yet, if we consider the matter attentively we shall find there is
-no such danger in abstinence as we imagine, but, on the contrary,
-the greatest abstinence and moderation nature and its external laws
-will suffer us to go into and practise for any time, will neither
-endanger our health, nor weaken our just thinking, be it ever so
-unlimited or unrestrained.... And it is a wise providence that
-Lent time falls out at that season which, if kept according to its
-original intention, in seeds and vegetables well dressed and not in
-rich high-dressed fish, would go a great way to preserve the health
-of the people in general, as well as dispose them to seriousness
-and reflection&mdash;so true it is that ‘godliness has the promise of
-this life, and of that which is to come,’ and it is very observable
-that in all civil and established religious worships hitherto
-known among polished nations Lents, days of abstinence, seasons of
-fasting and bringing down the brutal part of the rational being,
-have had a large share, and been reckoned an indispensable part
-of their worship and duty, except among a wrong-headed part of
-our Reformation, where it has been despised and ridiculed into a
-total neglect. And yet it seems not only natural and convenient for
-health, but strongly commended both in the Old and New Testament,
-and might allow time and proper disposition for more serious and
-weighty purposes. And this ‘Lent,’ or times of abstinence, is one
-reason of the cheerfulness or serenity of some Roman Catholic
-or Southern countries, which would be still more healthy and
-long-lived were it not for their excessive use of aromatics and
-opiates, which are the worst kind of dry drams, and the cause of
-their unnatural and unbridled lechery and shortness of life.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Denouncing the general practice of the Profession of encouraging their
-patients in indulging vitiated habits and tastes, he reminds them:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“That such physicians do not consider that they are accountable
-to the community, to their patients, to their conscience, and to
-their Maker, for every hour and moment they shorten and cut off
-their patients’ lives <i>by their immoral and murderous indulgence</i>:
-and the patients do not duly ponder that suicide (which this is
-in effect) is the most mortal and irremissible of all sins, and
-neither have sufficiently weighed the possibility that the patient,
-if not quickly cut off by both these preposterous means, may linger
-out miserably, and be twenty or thirty years a-dying, under these
-heart and wheel-breaking miseries thus exasperated; whereas, by the
-methods I propose, if they obtain not in time a perfect cure, yet
-they certainly lessen their pain, lengthen their days, and continue
-under the benign influence of ‘the Sun of Righteousness, who has
-healing in His wings,’ and, at worst, soften and lighten the
-anguish of their dissolution, as far as the nature of things will
-admit.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Not the least useful and instructive portions of his treatise are his
-references to the proper regimen for mental diseases and disordered
-brains, which, he reasonably infers, are best treated by the adoption
-of a light and pure dietary. He despairs, however, of the general
-recognition, or at least adoption, of so rational a method by the
-“faculty” or the public at large,</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Who do not consider that <i>nine parts in ten</i> of the whole mass
-of mankind are necessarily confined to this diet (of farinacea,
-fruits, &amp;c.), or pretty nearly to it, and yet live with the use of
-their senses, limbs, and faculties, without diseases or with but
-few, and those from accidents or epidemical causes; and that there
-have been nations, and now are numbers of tribes, who voluntarily
-confine themselves to vegetables only, ... and that there are whole
-villages in this kingdom whose inhabitants scarce eat animal food
-or drink fermented liquors a dozen times a year.”</p></div>
-
-<p>In regard to all nervous and brain diseases, he insists that the
-reformed diet would</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Greatly alleviate and render tolerable original distempers derived
-from diseased parents, and that it is absolutely necessary for the
-deep-thinking part of mankind, who would preserve their faculties
-ripe and pregnant to a green old age and to the last dregs of life;
-and that it is the true and real antidote and preservative from
-wrong-headedness, irregular and disorderly intellect and functions,
-from loss of the rational faculties, memory, and senses, as far
-as the ends of Providence and the condition of mortality will
-allow.”&mdash;(<i>Nat. Method</i>, page 90.)</p></div>
-
-<p>This benevolent and beneficent dietetic reformer, according to the
-testimony of an eye-witness, exemplified by his death the value of
-his principles&mdash;relinquishing his last breath easily and tranquilly,
-while his senses remained entire to the end. During his last illness
-he was attended by the famous David Hartley, noticed below. He was
-buried at Weston, near Bath. His character is sufficiently seen in his
-writings which, if they contain some metaphysical or other ideas which
-our reason cannot always endorse, in their <i>practical</i> teaching prove
-him to have been actuated by a true and earnest desire for the best
-interests of his fellow-men. One of the merits of Cheyne’s writings is
-his discarding the common orthodox <i>esoteric</i> style of his profession,
-who seem jealously to exclude all but the “initiated” from their sacred
-mysteries. One of his biographers has remarked upon this point that
-“there is another peculiarity about most of Dr. Cheyne’s writings
-which is worthy of notice. Although there are many passages that are
-quite unintelligible to the reader unless he possesses a considerable
-knowledge, not only of medicine but also of mathematics, yet there
-is no doubt but that the greater part of his works were intended for
-popular perusal, and in this undertaking he is one of the few medical
-writers who have been completely successful. His productions, which
-were much read and had an extensive influence in their day, procured
-him a considerable degree of reputation, not only with the public, but
-also with the members of his own profession. If they present to the
-reader no great discoveries (?) they possess the merit of putting more
-prominently forward some useful but neglected truths; and though now,
-probably, but little read, they contain much matter that is well worth
-studying, and have obtained for their author a respectable place in the
-history of medical literature.”<a name="FNanchor_143_143" id="FNanchor_143_143"></a><a href="#Footnote_143_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a></p>
-
-<p>Our notice of the author of the <i>Essay on Regimen</i>, &amp;c., would
-scarcely be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span> complete without some reference to his friendship with
-two distinguished characters&mdash;John Wesley and Samuel Richardson,<a name="FNanchor_144_144" id="FNanchor_144_144"></a><a href="#Footnote_144_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a>
-the author of <i>Pamela</i>. It was to Dr. Cheyne that Wesley, as he tells
-us in his journals, was indebted for his conversion to those dietetic
-principles to which he attributes, in great measure, the invigoration
-of his naturally feeble constitution, and which enabled him to undergo
-an amount of fatigue and toil, both mentally and bodily, seldom or
-never surpassed. Of Cheyne’s friendship for Richardson there are
-several memorials preserved in his familiar letters to that popular
-writer; and his free and naïve criticisms of his novels are not a
-little amusing. The novelist, it seems, was one of his patients,
-and that he was not always a satisfactory one, under the abstemious
-regimen, appears occasionally from the remonstrances of his adviser.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XX_POPE">XX.<br />
-<span class="s5">POPE. 1688&ndash;1744.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">T<span class="smaller">HE</span> most epigrammatic, and one of the most elegant, of poets. He was
-also one of the most precocious. His first production of importance
-was his <i>Essay on Criticism</i>, written at the age of twenty-one,
-although not published until two years later. But he had composed, we
-are assured, several verses of an Epic at the age of twelve; and his
-<i>Pastorals</i> was given to the world by a youth of sixteen. Its division
-into the Four Seasons is said to have suggested to Thomson the title of
-his great poem. The MS. passed through the hands of some distinguished
-persons, who loudly proclaimed the merits of the boy-poet.</p>
-
-<p>In the same year with his fine mock-heroic <i>Rape of the Lock</i> (1712)
-appeared <i>The Messiah</i>, in imitation of Isaiah and of Virgil (in his
-well-known <i>Eclogue</i> IV.), both of whom celebrate, in similar strains,
-the advent of a “golden age” to be. The “Sybilline” prophecy, which
-Pope supposes the Latin poet to have read, existed, it need scarcely
-be added, only in the imagination of himself and of the authorities on
-whom he relied. <i>Windsor Forest</i> (1713) deserves special notice as one
-of the earliest of that class of poems which derive their inspiration
-directly from Nature. It was the precursor of <i>The Seasons</i>, although
-the anti-barbarous feeling is less pronounced in the former. We find,
-however, the germs of that higher feeling which appears more developed
-in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span> the <i>Essay on Man</i>; and the following verses, descriptive of the
-usual “sporting” scenes, are significant:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“See! from the brake the whirring Pheasant springs,</div>
- <div class="verse">And mounts exulting on triumphant wings:</div>
- <div class="verse">Short is his joy; he feels the fiery wound,</div>
- <div class="verse">Flutters in blood, and panting beats the ground.</div>
- <div class="verse">Ah, what avail his glossy, varying dyes,</div>
- <div class="verse">His purple crest and scarlet-circled eyes&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">The vivid green his shining plumes unfold,</div>
- <div class="verse">His painted wings, and breast that flames with gold?</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">To plains with well-breathed beagles they repair,</div>
- <div class="verse">And trace the mazes of the circling Hare.</div>
- <div class="verse">Beasts, urged by us, their fellow-beasts pursue,</div>
- <div class="verse">And learn of man each other to undo.</div>
- <div class="verse">With slaughtering guns the unwearied fowler roves,</div>
- <div class="verse">When frosts have whitened all the naked groves,</div>
- <div class="verse">Where Doves, in flocks, the leafless trees o’ershade,</div>
- <div class="verse">And lonely Woodcocks haunt the watery glade&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">He lifts the tube, and level with his eye,</div>
- <div class="verse">Straight a short thunder breaks the frozen sky.</div>
- <div class="verse">Oft, as in airy rings they skim the heath,</div>
- <div class="verse">The clamorous Lapwings feel the leaden death:</div>
- <div class="verse">Oft, as the mounting Larks their notes prepare,</div>
- <div class="verse">They fall and leave their little lives in air.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>His <i>Epistle of Eloisa to Abelard</i> (a romantic version of a very
-realistic story), <i>Temple of Fame</i>, <i>Imitations of Chaucer</i>,
-translation of the <i>Iliad</i> (1713&ndash;1720)&mdash;characterised by Gibbon as
-having “every merit but that of likeness to its original”&mdash;an edition
-of Shakspere, <i>The Dunciad</i> (1728), translation of the <i>Odyssey</i>, are
-some of the works which attest his genius and industry. But it is with
-his <i>Moral Essays</i>&mdash;and in particular the <i>Essay on Man</i> (1732&ndash;1735),
-the most important of his productions&mdash;that we are especially concerned.</p>
-
-<p>As is pretty well known, these <i>Essays</i> owe their conception, in great
-part, to his intimate friend St. John Bolingbroke. Although the author
-by birth and, perhaps, still more from a feeling of pride which might
-make him reluctant to abandon an unfashionable sect (such it was at
-that time), belonged nominally to the Old Church, the theology and
-metaphysics of the work display little of ecclesiastical orthodoxy. The
-pervading principles of the <i>Essay on Man</i> are natural theology or,
-as Warburton styles it, “Naturalism” (<i>i.e.</i>, the putting aside human
-assertion for the study of the attributes of Deity through its visible
-manifestations) and Optimism.<a name="FNanchor_145_145" id="FNanchor_145_145"></a><a href="#Footnote_145_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The merits of the <i>Essay</i>, it must be added, consist not so much in the
-philosophy of the poem as a whole as in the many fine and true thoughts
-scattered throughout it, which the author’s epigrammatic terseness
-indelibly fixes in the mind. Of the whole poem the most valuable
-part, undoubtedly, is its ridicule of the common arrogant (pretended)
-belief that all other species on the earth have been brought into
-being for the benefit of the human race&mdash;an egregious fallacy, by the
-way, which, ably exposed as it has been over and over again, still
-frequently reappears in our popular theology and morals. To the writers
-and talkers of this too numerous class may be commended the rebukes of
-Pope:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Nothing is foreign&mdash;parts relate to whole:</div>
- <div class="verse">One all-extending, all-preserving soul</div>
- <div class="verse">Connects each being, greatest with the least&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Made beast in aid of man, and man of beast:</div>
- <div class="verse">All served, all serving&mdash;nothing stands alone.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Has God, thou fool, worked solely for thy good,</div>
- <div class="verse">Thy joy, thy pastime, thy attire, thy food?</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Is it for thee the Lark ascends and sings?</div>
- <div class="verse">Joy tunes his voice, joy elevates his wings.</div>
- <div class="verse">Is it for thee the Linnet pours his throat?</div>
- <div class="verse">Loves of his own and raptures swell the note.</div>
- <div class="verse">The bounding Steed you pompously bestride</div>
- <div class="verse">Shares with his lord the pleasure and the pride.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Know Nature’s children all divide her care,</div>
- <div class="verse">The fur that warms a monarch warmed a Bear.</div>
- <div class="verse">While Man exclaims, ‘See all things for my use!’</div>
- <div class="verse">‘See Man for mine!’ replies a pampered Goose.</div>
- <div class="verse">And just as short of reason he must fall,</div>
- <div class="verse">Who thinks <i>all made for one, not one for all</i>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>He then paints the picture of the “Times of Innocence” of the Past, or
-rather (as we must take it) of the Future:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“<i>No murder clothed him, and no murder fed.</i></div>
- <div class="verse">In the same temple&mdash;the resounding wood&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">All vocal beings hymned their equal God.</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
- <div class="verse">The shrine, with gore unstained, with gold undrest,</div>
- <div class="verse">Unbribed, unbloody, stood the blameless priest.</div>
- <div class="verse">Heaven’s attribute was universal care,</div>
- <div class="verse">And man’s prerogative to rule but spare.</div>
- <div class="verse">Ah, how unlike the man of times to come&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Of half that live the butcher and the tomb</i>!</div>
- <div class="verse">Who, foe to Nature, hears the general groan,</div>
- <div class="verse">Murders their species, and betrays his own.</div>
- <div class="verse">But just disease to luxury succeeds,</div>
- <div class="verse">And every death its own avenger breeds:</div>
- <div class="verse">The fury-passions from that blood began,</div>
- <div class="verse">And turned on man a fiercer savage, man.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Again, depicting the growth of despotism and superstition, and
-speculating as to&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Who first taught souls enslaved and realms undone</div>
- <div class="verse">The enormous faith of Many made for One?”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>he traces the gradual horrors of sacrifice beginning with other, and
-culminating in that of the human, species:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“She [Superstition] from the rending earth and bursting skies</div>
- <div class="verse">Saw gods descend, and fiends infernal rise:</div>
- <div class="verse">Here fixed the dreadful, there the blest, abodes&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Fear made her devils and weak Hope her gods&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Gods partial, changeful, passionate, unjust,</div>
- <div class="verse">Whose attributes were rage, revenge, or lust&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Such as the souls of cowards might conceive,</div>
- <div class="verse">And, formed like tyrants, tyrants would believe.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Altars grew marble then, and reeked with gore;</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Then first the Flamen tasted living food,</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Next his grim idol smeared with human blood</i>.</div>
- <div class="verse">With Heaven’s own thunders shook the earth below,</div>
- <div class="verse">And played the God an engine on his foe.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Whenever occasion arises, Pope fails not to stigmatise the barbarity of
-slaughtering for food; and the <i>sæva indignatio</i> urges him to upbraid
-his fellows with the slaughter of&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“The lamb thy riot dooms to bleed,</div>
- <div class="verse">&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Who licks the hand just raised to shed his blood.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>And, again, he expresses his detestation of the selfishness of our
-species who&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Destroy all creatures for their sport or gust.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>That all this was no mere affectation of feeling appears from his
-correspondence and contributions to the periodicals of the time:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I cannot think it extravagant,” he writes, “to imagine that
-mankind are no less, in proportion, accountable for the ill use
-of their dominion over the lower ranks of beings, than for the
-exercise of tyranny over their own species. The more entirely the
-inferior creation is submitted to our power, the more answerable
-we must be for our mismanagement of them; and the rather, as the
-very condition of Nature renders them incapable of receiving any
-recompense in another life for ill-treatment in this.”<a name="FNanchor_146_146" id="FNanchor_146_146"></a><a href="#Footnote_146_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Consistently with the expression of this true philosophy, he declares
-elsewhere that&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Nothing can be more shocking and horrid than one of our kitchens
-sprinkled with blood, and abounding with the cries of expiring
-victims, or with the limbs of dead animals scattered or hung up
-here and there. It gives one the image of a giant’s den in romance,
-bestrewed with scattered heads and mangled limbs.”<a name="FNanchor_147_147" id="FNanchor_147_147"></a><a href="#Footnote_147_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>The personal character of Pope, we may add, has of late been subjected
-to minute and searching criticism. Some meannesses, springing from an
-extreme anxiety for fame with after ages, have undoubtedly tarnished
-his reputation for candour. His excessive animosity towards his public
-or private enemies may be palliated in part, if not excused, by his
-well-known feebleness of health and consequent mental irritability.
-For the rest, he was capable of the most sincere and disinterested
-attachments; and not his least merit, in literature, is that in an age
-of servile authorship he cultivated literature not for place or pay,
-but for its own sake.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Amongst Pope’s intimate friends were Dr. Arbuthnot, Dean Swift,
-and Gay. The first of these, best known as the joint author with
-Pope and Swift of <i>Martinus Scriblerus</i>, a satire on the useless
-pedantry prevalent in education and letters, and especially as the
-author of the <i>History of John Bull</i> (the original of that immortal
-personification of beef, beer, and prejudice), published his <i>Essay
-Concerning Aliments</i>, in which the vegetable diet is commended as a
-preventive or cure of certain diseases, about the year 1730. Not the
-least meritorious of his works was an epitaph on the notorious Colonel
-Chartres&mdash;one of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span> the few epitaphs which are attentive less to custom
-than to truth, and, we may add, in marked contrast with that typical
-one on his unhistorical contemporary Captain Blifil.</p>
-
-<p>In the <i>Travels of Lemuel Gulliver</i> the reader will find the <i>sæva
-indignatio</i> of Swift&mdash;or, at all events, of the Houyhnhnms&mdash;amongst
-other things, launched against the indiscriminating diet of his
-countrymen:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I told him” [the Master-Horse], says Gulliver, “we fed on a
-thousand things which operated contrary to each other&mdash;that we
-eat when we are not hungry, and drink without the provocation of
-thirst ... that it would be endless to give him a catalogue of all
-diseases incident to human bodies, for they could not be fewer than
-five or six hundred, spread over every limb and joint&mdash;in short,
-every part, external and intestine, having diseases appropriated to
-itself&mdash;to remedy which there was a sort of people bred up among us
-in the profession or pretence of curing the sick.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Among the infinite variety of remedies and prescriptions, in the
-human <i>Materia Medica</i>, the astounded Houyhnhnm learns, are reckoned
-“serpents, toads, frogs, spiders, dead men’s flesh and bones, birds,
-beasts, fishes”&mdash;no mere travellers’ tales (it is perhaps necessary
-to explain), but sober fact, as any one may discover for himself by
-an examination of some of the received and popular medical treatises
-of the seventeenth century, in which the most absurd “prescriptions,”
-involving the most frightful cruelty, are recorded with all
-seriousness:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“My master, continuing his discourse, said there was nothing
-that rendered the Yahoos more odious than their undistinguishing
-appetite to devour everything that came in their way, whether
-herbs, roots, berries, the <i>corrupted flesh of animals, or all
-mingled together</i>; and that it was peculiar in their temper that
-they were fonder of what they could get by rapine or stealth at a
-greater distance than much better food provided for them at home.
-If their prey held out, they would eat till they were ready to
-burst.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Although unaccustomed to the better living, and finding it “insipid at
-first,” the human slave of the Houyhnhnm (a word which, by the way, in
-that language, means “the perfection of nature”) records as the result
-of his experience, in the first place, how little will sustain human
-life; and, in the second place, the fact of the superior healthfulness
-of the vegetable food.<a name="FNanchor_148_148" id="FNanchor_148_148"></a><a href="#Footnote_148_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a></p>
-
-<p>About this period or a little earlier, Philippe Hecquet, a French
-physician, published his <i>Traité des Dispenses du Carême</i> (“Treatise
-on Dispensations in Lent”), 1709, in which he gave in his adhesion
-to the principles of Vegetarianism&mdash;at all events, so far as health
-is concerned. He is mentioned by Voltaire, and is supposed to be the
-original of the doctor Sangrado of Le Sage.<a name="FNanchor_149_149" id="FNanchor_149_149"></a><a href="#Footnote_149_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a> If this conjecture
-have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span> any truth, the author of <i>Gil Blas</i> is open to the grave charge
-of misrepresentation, of sacrificing truth to effect, or (what is still
-worse and still more common) of pandering to popular prejudices.<a name="FNanchor_150_150" id="FNanchor_150_150"></a><a href="#Footnote_150_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXI_THOMSON">XXI.<br />
-<span class="s5">THOMSON. 1700&ndash;1748.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">I<span class="smaller">N</span> the long and terrible series of the Ages the distinguishing glory of
-the eighteenth century is its <i>Humanitarianism</i>&mdash;not visible, indeed,
-in legislation or in the teaching of the ordinarily-accredited guides
-of the public faith and morals, but proclaimed, nevertheless, by the
-great prophets of that era. As far as ordinary life was concerned,
-the last age is only too obnoxious to the charge of selfishness and
-heartlessness. Callousness to suffering, as regards the non-human
-species in particular, is sufficiently apparent in the common
-amusements and “pastimes” of the various grades of the community.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, if we compare the tone of even the common-place class of writers
-with that of the authors of quasi-scientific treatises of the preceding
-century&mdash;in which the most cold-blooded atrocities on the helpless
-victims of human ignorance and barbarity are prescribed for the
-composition of their medical <i>nostrums</i>, &amp;c., with the most unconscious
-audacity and ignoring of every sort of feeling&mdash;considerable advance is
-apparent in the slow onward march of the human race towards the goal of
-a true morality and religion.</p>
-
-<p>To the author of <i>The Seasons</i> belongs the everlasting honour of being
-the first amongst modern poets earnestly to denounce the manifold
-wrongs inflicted upon the subject species, and, in particular, the
-savagery inseparable from the Slaughter-House&mdash;for Pope did not publish
-his <i>Essay on Man</i> until four years after the appearance of <i>Spring</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>James Thomson, of Scottish parentage, came to London to seek his
-fortune in literature, at the age of 25. For some time he experienced
-the poverty and troubles which so generally have been the lot of
-young aspirants to literary, especially poetic, fame. <i>Winter</i>&mdash;which
-inaugurated a new school of poetry&mdash;appeared in March, 1726. That the
-publisher considered himself liberal in offering three guineas for the
-poem speaks little for the taste of the time; but that a better taste
-was coming into existence is also plain from the fact of its favourable
-reception, notwithstanding the obscurity of the author. Three editions
-appeared in the same year. <i>Summer</i>, his next venture, was published
-in 1727, and the (Four) <i>Seasons</i> in 1730, by subscription&mdash;387
-subscribers enrolling their names for copies at a guinea each.</p>
-
-<p>Natural enthusiasm, sympathy, and love for all that is really beautiful
-on Earth (a sort of feeling not to be appreciated by vulgar minds)
-forms his chief characteristic. But, above all, his sympathy with
-suffering in all its forms (see, particularly, his reflections after
-the description of the snowstorm in <i>Winter</i>), not limited by the
-narrow bounds of nationality or of species but extended to all innocent
-life&mdash;his indignation against oppression and injustice, are what most
-honourably distinguish him from almost all of his predecessors and,
-indeed, from most of his successors. <i>The Seasons</i> is the forerunner
-of <i>The Task</i> and the humanitarian school of poetry. <i>The Castle of
-Indolence</i> in the stanza of Spenser, has claims of a kind different
-from those of <i>The Seasons</i>; and the admirers of <i>The Faerie Queen</i>
-cannot fail to appreciate the merits of the modern romance. Besides
-these <i>chefs-d’œuvre</i> Thomson wrote two tragedies, <i>Sophonisba</i> and
-<i>Liberty</i>, the former of which, at the time, had considerable success
-upon the stage. In the number of his friends he reckoned Pope and
-Samuel Johnson, both of whom are said to have had some share in the
-frequent revisions which he made of his principal production.</p>
-
-<p>It is with his <i>Spring</i> that we are chiefly concerned, since it is in
-that division of his great poem that he eloquently contrasts the two
-very opposite diets. Singing the glories of the annual birth-time and
-general resurrection of Nature, he first celebrates</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft6">“The living Herbs, profusely wild,</div>
- <div class="verse">O’er all the deep-green Earth, beyond the power</div>
- <div class="verse">Of botanist to number up their tribes,</div>
- <div class="verse">(Whether he steals along the lonely dale</div>
- <div class="verse">In silent search, or through the forest, rank</div>
- <div class="verse">With what the dull incurious weeds account,</div>
- <div class="verse">Bursts his blind way, or climbs the mountain-rock,</div>
- <div class="verse">Fired by the nodding verdure of its brow).</div>
- <div class="verse">With such a liberal hand has Nature flung</div>
- <div class="verse">Their seeds abroad, blown them about in winds,</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
- <div class="verse">Innumerous mixed them with the nursing mould,</div>
- <div class="verse">The moistening current and prolific rain.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft1">But who their virtues can declare? Who pierce,</div>
- <div class="verse">With vision pure, into those secret stores</div>
- <div class="verse">Of health and life and joy&mdash;the food of man,</div>
- <div class="verse">While yet he lived in innocence and told</div>
- <div class="verse">A length of golden years, unfleshed in blood?</div>
- <div class="verse">A stranger to the savage arts of life&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Death, rapine, carnage, surfeit, and disease&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">The Lord, and not the Tyrant, of the world.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>And then goes on to picture the feast of blood:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft1">“And yet the wholesome herb neglected dies,</div>
- <div class="verse">Though with the pure exhilarating soul</div>
- <div class="verse">Of nutriment and health, and vital powers</div>
- <div class="verse">Beyond the search of Art, ’tis copious blessed.</div>
- <div class="verse">For, with hot ravin fired, ensanguined Man</div>
- <div class="verse">Is now become the Lion of the plain</div>
- <div class="verse">And worse. The Wolf, who from the nightly fold</div>
- <div class="verse">Fierce drags the bleating Prey, ne’er drank her milk,</div>
- <div class="verse">Nor wore her warming fleece; nor has the Steer,</div>
- <div class="verse">At whose strong chest the deadly Tiger hangs,</div>
- <div class="verse">E’er ploughed for him. They, too, are tempered high,</div>
- <div class="verse">With hunger stung and wild necessity,</div>
- <div class="verse">Nor lodges pity in their shaggy breast.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft1">But Man, whom Nature formed of milder clay,</div>
- <div class="verse">With every kind emotion in his heart,</div>
- <div class="verse">And taught alone to weep; while from her lap</div>
- <div class="verse">She pours ten thousand delicacies&mdash;herbs</div>
- <div class="verse">And fruits, as numerous as the drops of rain</div>
- <div class="verse">Or beams that gave them birth&mdash;shall he, fair form,</div>
- <div class="verse">Who wears sweet smiles and looks erect on heaven,</div>
- <div class="verse">E’er stoop to mingle with the prowling herd</div>
- <div class="verse">And dip his tongue in gore? The beast of prey,</div>
- <div class="verse">Blood-stained, deserves to bleed. But you, ye Flocks,</div>
- <div class="verse">What have you done? Ye peaceful people, what</div>
- <div class="verse">To merit death? You who have given us milk</div>
- <div class="verse">In luscious streams, and lent us your own coat</div>
- <div class="verse">Against the winter’s cold? And the plain Ox,</div>
- <div class="verse">That harmless, honest, guileless animal,</div>
- <div class="verse">In what has he offended? He, whose toil,</div>
- <div class="verse">Patient and ever ready, clothes the land</div>
- <div class="verse">With all the pomp of harvest&mdash;shall he bleed,</div>
- <div class="verse">And struggling groan beneath the cruel hands</div>
- <div class="verse">E’en of the clowns he feeds, and that, perhaps,</div>
- <div class="verse">To swell the riot of the autumnal feast</div>
- <div class="verse">Won by his labour?”<a name="FNanchor_151_151" id="FNanchor_151_151"></a><a href="#Footnote_151_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And again in denouncing the <i>amateur</i> slaughtering (euphemised by the
-mocking term of <i>Sport</i>) unblushingly perpetrated in the broad light of
-day:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft1">“When beasts of prey retire, that all night long,</div>
- <div class="verse">Urged by necessity, had ranged the dark,</div>
- <div class="verse">As if their conscious ravage shunned the light,</div>
- <div class="verse">Ashamed. Not so [he reproaches] the steady tyrant Man,</div>
- <div class="verse">Who with the thoughtless insolence of Power,</div>
- <div class="verse">Inflamed beyond the most infuriate wrath</div>
- <div class="verse">Of the worst monster that e’er roamed the waste,</div>
- <div class="verse">For Sport alone pursues the cruel chase,</div>
- <div class="verse">Amid the beamings of the gentle days.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft2">Upbraid, ye ravening tribes, our <i>wanton</i> rage,</div>
- <div class="verse">For hunger kindles <i>you</i>, and lawless want;</div>
- <div class="verse">But lavish fed, in Nature’s bounty rolled&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">To joy at anguish, and delight in blood&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Is what your horrid bosoms never knew.”<a name="FNanchor_152_152" id="FNanchor_152_152"></a><a href="#Footnote_152_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>We conclude these extracts from <i>The Seasons</i> with the poet’s indignant
-reflection upon the selfish greed of Commerce, which barbarously
-sacrifices by thousands (as it does also the innocent mammalia of the
-seas) the noblest and most sagacious of the terrestrial races for the
-sake of a superfluous luxury:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Peaceful, beneath primeval trees, that cast</div>
- <div class="verse">Their ample shade o’er Niger’s yellow stream,</div>
- <div class="verse">And where the Ganges rolls his sacred waves;</div>
- <div class="verse">Or mid the central depth of blackening woods,</div>
- <div class="verse">High raised in solemn theatre around,</div>
- <div class="verse">Leans the huge Elephant, wisest of <i>brutes</i>!</div>
- <div class="verse">O truly wise! with gentle might endowed:</div>
- <div class="verse">Though powerful, not destructive. Here he sees</div>
- <div class="verse">Revolving ages sweep the changeful Earth,</div>
- <div class="verse">And empires rise and fall: regardless he</div>
- <div class="verse">Of what the never-resting race of men</div>
- <div class="verse">Project. Thrice happy! could he ’scape their guile</div>
- <div class="verse">Who mine, from cruel avarice, his steps:</div>
- <div class="verse">Or with his towering grandeur swell their state&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">The pride of kings!&mdash;or else his strength pervert,</div>
- <div class="verse">And bid him rage amid the mortal fray,</div>
- <div class="verse">Astonished at the madness of mankind.”<a name="FNanchor_153_153" id="FNanchor_153_153"></a><a href="#Footnote_153_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXII_HARTLEY">XXII.<br />
-<span class="s5">HARTLEY. 1705&ndash;1757.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">C<span class="smaller">ELEBRATED</span> as the earliest writer of the utilitarian school of morals.
-At the age of fifteen he entered Jesus College, Cambridge, of which
-he was afterwards elected a Fellow. Scruples of conscience about the
-“Thirty-nine Articles” would not allow him to subscribe them and take
-orders, and he turned to the medical profession, in which he reached
-considerable eminence.</p>
-
-<p>His <i>Observations on Man: his Frame, his Duties, and his Expectations</i>,
-appeared in 1748. The principal interest in the book consists in the
-fact of its containing the germs of that school of moral philosophy of
-which Paley, Bentham, and Mill have been the most able expositors. He
-had imbibed the teaching of Locke upon the origin of ideas, which that
-first of English metaphysicians founded in Sensation and Reflection
-or Association, in contradiction to the old theory of <i>Innateness</i>.
-Although now universally received, it is hardly necessary to remark
-that at its first promulgation it met with as great opposition as all
-rational ideas experience long after their first introduction; and
-Locke’s controversy with the Bishop of Worcester is matter of history.</p>
-
-<p>It has already been stated that David Hartley was the friend of Dr.
-Cheyne, whom he attended in his last illness, and he numbered amongst
-his acquaintances some of the most eminent personages of the day. His
-character appears to have been singularly amiable and disinterested.
-His theology is, for the most part, of unsuspected orthodoxy. The
-following sentences reveal the bias of his mind in the matter of
-<i>kreophagy</i>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“With respect to animal diet, let it be considered that taking
-away the lives of [other] animals in order to convert them into
-food, <i>does great violence to the principles of benevolence and
-compassion</i>. This appears from the frequent hard-heartedness and
-cruelty found among those persons whose occupations engage them
-in destroying animal life, as well as from the uneasiness which
-others feel in beholding the butchery of [the lower] animals. It
-is most evident, in respect to the larger animals and those with
-whom we have a familiar intercourse&mdash;such as Oxen, Sheep, and
-domestic Fowls, &amp;c.&mdash;so as to distinguish, love, and compassionate
-individuals. They resemble us greatly in the make of the body in
-general, and in that of the particular organs of circulation,
-respiration, digestion, &amp;c.; also in the formation of their
-intellects, memories, and passions, and in the signs of distress,
-fear, pain, and death. They often, likewise, win our affections by
-the marks of peculiar sagacity, by their instincts, helplessness,
-innocence, nascent benevolence, &amp;c., &amp;c., and, if there be any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
-glimmering of hope of an hereafter for them&mdash;if they should
-prove to be our <i>brethren and sisters</i> in this higher sense, in
-immortality as well as mortality&mdash;in the permanent principle of our
-minds as well as in the frail dust of our bodies&mdash;this ought to be
-still further reason for tenderness for them.</p>
-
-<p>“This, therefore, seems to be nothing else,” he concludes, “than an
-argument to stop us in our career, to make us sparing and tender
-in this article of diet, and put us upon consulting experience
-more faithfully and impartially in order to determine what is most
-suitable to the purposes of life and health, our compassion being
-made, by the foregoing considerations in some measure, a balance to
-our impetuous bodily appetites.”<a name="FNanchor_154_154" id="FNanchor_154_154"></a><a href="#Footnote_154_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Dr. Hartley is not the only theologian who has suggested the
-possibility or probability of a future life for all or some of the
-non-human races. This question we must leave to the theologians. All
-that we here remark is, that Hartley is one of the very few amongst his
-brethren who have had the consistency and the courage of their opinions
-to deduce the inevitable inference.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXIII_CHESTERFIELD">XXIII.<br />
-<span class="s5">CHESTERFIELD. 1694&ndash;1773.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">N<span class="smaller">OTWITHSTANDING</span> his strange self-deception as to the “general order
-of nature,” by which he attempted (sincerely we presume) to silence
-the better promptings of conscience, the remarkably strong feeling
-expressed by Lord Chesterfield gives him some right to notice here.
-His early <i>instinctive</i> aversion for the food which is the product
-of torture and murder is much better founded, we shall be apt to
-believe, than the fallacious sophism by which he seems eventually to
-have succeeded in stifling the voices of Nature and Reason in seeking
-refuge under the shelter of a superficial philosophy. At all events
-his example is a forcible illustration of Seneca’s observation that
-the better feelings of the young need only to be evoked by a proper
-education to conduct them to a true morality and religion.<a name="FNanchor_155_155" id="FNanchor_155_155"></a><a href="#Footnote_155_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a></p>
-
-<p>As it is we have to lament that he had not the greater light (of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
-science) of the present time, if, indeed, the “deceitfulness of riches”
-would not have been for him, as for the mass of the rich or fashionable
-world, the shipwreck of just and rational feeling.</p>
-
-<p>Philip Dormer, Earl of Chesterfield, succeeded to the family title in
-1726. High in favour with the new king&mdash;George II.&mdash;he received the
-appointment of Ambassador-extraordinary to the Court of Holland in
-1728, and amongst other honours that of the knighthood of the Garter.
-In 1745 he was appointed Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, in which post,
-during his brief rule, he seemed to have governed with more success
-than some of his predecessors or successors. He was soon afterwards a
-Secretary of State: ill-health obliged him to relinquish this office
-after a short tenure. He wrote papers for <i>The World</i>&mdash;the popular
-periodical of the time&mdash;besides some poetical pieces, but he is
-chiefly known as an author by his celebrated <i>Letters to his Son</i>,
-which long served as the text-book of polite society. It contains some
-remarks in regard to the relations of the sexes scarcely consonant
-with the custom, or at least with the outward code of sexual morals of
-the present day. His sentiments upon the subject in question are as
-follow:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I remember, when I was a young man at the University, being so
-much affected with that very pathetic speech which Ovid puts into
-the mouth of Pythagoras against the eating of the flesh of animals,
-that it was some time before I could bring myself to our college
-mutton again, with some inward doubt whether I was not making
-myself an accomplice to a murder. My scruples remained unreconciled
-to the committing of so horrid a meal, till upon serious reflection
-I became convinced of its legality<a name="FNanchor_156_156" id="FNanchor_156_156"></a><a href="#Footnote_156_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a> from the general order of
-Nature which has instituted the universal preying [of the stronger]
-upon the weaker as one of her first principles: though to me it has
-ever appeared an incomprehensible mystery that she, who could not
-be restrained by any want of materials from furnishing supplies for
-the support of her numerous offspring, should lay them under the
-necessity of devouring one another.<a name="FNanchor_157_157" id="FNanchor_157_157"></a><a href="#Footnote_157_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a></p>
-
-<p>“I know not whether it is from the clergy having looked upon this
-subject as too trivial for their notice, that we find them more
-silent upon it than could be wished; for as slaughter is at present
-no branch of the priesthood, it is to be presumed that they have as
-much compassion as other men. The <i>Spectator</i> has exclaimed against
-the cruelty of roasting lobsters alive, and of whipping pigs to
-death, but the misfortune is the writings of an Addison are seldom
-read by cooks and butchers. As to the <i>thinking</i> part of mankind,
-it has always been convinced, I believe, that however conformable
-to the <i>general</i> rule of nature our devouring animals may be,
-we are nevertheless under indelible obligation to prevent their
-suffering any degree of pain more than is absolutely unavoidable.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“But this conviction lies in such heads that I fear <i>not one
-poor creature in a million has ever fared the better for it</i>,
-and, I believe, never will: since people of condition, the only
-source from whence [effectual] pity is to flow, are so far from
-inculcating it to those beneath them, that a very few years ago
-they suffered themselves to be entertained at a public theatre
-by the performances of an unhappy company of animals who could
-only have been made actors by the utmost energy of whipcord and
-starving.”<a name="FNanchor_158_158" id="FNanchor_158_158"></a><a href="#Footnote_158_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>The writer might have instanced still more frightful results of this
-insensibility on the part of the influential classes of the community:
-nor indeed, the better few always excepted, were he living now could he
-present a much more favourable picture of the morals (in this the most
-important department of them) of the ruling sections of society.</p>
-
-<p>Ritson supplements the virtual adhesion of Lord Chesterfield to
-the principles of Humanity, with some remarks of Sir W. Jones, the
-eminent Orientalist, who (protesting against the selfish callousness
-of “Sportsmen” and even of “Naturalists” in the infliction of pain)
-writes: “I shall never forget the couplet of Ferdusi<a name="FNanchor_159_159" id="FNanchor_159_159"></a><a href="#Footnote_159_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a> for which
-Sadi,<a name="FNanchor_160_160" id="FNanchor_160_160"></a><a href="#Footnote_160_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a> who cites it with applause, pours blessings on his departed
-spirit:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Ah! spare yon emmet, rich in hoarded grain:</div>
- <div class="verse">He lives with pleasure and he dies with pain.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>To which creditable expression of feeling we would append a word
-of astonishment at that very common inconsistency, and failure in
-elementary logic, which permits men&mdash;while easily and hyperbolically
-commiserating the fate of an emmet, a beetle, or a worm&mdash;to ignore
-the necessarily infinitely greater sufferings of the highly-organised
-victims of the <i>Table</i>.”</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXIV_VOLTAIRE">XXIV.<br />
-<span class="s5">VOLTAIRE. 1694&ndash;1778.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">O<span class="smaller">F</span> the life and literary productions of the most remarkable name in
-the whole history of literature&mdash;if at least we regard the extent and
-variety of his astonishing genius, as well as the immense influence,
-contemporary and future, of his writings&mdash;only a brief outline can
-be given here. Yet, as the most eminent humanitarian prophet of the
-eighteenth century, the principal facts of his life deserve somewhat
-larger notice than within the general scope of this work.</p>
-
-<p>François Marie Arouet&mdash;commonly known by his assumed name of
-Voltaire&mdash;on his mother’s side of a family of position recently
-ennobled, was born at Chatenay, near Paris. He was educated at the
-Jesuits’ College of Louis XIV., where, it is said, the fathers already
-foretold his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span> future eminence. Like many other illustrious writers he
-was originally destined for the “Law,” which was little adapted to his
-genius, and, like his great prototype, Lucian, and others, he soon
-abandoned all thought of that profession for letters and philosophy.
-He had the good fortune, at an early age, to gain the favour of the
-celebrated Ninon de Lenclos, who left him a legacy of 2,000 livres for
-the purchase of a library&mdash;an important event which was doubtless the
-means of confirming his intellectual bias.</p>
-
-<p>Voltaire’s first literary conceptions were formed in the Bastile, that
-infamous representative of despotic caprice, to which some verses of
-which he was the reputed author, satirising the licentious extravagance
-of the Court of the late king, Louis XIV., had consigned him at the age
-of twenty. Soon afterwards appeared the tragedy of <i>Ædipe</i> (founded
-upon the well-known dramas of Sophocles), the first modern drama in
-which the universal and traditional love scenes were discarded. This
-contempt for the conventionalities, however, excited the indignation
-of the play-goers, and the <i>Ædipe</i> was, at its first representation,
-hissed off the stage. The author found himself forced to sacrifice
-to the popular tastes, and his tragedy was received with applause.
-Two memorable verses indicated the bias of the future antagonist of
-ecclesiastical orthodoxy, and naturally provoked the hostility of the
-profession which he had dared so openly to assail:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Nos prêtres ne sont pas ce qu’un vain peuple pense:</div>
- <div class="verse">Notre credulité fait toute leur science.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was during this imprisonment, too, that he formed the first idea
-of the <i>Henriade</i> (or <i>The League</i>, as it was originally called),
-the only epic poem worthy of the name in the French language. A
-chance quarrel with an insolent courtier was the cause of Voltaire’s
-second incarceration in the Bastile with, at the end of six months, a
-peremptory order to absent himself from the capital. These experiences
-of despotic caprice and of sophisticated society he long afterwards
-embodied in two of his best romances, <i>L’Ingénu</i> and <i>Micro-mégas</i> (the
-“Little-Big Man”), one of the most exquisite productions of Satire.</p>
-
-<p>The youthful victim of these malicious persecutions determined upon
-seeking refuge in England, whose freer air had already inspired
-Newton, Locke, Shaftesbury, and other eminent leaders of Thought. A
-flattering welcome awaited him&mdash;and subscriptions to the <i>Henriade</i>,
-better received here than in France, gratified his pride and filled
-his purse. During his sojourn of three years in this country, he made
-the most of his time in studying its best literature, and cultivating
-the acquaintance of its most eminent living writers. His tragedy of
-<i>Brutus</i> was followed by <i>La Mort de César</i> which, from its taint of
-liberalism, was not allowed to be printed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span> in France. Upon his return
-to Paris he published his <i>Zaïre</i>&mdash;finished in eighteen days&mdash;the first
-tragedy in which, deserting the footsteps of Corneille and Racine, he
-ventured to follow the bent of his own genius. The plan of <i>Zaïre</i> has
-been pronounced to be one of the most perfect ever contrived for the
-stage.</p>
-
-<p>More important, by its influence upon contemporary thought, was
-his famous <i>Letters on the English</i>&mdash;a work designed to inform his
-countrymen generally of the literature, thought, and political and
-theological parties of the rival nation, and, more especially, of the
-discoveries of Newton and Locke. Descartes, at this moment supreme
-in France, had succeeded to the vacant throne of the so-called
-Aristotelian Schoolmen. His system, a great advance upon the old,
-broached some errors in physics, amongst others the theory of
-“Vortices” to explain the planetary movements. A much more pernicious
-and reprehensible error was his absurd denial of conscious feeling
-and intelligence to the lower races, which was admirably exposed by
-Voltaire in his <i>Elémens de Newton</i> and elsewhere. In England, Newton’s
-extraordinary discoveries had already made Descartes obsolete, as far
-as the <i>savans</i> were concerned at least, but the French scientific
-world still clung, for the most part, to the Cartesian principles. As
-for Locke, he had overturned the orthodox creed of “innate ideas,”
-supplying instead sensation and reflection. This advocacy of the new
-philosophy, added to the success of his tragedies for the theatre,</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Drew [says Voltaire in his <i>Mémoires</i>] a whole library of
-pamphlets down upon me, in which they proved I was a bad poet,
-an atheist, and the son of a peasant. A history of my life was
-printed in which this genealogy was inserted. An industrious German
-took care to collect all the tales of that kind which had been
-crammed into the libel, they had published against me. They imputed
-adventures to me with persons I never knew, and with others who
-never existed. I have found while writing this a letter from the
-Maréchal de Richelieu which informed me of an impudent lampoon
-where it was proved his wife had given me an elegant couch, with
-something else, at a time when he had no wife. At first I took
-some pleasure in making collections of these calumnies, but they
-multiplied to such a degree I was obliged to leave off. Such are
-the fruits I gathered from my labours. I, however, easily consoled
-myself, sometimes in my retreat at Cirey, and at other times in
-mixing with the best society.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Amongst other subjects the <i>Lettres</i> (a masterpiece of criticism and
-sort of essays, since often imitated but seldom or never, perhaps,
-equalled in their kind) contains an admirable essay upon the Quakers,
-to whom he did justice. He introduces one of them in conversation with
-him, thus apologising for his <i>eccentricities</i>:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Confess that thou hast had some trouble to prevent thyself from
-laughing when I answered all thy civilities with my hat upon my
-head and with thouing and thee-ing thee (<i>en te tutoyant</i>). Yet
-thou seemest to me too well informed to be ignorant that, in
-the time of Christ, no nation fell into the ridiculousness of
-substituting the <i>plural</i> for the singular. They used to say to
-Cæsar-Augustus: ‘I love thee,’ ‘I pray thee,’ ‘I thank thee.’ He
-would not allow himself to be called ‘Monsieur’ (<i>dominus</i>). It was
-only a long time after him that men thought of causing themselves
-to be addressed as <i>you</i> in place of <i>thou</i>, as though they
-were double, and of usurping impertinent titles of grandeur, of
-eminence, of holiness, of divinity even, which earthworms give to
-other earthworms, while assuring them with a profound respect (and
-with an infamous falseness), they are their <i>very humble and very
-obedient servants</i>. It is in order to be upon our guard against
-this unworthy commerce of lies and of flatteries that we ‘thee’ and
-‘thou’ equally kings and kitchen-maids: that we give the ordinary
-compliments to no one, having for men only charity, and reserving
-our respect for the laws. We wear a dress a little different from
-other men, in order that it may be for us a continual warning not
-to resemble them. Others wear marks of their dignities, we those
-of Christian humility. We never use <i>oaths</i>, not even in law
-courts: we think that the name of the <i>Most High</i> ought not to be
-pronounced in the miserable debates of men. When we are forced to
-appear before the magistrates on others’ business (for we never
-have law suits ourselves), we affirm the truth by a ‘yes’ or a
-‘no,’ and the judges believe us upon our simple word, while so many
-other Christians perjure themselves upon the <i>Gospel</i>. We never
-go to war. It is not that we fear death, but it is because we are
-neither tigers, nor wolves, nor dogs, but men, but Christians. Our
-God, who has told us to love our enemies and to suffer without a
-murmur, doubtless would not have us cross the sea to go and cut
-the throats of our brothers, because assassins, clothed in red
-and in hats of two feet high, enrol citizens to the accompaniment
-of a noise produced by two little sticks upon the dried skin of
-an ass. And when, after battles won, all London is brilliant with
-illuminations, when the sky is in flames with musket shots, when
-the air re-echoes with sounds of thanksgiving, with bells, with
-organs, with cannons, we groan in silence over the murders which
-cause the public light-heartedness.” (<i>Lettre II.</i>)</p></div>
-
-<p>About this period, frequenting less the fashionable and trifling
-society of the capital, and contenting himself with the company of a
-few congenial minds, he formed amongst others a sympathetic friendship
-with the Marquise de Châtelet, a lady of extraordinary talents.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I was tired [thus he begins his unfinished <i>Mémoires</i>], I was
-tired of the lazy and noisy life led at Paris, of the multitude
-of <i>petit-maîtres</i>, of bad books printed with the approbation
-of censors and the privilege of the king, of the cabals and
-parties among the learned, and of the mean arts of plagiarism and
-book-making which dishonour Literature.”</p></div>
-
-<p>The lady was the equal of Madame Dacier in knowledge of the Greek
-and Latin languages, and she was familiar with all the best modern
-writers. She wrote a commentary on Leibnitz. She also translated the
-<i>Principia</i>. Her favourite pursuits, however, were mathematics and
-metaphysics.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“She was none the less fond of the world and those amusements
-familiar to her age and sex. She determined to leave them all and
-bury herself in an old ruinous château on the borders of Champagne
-and Lorraine, situated in a barren and unhealthy soil. This old
-château she ornamented with sufficiently pretty gardens. I built
-a gallery, and formed a very good collection of natural history,
-added to which we had a library not badly furnished. We were
-visited by several of the <i>savans</i>, who came to philosophise in our
-retreat.... I taught English to Madame de Châtelet, who, in about
-three months understood it as well as I did, and read Newton, and
-Locke, and Pope, with equal ease. We read all the works of Tasso
-and Ariosto together, so that when Algerotti came to Cirey, where
-he finished his <i>Newtonianism for Women</i>, he found her sufficiently
-skilful in his own language to give him some very excellent
-information by which he profited.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Voltaire had already (1741) given to the world his <i>Elémens de
-Newton</i>&mdash;a work which, in conjunction with other parts of his writings,
-proves that had he chosen to apply himself wholly to natural philosophy
-or to mathematics he might have reached the highest fame in those
-departments of science. It is in the <i>Elémens</i> that Voltaire records
-his noble protest at the same time against the monstrous hypothesis of
-Descartes, to which we have already referred, and against the selfish
-cruelty of our species.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“There is in man a disposition to compassion as generally diffused
-as his other instincts. Newton had <i>cultivated</i> this sentiment of
-humanity, and he extended it to the lower animals. With Locke he
-was strongly convinced that God has given to them a proportion
-of ideas, and the same feelings which he has to us. He could not
-believe that God, who has made nothing in vain, would have given to
-them organs of feeling <i>in order that they might have no feeling</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“He thought it a very frightful inconsistency to believe that
-animals feel and <i>at the same time to cause them to suffer</i>. On
-this point his morality was in accord with his philosophy. <i>He
-yielded but with repugnance to the barbarous custom of supporting
-ourselves upon the blood and flesh of beings like ourselves</i>, whom
-we caress, and he never permitted in his own house the putting them
-to death by slow and exquisite [<i>recherchées</i>] modes of killing for
-the sake of making the food more delicious. This compassion, which
-he felt for other animals, culminated in true charity for men. In
-truth, <i>without humanity, a virtue which comprehends all virtues</i>,
-the name of philosopher would be little deserved.”<a name="FNanchor_161_161" id="FNanchor_161_161"></a><a href="#Footnote_161_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>At Cirey some of his best tragedies were composed&mdash;<i>Alzire</i>, <i>Mérope</i>,
-and <i>Mehemet</i>; the <i>Discours sur l’Homme</i>, a moral poem in the style of
-Pope’s Essays, pronounced to be one of the finest monuments of French
-poetry; an <i>Essay on Universal History</i>, (for his friend’s use, to
-correct as well as supplement Bossuet’s splendid but little philosophic
-history), the foundation of perhaps his most admirable production the
-<i>Essai sur les Mœurs et l’Esprit des Nations</i>, and many lesser pieces,
-including a large correspondence. Besides these literary works, he
-engaged in mathematical and scientific studies, which resulted in some
-<i>brochures</i> of considerable value.</p>
-
-<p>About this time (1740) news arrived of the death of Friedrich Wilhelm
-of Prussia. Most readers know the extraordinary character of this
-strange personage, who caned the women and his clergy in the streets
-of his capital, and who was with difficulty dissuaded from ordering
-his son’s execution. Narrowly escaping with his life the prince had
-devoted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span> himself to literary pursuits, and had kept up a correspondence
-with the leading men of letters of France, and above all with the
-author of <i>Zaïre</i> whom he regarded as little less than divine. The new
-king set about inspecting his territories, and proceeded <i>incognito</i> to
-Brussels, where the first interview between the two future most eminent
-persons in Europe took place. Repairing to his majesty’s quarters&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“One soldier was the only guard I found. The Privy-Councillor
-and Minister of State was walking in the court-yard blowing his
-fingers. He had on a large pair of coarse ruffles, a hat all
-in holes, and a judge’s old wig, one side of which hung into
-his pocket and the other scarcely touched his shoulder. They
-informed me that this man was charged with a state affair of
-great importance, and so indeed he was. I was conducted into his
-majesty’s apartments, in which I found nothing but four bare walls.
-By the light of a taper I perceived a small truckle-bed two feet
-and a half wide in a closet, upon which lay a little man wrapped in
-a morning dressing-gown of blue cloth. It was his majesty who lay
-perspiring and shaking beneath a miserable coverlet in a violent
-ague fit. I made my bow, and began my acquaintance by feeling his
-pulse, as if I had been his first physician. The fit left him, and
-he rose, dressed himself, and sat down to table with Algerotti,
-Maupertuis, the ambassador of the States-general, and myself. At
-supper he treated most profoundly of the soul, natural liberty,
-and the <i>Androgynes</i> of Plato. I soon found myself attached to
-him, for he had wit, an agreeable manner, and moreover was a king,
-which is a circumstance of seduction hardly to be vanquished by
-human weakness. Generally speaking, it is the employment of men of
-letters to flatter kings, but in this instance I was praised by
-a king from the crown of my head to the soles of my feet at the
-same time that I was libelled at least once a week by the Abbé
-Desfontaines and other Grub-street poets of Paris.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Voltaire received a pressing invitation to Berlin.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“But I had before given him to understand I could not come to stay
-with him; that I deemed it a duty to prefer friendship to ambition;
-that I was attached to Mdlle. de Châtelet, and that, between
-philosophers, I loved a lady better than a king. He approved of the
-liberty I took, though, for his part, he did not love the ladies.
-I went to pay him a visit in October, and the Cardinal de Fleury
-[the French premier] wrote me a long letter, full of praises of the
-<i>Anti-Machiavel</i>, and of the author [Friedrich], which I did not
-forget to let him see.”</p></div>
-
-<p>The French court wished to secure the alliance of Friedrich. No one
-seemed a more fitting mediator than his early counsellor, who was
-induced to accept the mission, and to set out for Berlin, where an
-enthusiastic welcome awaited him, apartments in the palace being
-placed at his disposal. Yet, in spite of the success of this and other
-public services, his enemies in Paris remained in full possession of
-the field. For the second time Voltaire sought admission into the
-<i>Académie</i>&mdash;an empty honour, the granting or refusal of which could
-neither add to nor detract from his fame. The prestige of that society,
-however, he seemed to consider essential to his safety against the
-increasing violence and formidable array of his enemies, who were bent
-on crushing him, by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span> whatever means. It was only by submitting to the
-mortification of qualifying some of his opinions that he at length
-succeeded in his object. Notwithstanding the address with which he
-manages his language, it were better, as his biographer&mdash;the Marquis de
-Condorcet&mdash;justly remarks, he had renounced the <i>Académie</i> than have
-had the weakness to submit to so evident a farce.</p>
-
-<p>On succeeding to a vacant chair it was customary, besides a eulogy
-upon the deceased member, to speak in set terms of praise of Richelieu
-and Louis <span class="smcap">XIV.</span> This traditional and servile practice the new
-Academician was the first to break through. Philosophy and literature
-were treated of in unaccustomed strains of freedom, and his good
-example has been influential on after generations.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I was deemed worthy [writes Voltaire] to be one of the forty
-useless members of the <i>Académie</i>, was appointed historiographer of
-France, and created by the king one of the gentlemen in ordinary
-of his chamber. From this I concluded it was better, in order to
-make the most trifling fortune, to speak four words to a king’s
-mistress, than to write a hundred volumes.”</p></div>
-
-<p>A sort of experience he has finely illustrated in his romance of
-<i>Zadig</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Stanislaus, the ex-king of Poland, was keeping his Court at Luneville,
-not far from Cirey, where he divided his time between his mistress and
-his confessor. To this royal retreat the friends of Cirey were invited,
-and the whole of the year 1749 was passed there. Meanwhile Madame de
-Châtelet died, and Voltaire, much affected by his loss, returned to
-Paris. Friedrich redoubled his solicitation with new hope.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I was destined to run from king to king, although I loved liberty
-to idolatry.... He was well assured that in reality his verse and
-prose were superior to my verse and prose; though as to the former,
-he thought there was a certain something that I, in quality of
-academician, might give to his writings, and there was no kind of
-flattery, no seduction, he did not employ to engage me to come.”</p></div>
-
-<p>The philosopher at length set out for Berlin, and his reception must
-have reached his highest expectations. We have no intention to repeat
-the account of this singular episode in his life, which has been
-so often narrated. Evenings of the most agreeable kind, abundance
-of wit, unrestrained conversation, the society of some of the most
-distinguished men of science of the time, the unbounded adoration
-of a royal host, eager, above all things, to retain so brilliant a
-guest&mdash;such were the pleasures of this palace of Alcina, as he calls
-it. But the imperious tempers of the two unequal friends soon proved
-the impossibility of a lasting <i>entente</i>, and rivalries amongst the
-literary courtiers hastened, if they did not effect, the final rupture.</p>
-
-<p>After his escape from Berlin Voltaire passed a few weeks with the
-Duchess of Saxe-Gotha,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span> “the best of princesses, full of gentleness,
-discretion, and equanimity, and who, God be thanked, did not make
-verses” (alluding to his late host’s proclivities), and some days with
-the Landgrave of Hesse on his way to Frankfort. Literature had not
-suffered during the life at Berlin. Finishing touches were put to many
-of the tragedies&mdash;the <i>Âge de Louis XIV.</i> was completed, part of the
-<i>Essai sur les Mœurs et l’Esprit des Nations</i> written, <i>La Pucelle</i>
-(the least worthy of all his productions) corrected, and a poem, <i>Sur
-la Loi Naturelle</i>, composed (a work of a far better inspiration than
-the poem just mentioned, but which was publicly burned at Paris by the
-misdirected zeal of the bigots). In a later poem on the destruction of
-Lisbon, as well as in the romance of <i>Candide</i>, fired with indignation
-at the hypocrisies and mischiefs of the easy-going creed of Optimism
-(as generally understood), so welcome to self-complacent orthodoxy,
-he displayed all his vast powers of sarcasm in exposing its fatal
-absurdities. Leibnitz had been one of its most strenuous apologists.
-In the person of the wretched Pangloss the theory of “the best of
-all possible worlds,” and of the “eternal fitness of things,” is
-overwhelmed, indeed, with an excess of ridicule. It is to be lamented
-that the satirist allowed his <i>sæva indignatio</i> to overpower a
-proper sense of the proprieties of language and expression.</p>
-
-<p>Voltaire was now become a potentate more dreaded than a
-sovereign-prince on his throne, an object of hatred and terror to
-political and other oppressors. After some hesitation he had chosen
-for his retreat the ever-memorable Ferney&mdash;a place within French
-territory, on the borders of Switzerland&mdash;and also a spot near Geneva,
-where he alternately resided, escaping at pleasure either from Catholic
-intolerance or from Puritanic rigour, with his niece&mdash;Madame Denis,
-who had anxiously attended him during a recent illness. From these
-retreats he made himself heard over all Europe in defence of reason and
-humanity. It was about this time (1756) that he employed his eloquence
-to save Admiral Byng, a victim to ministerial necessities, who was
-nevertheless condemned, as his advocate expresses it in <i>Candide</i>,
-“pour encourager les autres.” A like philanthropic effort, equally
-vain, was made on behalf of the still more unfortunate Comte de Lally.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The year 1757 is memorable in literature as that in which he gave
-to the world an accurate edition of his already published works,
-enriched by one of his most meritorious productions, the <i>Essai sur
-les Mœurs et l’Esprit des Nations</i>, which now appeared in its complete
-form. History, the author justly complained, had hitherto been but a
-uniform chronicle of kings, courts, and court intrigues. The history
-of legislation, arts, sciences, commerce, morals, had been always, or
-almost always, neglected.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“We imagine [says Condorcet], while we read such histories, that
-the human race was created only to exhibit the political or
-military talents of a few individuals, and that the object of
-society is not the happiness of the Species but the pleasure of the
-Few.”</p></div>
-
-<p>If the best historical works of the present day are a considerable
-improvement upon those which were in fashion before Voltaire’s
-<i>critiques</i>, the remarks of Condorcet are not altogether inapplicable
-to the popular and school manuals still in vogue. At all events this
-style of composing “history,” ridiculed by the wit of Lucian sixteen
-centuries before, was the universal method down to the appearance of
-the celebrated <i>Essai</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Beginning with Charlemagne, it presents, in a rapid, concise, and
-philosophic style, the most important and interesting features, not
-only of European but of the world’s history, adorned with all the grace
-and ease of which he was always so consummate a master. Many there
-always are who conceive of philosophy and erudition only as enveloped
-in verbosity and obscurity. Dulness and learning in the common mind
-are convertible terms. The very transparency and clearness of his
-style were reproached to him as a sign of superficiality and want
-of exactness&mdash;the last faults which could be justly imputed to him.
-However, the influence of Voltaire became apparent in the productions
-of the English historical school, till then unknown, which soon
-afterwards arose. The Italian Vico, and Beaufort, in France, in the
-particular branch of Roman antiquity, and Bayle in general, had already
-contributed in some degree towards the founding of a critical school;
-but these attempts were partial only. To Voltaire belongs the honour
-of having applied the principles of criticism at once universally and
-popularly.</p>
-
-<p>In reviewing the history and manners of the Hindus he repeatedly
-expresses his sympathy, more or less directly, with their aversion from
-the coarser living of the West:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The Hindus, in embracing the doctrine of the <i>Metémpsychosis</i>, had
-one restraint the more. The dread of killing a father or mother, in
-killing men and other animals, inspired in them a terror of murder
-and every other violence, which became with them a second nature.
-Thus all the peoples of India, whose families are not allied either
-to the Arabs or to the Tartars, are still at this day the mildest
-of all men. Their religion and the temperature of their climate
-made these peoples entirely resemble those peaceful animals whom we
-bring up in our sheep pens and our dove cotes for the purpose of
-cutting their throats at our good will and pleasure....</p>
-
-<p>“The Christian religion, which these <i>primitives</i> [the Quakers]
-alone follow out to the letter, is as great an enemy to bloodshed
-as the Pythagorean. But the Christian peoples have never practised
-<i>their</i> religion, and the ancient Hindu castes have always
-practised theirs. It is because Pythagoreanism is the only religion
-in the world which has been able to educe a religious feeling from
-the horror of murder and slaughter....</p>
-
-<p>“Some have supposed the cradle of our race to be Hindustan,
-alleging that the feeblest of all animals must have been born in
-the softest climate, and in a land<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span> which produces without culture
-the <i>most nourishing and most healthful fruits</i>, like dates and
-cocoa nuts. The latter especially easily affords men the means
-of existence, of clothing and of housing themselves&mdash;and of what
-besides has the inhabitant of that Peninsula need?... Our Houses of
-Carnage, which they call Butcher-Shops [<i>boucheries</i>], where they
-sell so many carcases to feed our own, would import the plague into
-the climate of India.</p>
-
-<p>“These peoples need and desire pure and refreshing foods. Nature
-has lavished upon them forests of citron trees, orange trees, fig
-trees, palm trees, cocoa-nut trees, and plains covered with rice.
-The strongest man can need to spend but one or two sous a day for
-his subsistence.<a name="FNanchor_162_162" id="FNanchor_162_162"></a><a href="#Footnote_162_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a> Our workmen spend more in one day than a
-Malabar native in a month....</p>
-
-<p>“In general, the men of the South-East have received from Nature
-gentler manners than the people of our West. Their climate
-disposes them to abstain from strong liquors and from the flesh
-of animals&mdash;foods which excite the blood and often provoke
-ferocity&mdash;and, although superstition and foreign irruptions have
-corrupted the goodness of their disposition, nevertheless all
-travellers agree that the character of these peoples has nothing of
-that irritability, of that caprice, and of that harshness which it
-has cost much trouble to keep within bounds in the countries of the
-North.”</p></div>
-
-<p>In noticing the comparative progress of the various foreign religions
-in India, Voltaire observes that&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The Mohammedan religion alone has made progress in India,
-especially amongst the richer classes, because it is the religion
-of the Prince, and because it teaches but the divine unity
-conformably to the ancient teaching of the first Brahmins.
-Christianity [he adds, only too truly] has not had the same
-success, notwithstanding the large establishments of the
-Portuguese, of the French, of the English, of the Dutch, of the
-Danes. It is, in fact, the conflict of these nations which has
-injured the progress of our Faith. As they all hate each other,
-and as several of them often make war one upon the other in their
-climates, what they teach is naturally hateful to the peaceful
-inhabitants. Their customs, besides, revolt the Hindus. Those
-people are scandalised at seeing us drinking wine and eating flesh,
-which they themselves abhor.”<a name="FNanchor_163_163" id="FNanchor_163_163"></a><a href="#Footnote_163_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>This&mdash;one of the chief obstacles to the spread of Christian
-civilisation in the East, and especially in India, viz., the eating of
-flesh and the drinking of alcohol, its legitimate attendant&mdash;has been
-acknowledged by Christian missionaries themselves of late years.</p>
-
-<p>Employed as he was in various literary undertakings he had been
-watching with great interest, not, perhaps, without a secret wish
-for vengeance, the important political and military complications of
-Europe. After some brilliant successes the Prussian king had been
-reduced to the last extremity. At this juncture the former friends
-agreed to forget, as far as possible, their old quarrel, and Voltaire
-enjoyed the satisfaction of having succeeded in dissuading Friedrich
-from suicide. The victories of Rosbach and Breslau not long afterwards
-changed the condition of things once again. From this time the prince
-and the philosopher resumed the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span> name, if not the cordiality, of
-friends. A curious accident put the arbitrament of peace and war
-for some weeks into the hands of Voltaire. The Prussian king, while
-inactive in his fortified camp, wrote, as his custom was, a quantity
-of verse and sent the packet to Ferney. Amongst the mass&mdash;good, bad,
-and indifferent&mdash;was a satire on Louis and his mistress. The packet had
-been opened before reaching its destination.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Had I been inclined to amuse myself, it depended only on me to
-set the King of France and the King of Prussia to war in rhyme,
-which would have been a novel farce on earth. But I enjoyed another
-pleasure&mdash;that of being more prudent than Friedrich. I wrote him
-word that his Ode was beautiful, but that he ought not to publish
-it.... To make the pleasantry complete I thought it possible to lay
-the foundation of the peace of Europe on these poetical pieces.
-My correspondence with the Duc de Choiseul [the French Premier]
-gave birth to that idea, and it appeared so ridiculous, so worthy
-of the transactions of the times, that I indulged it, and had the
-satisfaction of proving on what weak and invisible pivots the
-destinies of nations turn.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Several letters passed between the three before the danger was averted.</p>
-
-<p>The limited space at our disposal will allow us only rapidly to notice
-some of the remaining <i>chefs-d’œuvre</i> of Voltaire. The celebrated
-<i>Encyclopédie</i>, under the auspices of D’Alembert and Diderot, had been
-lately commenced. To this great work, to which he looked with some hope
-as promising a severe assault on ignorance and prejudice, Voltaire
-contributed a few articles. It is not the place here to narrate the
-history of the fierce war of words to which the <i>Encyclopédie</i> gave
-birth. It was completed in about fifteen years, in 1775&mdash;a memorable
-year in literature.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Several men of letters [thus Voltaire briefly describes the
-project], most estimable by their learning and character, formed
-an association to compose an immense Dictionary of whatever could
-enlighten the human mind, and it became an object of commerce with
-the booksellers. The Chancellor, the Ministry, all encouraged so
-noble an enterprise. Seven volumes had already appeared, and were
-translated into English, German, Dutch, and Italian. This treasure,
-opened by the French to all nations, may be considered as what did
-us most honour at the time, so much were the excellent articles in
-the <i>Encyclopédie</i> superior to the bad, which also were tolerably
-numerous. One had little to complain of in the work, except too
-many puerile declamations unfortunately adopted by the editors, who
-seized whatever came to hand to swell the work. But all which those
-editors wrote themselves was good.”</p></div>
-
-<p>The article which was particularly selected by the prosecution was
-that on the Soul, “one of the worst in the work, written by a poor
-doctor of the Sorbonne, who killed himself with declaiming, rightly
-or wrongly, against materialism.” The writers, as “encyclopédistes”
-and “philosophers” were long marked by those titles for the public
-opprobrium. This general persecution had the effect of uniting that
-party for common defence. For Voltaire himself an important advantage
-was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span> secured. Most of the principal men of letters and science, up to
-this time either avowed enemies or coldly-distant friends, henceforward
-enrolled themselves under his undisputed leadership.</p>
-
-<p>About the same period he published a number of pieces, prose and
-verse, directed against his enemies of various kinds, theatrical as
-well as theological. Amongst the latter, conspicuous by their attacks,
-but still more so by their punishment, were Fréron and Desfontaines,
-whose chastisement was such that, according to Macaulay’s hyperbolic
-expression, “scourging, branding, pillorying would have been a trifle
-to it.” It is more pleasing, however, to turn from this fierce war of
-retaliation, in which neither party was free from blame, to proofs
-of the real benevolence of his disposition. We can merely note the
-strenuous efforts he made, unsolicited, on behalf of Admiral Byng and
-the Comte de Lally, and the still more meritorious labours in the
-less well-known histories of Calas and Serven. Not by these public
-acts alone did the man, who has been accused of malignity, discover
-the humanity of his character: to whose ready assistance in money, as
-well as in counsel, the unfortunate of the literary tribe and others
-acknowledged their obligations.</p>
-
-<p>His <i>Philosophie de l’Histoire</i>, the prototype of its successors
-in name at least, was designed to expose that long-established and
-prevailing idolatry of Antiquity, which received everything bequeathed
-by it with astounding credulity. The <i>Philosophie</i> called forth a
-numerous host of small critics, to which men who knew, or ought to
-have known better, allied themselves. Their curious way of maintaining
-the credit of Antiquity afforded, as may be imagined, the author of
-the <i>Defence of my Uncle</i>, under which title Voltaire chose to defend
-himself, full scope for the exercise of his unrivalled powers of irony.
-Warburton, the pedant Bishop of Gloucester, with his odd theories about
-the “Divine Legation,” comes in for a share of this Dunciad sort of
-immortalisation.</p>
-
-<p>A work of equal merit with the <i>Philosophie</i> are the <i>Questions</i>,
-addressed to the lovers of science, upon the <i>Encyclopædia</i>, wherein,
-in the form of a dictionary, he treats, as the Marquis de Condorcet
-eloquently describes,</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Successively of theology, grammar, natural philosophy, and
-literature. At one time he discusses subjects of Antiquity; at
-another questions of policy, legislation, and public economy.
-His style, always animated and seductive, clothed these various
-subjects with a charm hitherto known to himself alone, and which
-springs chiefly from the licence with which, yielding to his
-successive emotions, adapting his style less to his subject than
-to the momentary disposition of his mind, sometimes he spreads
-ridicule over objects which seem capable of inspiring only
-horror, and almost instantaneously hurried away by the energy and
-sensibility of his soul, he vehemently and eloquently exclaims
-against abuses which he had just before treated with mockery. His
-anger is excited by false taste; he quickly perceives that his
-indignation ought to be reserved for interests more important, and
-he finishes by laughing in his usual way. Sometimes he abruptly
-leaves a moral or political discussion for a literary criticism,
-and in the midst of a lesson on taste he pronounces abstract maxims
-of the profoundest philosophy, or makes a sudden and terrible
-attack on fanaticism and tyranny.”</p></div>
-
-<p>It is with his romances that we are here chiefly concerned, since it is
-in those lighter productions of his genius that he has most especially
-allowed us to see his opinions upon flesh-eating. In the charming tale
-of <i>The Princess of Babylon</i>, her attendant <i>Phœnix</i> thus accounts to
-his mistress for the silence of his brethren of the inferior races:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It is because men fell into the practice of eating us in place of
-holding converse with and being instructed by us. The barbarians!
-Ought they not to have convinced themselves that, having the same
-organs as they, the same power of feeling, the same wants, the same
-desires, we have what they call <i>soul</i> as well as themselves, that
-we are their brethren, and that only the wicked and bad deserve to
-be cooked and eaten? We are to such a degree your brethren that the
-Great Being, the Eternal and Creative Being, having made a covenant
-with men<a name="FNanchor_164_164" id="FNanchor_164_164"></a><a href="#Footnote_164_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a>, expressly comprised us in the treaty. He forbad
-<i>you</i> to feed yourselves upon our blood, and <i>us</i> to suck yours.
-The fables of your Lokman, translated into so many languages, will
-be an everlasting witness of the happy commerce which you formerly
-had with us. It is true that there are many women among you who are
-always talking to their Dogs; but they have resolved never to make
-any answer, from the time that they were forced by blows of the
-whip to go hunting and to be the accomplices of the murder of our
-old common friends, the Deer and the Hares and the Partridges. You
-have still some old poems in which Horses talk and your coachmen
-address them every day, but with so much grossness and coarseness,
-and with such infamous words, that Horses who once loved you now
-detest you.... The shepherds of the Ganges, born all equal, are
-the owners of innumerable flocks who feed in meadows that are
-perpetually covered with flowers. They are never slaughtered there.
-It is a horrible crime in the country of the Ganges to kill and eat
-one’s fellows [<i>semblables</i>]. Their wool, finer and more brilliant
-than the most beautiful silk, is the greatest object of commerce in
-the Orient.”</p></div>
-
-<p>A certain king had the temerity to attack this innocent people:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The king was taken prisoner with more than 600,000 men. They
-bathed him in the waters of the Ganges; they put him on the
-salutary <i>régime</i> of the country, which consists in vegetables,
-which are lavished by Nature for the support of all human beings.
-Men, fed upon carnage and drinking strong drinks, have all an
-empoisoned and acrid blood, which drives them mad in a hundred
-different ways. Their principal madness is that of shedding the
-blood of their brothers, and of devastating fertile plains to reign
-over cemeteries.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Her admirable instructor caused the princess to enter</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“A dining-hall, whose walls were covered with orange-wood. The
-under-shepherds and shepherdesses, in long white dresses girded
-with golden bands, served her in a hundred baskets of simple
-porcelain, with a hundred delicious meats, among which was seen
-no disguised corpse. The feast was of rice, of sago, of semolina,
-of vermicelli, of maccaroni, of omelets, of eggs in milk, of
-cream-cheeses, of pastries of every kind, of vegetables, of fruits
-of perfume and taste of which one has no idea in other climates,
-and a profusion of refreshing drinks superior to the best wines.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Having occasion to visit the land <i>par excellence</i> of flesh-eaters, and
-being entertained at the house of a certain English lord, the hero, the
-amiable lover of the princess, is questioned by his host</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Whether they ate ‘good roast beef’ in the country of the people
-of the Ganges. The Vegetarian traveller replied to him with his
-accustomed politeness that they did not eat their brethren in that
-part of the world. He explained to him the system and diet which
-was that of Pythagoras, of Porphyry, of Iamblichus; whereupon
-<i>milord</i> went off into a sound slumber.”<a name="FNanchor_165_165" id="FNanchor_165_165"></a><a href="#Footnote_165_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Amabed, a young Hindu, writes from Europe to his affianced mistress
-his impressions of the Christian sacred books and, in particular, of
-Christian carnivorousness:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I pity those unfortunates of Europe who have, at the most, been
-created only 6,940 years; while our era reckons 115,652 years [the
-Brahminical computation]. I pity them more for wanting pepper, the
-sugar-cane, and tea, coffee, silk, cotton, incense, aromatics, and
-everything that can render life pleasing. But I pity them still
-more for coming from so great a distance, among so many perils, to
-ravish from us, arms in hand, our provisions. It is said at Calicut
-they have committed frightful cruelties only to procure pepper.
-It makes the Hindu nature, which is in every way different from
-theirs, shudder; their stomachs are carnivorous, they get drunk on
-the fermented juices of the vine, which was planted, they say, by
-their Noah. Father Fa-Tutto [one of the missionaries], polished
-as he is, has himself cut the throats of two little chickens; he
-has caused them to be boiled in a cauldron, and has devoured them
-without pity. This barbarous action has drawn upon him the hatred
-of all the neighbourhood, whose anger we have appeased only with
-much difficulty. May God pardon me! I believe that this stranger
-would have eaten our sacred Cows, who give us milk, if he had
-been allowed to do so. A promise has been extorted from him that
-he will commit no more murders of Hens, and that he will content
-himself with fresh eggs, milk, rice, and our excellent fruits
-and vegetables&mdash;pistachio nuts, dates, cocoa nuts, almond cakes,
-biscuits, ananas, oranges, and with everything which our climate
-produces, blessed be the Eternal!”</p></div>
-
-<p>In another letter to his old Hindu teacher from Rome, whither he had
-been induced to go by the missionaries, speaking of the feasts in that
-“citadel of the faith,” he writes:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The dining-hall was grand, convenient, and richly ornamented. Gold
-and silver shone upon the sideboards. Gaiety and wit animated the
-guests. But, meantime, in the kitchens blood and fat were streaming
-in one horrible mass; skins of quadrupeds, feathers of birds and
-their entrails, piled up pell-mell, oppressed the heart, and spread
-the infection of fevers.”<a name="FNanchor_166_166" id="FNanchor_166_166"></a><a href="#Footnote_166_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a></p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>That one who hated and denounced injustice of all kinds, and who
-sympathised with the suffering of all innocent life, should thus
-characterise the cruelty of the Slaughter-House is what we might
-naturally look for; as also that he should denounce the kindred and
-even worse atrocity of the physiological Laboratory. And it is a
-strange and unaccountable fact that, amongst the humanitarians of
-his time, he stands apparently alone in condemnation of the secret
-tortures of the vivisectionists and pathologists&mdash;although, perhaps,
-the almost universal silence may be attributable, in part, to the
-very secresy of the experiments which only recent vigilance has fully
-detected. Exposing the equally absurd and arrogant denial of reason and
-intelligence to other animals, and instancing the dog, he proceeds:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“There are barbarians who seize this dog, who so prodigiously
-surpasses man in friendship, and nail him down to a table, and
-dissect him alive to shew you the mezaraic veins. You discover
-in him all the same organs of feeling as in yourself. Answer me,
-Machinist [<i>i.e.</i>, supporter of the theory of mere mechanical
-action], has Nature really arranged all the springs of feeling in
-this animal <i>to the end that he might not feel</i>? Has he nerves
-<i>that he may be incapable</i> of suffering? Do not suppose that
-impertinent contradiction in Nature.”<a name="FNanchor_167_167" id="FNanchor_167_167"></a><a href="#Footnote_167_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>To the final triumph which in Paris awaited this champion of the weak,
-at the advanced age of 84, and the unexampled enthusiasm of the people,
-and the closing act of his eventful life, we can here merely refer.
-In Berlin, Friedrich ordered a solemn mass in the cathedral church in
-commemoration of his genius and virtues. A more enduring monument than
-any conventional mark of human vanity is the legacy which he left to
-posterity, which will last as long as the French language, and, still
-more, the humanity embodied in one of his later verses:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“J’ai fait un peu de bien, c’est mon meilleur ouvrage.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The faults of his character and writings which, for the most part, lie
-on the surface (one of the most regretable of which was his sometimes
-servile flattery of men in power, and the only excuse for which was his
-eagerness to gain them over to moderation and justice) will be deemed
-by impartial criticism to have been more than counterbalanced by his
-real and substantial merits. That he allowed his ardent indignation to
-overmaster the sense of propriety in too many instances, in dealing
-with subjects which ought to be dealt with in a judicial and serious
-manner, is that fault in his writings which must always cause the
-greatest regret. In his discourse at his reception by the French
-Academy he remarks that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span> “the art of instruction, when it is perfect, in
-the long run, succeeds better than the art of sarcasm, because Satire
-dies with those who are the victims of it; while Reason and Virtue are
-eternal.” It would have been well, in many instances, had he practised
-this principle. But, however objectionably his convictions were
-sometimes expressed, his ardent love of truth and hatred of injustice
-have secured for him an imperishable fame; while Göthe’s estimate of
-his intellectual pre-eminence&mdash;that he has the greatest name in all
-Literature&mdash;is not likely soon to be disputed by Posterity.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXV_HALLER">XXV.<br />
-<span class="s5">HALLER. 1708&ndash;1777.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">T<span class="smaller">HE</span> founder of Modern Physiology was born at Berne. In 1723 he went
-to Tübingen to study medicine, afterwards to Leyden, where the famous
-Boerhaave was at the height of his reputation. Twelve years later he
-received the appointment of physician to the hospital at Berne; but
-soon afterwards he was invited by George II., as Elector of Hanover, to
-accept the professorship of anatomy and surgery at the University of
-Göttingen.</p>
-
-<p>His scientific writings are extraordinarily numerous. From 1727 to 1777
-he published nearly 200 treatises. His great work is his <i>Elements
-of the Physiology of the Human Body</i> (in Latin), 1757&ndash;1766&mdash;the most
-important treatise on medical science&mdash;or at least on anatomy and
-surgery&mdash;up to that time produced. The <i>Icones Anatomicæ</i> (“Anatomical
-Figures”) is “a marvellously accurate, well-engraved representation of
-the principal organs of the human body.” His writings are marked by
-unusual clearness of meaning, as well as by accurate and deep research.</p>
-
-<p>We wish that we could here stop; but the force of truth compels us
-to affirm that, for us at least, his reputation, great as it is in
-science, has been for ever tarnished by his sacrifices&mdash;with frightful
-torture&mdash;of innocent victims on the altars of a selfish and sanguinary
-science.</p>
-
-<p>One plea in extenuation of this callousness in regard to the suffering
-of other animals, and only one, can be offered in his defence. At this
-very moment, after all the humanitarian doctrine that has been preached
-during the century since the death of Haller, tortures of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span> most
-cold-blooded kind are being inflicted on tens of thousands of horses,
-deer, dogs, rabbits, and others, in all the “laboratories” of Europe;
-while he had neither the prolonged experience of the uselessness of
-all such unnatural experimentation, of which the vivisectors and
-pathologists of our day are in possession, nor the same indoctrination
-of a higher morality, which has been the heritage of these latter days.
-The scientific barbarity of Haller does not affect the nature of his
-physiological testimony, which, it might be presumed, ought to be of
-some weight with his disciples and representatives of the present day.
-He asserts:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“This food, then, that I have hitherto described, in which flesh
-has no part, is salutary; inasmuch as it fully nourishes a man,
-protracts life to an advanced period, and prevents or cures such
-disorders as are attributable to the acrimony or the grossness of
-the blood.”<a name="FNanchor_168_168" id="FNanchor_168_168"></a><a href="#Footnote_168_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXVI_COCCHI">XXVI.<br />
-<span class="s5">COCCHI. 1695&ndash;1758.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">I<span class="smaller">T</span> might justly provoke expression of feeling stronger than that of
-astonishment, when we have to record that in South Europe (where
-climate and soil unite to recommend and render a <i>humane</i> manner of
-living<a name="FNanchor_169_169" id="FNanchor_169_169"></a><a href="#Footnote_169_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a> still more easy than in our colder regions) the followers,
-or, at all events, the prophets of the Reformed Diet have been
-conspicuously few. Since, by the <i>à fortiori</i> argument, if abundant
-experience and teaching have proved it to be more conducive to health
-in higher latitudes, much more is it evident that it must be fitting
-for the people of those parts of the globe nearer to the Equator.</p>
-
-<p>Italy, which has produced Seneca, Cornaro, and Cocchi, is
-less obnoxious to the reproach of indifferentism in this most
-vitally-important branch of ethics than the western peninsula. But the
-“paradise of Europe” has yet to deserve the more glorious title of
-“the paradise of Peace,” and to atone (if, indeed, it be possible) for
-the cruel shedding of innocent, and in an especial degree superfluous,
-blood.</p>
-
-<p>An eminent professor of medicine and of surgery, Antonio Cocchi
-distinguished himself also as a philologist. He was born at Benevento.
-Before giving himself up to the practice of medicine he devoted several
-years to the study of the old and the modern languages of Europe. His
-knowledge of English helped to bring him into contact with many<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span> men
-of science in England, some of whom he met on his visit to London.
-Returning to Italy he was named Professor of Medicine at Pisa. He
-soon left that University for Florence, where he held the chair of
-Anatomy as well as of Philosophy. To him Florence was indebted for its
-Botanical Society, with which, in conjunction with Micheli, he endowed
-it.</p>
-
-<p>He was a voluminous writer.<a name="FNanchor_170_170" id="FNanchor_170_170"></a><a href="#Footnote_170_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a> His <i>Greek Surgical Books</i><a name="FNanchor_171_171" id="FNanchor_171_171"></a><a href="#Footnote_171_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a>
-contain valuable extracts from the Greek writers on medicine
-and surgery not before published. Amongst other writings may
-be distinguished his <i>Treatise on the Use of Cold Baths by the
-Ancients</i>.<a name="FNanchor_172_172" id="FNanchor_172_172"></a><a href="#Footnote_172_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a> The treatise which gives him a place in this work was
-published at Florence under the title of <i>The Pythagorean Diet: for the
-Use of the Medical Faculty</i>.<a name="FNanchor_173_173" id="FNanchor_173_173"></a><a href="#Footnote_173_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a></p>
-
-<p>Dr. Cocchi begins his little treatise with a eulogy and defence of the
-great reformer of Samos, and of his radical revolution in food. He
-cites the Greek and Latin writers, and especially the earlier Roman
-Laws, the Fannian and the Licinian. He proceeds:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“True and constant vigour of body is the effect of health, which
-is much better preserved with watery, herbaceous, frugal, and
-tender food, than with <i>vinous</i>, abundant, hard, and gross flesh
-(<i>che col carneo vinoso ed unto abundante e duro</i>). And in a sound
-body, a clear intelligence, and desire to suppress the mischievous
-inclinations (<i>voglie dannose</i>), and to conquer the irrational
-passions, produces true worth.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Cocchi cites the examples of the Greeks and of the Romans as proof that
-the non-flesh diet does not diminish courage or strength:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The vulgar opinion, then, which, on health reasons, condemns
-vegetable food and so much praises animal food, being so
-ill-founded, I have always thought it well to oppose myself to it,
-moved both by experience and by that refined knowledge of natural
-things which some study and conversation with great men have given
-me. And perceiving now that such my constancy has been honoured by
-some learned and wise physicians with their authoritative adhesion
-(<i>della autorevole sequela</i>), I have thought it my duty publicly
-to diffuse the reasons of the Pythagorean diet, regarded as useful
-in medicine, and, at the same time, as full of innocence, of
-temperance, and of health. And it is none the less accompanied with
-a certain delicate pleasure, and also with a refined and splendid
-luxury (<i>non è privo nemmeno d’una certa delicate voluttà e d’un
-lusso gentile e splendido ancora</i>), if care and skill be applied in
-selection and proper supply of the best vegetable food, to which
-the fertility and the natural character of our beautiful country
-seem to invite us. For my part I have been so much the more induced
-to take up this subject, because I have persuaded myself that I
-might be of service to intending diet-reformers, there not being,
-to my knowledge, any book of which this is the sole subject, and
-which undertakes exactly to explain the origin and the reasons of
-it.”</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>His special motive to the publication of his treatise, however, was to
-vindicate the claims of the reformer of Samos upon the gratitude of
-men:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I wished to show that Pythagoras, the first founder of the
-vegetable regimen, was at once a very great physicist and a very
-great physician; that there has been no one of a more cultured
-and discriminating humanity; that he was a man of wisdom and of
-experience; that his motive in commending and introducing the new
-mode of living was derived not from any extravagant superstition,
-but from the desire to improve the health and the manners of
-men.”<a name="FNanchor_174_174" id="FNanchor_174_174"></a><a href="#Footnote_174_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXVII_ROUSSEAU">XXVII.<br />
-<span class="s5">ROUSSEAU. 1712&ndash;1778.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">F<span class="smaller">EW</span> lives of writers of equal reputation have been exposed to our
-examination with the fulness and minuteness of the life of this the
-most eloquent name in French literature. With the exception of the
-great Latin father, St. Augustine, no other leader of thought, in
-fact, has so entirely revealed to us his inner life, his faults and
-weaknesses (often sufficiently startling), no less than the estimable
-parts of his character, and we remain in doubt whether more to lament
-the infirmities or to admire the candour of the autobiographer.</p>
-
-<p>Jean Jacques Rousseau, son of a Genevan tradesman, had the misfortune
-to lose his mother at a very early age. It is to this want of maternal
-solicitude and fostering care that some of the errors in his after
-career may perhaps be traced. After a short experience of school
-discipline he was apprenticed to an engraver, whose coarse violence
-must injuriously have affected the nervous temperament of the sensitive
-child. Ill-treatment forced him to run away, and he found refuge with
-Mde. de Warens, a Swiss lady, a convert to Catholicism, who occupies a
-prominent place in the first period of his <i>Confessions</i>. Influenced
-by her kindness, and by the skilful arguments of his preceptors at the
-college at Turin, where she had placed him, the young Rousseau (like
-Bayle and Gibbon, before and after him, though from a different motive)
-abjured Protestantism, and, for the moment, accepted, or at least
-professed, the tenets of the old Orthodoxy. Dismissed from the college
-because he refused to take orders, he engaged himself as a domestic
-servant or valet.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span> He did not long remain in this position, and he
-resought the protection of his friend Mde. de Warens at Chambéry. His
-connexion with his too indulgent patroness terminated in the year 1740.
-For some years after this his life was of a most erratic, and not
-always edifying, kind. We find him employed in teaching at Lyons, and
-at another time acting as secretary to the French Embassy at Venice. In
-1745 he came to Paris. There he earned a living by copying music. About
-this time he met with Therèse Levasseur, the daughter of his hostess,
-with whom he formed a lasting but unhappy connexion.</p>
-
-<p>It was in 1748, at the age of 36, that he made the acquaintance, at
-the house of Mde. d’Epinay, of the editors of the <i>Encyclopédie</i>,
-D’Alembert and Diderot, who engaged him to write articles on music
-and upon other subjects in that first of comprehensive dictionaries.
-His first independent appearance in literature was in his essay on
-the question, “Whether the progress of science and of the arts has
-been favourable to the morals of mankind,” in which paradoxically he
-maintains the negative. It was the eloquence, we must suppose, rather
-than the reasoning, which gained him the prize awarded by the Académie
-of Dijon. His next production&mdash;a more important one&mdash;was his <i>Discours
-sur l’Inegalité parmi les Hommes</i> (“Discourse upon Inequality amongst
-Men”). In this treatise&mdash;the prelude to his more developed <i>Contrat
-Social</i>&mdash;Rousseau affirms the paradox of the <i>natural</i> school, as it
-may be termed, which alleged the state of nature&mdash;the life of the
-uncivilised man&mdash;to be the ideal condition of the species. His thesis
-that all men are born with equal rights takes a much more defensible
-position. In this <i>Discours</i> diet is assigned its due importance in
-relation to the welfare of communities.</p>
-
-<p>The romance of <i>Julie: ou la Nouvelle Héloise</i>, which excited
-an unusual amount of interest, appeared in 1759. <i>Emile: ou de
-l’Education</i>, was given to the world three years later. It is the most
-important of his writings. In the education of Emile, or Emilius, he
-propounds his ideas upon one of the most interesting subjects which
-can engage attention&mdash;the right training of the young. The earlier
-part of the book is almost altogether admirable and useful. The later
-portion is more open to criticism, although not upon the grounds upon
-which was founded the hostility of the authorities of the day who
-unjustly condemned the book as irreligious and immoral. Rousseau begins
-with laying down the principles of a new and more rational method of
-rearing infants, agreeing, in many particulars, with the system of
-his predecessor, Locke. At least some of his protests against the
-unnatural treatment of children were not altogether in vain. Mothers
-in fashionable ranks of life began to recognise the mischief arising
-from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span> the common practice of putting their infants out to nurse in
-place of suckling them themselves. They began also to abandon the
-absurd custom of confining their limbs in mummy-like bandages. Nor,
-though long in bearing adequate fruit, were his denunciations of the
-barbarous severity of parents and schoolmasters without some result. He
-insists upon the incalculable evils of inoculating the young, according
-to the almost universal custom, with superstitious beliefs and fancies
-which grow with the growth of the recipient until they become radically
-fixed in the mind as by a natural development. Most important of all
-his innovations in education, and certainly the most heretical, is his
-recommendation of a pure dietary.</p>
-
-<p>The publication of his treatise on education brought down a storm
-of persecution and opprobrium upon the author. The <i>Contrat Social</i>
-(in which he seemed to aim at subverting the political and social
-traditions, as he had in <i>Emile</i> the educational prejudices of the
-venerated Past) appearing soon afterwards added fuel to the flames.
-Rousseau found himself forced to flee from Paris, and he sought shelter
-in the territory of Geneva. But the authorities, unmindful of the old
-reputation of the land of freedom, refusing him an asylum, he proceeded
-to Neuchâtel, then under Prussian rule, where he was well received.
-From this retreat he replied to the attacks of the Archbishop of Paris,
-and addressed a letter to the magistrates of Geneva renouncing his
-citizenship. He also published <i>Letters Written from the Mountain</i>,
-severely criticising the civil and church government of his native
-canton. These acts did not tend to conciliate the goodwill of the
-rulers of the people with whom he had taken refuge. At this moment an
-object of dislike to all the Continental sovereign powers, he gladly
-embraced the offer of David Hume to find him an asylum in England. The
-social and political revolutionist arrived in London in 1766, and took
-up his residence in a village in Derbyshire. He did not remain long in
-this country, his irritable temperament inducing him too hastily to
-suspect the sincerity of the friendship of his host.</p>
-
-<p>The next eight years of his life were passed in comparative obscurity,
-and in migrating from one place to another in the neighbourhood of
-Paris. In his solitude gardening and botanising occupied a large part
-of his leisure hours. It was at this period he made the acquaintance of
-Bernardin St. Pierre, his enthusiastic disciple, and immortalised as
-the author of <i>Paul et Virginie</i>. His end came suddenly. He had been
-settled only a few months in a cottage given him by one of his numerous
-aristocratic friends and admirers, when one morning, feeling unwell, he
-requested his wife to open the window that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span> “might once more look on
-the lovely verdure of the fields,” and as he was expressing his delight
-at the exquisite beauty of the scene and of the skies he fell forward
-and instantly breathed his last. At his special request his place of
-burial was chosen on an island in a lake in the Park of Ermondville, a
-fitting resting-place for one of the most eloquent of the high priests
-of Nature.</p>
-
-<p>His character (as we have already remarked) is revealed in his
-<i>Confessions</i>&mdash;which was written, in part, during his brief exile
-in England. It, as well as his other productions, shews him to us
-as a man of extraordinary sensibility, which, in regard to himself,
-occasionally degenerated into a sort of disease or, in popular
-language, <i>morbidness</i> (a word, by the way, constantly abused by the
-many who seem to excuse their own insensibility to surrounding evils
-by stigmatising with that vague expression the acuter feeling of the
-few), which sometimes assumed the appearance of partial unsoundness of
-mind. This it was that caused him to suspect and quarrel with his best
-friends, and which, we may suppose, led him, in his minute dissection
-of himself, to exaggerate his real moral infirmities.</p>
-
-<p>In summing up his personal character we shall perhaps impartially judge
-him to have been, on the whole, amiable rather than admirable, of good
-impulses, and of a naturally humane disposition, cultivated by reading
-and reflection, but to have been wanting in firmness of mind and in
-that virtue so much esteemed in the school of Pythagoras&mdash;self control.
-His philosophy is distinguished rather by refinement than by vigour or
-depth of thought.</p>
-
-<p>It is in the education of the young that Rousseau exerts his eloquence
-to enforce the importance of a non-flesh diet:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“One of the proofs that the taste of flesh is not natural to man
-is the indifference which children exhibit for that sort of meat,
-and the preference they all give to vegetable foods, such as
-milk-porridge, pastry, fruits, &amp;c. It is of the last importance
-not to <i>denaturalise</i> them of this primitive taste (<i>de ne pas
-dénaturer ce goût primitif</i>), and not to render them carnivorous,
-if not for health reasons, at least <i>for the sake of their
-character</i>. For, however the experience may be explained, it is
-certain that great eaters of flesh are, in general, more cruel and
-ferocious than other men. This observation is true of all places
-and of all times. English coarseness is well known.<a name="FNanchor_175_175" id="FNanchor_175_175"></a><a href="#Footnote_175_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a> The
-Gaures, on the contrary, are the gentlest of men. All savages are
-cruel, and it is not their morals that urge them to be so; this
-cruelty proceeds <i>from their food</i>. They go to war as to the chase,
-and treat men as they do bears. Even in England the butchers are
-not received as legal witnesses any more than surgeons.<a name="FNanchor_176_176" id="FNanchor_176_176"></a><a href="#Footnote_176_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a> Great
-criminals harden themselves to murder by drinking blood.<a name="FNanchor_177_177" id="FNanchor_177_177"></a><a href="#Footnote_177_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a> Homer
-represents the <i>Cyclopes</i>, who were flesh-eaters, as frightful
-men, and the Lotophagi [Lotus-eaters] as a people so amiable that
-as soon as one had any dealing with them one straightway forgot
-everything, even one’s country, to live with them.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Rousseau, in a free translation, here quotes a considerable part of
-Plutarch’s <i>Essay</i>. He insists, especially, that children should be
-early accustomed to the pure diet:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The further we remove from a natural mode of living the more
-do we lose our natural tastes; or rather habit makes a <i>second</i>
-nature, which we substitute to such a degree for the first that
-none among us any longer knows what the latter is. It follows from
-this that the most simple tastes must also be the most natural,
-for they are those which are most easily changed, while by being
-sharpened and by being irritated by our whims they assume a form
-which never changes. The man who is yet of no country will conform
-himself without trouble to the customs of any country whatever,
-but the man of one country never becomes that of another. This
-appears to me true in every sense, and still more so applied to
-taste properly so-called. Our first food was milk. We accustom
-ourselves only by degrees to strong flavours. At first they are
-repugnant to us. Fruits, vegetables, kitchen herbs, and, in fine,
-often broiled dishes, without seasoning and without salt, composed
-the feasts of the first men. The first time a savage drinks wine
-he makes a grimace and rejects it; and even amongst ourselves,
-whoever has lived to his twentieth year without tasting fermented
-drinks, cannot afterwards accustom himself to them. We should all
-be abstinents from alcohol if we had not been given wines in our
-early years. In fine, the more simple our tastes are the more
-universal are they, and the most common repugnance is for made-up
-dishes. Does one ever see a person have a disgust for water or
-bread? Behold here the impress of nature! Behold here, then, our
-rule of life. Let us preserve to the child as long as possible his
-primitive taste; let its nourishment be common and simple; let not
-its palate be familiarised to any but natural flavours, and let
-no exclusive taste be formed.... I have sometimes examined those
-people who attached importance to <i>good living</i>, who thought, upon
-their first awaking, of what they should eat during the day, and
-described a dinner with more exactitude than Polybius would use
-in describing a battle. I have thought that all these so-called
-men were but children of forty years without vigour and without
-consistence&mdash;<i>fruges consumere nati</i>.<a name="FNanchor_178_178" id="FNanchor_178_178"></a><a href="#Footnote_178_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a> Gluttony is the vice of
-souls that have no solidity (<i>qui n’ont point d’étoffe</i>). The soul
-of a gourmand is in his palate. He is brought into the world but to
-devour. In his stupid incapacity he is at home only at his table.
-His powers of judgment are limited to his dishes. Let us leave him
-in his employment without regret. Better that for him than any
-other, as much for our own sakes as for his.”<a name="FNanchor_179_179" id="FNanchor_179_179"></a><a href="#Footnote_179_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a></p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In the <i>Julie: ou la Nouvelle Heloise</i> he describes his heroine as
-preferring the innocent feast:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Although luxurious in her repasts she likes neither flesh-meat nor
-ragoûts. Excellent vegetable dishes, eggs, cream, fruits&mdash;these
-constitute her ordinary food; and, excepting fish, which she likes
-as much, she would be a true Pythagorean.”<a name="FNanchor_180_180" id="FNanchor_180_180"></a><a href="#Footnote_180_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Although he was not a thorough or consistent abstainer, Rousseau speaks
-with enthusiasm of the pleasures of his frugal repasts, in which,
-it seems, when he was not seduced by the sumptuous dinners of his
-fashionable admirers, flesh, as a rule, had no part:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Who shall describe, who shall understand, the charm of these
-repasts, composed of a quartern loaf, of cherries, of a little
-cheese, and of a half-pint of wine, which we drank together.
-Friendship, confidence, intimacy, sweetness of soul, how delicious
-are your seasonings!”<a name="FNanchor_181_181" id="FNanchor_181_181"></a><a href="#Footnote_181_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXVIII_LINNE">XXVIII.<br />
-<span class="s5">LINNÉ. 1707&ndash;1778.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">K<span class="smaller">ARL VON</span> L<span class="smaller">INNÉ</span>, or (according to the antiquated fashion of <i>Latinising</i>
-eminent names still retained) Linnæus, the distinguished Swedish
-naturalist, and the most eminent name in botanical literature, in a
-notable manner arrived at his destined immortality in spite of friends
-and fortune. Prophecies do not always fulfil themselves, and the
-estimate of his teachers that he was a hopeless “blockhead,” and the
-prediction that he would be of no intellectual worth in the world (they
-had advised his parents to apprentice him to a handicraft trade), are
-a conspicuous instance of the falsification of prophecy. After one
-year’s course of study at the University of Lund&mdash;where he had access
-to a good library and collections of natural history&mdash;he proceeded to
-the University of Upsala. There, upon an allowance by his father of £8
-a year to meet all his expenses of living, he struggled desperately
-against the almost insuperable obstacles of extreme poverty, which
-forced him often to reduce his diet to one meal during the day. He was
-then at the age of 20. At length, by the hospitable friendship of the
-professor of botany, and a small income derived from a few pupils,
-Linné found himself free to devote himself to the great labour of his
-life. It was in the house of his host (Rudbeck) that he sketched the
-subject-matter of the important works he afterwards published. In 1731
-he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span> commissioned by his university to explore the vegetable life
-of Lapland. Within the space of five months he traversed alone, and
-with slender provision, some 4,000 miles. The result of this laborious
-expedition was his <i>Flora Laponica</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Three years later, with the sum of fifteen pounds, which he had with
-great difficulty gathered together, he set out in search of some
-university where he might obtain the necessary degree of doctor in
-medicine at the least outlay, in order to gain a living by the practice
-of physic. He found the object of his search in Holland. In that
-country he met with a hospitable reception. During his residence in
-Holland he came over to England, and visited the botanical collections
-at Oxford and Eltham, with which the Swedish <i>savant</i>, it seems, had
-not much reason to be satisfied. Returning to Sweden, he began practice
-as a physician at the age of 31, and he lectured, by Government
-appointment, upon botany and mineralogy at Stockholm. His fame had now
-become European. He was in correspondence with some of the most eminent
-scientific men throughout the world. Books and collections were sent to
-him from every quarter, and his pupils supplied him with the results
-of their explorations in the three continents. He was elected to the
-Professorship of Medicine at Upsala, and (a vain addition to his real
-titles) he was soon afterwards “ennobled.”</p>
-
-<p>The productions of his genius and industry during the twenty years
-from 1740 were astonishingly numerous. Besides his <i>Systema Naturæ</i>
-and <i>Species Plantarum</i>, his two most considerable works, he wrote a
-large number of dissertations, afterwards collected under the title of
-<i>Amœnitates Academicæ</i>&mdash;“Academic Delights.” Everything he wrote was
-received with the greatest respect by the scientific world. Upon his
-death the whole University of Upsala united in showing respect to his
-memory; sixteen doctors of medicine, old pupils, bearing the “pall,”
-and a general mourning was ordered throughout the land of his birth.</p>
-
-<p>The scientific merits of Linné are his exactness and conciseness in
-classification. He reduced to something like order the chaotic and
-pedantic systems of his predecessors, which were prolix and overladen
-with names and classes. If the science still labours under the stigma
-of needless pedantry, the fault lies not with himself, but with his
-successors. Linné’s evidence to the scientific truth of Vegetarianism
-is brief but <i>pregnant</i>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“This species of food [fruits and farinacea] is that which <i>is most
-suited</i> to man, as is proved by the series of quadrupeds, analogy,
-wild men, apes, the structure of the mouth, of the stomach, and of
-the hands.”<a name="FNanchor_182_182" id="FNanchor_182_182"></a><a href="#Footnote_182_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXIX_BUFFON">XXIX.<br />
-<span class="s5">BUFFON. 1707&ndash;1788.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">A<span class="smaller">N</span> eminent instance of perversity of logic&mdash;of which, by the way, the
-history of human thought supplies too many examples&mdash;is that of the
-well-known author of the <i>Histoire Naturelle</i>, a work which (highly
-interesting as it is, and always will be, by reason of the detailed
-and generally accurate delineation of the characters and habits of the
-various forms of animated nature, and by reason of the graces of style
-of that French classic) is, from a strictly scientific point of view,
-of not always the most reliable authority. Although Buffon has depicted
-as forcibly as well can be conceived the low position in Nature of
-the carnivorous tribes, and not a few of the evils arising from human
-addiction to carnivorousness, yet, by a strange perversion of the facts
-of comparative physiology, he has chosen to enlist himself amongst the
-apologists of that degenerate mode of living. But facts are stronger
-than prejudices, and his very candid <i>admissions</i>, which we shall here
-quote, speak sufficiently for themselves:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Man [says he] knows how to use, as a master, his power over
-[other] animals. He has selected those whose flesh <i>flatters his
-taste</i>. He has made domestic slaves of them. He has multiplied them
-more than Nature could have done. He has formed innumerable flocks,
-and by the cares which he takes in propagating them he <i>seems</i><a name="FNanchor_183_183" id="FNanchor_183_183"></a><a href="#Footnote_183_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a>
-to have acquired the right of sacrificing them for himself. But he
-extends that right <i>much beyond</i> his needs. For, independently of
-those species which he has subjected, and of which he disposes at
-his will, he makes war also upon wild animals, upon birds, upon
-fishes. He does not even limit himself to those of the climate
-he inhabits. He seeks at a distance, even in the remotest seas,
-new meats, and entire Nature seems scarcely to suffice for his
-intemperance and the inconsistent variety of his appetites.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Man alone consumes and engulfs more flesh than all other animals
-put together. He is, then, the greatest destroyer, and he is
-so more by abuse than by necessity.</i> Instead of enjoying with
-moderation the resources offered him, in place of dispensing them
-with equity, in place of repairing in proportion as he destroys,
-of renewing in proportion as he annihilates, the rich man makes
-all his boast and glory in <i>consuming</i>, all his splendour in
-destroying, in one day, at his table, more material (<i>plus de
-biens</i>) than would be necessary for the support of several
-families. He abuses equally other animals and his own species, the
-rest of whom live in famine, languish in misery, and work only
-to satisfy the immoderate appetite and the still more insatiable
-vanity of this human being who, <i>destroying others by want,
-destroys himself by excess</i>.</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
-
-<p>“And yet Man might, like other animals, live upon vegetables.
-<i>Flesh is not a better nourishment than grains or bread.</i> What
-constitutes true nourishment, what contributes to the nutrition,
-to the development, to the growth, and to the support of the body,
-is not that brute matter which, to our eyes, composes the texture
-of flesh or of vegetables, but it is those organic molecules which
-both contain; since the ox, in feeding on grass, acquires as much
-flesh as man or as animals who live upon flesh and blood.... The
-essential source is the same; it is the same matter, it is the same
-organic molecules which nourish the Ox, Man, and all animals....
-It results from what we have just said that Man, whose stomach
-and intestines are not of a very great capacity relatively to the
-volume of his body, could not live simply upon grass. Nevertheless
-<i>it is proved by facts that he could well live upon bread,
-vegetables, and the grains of plants</i>, since we know entire nations
-and classes of men to whom religion forbids to feed upon anything
-that has life.”</p></div>
-
-<p>To the ordinary apprehension all this might seem <i>primâ facie</i>
-conclusive evidence of the non-necessariness of the food of the
-richer classes of the community. But, unhappily, Buffon seems to have
-considered himself as holding a brief to defend his clients, the
-flesh-eaters, in the last resort, and, accordingly, in spite of these
-admissions, which to an unbiassed mind might appear conclusive argument
-for the relinquishment of flesh as food, he proceeds to contradict
-himself by adding:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“But these examples, supported even by the authority of Pythagoras
-[and he might have added many later names of equal authority], and
-recommended by some physicians too friendly to a reformed diet
-(<i>trop amis de diète!</i>), appear to me not sufficient to convince us
-that it would be for the advantage of human health (<i>qu’il y eût à
-gagner pour la santè des hommes</i>) and for the multiplication of the
-human species to live upon vegetables and bread only, for so much
-the stronger reason, that the poor country people, whom the luxury
-of the cities and towns and the extravagant waste of tables reduce
-to this mode of living, languish and die off sooner than persons
-of the middle class, to whom inanition and excess are equally
-unknown!”<a name="FNanchor_184_184" id="FNanchor_184_184"></a><a href="#Footnote_184_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>In stigmatising, in the following sentence, the cruel rapacity of the
-lower carnivorous tribes, Buffon consciously or unconsciously stamps
-the same stigma upon the carnivorous human animal:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“<i>After Man</i>, the animals who live only upon flesh are the greatest
-destroyers. They are at once the enemies of Nature and the rivals
-of Man.”<a name="FNanchor_185_185" id="FNanchor_185_185"></a><a href="#Footnote_185_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXX_HAWKESWORTH">XXX.<br />
-<span class="s5">HAWKESWORTH. 1715&ndash;1773.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">B<span class="smaller">EST</span> known as the editor of <i>The Adventurer</i>&mdash;a periodical in imitation
-of the <i>Spectator</i>, <i>Rambler</i>, &amp;c.&mdash;which appeared twice a week during
-the years 1752&ndash;54. Johnson, Warton, and others assisted him in this
-undertaking, which has the honour of being one of the first periodicals
-which have ventured to denounce the cruel barbarism of “Sport,” and the
-papers by Hawkesworth upon that subject are in striking contrast with
-the usual tone and practice of his contemporaries and, indeed, of our
-own times.</p>
-
-<p>In 1761 he published an edition of Swift’s writings, with a life which
-received the praise of Samuel Johnson (in his <i>Lives of the Poets</i>),
-and it is a passage in that book which entitles him to a place here.
-In 1773 he was entrusted by the Government of the day with the task
-of compiling a history of the recent voyages of Captain Cook. He also
-translated the <i>Aventures de Télémaque</i> of Fénélon. The coarseness
-and repulsiveness of the dishes of the common diet seldom have been
-stigmatised with greater force than by Dr. Hawkesworth. His expressions
-of abhorrence are conceived quite in the spirit of Plutarch:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Among other dreadful and disgusting images which Custom has
-rendered familiar, are those which arise from eating animal food.
-He who has ever turned with abhorrence from the skeleton of a
-beast which has been picked whole by birds or vermin, must confess
-that <i>habit</i> alone could have enabled him to endure the sight of
-the mangled bones and flesh of a dead carcase which every day
-cover his table. And he who reflects on the <i>number</i> of lives that
-have been sacrificed to sustain his own, should enquire by <i>what</i>
-the account has been balanced, and whether his life is become
-proportionately of more value by the exercise of virtue and by the
-superior happiness which he has communicated to [more] reasonable
-beings.”<a name="FNanchor_186_186" id="FNanchor_186_186"></a><a href="#Footnote_186_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXI_PALEY">XXXI.<br />
-<span class="s5">PALEY. 1743&ndash;1805.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">W<span class="smaller">ITH</span> the exception of Joseph Butler, perhaps the ablest and most
-interesting of English orthodox theologians. As one of the very few
-of this numerous class of writers who seem seriously to be impressed
-with the difficulty of reconciling orthodox <i>dietetics</i> with the higher
-moral and religious instincts, Paley has for social reformers a title
-to remembrance, and it is as a moral philosopher that he has a claim
-upon our attention.</p>
-
-<p>The son of a country curate, Paley began his career as tutor in an
-academy in Greenwich. He had entered Christ’s College, Cambridge,
-as “sizar.” Being senior wrangler of his year, he was afterwards
-elected a Fellow of his college. His lectures on moral philosophy at
-the University contained the germs of his most useful writing. After
-the usual previous stages, finally he received the preferment of the
-Archdeaconry of Carlisle. The failure of the most eminent of the modern
-apologists of dogmatic Christianity to attain the highest rewards of
-ecclesiastical ambition, and the refusal of George III. to promote
-“pigeon” Paley when it was proposed to that reactionary prince to make
-so skilful a controversialist a bishop&mdash;a refusal founded on the famous
-apology for monarchy in the <i>Moral and Political Philosophy</i>&mdash;is well
-known.</p>
-
-<p>The most important, by far, of his writings, is the <i>Elements of
-Moral and Political Philosophy</i> (1785). He founds moral obligation
-upon principles of utility. In politics he asserts the grounds of the
-duties of rulers and ruled to be based upon the same far-reaching
-consideration, and upon this principle he maintains that as soon
-as any Government has proved itself corrupt or negligent of the
-public good, whatever may have been the alleged legitimacy of its
-original authority, the right of the governed to put an end to it is
-established. “The final view of all national politics,” he affirms,
-“is [ought to be] to produce the greatest quantity of happiness.”
-The comparative boldness, indeed, of certain of his disquisitions
-on Government alarmed not a little the political and ecclesiastical
-dignitaries of the time. His adhesion to the programme of Clarkson and
-the anti-slavery “fanatics” (as that numerically insignificant band of
-reformers was styled) did not tend, it may be presumed, to counteract
-the damaging effects of his political philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>In his <i>Natural Theology</i> (1802), his best theological production, he
-labours to establish the fact of benevolent design from observation
-of the various phenomena of nature and life. Whatever estimate may be
-formed of the success of this undertaking, there can be no question
-of the ability and eloquence of the accomplished pleader; and the
-book<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span> proves him, at least, to have acquired a surprising amount
-of physiological and anatomical knowledge. It is justly described
-by Sir J. Mackintosh as “the wonderful work of a man who, after
-sixty, had studied anatomy in order to write it.” Of the <i>Evidences</i>
-(1790&ndash;94)&mdash;the most popularly known of his writings&mdash;the considerable
-literary merit is in somewhat striking contrast, in regard to clearness
-and simplicity of style, with the ordinary productions of the
-evidential school.</p>
-
-<p>We are concerned now with the <i>Moral and Political Philosophy</i>. It
-has been already stated that it is based upon the principles of
-utilitarianism. As for personal moral conduct, he justly considered it
-to be vastly influenced by early custom; or, as he expresses it, the
-art of life consists in the right “setting of our habits.”</p>
-
-<p>On the subjoined examination of the question of the lawfulness or
-otherwise of flesh-eating, his ultimate refuge in an alleged biblical
-authority (forced upon him, apparently, by the necessity of his
-position rather than by personal inclination) confirms rather than
-weakens his preceding candid <i>admissions</i>, which sufficiently establish
-our position:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“A right to the flesh of animals. This is a <i>very different claim</i>
-from the former [‘a right to the fruits or vegetable produce of
-the earth’]. <i>Some</i> excuse seems necessary for the pain and loss
-which we occasion to [other] animals by restraining them of their
-liberty, mutilating their bodies, and, at last, putting an end to
-their lives for our pleasure or convenience.</p>
-
-<p>“The reasons alleged in vindication of this practice are the
-following&mdash;that the several species of animals being created to
-prey upon one another<a name="FNanchor_187_187" id="FNanchor_187_187"></a><a href="#Footnote_187_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a> affords a kind of analogy to prove that
-the human species were intended to feed upon them; that, if let
-alone, they would overrun the earth, and exclude mankind from the
-occupation of it;<a name="FNanchor_188_188" id="FNanchor_188_188"></a><a href="#Footnote_188_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a> that they are requited for what they suffer
-at our hands by our care and protection.</p>
-
-<p>“Upon which reasons I would observe that the analogy contended
-for <i>is extremely lame</i>, since [the carnivorous] animals have no
-power to support life by any other means, and <i>since we have, for
-the whole human species might subsist entirely upon fruit, pulse,
-herbs, and roots, as many tribes of Hindus<a name="FNanchor_189_189" id="FNanchor_189_189"></a><a href="#Footnote_189_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a> actually do</i>. The
-two other reasons may be valid reasons, as far as they go, for,
-no doubt, if men had been supported entirely by vegetable food a
-great part of those animals who die to furnish our tables would
-never have lived<a name="FNanchor_190_190" id="FNanchor_190_190"></a><a href="#Footnote_190_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a> but they by no means justify our right over
-the lives of other animals to the extent to which we exercise it.
-What danger is there, <i>e.g.</i>, of fish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span> interfering with us in the
-occupation of their element, or what do we contribute to their
-support or preservation?</p>
-
-<p>“<i>It seems to me that it would be difficult to defend this right
-by any arguments which the light and order of Nature afford</i>, and
-that we are beholden for it to the permission recorded in Scripture
-(<i>Gen.</i> ix., 1, 2, 3). To Adam and his posterity had been granted,
-at the creation, ‘every green herb for meat,’ and nothing more.
-In the last clause of the passage now produced the old grant is
-recited and extended to the flesh of animals&mdash;‘even as the green
-herb, have I given you all things.’ But this was not until after
-the Flood. The inhabitants of the antediluvian world had therefore
-no such permission that we know of. Whether they actually refrained
-from the flesh of animals is another question. Abel, we read, was
-a keeper of sheep, and for what purpose he kept them, except for
-food, is difficult to say (unless it were sacrifice). Might not,
-however, some of the stricter sects among the antediluvians be
-scrupulous as to this point? And might not Noah and his family
-be of this description? For, it is not probable that God should
-publish a permission to authorise a practice which had never been
-disputed.”<a name="FNanchor_191_191" id="FNanchor_191_191"></a><a href="#Footnote_191_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Thus far as regards the <i>moral</i> aspect of the subject. Dealing with the
-social and economical view, Paley, untrammelled by professional views,
-is more decided. In his chapter, <i>Of Population and Provision, &amp;c.</i>, he
-writes:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The natives of Hindustan being confined, by the laws of their
-religion, to the use of vegetable food, and requiring little except
-rice, which the country produces in plentiful crops; and food, in
-warm climates, composing the only want of life, these countries are
-populous under all the injuries of a despotic, and the agitations
-of an unsettled, Government. If any revolution, or what would be
-called perhaps <i>refinement of manners (!)</i>, should generate in
-these people a taste for the flesh of animals, similar to what
-prevails amongst the Arabian hordes&mdash;should introduce flocks and
-herds into grounds which are now covered with corn&mdash;should teach
-them to account a certain portion of this species of food amongst
-the necessaries of life&mdash;the population from this single change
-would suffer in a few years a great diminution, and this diminution
-would follow in spite of every effort of the laws, or even of any
-improvement that might take place in their civil condition. In
-Ireland the simplicity of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span> living alone maintains a considerable
-degree of population under great defects of police, industry,
-and commerce.... Next to the mode of living, we are to consider
-‘the quantity of provision suited to that mode, which is either
-raised in the country or imported into it,’ for this is the order
-in which we assigned the causes of population and undertook to
-treat of them. Now, if we measure the quantity of provision by the
-number of human bodies it will support in due health and vigour,
-this quantity, the extent and quality of the soil from which it
-is raised being given, will depend greatly upon the <i>kind</i>. For
-instance, a piece of ground capable of supplying animal food
-sufficient for the subsistence of ten persons <i>would sustain, at
-least, the double of that number with grain, roots, and milk</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“The first resource of savage life is in the flesh of wild animals.
-Hence the numbers amongst savage nations, compared with the tract
-of country which they occupy, are universally small, because this
-species of provision is, of all others, supplied in the slenderest
-proportion. The next step was the invention of pasturage, or the
-rearing of flocks and herds of tame animals. This alteration
-added to the stock of provision much. But the last and <i>principal
-improvement was to follow, viz., tillage, or the artificial
-production of corn, esculent plants, and roots</i>. This discovery,
-whilst it changed the quality of human food, augmented the quantity
-in a vast proportion.</p>
-
-<p>“So far as the state of population is governed and limited by
-the quantity of provision, perhaps there is no single cause that
-affects it so powerfully as the kind and quality of food which
-chance or usage hath introduced into a country. In England,
-notwithstanding the produce of the soil has been of late
-considerably increased by the enclosure of wastes and the adoption,
-in many places, of a more successful husbandry, yet we do not
-observe a corresponding addition to the number of inhabitants, the
-reason of which appears to me to be the more general consumption
-of animal food amongst us. Many ranks of people whose ordinary
-diet was, in the last century, prepared almost entirely from milk,
-roots, and vegetables, now require every day a considerable portion
-of the flesh of animals. <i>Hence a great part of the richest lands
-of the country are converted to pasturage.</i> Much also of the
-bread-corn, which went directly to the nourishment of human bodies,
-now only contributes to it by fattening the flesh of sheep and
-oxen. <i>The mass and volume of provisions are hereby diminished</i>,
-and what is gained in the amelioration of the soil is lost in the
-quality of the produce.</p>
-
-<p>“This consideration teaches us that tillage, as an object of
-national care and encouragement, is universally preferable to
-pasturage, because the kind of provision which it yields goes
-much farther in the sustentation of human life. Tillage is also
-recommended by this additional advantage&mdash;that it <i>affords
-employment to a much more numerous peasantry</i>. Indeed pasturage
-seems to be the art of a nation, either imperfectly civilised, as
-are many of the tribes which cultivate it in the internal parts
-of Asia, or of a nation, like Spain, declining from its summit by
-luxury and inactivity.”<a name="FNanchor_192_192" id="FNanchor_192_192"></a><a href="#Footnote_192_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Elsewhere Paley asserts that “luxury in dress or furniture is
-universally preferable to luxury <i>in eating</i>, because the articles
-which constitute the one are more the production of human art and
-industry than those which supply the other.”</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXII_ST_PIERRE">XXXII.<br />
-<span class="s5">ST. PIERRE. 1737&ndash;1814.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">P<span class="smaller">RINCIPALLY</span> known as the author of the most charming of all idyllic
-romances&mdash;<i>Paul et Virginie</i>. Beginning his career as civil engineer
-he afterwards entered the French army. A quarrel with his official
-superiors forced him to seek employment elsewhere, and he found it
-in the Russian service, where his scientific ability received due
-recognition.</p>
-
-<p>Encouraged by the esteem in which he was held, he formed the project
-of establishing a colony on the Caspian shores, which should be under
-just and equal laws. St. Pierre submitted the scheme to the Russian
-Minister, who, as we should be apt to presume, did not receive it too
-favourably. He then went to Poland in the vain expectation of aiding
-the people of that hopelessly distracted country in throwing off the
-foreigners’ yoke. Failing in this undertaking, and despairing, for
-the time, of the cause of freedom, we next find him in Berlin and
-in Vienna. He had also previously visited Holland, in which great
-refuge of freedom he had been received with hospitality. In Paris,
-upon his return to France, his project of a free colony found better
-reception than in St. Petersburg&mdash;owing, perhaps, to the not altogether
-disinterested sympathy of the Government with the recently revolted
-American colonies. To further his plans he accepted an official post in
-the Ile de France, intending eventually to proceed to Madagascar, where
-was to be realised his long-cherished idea. On the voyage he discovered
-that his associates had formed a very different design from his
-own&mdash;to engage in the slave traffic. Separating from these nefarious
-speculators, he landed in the Ile de France, where he remained two
-years. It is to the experiences of this part of his life that we owe
-his <i>Paul et Virginie</i>, the scenes of which are laid in that tropical
-island.</p>
-
-<p>Returning home once again, he made the acquaintance of D’Alembert
-and of other leading men of letters in Paris, and, particularly,
-of Rousseau, his philosophical master. At the period of the Great
-Revolution of 1789, St. Pierre lost his post as superintendent of the
-Royal Botanical Gardens under the old Bourbon Government, and he found
-himself reduced to poverty; and although his sympathies were with the
-party of constitutional, though not of radical, reform, the supremacy
-of the extreme revolutionists (1792&ndash;1794) exposed him to some hazard by
-reason of his known deistic convictions. Upon the establishment of the
-reactionary revolution of the Empire, St. Pierre recovered his former
-post, and, with the empty honour of the Imperial Cross, he received the
-more solid benefit of a pension and other emoluments.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>His writings have been collected and published in two quarto volumes
-(Paris, 1836). Of these, after his celebrated romance, perhaps the most
-popular is <i>La Chaumière Indienne</i> (“The Indian or Hindu Cottage”). His
-principal productions are <i>Etudes de la Nature</i> (“Studies of Nature”),
-<i>Vœux d’un Solitaire</i> (“Aspirations of a Recluse”), <i>Voyage à L’Ile
-de France</i> (“Voyage to Mauritius”), and <i>L’Arcadie</i> (“Arcadia”).
-His merits consist in a certain refinement of feeling, in charming
-eloquence in description of natural beauty, and in the humane spirit
-which breathes in his writings. Of the <i>Paul et Virginie</i> he tells us&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I have proposed to myself great designs in that little work....
-I have desired to reunite to the beauty of Nature, as seen in the
-tropics, the moral beauty of a small society of human beings. I
-proposed to myself thereby to demonstrate several great truths;
-amongst others this&mdash;that our happiness consists in living
-according to Nature and Virtue.”</p></div>
-
-<p>He assures us that the principal characters and events he describes
-are by no means only the imaginings of romance. In truth, it seems
-difficult to believe that the genius of the author alone could have
-impressed so wonderful an air of reality upon merely fictitious scenes.
-The popularity of the story was secured at once in the author’s own
-country, and it rapidly spread throughout Europe. <i>Paul et Virginie</i>
-was successively translated into English, Italian, German, Dutch,
-Polish, Russian, and Spanish. It became the fashion for mothers to give
-to their children the names of its hero and heroine, and well would
-it have been had they also adopted for them that method of innocent
-living which is the real, if too generally unrecognised, secret of the
-fascinating power of the book.</p>
-
-<p>It is thus that he eloquently calls to remembrance the <i>natural</i> feasts
-of his young heroine and hero:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Amiable children! thus in innocence did you pass your first days.
-How often in this spot have your mothers, pressing you in their
-arms, thanked Heaven for the consolation you were preparing for
-them in their old age, and for the happiness of seeing you enter
-upon life under so happy auguries! How often, under the shadow
-of these rocks, have I shared, with them, your out-door repasts
-<i>which had cost no animals their lives</i>. Gourds full of milk, of
-newly-laid eggs, of rice cakes upon banana leaves, baskets laden
-with potatoes, with mangoes, with oranges, with pomegranates,
-with bananas, with dates, with ananas, offered at once the most
-wholesome meats, the most beautiful colours, and the most agreeable
-juices. The conversation was as refined and gentle as their food.”</p></div>
-
-<p>The humaneness of their manners had attracted to the charming arbour,
-which they had formed for themselves, all kinds of beautiful birds,
-who sought there their daily meals and the caresses of their human
-protectors. Our readers will not be displeased to be reminded of this
-charming scene:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Virginie loved to repose upon the slope of this fountain, which
-was decorated with a pomp at once magnificent and wild. Often
-would she come there to wash the household linen beneath the shade
-of two cocoa-nut trees. Sometimes she led her goats to feed in this
-place; and, while she was preparing cheese from their milk, she
-pleased herself in watching them as they browsed the herbage upon
-the precipitous sides of the rocks, and supported themselves in
-mid-air upon one of the jutting points as upon a pedestal. Paul,
-seeing that this spot was loved by Virginie, brought from the
-neighbouring forest the nests of all sorts of birds. The fathers
-and mothers of these birds followed their little ones, and came
-and established themselves in this new colony. Virginie would
-distribute to them from time to time grains of rice, maize, and
-millet. As soon as she appeared, the blackbirds, the <i>bengalis</i>,
-whose flight is so gentle, the cardinals, whose plumage is of the
-colour of fire, quitted their bushes; parroquets, green as emerald,
-descended from the neighbouring lianas, partridges ran along under
-the grass&mdash;all advanced pell-mell up to her feet like domestic
-hens. Paul and she delighted themselves with their transports of
-joy, with their eager appetites, and with their loves.”</p></div>
-
-<p>In his views upon national education, St. Pierre invites the serious
-attention of legislators and educators to the importance of accustoming
-the young to the nourishment prescribed by Nature:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“They [the true instructors of the people] will accustom children
-to the vegetable <i>régime</i>. The peoples living upon vegetable foods,
-are, of all men, the handsomest, the most vigorous, the least
-exposed to diseases and to passions, and they whose lives last
-longest. Such, in Europe, are a large proportion of the Swiss. The
-greater part of the peasantry who, in every country, form the most
-vigorous portion of the people, eat very little flesh-meat. The
-Russians have multiplied periods of fasting and days of abstinence,
-from which even the soldiers are not exempt; and yet they resist
-all kinds of fatigues. The negroes, who undergo so many hard blows
-in our colonies, live upon manioc, potatoes, and maize alone. The
-Brahmins of India, who frequently reach the age of one hundred
-years, eat only vegetable foods. It was from the Pythagorean sect
-that issued Epaminondas, so celebrated by his virtues; Archytas,
-by his genius for mathematics and mechanics; Milo of Crotona, by
-his strength of body. Pythagoras himself was the finest man of his
-time, and, without dispute, the most enlightened, since he was the
-father of philosophy amongst the Greeks. Inasmuch as the non-flesh
-diet introduces many virtues and excludes none, it will be well to
-bring up the young upon it, since it has so happy an influence upon
-the beauty of the body and upon the tranquility of the mind. This
-regimen prolongs childhood, and, by consequence, human life.<a name="FNanchor_193_193" id="FNanchor_193_193"></a><a href="#Footnote_193_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a></p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
-
-<p>“I have seen an instance of it in a young Englishman aged fifteen,
-and who did not appear to be twelve years of age. He was of a most
-interesting figure, of the most robust health, and of the most
-sweet disposition. He was accustomed to take very long walks. He
-was never put out of temper by any annoyance that might happen. His
-father, Mr. Pigott, told me that he had brought him up entirely
-upon the Pythagorean regimen, the good effects of which he had
-known by his own experience. He had formed the project of employing
-a part of his fortune, which was considerable, in establishing
-in English America a society of dietary reformers who should be
-engaged in educating, under the same regimen, the children of
-the colonists in all the arts which bear upon agriculture. Would
-that this educational scheme, worthy of the best and happiest
-times of Antiquity, might succeed! Physically, it suits a warlike
-people no less than an agricultural one. The Persian children, of
-the time of Cyrus, and by his orders, were nourished upon bread,
-water, and vegetables.... It was with these children, become men,
-that Cyrus made the conquest of Asia. I observe that Lycurgus
-introduced a great part of the physical and moral regimen of the
-Persian children into the education of those of the Lacedemonians.”
-(<i>Etudes.</i>)<a name="FNanchor_194_194" id="FNanchor_194_194"></a><a href="#Footnote_194_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a></p></div>
-
-<p class="mtop2">Of the many practical witnesses of this period, more or less
-interesting, for the sufficiency, or rather superiority, of the
-reformed regimen, four names stand out in prominent relief&mdash;Franklin,
-Howard, Swedenborg, Wesley&mdash;prominent either for scientific ability or
-for philanthropic zeal. To his early resolution to betake himself to
-frugal living, Benjamin Franklin, then in a printer’s office in Boston,
-attributes mainly his future success in life.<a name="FNanchor_195_195" id="FNanchor_195_195"></a><a href="#Footnote_195_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a></p>
-
-<p>It was to his pure dietary that the great Prison Reformer assigns
-his immunity, during so many years, from the deadly jail-fever, to
-the infection of which he fearlessly exposed himself in visiting
-those hotbeds of <i>malaria</i>&mdash;the filthy prisons of this country and of
-continental Europe. (See the correspondence of John Howard&mdash;<i>passim</i>.)
-Equally significant is the testimony of the eminent founder of
-Methodism whose almost unexampled energy and endurance, both of mind
-and body, during some fifty years of continuous persecution, both legal
-and popular, were supported (as he informs us in his <i>Journals</i>) mainly
-by abstinence from gross foods; while, in regard to Emanuel Swedenborg,
-if abstinence does not assume so prominent a place in his theological
-or other various writings as might have been expected from his special
-opinions, the cause of such silence must be referred not to personal
-addiction to an <i>anti-spiritualistic</i> nourishment (for he himself was
-notably frugal) but to preoccupation of mental faculties which seem to
-have been absorbed in the elaboration of his well-known spiritualistic
-system.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The limits of this work do not permit us to quote all the many writers
-of the eighteenth century whom philosophy, science, or profounder
-feeling urged <i>incidentally</i> to question the necessity or to suspect
-the barbarism of the Slaughter-House. But there are two names, amongst
-the highest in the whole range of English philosophic literature, whose
-expression of opinion may seem to be peculiarly noteworthy&mdash;the author
-of the <i>Wealth of Nations</i> and the historian of the <i>Decline and Fall
-of the Roman Empire</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It may, indeed, be doubted [writes the founder of the science of
-Political Economy] whether butchers’ meat is <i>anywhere</i> a necessary
-of life. Grain and other vegetables, with the help of milk, cheese,
-and butter, or oil (where butter is not to be had), it is known
-from experience, can, <i>without any butchers’ meat, afford the most
-plentiful, the most wholesome, the most nourishing, and the most
-invigorating diet</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_196_196" id="FNanchor_196_196"></a><a href="#Footnote_196_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>As for the reflections of the first of historians, who seems always
-carefully to guard himself from the expression of any sort of
-emotion not in keeping with the character of an impartial judge and
-unprejudiced spectator, but who, on the subject in question, cannot
-wholly repress the <i>natural</i> feeling of disgust, they are sufficiently
-significant. Gibbon is describing the manners of the Tartar tribes:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The thrones of Asia have been repeatedly overturned by the
-shepherds of the North, and their arms have spread terror and
-devastation over the most fertile and warlike countries of Europe.
-On this occasion, as well as on many others, the sober historian is
-forcibly awakened from a pleasing vision, and is compelled, with
-some reluctance, to confess that the pastoral manners, which have
-been adorned with the fairest attributes of peace and innocence,
-are much better adapted to the fierce and cruel habits of a
-military life.</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
-
-<p>“To illustrate this observation, I shall now proceed to consider a
-nation of shepherds and of warriors in the three important articles
-of (1) their diet, (2) their habitations, and (3) their exercises.
-1. The corn, or even the rice, which constitutes the ordinary
-and wholesome food of a civilised people, can be obtained only
-by the patient toil of the husbandman. Some of the happy savages
-who dwell between the tropics are plentifully nourished by the
-liberality of Nature; but in the climates of the North a nation
-of shepherds is reduced to their flocks and herds. The skilful
-practitioners of the medical art will determine (if they are able
-to determine) how far the temper of the human mind may be affected
-by the use of animal or of vegetable food; and whether the common
-association of carnivorous and cruel deserves to be considered
-in any other light than that of an innocent, perhaps a salutary,
-prejudice of humanity. Yet if it be true that the sentiment of
-compassion is imperceptibly weakened by the sight and practice of
-domestic cruelty, we may observe that <i>the horrid objects which
-are disguised by the arts of European refinement</i> are exhibited in
-their naked and most disgusting simplicity in the tent of a Tartar
-shepherd. The Oxen or the Sheep are slaughtered by the same hand
-from which they were accustomed to receive their daily food, and
-the bleeding limbs are served, with very little preparation, on the
-table of their unfeeling murderers.”<a name="FNanchor_197_197" id="FNanchor_197_197"></a><a href="#Footnote_197_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>To the poets, who claim to be the interpreters and priests of
-Nature, we might, with justness, look for celebration of the
-anti-materialist living. Unhappily we too generally look in vain.
-The prophet-poets&mdash;Hesiod, Kalidâsa, Milton, Thomson, Shelley,
-Lamartine&mdash;form a band more noble than numerous. Of those who, not
-having entered the very sanctuary of the temple of humanitarianism,
-have been content to officiate in its outer courts, Burns and Cowper
-occupy a prominent place. That the latter, who felt so keenly</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft3">“The persecution and the pain</div>
- <div class="verse">That man inflicts on all inferior kinds</div>
- <div class="verse">Regardless of their plaints,”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">and who has denounced with so eloquent indignation the pitiless wars
-“waged with defenceless innocence,” and the protean shapes of human
-selfishness, should yet have stopped short of the <i>final</i> cause of
-them all, would be inexplicable but for the blinding influence of
-habit and authority. Nevertheless, his picture of the savagery of
-the Slaughter-House, and of some of its associated cruelties, is too
-forcible to be omitted:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft5">“To make him sport,</div>
- <div class="verse">To justify the phrensy of his wrath,</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Or his base gluttony</i>, are causes good</div>
- <div class="verse">And just, in his account, why bird and beast</div>
- <div class="verse">Should suffer torture, and the stream be dyed</div>
- <div class="verse">With blood of their inhabitants impaled.</div>
- <div class="verse">Earth groans beneath the burden of a war</div>
- <div class="verse">Waged with defenceless Innocence: while he,</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Not satisfied to prey on all around,</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Adds tenfold bitterness to death by pangs</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Needless, and first torments ere he devours</i>.</div>
- <div class="verse">Now happiest they who occupy the scenes</div>
- <div class="verse">The most remote from his abhorred resort.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
- <div class="verse mleft5">Witness at his feet</div>
- <div class="verse">The Spaniel dying for some venial fault,</div>
- <div class="verse">Under dissection of the knotted scourge:</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Witness the patient Ox, with stripes and yells</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Driven to the slaughter, goaded as he runs</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>To madness, while the savage at his heels</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Laughs at the frantic sufferer’s fury spent</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Upon the heedless passenger o’erthrown</i>.</div>
- <div class="verse">He, too, is witness&mdash;noblest of the train</div>
- <div class="verse">Who waits on Man&mdash;the flight-performing Horse:</div>
- <div class="verse">With unsuspecting readiness he takes</div>
- <div class="verse">His murderer on his back, and, pushed all day,</div>
- <div class="verse">With bleeding sides, and flanks that heave for life,</div>
- <div class="verse">To the far-distant goal arrives, and dies!</div>
- <div class="verse">So little mercy shows, who needs so much!</div>
- <div class="verse">Does Law&mdash;so jealous in the cause of Man[?]&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Denounce no doom on the delinquent? None.”<a name="FNanchor_198_198" id="FNanchor_198_198"></a><a href="#Footnote_198_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXIII_OSWALD">XXXIII.<br />
-<span class="s5">OSWALD. 1730&ndash;1793.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">A<span class="smaller">MONGST</span> the less known prophets of the new Reformation the author
-of the <i>Cry of Nature</i>&mdash;one of the most eloquent appeals to justice
-and right feeling ever addressed to the conscience of men&mdash;deserves
-an honourable place. Of the facts of his life we have scanty record.
-He was a native of Edinburgh. At an early age he entered the English
-army as a private soldier, but his friends soon obtained for him
-an officer’s commission. He went to the East Indies, where he
-distinguished himself by his remarkable courage and ability. He did not
-long remain in the military life; and, having sold out, he travelled
-through Hindustan to inform himself of the principles of the Brahmin
-and Buddhist religions of the peninsula, whose dress as well as milder
-manners he assumed upon his return to England.</p>
-
-<p>During his stay in this country he uniformly abstained from all
-flesh meats, and so great, we are told, was his abhorrence of the
-Slaughter-House, that, to avoid it or the butcher’s shop, he was
-accustomed to make a long <i>détour</i>. His children were brought up in
-the same way.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span> In 1790, like some others of the more enthusiastic
-class of his countrymen, he espoused the cause of the Revolution, and
-went to Paris. By introducing some useful military reforms he gained
-distinction amongst the Republicans, and he received an important post.
-He seems to have fallen, with his sons, fighting in La Vendée for the
-National Cause.</p>
-
-<p>The author, in his preface, tells us that&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Fatigued with answering the inquiries and replying to the
-objections of his friends with respect to the singularity of his
-mode of life, he conceived that he might consult his ease by
-making, once for all, a public apology for his opinions.... The
-author is very far from entertaining a presumption that his slender
-labours (crude and imperfect as they are now hurried to the press)
-will ever operate an effect on the public mind; and yet, when
-he considers the natural bias of the human heart to the side of
-mercy,<a name="FNanchor_199_199" id="FNanchor_199_199"></a><a href="#Footnote_199_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a> and observes, on all hands, the barbarous governments
-of Europe giving way to a better system of things, he is inclined
-to hope that the day is beginning to approach when the growing
-sentiment of peace and goodwill towards men will also embrace, in a
-wide circle of benevolence, the lower orders of life.</p>
-
-<p>“At all events, the pleasing persuasion that his work may have
-contributed to <i>mitigate</i> the ferocities of prejudice, and to
-<i>diminish</i>, in some degree, the great mass of misery which
-oppresses the lower animal world, will, in the hour of distress,
-convey to the author’s soul a consolation which the tooth of
-calumny will not be able to empoison.”</p></div>
-
-<p>A noble and true inspiration nobly and eloquently used! The arguments,
-by which he attempts to reach the better feeling of his readers, are
-drawn from the deepest source of morality. Having given a beautiful
-picture of the tempting and alluring character of Fruits, he exclaims
-in his poetic-prose:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“But far other is the fate of animals. For, alas! when they are
-plucked from the tree of Life, suddenly the withered blossoms of
-their beauty shrink to the chilly hand of Death. Quenched in his
-cold grasp expires the lamp of their loveliness, and struck by
-the livid blast of loathed putrefaction, their comely limbs are
-involved in ghastly horror. Shall we leave the living herbs to
-seek, in the den of death, an obscene aliment? Insensible to the
-blooming beauties of Pomona&mdash;unallured by the fragrant odours that
-exhale from her groves of golden fruits&mdash;unmoved by the nectar of
-Nature, by the ambrosia of innocence&mdash;shall the voracious vultures
-of our impure appetites speed along those lovely scenes and alight
-in the loathsome sink of putrefaction to devour the remains of
-other creatures, to load with cadaverous rottenness a wretched
-stomach?”</p></div>
-
-<p>He repeats Porphyry’s appeal to the consideration of human interests
-themselves&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“And is not the human race itself highly interested to prevent the
-habit of spilling blood? For, will the man, habituated to violence,
-be nice to distinguish the vital tide of a quadruped from that
-which flows from a creature with two legs? Are the dying struggles
-of a Lamb less affecting than the agonies of any animal whatever?
-Or, will the ruffian who beholds unmoved the supplicatory looks
-of innocence itself, and, reckless of the Calf’s infantine cries,
-pitilessly plunges in her quivering side the murdering knife, will
-he turn, I say, with horror from human assassination?</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">‘What more advance can mortals make in sin,</div>
- <div class="verse">So near perfection, who with blood begin?</div>
- <div class="verse">Deaf to the calf who lies beneath the knife,</div>
- <div class="verse">Looks up, and from the butcher begs her life.</div>
- <div class="verse">Deaf to the harmless kid who, ere he dies,</div>
- <div class="verse">All efforts to procure thy pity tries,</div>
- <div class="verse">And imitates, in vain, thy children’s cries.</div>
- <div class="verse">Where will he stop?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“From the practice of slaughtering an innocent animal of another
-species to the murder of man himself the steps are neither many nor
-remote. This our forefathers perfectly understood, who ordained
-that, in a cause of blood, no butcher should be permitted to sit in
-jury....</p>
-
-<p>“But from the nature of the very human heart arises the strongest
-argument in behalf of the persecuted beings. Within us there
-exists a rooted repugnance to the shedding of blood, a repugnance
-which yields only to Custom, and which even the most inveterate
-custom can seldom entirely overcome. Hence the ungracious task of
-shedding the tide of life (for the gluttony of the table) has, in
-every country, been committed to the lowest class of men, and their
-profession is, in every country, an object of abhorrence.</p>
-
-<p>“They feed on the carcass without remorse, because the dying
-struggles of the butchered victim are secluded from their
-sight&mdash;because his cries pierce not their ears&mdash;because his
-agonising shrieks sink not into their souls. But were they forced,
-with their own hands, to assassinate the beings whom they devour,
-who is there among us who would not throw down the knife with
-detestation, and, rather than embrue his hands in the murder of
-the lamb, consent for ever to forego the accustomed repast? What
-then shall we say? Vainly planted in our breast is this abhorrence
-of cruelty&mdash;this sympathetic affection for innocence? Or do
-the feelings of the heart point to the command of Nature more
-unerringly than all the elaborate subtlety of a set of men who, at
-the shrine of science, have sacrificed the dearest sentiments of
-humanity?”</p></div>
-
-<p>This eloquent vindicator of the rights of the oppressed of the
-non-human races here addresses a scathing rebuke to the torturers
-of the vivisection-halls, as well as to those who abuse Science by
-attempting to enlist it in the defence of slaughter.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“You, the sons of modern science, who court not Wisdom in her
-walks of silent meditation in the grove&mdash;who behold her not in
-the living loveliness of her works, but expect to meet her in the
-midst of obscenity and corruption&mdash;you, who dig for knowledge in
-the depths of the dunghill, and who expect to discover Wisdom
-enthroned amid the fragments of mortality and the abhorrence of
-the senses&mdash;you, that with cruel violence interrogate trembling
-Nature, who plunge into her maternal bosom the butcher-knife, and,
-in quest of your nefarious science, delight to scrutinise the
-fibres of agonising beings, you dare also to violate the human
-form, and holding up the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span> entrails of men, you exclaim, ‘Behold the
-bowels of a carnivorous animal!’ Barbarians! to these very bowels
-I appeal against your cruel dogmas&mdash;to these bowels which Nature
-hath sanctified to the sentiments of pity and of gratitude, to the
-yearnings of kindred, to the melting tenderness of love.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft9">‘Mollissima corda</div>
- <div class="verse">Humano generi dare se Natura fatetur,</div>
- <div class="verse">Quæ <i>lachrymas</i> dedit: hæc nostri pars optima sensus.’<a name="FNanchor_200_200" id="FNanchor_200_200"></a><a href="#Footnote_200_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Had Nature intended man to be an animal of prey, would she have
-implanted in his breast an instinct so adverse to her purpose?...
-Would she not rather, in order to enable him to brave the piercing
-cries of anguish, have wrapped his ruthless heart in ribs of brass,
-and with iron entrails have armed him to grind, without shadow of
-remorse, the palpitating limbs of agonising life? But has Nature
-winged the feet of men with fleetness to overtake the flying prey?
-And where are his fangs to tear asunder the beings destined for
-his food? Does the lust of carnage glare in his eye-balls? Does he
-scent from afar the footsteps of his victim? Does his soul pant for
-the feast of blood? Is the bosom of men the rugged abode of bloody
-thoughts, and from the den of Death rush forth, at sight of other
-animals, his rapacious desires to slay, to mangle, and to devour?</p>
-
-<p>“But come, men of scientific subtlety, approach and examine with
-attention this dead body. It was late a playful Fawn, who skipping
-and bounding on the bosom of parent Earth, awoke in the soul of
-the feeling observer a thousand tender emotions. But the butcher’s
-knife has laid low the delight of a fond mother, and the darling
-of Nature is now stretched in gore upon the ground. Approach, I
-say, men of scientific subtlety, and tell me, does this ghastly
-spectacle whet your appetite? But why turn you with abhorrence?
-Do you then yield to the combined evidence of your senses, to
-the testimony of conscience and common sense; or with a show of
-rhetoric, pitiful as it is perverse, will you still persist in your
-endeavour to persuade us that to murder an innocent being is not
-cruel nor unjust, and that to feed upon a corpse is neither filthy
-nor unfitting?”</p></div>
-
-<p>Amid the dark scenes of barbarism and cold-blooded indifferentism
-to suffering innocence, there are yet the glimmers of a better
-nature, which need but the life-giving impulse of a true religion and
-philosophy:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“And yet those channels of sympathy for inferior animals, long&mdash;a
-very long&mdash;custom has not been able altogether to stifle. Even now,
-notwithstanding the narrow, joyless, and hard-hearted tendency of
-the prevailing superstitions; even now we discover, in every corner
-of the globe, some good-natured <i>prejudice</i> in behalf of [certain
-of] the persecuted animals; we perceive, in every country, certain
-privileged animals, whom even the ruthless jaws of gluttony dare
-not to invade. For, to pass over unnoticed the vast empires of
-India and of China, where the lower orders of life are considered
-as relative parts of society, and are protected by the laws and
-religion of the natives,<a name="FNanchor_201_201" id="FNanchor_201_201"></a><a href="#Footnote_201_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a> the Tartars abstain from several
-kinds of animals; the Turks are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span> charitable to the very dog, whom
-they abominate; and even the English peasant pays towards the
-<i>red-breast</i> an inviolable respect to the rights of hospitality.</p>
-
-<p>“Long after the perverse practice of devouring the flesh of animals
-had grown into inveterate habit among peoples, there existed still
-in almost every country, and of every religion, and of every sect
-of philosophy, a wiser, a purer, and more holy class of men who
-preserved by their institutions, by their precepts, and by their
-example, the memory of primitive innocence [?] and simplicity. The
-Pythagoreans abhorred the slaughter of any animal life; Epicurus
-and the worthiest part of his disciples bounded their delights with
-the produce of their garden; and of the first Christians several
-sects abominated the feast of blood, and were satisfied with the
-food which Nature, unviolated, brings forth for our support....</p>
-
-<p>“Man, in a state of nature, is not, apparently, much superior to
-other animals. His organisation is, without doubt, extremely happy;
-but then the dexterity of his figure is counterpoised by great
-advantages in other beings. Inferior to the Bull in force, and in
-fleetness to the Dog, the <i>os sublime</i>, or erect front, a feature
-he bears in common with the Monkey, could scarcely have inspired
-him with those haughty and magnificent ideas which the pride of
-human refinement thence endeavours to deduce. Exposed, like his
-fellow-creatures, to the injuries of the air, urged to action by
-the same physical necessities, susceptible of the same impressions,
-actuated by the same passions, and equally subject to the pains of
-disease and to the pangs of dissolution, the simple savage never
-dreams that his nature was so much more noble, or that he drew his
-origin from a purer source or more remote than the other animals in
-whom he saw a resemblance so complete.</p>
-
-<p>“Nor were the simple sounds by which he expressed the singleness
-of his heart at all fitted to flatter him into that fond sense
-of superiority over the beings whom the unreasoning insolence of
-cultivated ages absurdly styles <i>mute</i>. I say absurdly styles
-<i>mute</i>; for with what propriety can that name be applied, for
-example, to the little sirens of the groves, to whom Nature has
-granted the strains of ravishment&mdash;the soul of song? Those charming
-warblers who pour forth, with a moving melody which human ingenuity
-vies with in vain, their loves, their anxiety, their woes. In
-the ardour and delicacy of his amorous expressions, can the most
-impassioned, the most respectful, human lover surpass the ‘glossy
-kind,’ as described by the most beautiful of all our poets?</p>
-
-<p>“And, indeed, has not Nature given to almost every being the same
-spontaneous signs of the various affections? Admire we not in other
-animals whatever is most eloquent in man&mdash;the tremor of desire, the
-tear of distress, the piercing cry of anguish, the pity-pleading
-look&mdash;expressions which speak to the soul with a feeling which
-words are feeble to convey?”</p></div>
-
-<p>The whole of the little book of which the above extracts are properly
-representative, breathes the spirit of a true religion. We shall only
-add that it exhibits almost as much learning and valuable research as
-it exhibits justness of thought and sensibility&mdash;enriched, as it is, by
-copious illustrative notes.<a name="FNanchor_202_202" id="FNanchor_202_202"></a><a href="#Footnote_202_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXIV_HUFELAND">XXXIV.<br />
-<span class="s5">HUFELAND. 1762&ndash;1836.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">N<span class="smaller">OT</span> entitled to rank among the greater prophets who have had the
-penetration to recognise the <i>essential</i> barbarism, no less than the
-unnaturalness, of Kreophagy (disguised, as it is, by the arts of
-civilisation), this most popular of all German physicians, with the
-Cornaros and Abernethys, may yet claim considerable merit as having, in
-some degree, sought to stem the tide of unnatural living, which, under
-less gross forms indeed than those of the darker ages of dietetics,
-and partially concealed in the refinements of Art, is more difficult
-to be resisted by reason of its very disguise. If the renaissance of
-Pythagorean dietetics had already dawned for the deeper thinkers,
-the age of science and of reason, as regards the mass of accredited
-teachers, was yet a long way off; and to all pioneers, even though they
-failed to clear the way entirely, some measure of our gratitude is due.</p>
-
-<p>Christian Wilhelm Hufeland is one of the most prolific of medical
-writers. Having studied medicine at Jena and at Gottingen he took the
-degree of doctor in 1783. At Jena he occupied a professorial chair
-(1793), and came to Berlin five years later, where he was entrusted
-with the superintendence of the Medical College. Both as practical
-physician and as professor, Hufeland attained a European reputation.
-The French Academy of Sciences elected him one of its members. His
-numerous writings have been often reprinted in Germany. Among the most
-useful are: (1) <i>Popular Dissertations upon Health</i> (Leipsig, 1794);
-(2) <i>Makrobiotik: oder die Kunst das Menschliche Leben zu Verlängern</i>
-(Jena, 1796), a celebrated work which has been translated into all
-the languages of Europe<a name="FNanchor_203_203" id="FNanchor_203_203"></a><a href="#Footnote_203_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a>; (3) <i>Good Advice to Mothers upon the
-most Important Points of the Physical Education of Children in the
-First Years</i> (Berlin, 1799); (4) <i>History of Health, and Physical
-Characteristics of our Epoch</i> (Berlin, 1812)<a name="FNanchor_204_204" id="FNanchor_204_204"></a><a href="#Footnote_204_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a>. Of Hufeland’s
-witness to the general superiority of the <i>Naturgemässe Lebensweise</i>
-the following sentences are sufficiently representative:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The more man follows Nature and obeys her laws the longer will he
-live. The further he removes from them (<i>je weiter er von ihnen
-abweicht</i>) the shorter will be his duration of existence....
-Only inartificial, simple nourishment promotes health and long
-life, while mixed and rich foods but shorten our existence.... We
-frequently find a very advanced old age amongst men who from youth
-upwards have lived, for the most part, upon the vegetable diet,
-and, perhaps, have never tasted flesh.”<a name="FNanchor_205_205" id="FNanchor_205_205"></a><a href="#Footnote_205_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXV_RITSON">XXXV.<br />
-<span class="s5">RITSON. 1761&ndash;1830.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">K<span class="smaller">NOWN</span> to the world generally as an eminent antiquarian and, in
-particular, as one of the earliest and most acute investigators of
-the sources of English romantic poetry, for future times his best and
-enduring fame will rest upon his at present almost forgotten Moral
-Essay upon Abstinence&mdash;one of the most able and philosophical of the
-ethical expositions of anti-kreophagy ever published.</p>
-
-<p>His birthplace was Stockton in the county of Durham. By profession a
-conveyancer, he enjoyed leisure for literary pursuits by his income
-from an official appointment. During the twenty years from 1782 to 1802
-his time and talents were incessantly employed in the publication of
-his various works, antiquarian and critical. His first notable critique
-was his <i>Observations</i> on Warton’s <i>History of English Poetry</i>, in the
-shape of a letter to the author (1782), in which his critical zeal
-seems to have been in excess of his literary amenity. Of other literary
-productions may be enumerated his <i>Remarks on the Commentators of
-Shakspere</i>; <i>A Select Collection of English Songs, with a Historical
-Essay on the Origin and Progress of National Songs</i> (1783); <i>Ancient
-Songs from the Time of King Henry III. to the Revolution</i> (1790),
-reprinted in 1829&mdash;perhaps the most valuable of his archæological
-labours; <i>The English Anthology</i> (1793); <i>Ancient English Metrical
-Romances</i>, and <i>Bibliographia Poetica</i>, a catalogue of English poets
-from the 12th to the 16th century, inclusive, with short notices of
-their works. These are only some of the productions of his industry and
-genius.</p>
-
-<p>We give the origin of his adhesion to the Humanitarian Creed as
-recorded by himself in one of the chapters of his Essay, in which,
-also, he introduces the name of an ardent and well-known humanitarian
-reformer:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Mr. Richard Phillips,<a name="FNanchor_206_206" id="FNanchor_206_206"></a><a href="#Footnote_206_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a> the publisher of this compilation, a
-vigorous, healthy, and well-looking man, has desisted from animal
-food for upwards of twenty years; and the compiler himself, induced
-to serious reflection by the perusal of Mandeville’s <i>Fable of the
-Bees</i>, in the year 1772, being the 19th year of his age, has ever
-since, to the revisal of these sheets [1802], firmly adhered to a
-milk and vegetable diet; having, at least, never tasted, during the
-whole course of those thirty years, any flesh, fowl, or fish, or
-anything, to his knowledge, prepared in or with those substances
-or any extract from them, unless, on one occasion, when tempted
-by wet, cold, and hunger in the south of Scotland, he ventured
-to eat a few potatoes dressed under roasted flesh, nothing less
-repugnant to his feelings being obtainable; or, except by ignorance
-or imposition, unless, it may be, in eating eggs, which, however,
-deprives no animal of life, although it may prevent some from
-coming into the world to be murdered and devoured by others.”<a name="FNanchor_207_207" id="FNanchor_207_207"></a><a href="#Footnote_207_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Ritson begins his Essay with a brief review of the opinions of some of
-the old Greek and Italian philosophers upon the origin and constitution
-of the world, and with a sketch of the position of man in Nature
-relatively to other animals. Amongst others he cites Rousseau’s Essay
-<i>Upon Inequality Amongst Men</i>. He then demonstrates the unnaturalness
-of flesh-eating by considerations derived from Physiology and Anatomy,
-and from the writings of various authorities; the fallacy of the
-prejudice that flesh-meats are necessary or conducive to strength of
-body, a fallacy manifest as well from the examples of whole nations
-living entirely, or almost entirely, upon non-flesh food, as from
-those of numerous individuals whose cases are detailed at length. He
-quotes Arbuthnot, Sir Hans Sloane, Cheyne, Adam Smith, Volney, Paley,
-and others. Next he insists upon the ferocity or coarseness of mind
-directly or indirectly engendered by the diet of blood:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“That the use of animal food disposes man to cruel and ferocious
-actions is a fact to which the experience of ages gives ample
-testimony. The Scythians, from drinking the blood of their cattle,
-proceeded to drink that of their enemies. The fierce and cruel
-disposition of the wild Arabs is supposed chiefly, if not solely,
-to arise from their feeding upon the flesh of camels: and as
-the gentle disposition of the natives of Hindustan is probably
-owing, in great degree, to temperance and abstinence from animal
-food, so the common use of this diet, with other nations, has, in
-the opinion of M. Pagès, intensified the natural tone of their
-passions; and he can account, he says, upon no other principle,
-for the strong, harsh features of the Mussulmen and the Christians
-compared with the mild traits and placid aspect of the Gentoos.
-‘Vulgar and uninformed men,’ it is observed by Smellie, ‘when
-pampered with a variety of animal food, are much more choleric,
-fierce, and cruel in their tempers, than those who live chiefly
-upon vegetables.’ This affection is equally perceptible in other
-animals&mdash;‘An officer, in the Russian service, had a bear whom
-he fed with bread and oats, but never gave him flesh. A young
-hog, however, happening to stroll near his cell, the bear got
-hold of him and pulled him in; and, after he had once drawn
-blood and tasted flesh, he became unmanageable, attacking every
-person who came near him, so that the owner was obliged to kill
-him.’&mdash;[<i>Memoirs of P. H. Bruce.</i>] It was not, says Porphyry,
-from those who lived on vegetables that robbers, or murderers, or
-tyrants have proceeded, but from flesh-eaters.<a name="FNanchor_208_208" id="FNanchor_208_208"></a><a href="#Footnote_208_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a> Prey being
-almost the sole object of quarrel amongst carnivorous animals,
-while the frugivorous live together in constant peace and harmony,
-it is evident that if men were of this latter kind, they would find
-it much more easy to subsist happily.”</p>
-
-<p>“The barbarous and unfeeling sports (as they are called) of the
-English&mdash;their horse-racing, hunting, shooting, bull and bear
-baiting, cock-fighting,<a name="FNanchor_209_209" id="FNanchor_209_209"></a><a href="#Footnote_209_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a> prize-fighting, and the like, all
-proceed from their immoderate addiction to animal food. Their
-natural temper is thereby corrupted, and they are in the habitual
-and hourly commission of crimes against nature, justice, and
-humanity, from which a feeling and reflective mind, unaccustomed
-to such a diet, would revolt, but in which they profess to take
-delight. The kings of England have from a remote period, been
-devoted to hunting; in which pursuit one of them, and the son
-of another lost his life. James I., according to Scaliger, was
-merciful, except at the chase, where he was cruel, and was very
-much enraged when he could not catch the Stag. ‘God,’ he used
-to say, ‘is enraged against me, so that I shall not have him.’
-Whenever he had caught his victim, he would put his arm all entire
-into his belly and entrails. This anecdote may be paralleled with
-the following of one of his successors: ‘The hunt on Tuesday last,
-(March 1st, 1784), commenced near Salthill, and afforded a chase
-of upwards of fifty miles. His Majesty was present at the death of
-the stag near Tring, in Herts. It is the first deer that has been
-ran to death for many months; and when opened, the heart strings
-were found to be quite rent, as is supposed, with the force of
-running.’<a name="FNanchor_210_210" id="FNanchor_210_210"></a><a href="#Footnote_210_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a> <i>Siste, vero, tandem carnifex!</i> The slave trade,
-that abominable violation of the rights of Nature, is most probably
-owing to the same cause, as well as a variety of violent acts,
-both national and personal, which usually are attributed to other
-motives. In the sessions of Parliament, 1802, a majority of the
-members voted for the continuance of bull-baiting, and some of them
-had the confidence to plead in favour of it.”<a name="FNanchor_211_211" id="FNanchor_211_211"></a><a href="#Footnote_211_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a></p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Ritson enforces his observations upon this head by citing Plutarch,
-Cowper, and Pope (in the <i>Guardian, No. 61</i>&mdash;a most forcible
-and eloquent protest against the cruelties of “sport” and of
-gluttony).<a name="FNanchor_212_212" id="FNanchor_212_212"></a><a href="#Footnote_212_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a> In his fifth chapter he traces the origin of human
-sacrifices to the practice of flesh eating:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Superstition is the mother of Ignorance and Barbarity. Priests
-began by persuading people of the existence of certain invisible
-beings, whom they pretended to be the creators of the world and
-the dispensers of good and evil; and of whose wills, in fine,
-they were the sole interpreters. Hence arose the necessity of
-sacrifices [ostensibly] to appease the wrath or to procure the
-favour of imaginary gods, but in reality to gratify the gluttonous
-and unnatural appetites of <i>real</i> demons. Domestic animals were
-the first victims. These were immediately under the eye of the
-priest, and he was pleased with their taste. This satisfied for a
-time; but he had eaten of the same things so repeatedly, that his
-luxurious appetite called for variety. He had devoured the sheep,
-and he was now desirous of devouring the shepherd. The anger of
-the gods&mdash;testified by an opportune thunderstorm, was not to be
-assuaged but by a sacrifice of uncommon magnitude. The people
-tremble, and offer him their enemies, their slaves, their parents,
-their children, to obtain a clear sky on a summer’s day, or a
-bright moon by night. When, or upon what particular occasion, the
-first human being was made a sacrifice is unknown, nor is it of
-any consequence to enquire. Goats and bullocks had been offered up
-already, and the transition was easy from the ‘brute’ to the man.
-The practice, however, is of remote antiquity and universal extent,
-there being scarcely a country in the world in which it has not, at
-some time or other, prevailed.”</p></div>
-
-<p>He supports this probable thesis by reference to Porphyry, the most
-erudite of the later Greeks, who repeats the accounts of earlier
-writers upon this matter, and by a comparison of the religious rites
-of various nations, past and present. Equally natural and easy was the
-step from the use of non-human to that of human bodies:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“As human sacrifices were a natural effect of that superstitious
-cruelty which first produced the slaughter of other animals, so is
-it equally natural that those accustomed to eat the ‘brute’ should
-not long abstain from the man. More especially as, when roasted or
-broiled upon the altar, the appearance, savour, and taste of both,
-would be nearly, if not entirely the same. But, from whatever cause
-it may be deduced, nothing can be more certain than that the eating
-of human flesh has been a practice in many parts of the world from
-a very remote period, and is so, in some countries, at this day.
-That it is a consequence of the use of other animal food there can
-be no doubt, as it would be impossible to find an instance of it
-among people who were accustomed solely to a vegetable diet. The
-progress of cruelty is rapid. Habit renders it familiar, and hence
-it is deemed <i>natural</i>.</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
-
-<p>“The man who, accustomed to live on roots and vegetables, first
-devoured the flesh of the smallest mammal, committed a greater
-violence to his own nature than the most beautiful and delicate
-woman, accustomed to other animal flesh, would feel in shedding
-the blood of her own species for sustenance; possessed as they are
-of exquisite feelings, a considerable degree of intelligence, and
-even, according to her own religious system, of a <i>living soul</i>.
-That this is a principle in the social disposition of mankind,
-is evident from the deliberate coolness with which seamen, when
-their ordinary provisions are exhausted, sit down to devour such
-of their comrades as chance or contrivance renders the victim of
-the moment; a fact of which there are but too many, and those too
-well-authenticated instances. Such a crime, which no necessity
-can justify, would never enter the mind of a starving Gentoo,
-nor, indeed, of anyone who had not been previously accustomed to
-other animal flesh. Even among the Bedouins, or wandering Arabs
-of the desert&mdash;according to the observation of the enlightened
-Volney&mdash;though they so often experience the extremity of hunger,
-the practice of devouring human flesh was never heard of.”</p></div>
-
-<p>In the two following chapters Ritson traces a large proportion of human
-diseases and suffering, physical and mental, to indulgence in unnatural
-living. He cites Drs. Buchan, Goldsmith, Cheyne, Stubbes (<i>Anatomy of
-Abuses</i>, 1583), and Sparrman the well-known pupil of Linné (<i>Voyages</i>).</p>
-
-<p>In his ninth chapter, he gives a copious catalogue of “nations and of
-individuals, past and contemporary, subsisting entirely upon vegetable
-foods”&mdash;not the least interesting part of his work. Some of the most
-eminent of the old Greek and Latin philosophers and historians are
-quoted, as well as various modern travellers, such as Volney and
-Sparrman. Especially valuable are the enquiries of Sir F. M. Eden
-(<i>State of the Poor</i>), who, in a comparison of the dietary of the
-poor, in different parts of these islands, proves that flesh has, or
-at all events <i>had</i>, scarcely any share in it&mdash;a fact which is still
-true of the agricultural districts, manifest not only by the commonest
-observation, but also by scientific and official enquiries of late
-years.</p>
-
-<p>Of individual cases, two of the most interesting are those of John
-Williamson of Moffat, the discoverer of the famous chalybeate spring,
-who lived almost to the age of one hundred years, having abstained
-from all flesh-food during the last fifty years of his life,<a name="FNanchor_213_213" id="FNanchor_213_213"></a><a href="#Footnote_213_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a> and
-of John Oswald,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span> the author of <i>The Cry of Nature</i>. It is in this part
-of his work that Ritson narrates the history of his own conversion and
-dietetic experiences, and of his well-known publisher, Mr. R. Phillips.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXVI_NICHOLSON">XXXVI.<br />
-<span class="s5">NICHOLSON. 1760&ndash;1825.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">A<span class="smaller">MONG</span> the least known, but none the less among the most estimable,
-of the advocates of the rights of the oppressed species and the
-heralds of the dawn of a better day, the humble Yorkshire printer, who
-undertook the unpopular and unremunerative work of publishing to the
-world the sorrows and sufferings of the non-human races, claims our
-high respect and admiration. He has also another title (second only to
-his humanitarian merit) to the gratitude of posterity as having been
-the originator of cheap literature of the best class, and of the most
-instructive sort, which, alike by the price and form, was adapted for
-wide circulation.</p>
-
-<p>George Nicholson was born at Bradford. He early set up a printing
-press, and began the publication of his <i>Literary Miscellany</i>,
-“which is not, as the name might lead one to suppose, a magazine,
-but a series of choice anthologies, varied by some of the gems of
-English literature. The size is a small 18mo., scarcely too large for
-the waistcoat pocket. The printing was a beautiful specimen of the
-typographic art, and for the illustrations he sought the aid of the
-best artists. He was one of the patrons of Thomas Bewick, some of whose
-choicest work is to be found in the pamphlets issued by Nicholson.
-He also issued 125 cards, on which were printed favourite pieces,
-afterwards included in the <i>Literary Miscellany</i>. This ‘assemblage of
-classical beauties for the parlour, the closet, the carriage, or the
-shade,’ became very popular, and extended to twenty volumes. The plan
-of issuing them in separate numbers enabled individuals to make their
-own selection, and they are found bound up in every possible variety.
-Complete sets are now rare, and highly prized by collectors.”</p>
-
-<p>Of his many useful publications may be enumerated&mdash;<i>Stenography:
-The Mental Friend and Rational Companion, consisting of Maxims and
-Reflections relating to the Conduct of Life</i>. 12mo. <i>The Advocate and
-Friend of Woman.</i> 12mo. <i>Directions for the Improvement of the Mind.</i>
-12mo. <i>Juvenile Preceptor.</i> Three vols., 12mo. The books which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span> concern
-us now are&mdash;<i>On the Conduct of Man to Inferior Animals</i> (Manchester,
-1797: this was adorned by a woodcut from the hand of Bewick). And his
-<i>magnum opus</i>, which appeared in the year 1801, under the title of
-<i>The Primeval Diet of Man: Arguments in Favour of Vegetable Food; with
-Remarks on Man’s Conduct to [other] Animals</i> (Poughnill, near Ludlow).</p>
-
-<p>The value of <i>The Primeval Diet</i> was enhanced by the addition, in a
-later issue, of a tract <i>On Food</i> (1803), in which are given recipes
-for the preparation of “one hundred perfectly palatable and nutritious
-substances, which may easily be procured at an expense much below the
-price of the limbs of our fellow animals.... Some of the recipes, on
-account of their simple form, will not be adopted even by those in
-the middle rank of life. Yet they may be valuable to many of scanty
-incomes, who desire to avoid the evils of want, or to make a reserve
-for the purchasing of books and other mental pleasures.” He also
-published a tract <i>On Clothing</i>, which contains much sensible and
-practical advice on an important subject.</p>
-
-<p>Nicholson resided successively in Manchester, Poughnill, and Stourport,
-and died at the last-named place in the year 1825. “He possessed,” says
-a writer in <i>The Gentleman’s Magazine</i> (xcv.), “in an eminent degree,
-strength of intellect, with universal benevolence and undeviating
-uprightness of conduct.” The learned bibliographer, to whom we are
-indebted for this brief notice, thus sums up the character of his
-labours: “In all his writings the purity and benevolence of his
-intentions are strikingly manifest. Each subject he took in hand was
-thought out in an independent manner, and without reference to current
-views or prejudices.”<a name="FNanchor_214_214" id="FNanchor_214_214"></a><a href="#Footnote_214_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a></p>
-
-<p>In his brief preface the author thus expresses his sad conviction of
-the probable futility of his protests:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The difficulties of removing deep-rooted prejudices, and the
-inefficiency of reason and argument, when opposed to habitual
-opinions established on general approbation, are fully apprehended.
-Hence the cause of humanity, however zealously pleaded, will
-not be materially promoted. Unflattered by the hope of exciting
-an impression on the public mind, the following compilation is
-dedicated to the sympathising and generous Few, whose opinions
-have not been founded on implicit belief and common acceptation:
-whose habits are not fixed by the influence of false and pernicious
-maxims or corrupt examples: who are neither deaf to the cries of
-misery, pitiless to suffering innocence, nor unmoved at recitals of
-violence, tyranny, and murder.”</p></div>
-
-<p>In the whole literature of humanitarianism, nothing can be more
-impressive for the sympathising reader than this putting on record
-by these nobler spirits their profound consciousness of the moral
-torpor of the world around them, and their sad conviction of the
-prematureness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span> of their attempt to regenerate it. In both his principal
-works, he judiciously chooses, for the most part, the method of
-compilation, and of presenting in a concise and comprehensive form
-the opinions of his humane predecessors, of various minds and times,
-rather than the presentation of his own individual sentiments. He
-justly believed that the large majority of men are influenced more by
-the authority of great names than by arguments addressed simply to
-their conscience and reason. He intersperses, however, philosophic
-reflections of his own, whenever the occasion for them arises. Thus,
-under the head of “Remarks on Defences of Flesh-eating,” he well
-disposes of the common excuses:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The reflecting reader will not expect a formal refutation of
-common-place objections, which <i>mean nothing</i>, as, ‘There would be
-more unhappiness and slaughter among animals did we not keep them
-under proper regulations and government. Where would they find
-pasture did we not manure and enclose the land for them? &amp;c.’ The
-following objection, however, may deserve notice:&mdash;‘Animals must
-die, and is it not better for them to live a short time in plenty
-and ease, than be exposed to their enemies, and suffered in old
-age to drag on a miserable life?’ The lives of animals in <i>a state
-of nature</i> are very rarely miserable, and it argues a barbarous
-and savage disposition to cut them <i>prematurely</i> off in the midst
-of an agreeable and happy existence; especially when we reflect
-on the <i>motives</i> which induce it. Instead of a friendly concern
-for promoting their happiness, your aim is the gratification of
-your own sensual appetites. How inconsistent is your conduct with
-the fundamental principle of pure morality and true goodness
-(which some of you ridiculously profess)&mdash;<i>whatsoever you would
-that others should do to you, do you even so to them</i>. No man
-would willingly become the food of other animals; he ought not
-therefore to prey on <i>them</i>. Men who consider themselves members
-of universal nature, and links in the great chain of Being, ought
-not to usurp power and tyranny over others, beings naturally free
-and independent, however such beings may be inferior in intellect
-or strength.... It is argued that ‘man has a permission, proved by
-the practice of mankind, to eat the flesh of other animals, and
-consequently to kill them; and as there are many animals which
-subsist wholly on the bodies of other animals, the practice is
-sanctioned among mankind.’ By reason of the at present very low
-state of morality of the human race, there are many evils which
-it is the duty and business of enlightened ages to eradicate. The
-various refinements of civil society, the numerous improvements in
-the arts and sciences, and the different reformations in the laws,
-policy, and government of nations, are proofs of this assertion.
-That mankind, in the present stage of <i>polished</i> life, act in
-direct violation of the principles of justice, mercy, tenderness,
-sympathy, and humanity, in the practice of eating flesh, is
-obvious. To take away the life of any happy being, to commit
-acts of depredation and outrage, and to abandon every refined
-feeling and sensibility, is to degrade the human kind beneath its
-professed dignity of character; but to <i>devour</i> or eat any animal
-is an additional violation of those principles, because it is the
-<i>extreme</i> of brutal ferocity. Such is the conduct of the most
-savage of wild beasts, and of the most uncultivated and barbarous
-of our own species. Where is the person who, with calmness, can
-hear himself compared in disposition to a lion, a hyæna, a tiger or
-a wolf? And yet, how exactly similar is his disposition.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Mankind affect to revolt at murders, at the shedding of blood, and
-yet eagerly, and without remorse, feed on the corpse after it has
-undergone the culinary process. What mental blindness pervades the
-human race, when they do not perceive that every feast of blood
-is a <i>tacit encouragement</i> and licence to the very crime their
-pretended delicacy abhors! I say <i>pretended</i> delicacy, for that
-it is pretended is most evident. The profession of sensibility,
-humanity, &amp;c., in such persons, therefore, is egregious folly. And
-yet there are respectable persons among everyone’s acquaintance,
-amiable in other dispositions, and advocates of what is commonly
-termed the cause of humanity, who are weak or prejudiced enough to
-be satisfied with such arguments, on which they ground apologies
-for their practice! Education, habit, prejudice, fashion, and
-interest, have blinded the eyes of men, and seared their hearts.</p>
-
-<p>“Opposers of compassion urge: ‘If we should live on vegetable food,
-what shall we do with our <i>cattle</i>? What would become of them? They
-would grow so numerous they would be prejudicial to us&mdash;they would
-eat us up if we did not kill and eat them.’ But there is abundance
-of animals in the world whom men do not kill and eat; and yet we
-hear not of their injuring mankind, and sufficient room is found
-for their abode. Horses are not usually killed to be eaten, and yet
-we have not heard of any country overstocked with them. The raven
-and redbreast are seldom killed, and yet they do not become too
-numerous. If a decrease of cows, sheep, and others were required,
-mankind would readily find means of reducing them. Cattle are at
-present an article of trade, and their numbers are <i>industriously</i>
-promoted. If cows are kept solely for the sake of milk, and if
-their young should become too numerous, let the evil be nipped in
-the bud. Scarcely suffer the innocent young to feel the pleasure
-of breathing. Let the least pain possible be inflicted; let its
-body be deposited entire in the ground, and let a sigh have vent
-for the calamitous necessity that induced the painful act....
-Self-preservation justifies a man in putting noxious animals to
-death, yet cannot warrant the least act of cruelty to any being.
-By suddenly despatching one when in extreme misery, we do a kind
-office, an office which reason approves, and which accords with our
-best and kindest feelings, but which (such is the force of custom)
-we are denied to show, though solicited, to our own species. When
-they can no longer enjoy happiness, they may perhaps be deprived
-of life. Do not suppose that in this reasoning an intention is
-included of <i>perverting</i> nature. No! some animals are savage and
-unfeeling; but let not <i>their</i> ferocity and brutality be the
-standard and pattern of the conduct of <i>man</i>. Because <i>some</i> of
-them have no compassion, feeling, or reason, are <i>we</i> to possess no
-compassion, feeling, or reason?”</p></div>
-
-<p>In another section of his book Nicholson undertakes to expose the
-inconsistencies of flesh-eaters, and the strange illogicalness of the
-position of many protestors against various forms of cruelty, who
-condone the greatest cruelty of all&mdash;the (necessary) savagery of the
-butchers:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The inconsistencies of the conduct and opinions of mankind in
-general are evident and notorious; but when ingenious writers fall
-into the same glaring errors, our regret and surprise are justly
-and strongly excited. Annexed to the impressive remarks by Soame
-Jenyns, to be inserted hereafter, in examining the conduct of man
-to [other] animals, we meet with the following passage:&mdash;</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
-
-<p>“‘God has been pleased to create numberless animals intended for
-our sustenance, and that they are so intended, the agreeable
-flavour of their flesh to our palates, and the wholesome nutriment
-which it administers to our stomachs, are sufficient proofs; these,
-as they are formed for our use, propagated by our culture, and fed
-by our care, we have certainly a right to deprive of life, because
-it is given and preserved to them on that <i>condition</i>.’</p>
-
-<p>“Now, it has already been argued that the bodies of animals are
-<i>not</i> intended for the sustenance of man; and the decided opinions
-of several eminent medical writers and others sufficiently
-disprove assertions in favour of the wholesomeness of the flesh
-of animals. The <i>agreeable taste</i> of food is not always a proof
-of its <i>nourishing</i> or <i>wholesome</i> properties. This truth is too
-frequently experienced in mistakes, ignorantly or accidentally
-made, particularly by children, in eating the fruit of the deadly
-nightshade, the taste of which resembles black currants, and is
-extremely inviting by the beauty of its colour and shape.<a name="FNanchor_215_215" id="FNanchor_215_215"></a><a href="#Footnote_215_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a></p>
-
-<p>“That we have a right to make attacks on the existence of any being
-<i>because</i> we have assisted and fed such being, is an assertion
-opposed to every established principle of justice and morality. A
-‘condition’ cannot be made without the mutual consent of parties,
-and, therefore, what this writer terms ‘a condition,’ is nothing
-less than an unjust, arbitrary, and deceitful imposition. ‘Such is
-the deadly and stupifying influence of habit or custom,’ says Mr.
-Lawrence, ‘of so poisonous and brutalising a quality is prejudice,
-that men, perhaps no way inclined by nature to acts of barbarity,
-may yet live insensible of the constant commission of the most
-flagrant deeds.’ ... A cook-maid will weep at a tale of woe, while
-she is skinning a living eel; and the devotee will mock the Deity
-by asking a blessing on food supplied by murderous outrages against
-nature and religion! Even women of education, who readily weep
-while reading an affecting moral tale, will clear away clotted
-blood, still warm with departed life, cut the flesh, disjoint
-the bones, and tear out the intestines of an animal, without
-sensibility, without sympathy, without fear, without remorse.
-What is more common than to hear this <i>softer</i> sex talk of, and
-assist in, the cookery of a deer, a hare, a lamb or a calf (those
-acknowledged emblems of innocence) with perfect composure? Thus
-the female character, by nature soft, delicate, and susceptible of
-tender impressions, is debased and sunk. It will be maintained that
-in other respects they still possess the characteristics of their
-sex, and are humane and sympathising. The inconsistency then is the
-more glaring. To be virtuous in some instances does not constitute
-the moral character, but to be uniformly so.”</p></div>
-
-<p>We can allow ourselves space only for one or two further quotations
-from this excellent writer. The remarks upon the common usage of
-language, by which it is vainly thought to conceal the true nature of
-the dishes served up upon the tables of the rich, are particularly
-noteworthy, because the inaccurate expression condemned is almost
-universal, and that even, from force of habit, amongst reformed
-dietists themselves:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“There is a natural horror at the shedding of blood, and some
-have an aversion to the practice of devouring the carcase of an
-innocent sufferer, which bad habits improper education, and silly
-prejudices have not overcome. This is proved by their affected and
-absurd refinement of calling the dead bodies of animals <i>meat</i>. If
-the meaning of words is to be regarded, this is a gross mistake;
-for the word <i>meat</i> is a universal term, applying equally to all
-nutritive and palatable substances. If it be intended to express
-that all other kinds of food are comparatively not meat, the
-intention is ridiculous. The truth is that the proper expression,
-<i>flesh</i>, conveys ideas of murder and death. Neither can it easily
-be forgotten that, in grinding the body of a fellow animal,
-substances which constitute <i>human</i> bodies are masticated. This
-reflection comes somewhat home, and is recurred to by eaters of
-flesh in spite of themselves, but recurred to <i>unwillingly</i>. They
-attempt, therefore, to pervert language in order to render it
-agreeable to the ear, as they disguise animal flesh by cookery in
-order to render it pleasing to the taste.”</p></div>
-
-<p>His reflections upon the essential injustice (to use no stronger term)
-of delegating the work of butchering to a particular class of men (to
-which frequent reference has already been made in these pages) are
-equally admirable:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Among butchers, and those who qualify the different parts of an
-animal into food, it would be easy to select persons much further
-removed from those virtues which should result from reason,
-consciousness, sympathy, and animal sensations, than any savages
-on the face of the earth! In order to avoid all the generous and
-spontaneous sympathies of compassion, the office of shedding
-blood is committed to the hands of a set of men who have been
-educated in inhumanity, and whose sensibility has been blunted and
-destroyed by early habits of barbarity. Thus men <i>increase</i> misery
-in order to avoid the sight of it, and because they cannot endure
-being obviously cruel themselves, or commit actions which strike
-painfully on their senses, they commission those to commit them who
-are formed to delight in cruelty, and to whom misery, torture, and
-shedding of blood is an amusement! They appear not once to reflect
-that <i>whatever we do by another we do ourselves</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“When a large and gentle Ox, after having resisted a ten times
-greater force of blows than would have killed his murderers, falls
-stunned at last, and his armed head is fastened to the ground with
-cords; as soon as the wide wound is made, and the jugular veins
-are cut asunder, what mortal can, without horror and compassion,
-hear the painful bellowings, intercepted by his flow of blood,
-the bitter sighs that speak the sharpness of his anguish, and the
-deep-sounding groans with loud anxiety, fetched from the bottom of
-his strong and palpitating heart. Look on the trembling and violent
-convulsions of his limbs; see, whilst his reeking gore streams from
-him, his eyes become dim and languid, and behold his strugglings,
-gasps, and last efforts for life.</p>
-
-<p>“When a being has given such convincing and undeniable proofs of
-terror and of pain and agony, is there a disciple of Descartes
-so inured to blood, as not to refute, by his commiseration, the
-philosophy of that vain reasoner?”<a name="FNanchor_216_216" id="FNanchor_216_216"></a><a href="#Footnote_216_216" class="fnanchor">[216]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>In his previous essay, <i>On the Conduct of Men to Inferior Animals</i>,
-Nicholson has collected from various writers, both humane and
-inhumane,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span> a fearful catalogue of atrocities of different kinds
-perpetrated upon his helpless dependants by the being who delights to
-boast himself (at least in civilised countries) to be made “in the
-image and likeness of God.” Among these the hellish tortures of the
-vivisectionists and “pathologists” hold, perhaps, the bad pre-eminence,
-but the cruel tortures of the Slaughter-House come very near to them in
-wanton atrocity.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXVII_ABERNETHY">XXXVII.<br />
-<span class="s5">ABERNETHY. 1763&ndash;1831.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">D<span class="smaller">ISTINGUISHED</span> as a practical surgeon and as a physiologist, Abernethy
-has earned his lasting reputation as having been one of the first
-to attack the old prejudice of the profession as to the origin of
-diseases, and as having sought for such origin, not in mere local and
-accidental but, in general causes&mdash;in the constitution and habits of
-the body.</p>
-
-<p>A pupil of John Hunter, in 1786 he became assistant surgeon at St.
-Bartholomew’s Hospital, and shortly afterwards he lectured on anatomy
-and surgery at that institution, which to his ability and genius owes
-the fame which it acquired as a school of surgery. As a lecturer he
-had a reputation and popularity seldom or perhaps never before so well
-earned in the medical schools&mdash;founded, as they were, upon a rare
-penetration and logical method, united with clearness and perspicuity
-in communicating his convictions. In honesty, integrity, and in the
-domestic virtues his character was unimpeachable, but the gentleness
-of deportment for which he was noted in his home he was far from
-exhibiting in public and towards his patients. His roughness and even
-coarseness of manner in dealing with capricious valetudinarians,
-indeed, became notorious.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Constitutional Origin and Treatment of Local Diseases</i>&mdash;his
-principal work&mdash;in comparison with the vast mass of medical literature
-up to that time put forth, stands out in favourable relief. In it two
-great principles are laid down&mdash;that “local diseases are symptoms of
-a disordered constitution, not primary and independent maladies, and
-that they are to be cured by remedies calculated to make a salutary
-impression on the <i>general frame</i>, not by local treatment, nor by
-any mere manipulations of surgery.” This single principle changed
-the aspect of the entire field of surgery, and elevated it from a
-manual art into the rank of a science. And to this first principle
-he added a second, the range of which is, perhaps, less extensive,
-but the practical importance of which is scarcely inferior to that of
-the first&mdash;namely, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span> “this disordered state of the constitution
-either originates from, or is rigorously allied with, derangement of
-the stomach and bowels, and that it can only be reached by remedies
-which first exercise a curative influence upon these organs.” It will
-not detract from the merit of Abernethy to add to this account that
-his predecessor, Dr. Cheyne, and his contemporary, Dr. Lambe, have
-most satisfactorily and radically carried out into practice these just
-principles; or to remark that great public reputations ought not to
-be allowed, as too often is the fact, to overwhelm less known but not
-therefore less meritorious labours.</p>
-
-<p>As to <i>dietetics</i>, the theory of Abernethy seems to have been better
-than his practice. When reproached with the inconsistency that the
-reformed diet which he so forcibly commended to others he himself
-failed to follow, he is related to have used the well-known simile of
-the sign-post with his usual readiness of repartee.</p>
-
-<p>It was while Dr. Lambe was at the Aldersgate Street Dispensary that
-Abernethy formed the acquaintance of that unostentatious but true
-reformer&mdash;an acquaintance which was destined to have no unimportant
-influence upon the medical theories of the great surgeon. Abernethy
-was at that time writing his <i>Observations on Tumours</i>, and he had
-intrusted to his friend one of his cancer patients to be treated by
-the non-flesh and distilled water regimen. He carefully watched the
-effects, and he has thus given us the results of his observations:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“There can be no subject which I think more likely to interest
-the mind of a surgeon than that of an endeavour to amend and
-alter the state of a cancerous constitution. The best timed and
-best conducted operation brings with it nothing but disgrace if
-the diseased propensities of the constitution are active and
-powerful. It is after an operation that, in my opinion, we are
-most particularly concerned to regulate the constitution, lest
-the disease should be revived or renewed by its disturbance. In
-addition to that attention, to tranquillise and invigorate the
-nervous system, and keep the digestive organs in as healthy a
-state as possible (which I have recommended in my first volume),
-I believe general experience sanctions the recommendation of a
-more vegetable because less stimulating diet, with the addition of
-so much milk, broth, and eggs, as seems necessary to prevent any
-declension of the patient’s strength.</p>
-
-<p>“Very recently Dr. Lambe has proposed a method of treating
-cancerous diseases, which is <i>wholly</i> dietetic. He recommends
-the adoption of a strict vegetable regimen, to avoid the use of
-fermented liquors, and to substitute water purified by distillation
-in the place of common water as a beverage, and in all parts of
-diet in which common water is used, as tea, soups, &amp;c. The grounds
-upon which he founds his opinion of the propriety of this advice,
-and the prospects of benefit which it holds out, may be seen in his
-<i>Reports on Cancer</i>, to which I refer my readers.</p>
-
-<p>“My own experience on the effects of this regimen is of course
-very limited. Nor does it authorise me to speak decidedly on the
-subject. But I think it right to observe that, in one case of
-cancerous ulceration in which it was used, the symptoms of the
-disease were, in my opinion, rendered more mild, the erysipelatous
-inflammation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span> surrounding the ulcer was removed, and the life
-of the patient was, in my judgment, considerably prolonged. The
-more minute details of the facts constitute the sixth case of Dr.
-Lambe’s <i>Reports</i>. It seems to me very proper and desirable that
-the powers of the regimen recommended by Dr. Lambe should be fairly
-tried, for the following reasons:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Because I know some persons who, whilst confined to such diet,
-have enjoyed very good health; and further, I have known several
-persons, who did try the effects of such a regimen, declare that
-it was productive of considerable benefit. They were not, indeed,
-afflicted with cancer, but they were induced to adopt a change of
-diet to allay a state of nervous irritation and correct disorder of
-the digestive organs, upon which medicine had but little influence.</p>
-
-<p>“Because <i>it appears certain, in general, that the body can be
-perfectly nourished by vegetables</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Because all great changes of the constitution are more likely
-to be effected <i>by alterations of diet and modes of life than by
-medicine</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Because it holds out a source of hope and consolation to the
-patient in a disease in which medicine is known to be unavailing,
-and in which surgery affords no more than a temporary relief.”<a name="FNanchor_217_217" id="FNanchor_217_217"></a><a href="#Footnote_217_217" class="fnanchor">[217]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>“The above opinion of Mr. Abernethy,” remarks an experienced authority
-upon the subject, “is most valuable, for he watched the case for three
-and a half years under Dr. Lambe’s regimen, which is directly opposed
-to the system of diet which he had advocated, before he met Dr. Lambe,
-in the first volume of his work on <i>Constitutional Diseases</i>, and from
-his rough honesty there is no doubt that had Dr. Abernethy lived to
-publish a second edition he would have corrected his mistake.” As it
-is, the candour by which so distinguished an authority was impelled to
-alter or modify opinions already put forth to the world, claims our
-respect as much as the too general want of it deserves censure.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXVIII_LAMBE">XXXVIII.<br />
-<span class="s5">LAMBE. 1765&ndash;1847.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">O<span class="smaller">NE</span> of the most distinguished of the hygeistic and scientific promoters
-of the reformed regimen, Dr. Lambe, occupies an eminent position in
-the medical literature of vegetarianism, and he divides with his
-predecessor, Dr. Cheyne, the honour of being the founder of scientific
-<i>dietetics</i> in this country.</p>
-
-<p>His family had been settled some two hundred years in the county of
-Hereford, in which they possessed an estate that descended to Dr.
-William Lambe, and is now held by his grandson. He early gave promise
-of his future mental eminence. Head boy of the Hereford Grammar School,
-he proceeded, in due course, to St. John’s College,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span> Cambridge. In
-1786, being then in the twenty-first year of his age, he graduated
-as fourth wrangler of his year. As a matter of course, he soon was
-elected a Fellow of his college, where he continued to reside until his
-marriage in 1794. During this period of learned leisure he devoted his
-time to the study of medicine, and the MS. notes in the possession of
-his biographer, Mr. Hare, “prove the diligence with which he studied
-his profession, and there we see the origin of his enlarged views
-of the causes of disease, so much insisted on by these fathers of
-medicine, and so much neglected by modern physicians in their search
-for chemical remedies.” After his marriage he went to reside and
-practise in Warwick, where he was the intimate friend of Parr, the
-well-known Greek critic, and of Walter Savage Landor, who writes of him
-as “very communicative and good humoured. I had enough talk with Lambe
-to assure myself that he is no ordinary man.” It was to the discoveries
-of Dr. Lambe, and to his publications reporting the curative value of
-its mineral waters, that Leamington owed its fame and popularity; and
-Dr. Jefferson, in his address to the British Medical Association a few
-years ago, thus eulogises him:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It was not until the end of the last century that any really
-scientific research ever was recorded on this subject [impure
-water]. About this period Dr. Lambe was engaged in practice in
-Warwick. Somewhat eccentric in some of his practical views, Dr.
-Lambe was not the less a scientific man, an intelligent observer
-of nature, and an accomplished physician, and was, moreover,
-one of the most elegant medical writers of his day. The springs
-of the neighbouring village of Leamington did not escape his
-observation, and, having carefully studied and analysed the waters,
-he published an account of them, in 1797, in the fifth volume of
-the <i>Transactions of the Philosophical Society of Manchester</i>,
-a society embracing the respected names of Priestley, Dalton,
-Watt, and others, and not inferior, perhaps, to any contemporary
-association in Europe.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Like many other seceders from orthodox dietetics both before and after
-him, Dr. Lambe found himself impelled to experiment in the non-flesh
-diet by ill-health. His bodily disorders, indeed, were so complicated
-and of such a nature, as to excite astonishment that not only he
-greatly mitigated their violence, but that also he survived to an
-advanced age. In an exceedingly minute and conscientious narrative of
-his own case in his <i>Additional Reports</i> (writing in the third person),
-he informs us, that having during several years&mdash;from his eighteenth
-year&mdash;suffered greatly and with constantly aggravated symptoms:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“He resolved, therefore, finally to execute what he had been
-contemplating for some time&mdash;to abandon animal food altogether,
-and everything analogous to it, and to confine himself wholly to
-vegetable food. This determination he put in execution the second
-week of February, 1806, and he has adhered to it with perfect
-regularity to the present time. His only subject of repentance with
-regard to it has been that it had not been adopted much earlier in
-life. He never found the smallest real ill-consequence from this
-change. He sank neither in strength, flesh, nor in spirits. He
-was at all times of a very thin and slender habit, and so he has
-continued to be, but upon the whole he has rather gained than lost
-flesh. He has experienced neither indigestion nor flatulence even
-from the sort of vegetables which are commonly thought to produce
-flatulence, nor has the stomach suffered from any vegetable matter,
-though unchanged by culinary art or uncorrected by condiments. The
-only unpleasant consequence of the change was a sense of emptiness
-of stomach, which continued many months. In about a year, however,
-he became fully reconciled to the new habit, and felt as well
-satisfied with his vegetable meal as he had been formerly with his
-dinner of flesh. He can truly say that since he has acted upon
-this resolution no year has passed in which he has not enjoyed
-better health than in that which preceded it. But he has found
-that the changes introduced into the body by a vegetable regimen
-take place with extreme slowness; that it is in vain to expect
-any <i>considerable</i> amendment in successive weeks or in successive
-months. We are to look rather to the intervals of <i>half-years or
-years</i>.”</p></div>
-
-<p>With extreme candour as well as carefulness, this patient and
-philosophic experimentalist details every particular circumstance of
-his own <i>diagnosis</i>. After a minute report of the various symptoms of
-his maladies and his gradual subjugation of them, he deduces the only
-just inference:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Granting this representation of facts to be correct, and the
-nature of this case to, be truly determined, I must be permitted
-to ask, What other method than that which has been adopted would
-have produced the same benefit? If such methods exist, I confess
-my ignorance of them.... But though these pains [in the head]
-still recur in a trifling degree, the relief given to the brain in
-general has been decided and most essential. It has appeared in
-an increased sensibility of all the organs, particularly of the
-senses&mdash;the touch, the taste, and the sight, in greater muscular
-activity, in greater freedom and strength of respiration, greater
-freedom of all the secretions, and in increased intellectual power.
-It has been extended to the night as much as to the day. The sleep
-is more tranquil, less disturbed by dreams, and more refreshing.
-Less sleep, upon the whole, appears to be required; but the loss
-of quantity is more than compensated by its being sound and
-uninterrupted....</p>
-
-<p>“The hypochondriacal symptoms continued to be occasionally very
-oppressive during the second year, particularly during the earlier
-part of it, but they afterwards very sensibly declined, and at
-present he enjoys more uniform and regular spirits than he had
-done for many years upon the mixed diet. From the whole of these
-facts it follows that all the organs, and indeed every fibre of
-the body, are simultaneously affected by the matters habitually
-conveyed into the stomach, and that it is the incongruity of these
-matters to the system, which gradually forms that morbid diathesis,
-which exists alike both in apparent health and in disease. I might
-illustrate this fact still more minutely by observations on the
-teeth, on the hair, and on the skin. I might show that by a steady
-attention to regimen, the skin of the palm of the hand becomes of a
-firmer and stronger texture, that even an excrescence which had for
-twenty years and upwards been growing more fixed, firm, and deep,
-had, first, its habitudes altered, and, finally, was softened and
-disappeared. But, perhaps, enough has been said already to give
-a pretty clear idea both of the kind of change introduced into
-the habit by diet, and of the extent to which it may be carried.
-I proceed, therefore, to relate some new phenomena which took
-place during the course of this regimen, which are both curious in
-themselves and lead to important conclusions.”</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The author then goes on to record further gradual diminution of painful
-symptoms. From long and careful observation of himself, amongst other
-important deductions, Dr. Lambe infers that:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“We may conclude that it is the property of this regimen, and, in
-particular, of the vegetable diet, to transfer diseased action from
-the <i>viscera</i> to the exterior parts of the body&mdash;from the central
-parts of the system to the periphery. Vegetable diet has often been
-charged with causing cutaneous diseases; in common language, they
-are, in these cases, said to proceed from poorness of blood.<a name="FNanchor_218_218" id="FNanchor_218_218"></a><a href="#Footnote_218_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a>
-In some degree the charge is probably just, and the observation I
-have already made may give us some insight into the causes of it.
-But this charge, instead of being a just cause of reproach, is
-<i>a proof of the superior salubrity of vegetable diet</i>. Cutaneous
-eruptions appear, because disease is translated from the internal
-organs to the skin.”</p></div>
-
-<p>For all brain disease abandonment of the gross and stimulating
-flesh-meats is shown to be of the first importance. At the same time,
-that it involves any loss of actual bodily strength is a fallacy:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“We see, then, how ill-founded is the notion that inaction and
-loss of power are induced by a vegetable diet. In fact, all the
-observations that have been made have shewn the very reverse to be
-the truth. Symptoms of plenitude and oppression have continued in
-considerable force for at least five years; and the consequence of
-this peculiar regimen has been an increase of strength and power,
-and not a diminution. In the subject of this case the pulse, which
-may be deemed, perhaps, the best idea of the condition of all the
-other functions, is at present much more strong and full than under
-the use of animal food. It is also perfectly calm and regular.”</p></div>
-
-<p>His personal experience of satisfaction derivable from vegetables
-and fruits as affording, for the most part, sufficient liquids in
-themselves, without use of extraneous drinks, is of importance:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“He had, when living on the common diet, been habitually thirsty,
-and, like most persons inclined to studious and sedentary habits,
-was much attached to tea-drinking. But for the last two or three
-years he has almost wholly relinquished the use of liquids, and by
-the substitution of fruit and recent vegetables he has found that
-the sensation of thirst has been in a manner abolished. Even tea
-has lost its charms, and he very rarely uses it. He is therefore
-certain, from his own experience, that the habit of employing
-liquids is an artificial habit, and not necessary to any of the
-functions of the animal economy.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Whatever may be thought of the theory of the possibility of entire
-abstinence from all <i>extraneous</i> liquids, there is not the least doubt
-that a judicious use of vegetable foods reduces to a <i>minimum</i> the
-feeling of thirst and craving for artificial drinks, an experience, we
-imagine, almost universal with abstinents from flesh-dishes.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Lambe concludes the first part of his valuable <i>diagnosis</i> with
-the assurance,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span> “that if those for whose service these labours are
-principally designed, I mean persons suffering under habitual and
-chronic illness, are able to go along with me in my argument to form a
-general correct notion of what they are to expect from [a reformed]
-regimen, and, above all, to arm their minds with firmness, patience,
-and perseverance, I shall not readily be induced to think that I have
-written one superfluous line.”<a name="FNanchor_219_219" id="FNanchor_219_219"></a><a href="#Footnote_219_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a></p>
-
-<p>In 1805, at the age of forty, we find him established in practice in
-London. Five years later he was physician to the General Dispensary,
-Aldersgate Street. He was also elected Fellow and Censor of the College
-of Physicians, whose meetings he regularly attended. His peculiar
-opinions did not tend to secure popularity for him, and the adhesion
-of such men as Dr. Abernethy, Dr. Pitcairn, Lord Erskine, and of
-Mr. Brotherton, M.P. (one of the earliest members of the Vegetarian
-Society), served only to make the indifference of the mass of the
-community more conspicuous.</p>
-
-<p>Not the least interesting fact in his life is his share in the
-conversion of Shelley, and his friendship with J. F. Newton and his
-interesting family, at whose house these earlier pioneers of the New
-Reformation were accustomed to meet, and celebrate their charming
-<i>réunions</i> with vegetarian feasts. A cardinal part of the dietetic
-system of Dr. Lambe was his insistance upon the use of <i>distilled</i>
-water. In his <i>Reports on Regimen</i> he writes of the Newton family: “I
-am well acquainted with a family of young children who have scarcely
-ever touched animal food, and who now for three years have drunk only
-distilled water. For clearness and beauty of complexion, muscular
-strength, fulness of habit free from grossness, hardiness, healthiness,
-and ripeness of intellect these children are unparalleled.”<a name="FNanchor_220_220" id="FNanchor_220_220"></a><a href="#Footnote_220_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a></p>
-
-<p>We have already mentioned Lord Erskine as one of the many eminent
-friends of Dr. Lambe. That more humane and distinguished lawyer, in
-a letter to his friend acknowledging the receipt of the <i>Reports</i>,
-writes as follows: “I am of opinion that both this work and the other
-referred to in it are deserving of the highest consideration. I read
-them both with more interest and attention from the abuse of the
-<i>British Critic</i> [one of the periodicals of the day] mentioned in the
-preface, as no periodical criticism ever published in this country is
-so uniformly unjust, ignorant, and impudent.” Dr. Abernethy’s testimony
-to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span> efficacy of abstinence in cases of cancer will be found in
-the notice of that eminent practitioner. Amongst the most interesting
-correspondence of his later years is his interchange of ideas with
-Sylvester Graham&mdash;the first of the American prophets of the reformed
-regimen. The letter to the celebrated American vegetarian is, as Dr.
-Lambe’s latest biographer justly observes, “a most valuable relic,
-because it continues the result of Dr. Lambe’s diet up to September,
-1837&mdash;twenty-three years after the last notice of his health in the
-account of his own case, which he published in November, 1814. It is,
-besides, an admirable proof of his truthful and philosophic mind, which
-was slow to arrive at conclusions, and willing rather to exaggerate
-than otherwise the traces of disease which he still felt.” He proves,
-also, in this letter, how slow and yet sure are the effects of diet,
-and it supplies an answer to those objectors who complain that they
-have tried the diet (perhaps for a few weeks only) without any good
-result. After complimenting his transatlantic fellow-worker in the
-cause of truth upon his zeal and industry, Dr. Lambe proceeds:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“My book, entitled <i>Additional Reports on Regimen</i>, has now been
-before the world three and twenty years. That it has attracted
-little notice, and still less popular favour&mdash;though it may have
-excited in the writer some mortification&mdash;has not occasioned
-much surprise. The doctrine it seeks to establish is in direct
-opposition to popular and deep-rooted prejudice. It is thought
-(most erroneously) to attack the best enjoyments and most solid
-comforts of life; and, moreover, it has excited the bitter
-hostility of a numerous and influential body in society&mdash;I mean
-that body of medical practitioners who exercise their profession
-for the sake of its profits merely, and who appear to think that
-disease was made for the profession and not the profession for
-disease.</p>
-
-<p>“To drop, however, all idle complaints of public neglect, let
-us go to the more useful inquiry whether or not the principles
-propounded in these <i>Reports</i> have been confirmed by subsequent and
-more extensive experience. To this inquiry I answer directly and
-fearlessly, that in the interval between the present time and the
-year 1815 (the date of that publication) the practice recommended
-has succeeded in cases very numerous and of extreme variety, and
-I can promise the practitioner who will try it fairly and judge
-with candour that he will experience no disappointment. I say,
-<i>let him try it fairly</i>. I do not assert that it will succeed
-in cases where the powers of life are sunk, in confirmed hectic
-fever, in ulcerated cancer, in established chronic disease, or in
-the decrepitude of old age. I may have attempted the relief of
-such cases in an early stage of my experiments, but experience
-speedily demonstrated the hopelessness of such attempts. But let
-subjects be taken not far advanced in life, let them be <i>tabid</i>
-children (for example) with tumid abdomen, swelled joints, and
-depraved appetites, or with obstinate cutaneous diseases, erythema,
-<i>scabus</i>, rickets, epileptic convulsions (not grown habitual by
-long continuance). But a practitioner in moderate practice will
-find no difficulty in selecting proper subjects, if he is himself
-actuated by a regard to humanity united to principles of honour.</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
-
-<p>“Moreover, let not the patient, particularly if arrived at
-mature age, expect to receive a perfect cure. In many cases the
-consequences are rather preventive than curative. This I hold to
-be no objection. It is enough, surely, if a disease which, from
-its nature, might be expected to be continually on the increase,
-is obviously checked in its progress, if the symptoms become more
-and more mild, and if a human being is preserved in comfortable
-existence who would otherwise have been consigned to the grave.”</p></div>
-
-<p>He devoted his great medical knowledge and experience particularly to
-the cure or mitigation of cancer. In the letter, from which we have
-already quoted, he informs his correspondent of this interesting fact:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“My most ardent wish was to attempt the relief of cases of cancer.
-This object I have steadily pursued (from the year 1803) to the
-present day. The case&mdash;the particulars of which I briefly mentioned
-to you in my former communication&mdash;has hitherto succeeded so
-perfectly that I should myself suspect an error in the <i>diagnosis</i>,
-if it were not for the strongly-marked constitutional symptoms,
-which are such as, in my mind, put it out of doubt. There does not
-now remain what I expected, and what I have called a <i>nucleus</i>,
-for the resolution is <i>complete</i>. Now, this is contrary to most
-of my former observations, and would furnish, as I have said,
-some ground of suspicion. But still it is not wholly unsupported
-by corroborative facts. I have observed, particularly in one
-case, that the whole extreme edge of a schirrous tumour has
-been restored, whilst the portion has remained unchanged; not,
-indeed, speedily as in the former case, but after having used the
-diet for a very considerable time. Now, if a portion of a true
-schirrous tumour can be resolved, there can be no reason why a
-resolution of the whole&mdash;taken very early and under favourable
-circumstances&mdash;shall be deemed impossible. The truth is, that at
-present we are not advanced enough to form general conclusions, but
-ought to content ourselves with <i>accumulating</i> facts for the use of
-our successors.”</p></div>
-
-<p>If the experience of the benefits of a reasonable living in the cases
-of his patients was thus satisfactory, he himself afforded, in his own
-person, perhaps the best testimony to its revivifying and invigorating
-qualities. One of his visitors gives his impressions of the now famous
-<i>doctor</i> (a title, in the present instance, of real meaning) as follow:
-“Agreeably to your request, I submit to your perusal a short account of
-the friendly interview I had with Dr. Lambe in London. I first called
-on him in February. I found him to be very gentlemanly in manners and
-venerable in appearance. He is rather taller than the middle height.
-His hair is perfectly white, for he is now seventy-two years of age.
-He told me he had been on the vegetable diet thirty-one years, and
-that his health was better now than at forty, when he commenced his
-present system of living. He considers himself as likely to live
-thirty years longer as to have lived to his present age.... Although
-he is seventy-two years of age he walks into town, a distance of three
-miles from his residence, every morning, and back at night. Dr. Lambe,
-I am told, has spent large sums of money in making experiments and
-publishing their results to the world.” In his earlier life he had
-been conspicuously thin and attenuated. In later years he seems to
-have acquired even a certain amount of robustness, and he is described
-as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span> being active and strong at an advanced age. Some instances of
-extraordinary energy and endurance have been put on record by his
-family; and his feats of pedestrianism, when he was verging on his
-eightieth year, are, we imagine, rarely to be paralleled.</p>
-
-<p>His hope of attaining the age of one hundred years, unhappily, was
-not to be fulfilled. “Our bodies,” his biographer justly remarks,
-“are but machines adapted to perform a definite amount of work, and
-Dr. Lambe’s originally weak constitution had been severely tried by
-sickness and wrong diet during the first forty years of his life. At
-the age of eighty his strength began to fail, but his grandson writes,
-‘up to a very short time before his death there were no outward signs
-of ill-health, only the marks of old age.’”<a name="FNanchor_221_221" id="FNanchor_221_221"></a><a href="#Footnote_221_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a> Existence had its
-enjoyment for him up to almost the last days, and his intellectual
-powers remained to the end. He calmly expired in his eighty-third year.</p>
-
-<p>Of contemporary and posthumous eulogies of his personal, as well as
-scientific, worth, the following may suffice: “A man of learning, a
-man of science, a man of genius, a man of distinguished integrity
-and honour.” Such is the testimony of his friend Dr. Parr, as quoted
-by Samuel Johnson. In the Anniversary Harveian Oration before the
-College of Physicians, by Dr. Francis Hawkins, in the year 1848, the
-representative of the Faculty thus recalls his memory: “Nor can I pass
-over in silence the loss we have sustained in Dr. William Lambe&mdash;an
-excellent chemist, a learned man, and a skilful physician. His manners
-were simple, unreserved, and most modest. His life was pure. Farewell,
-therefore, gentle spirit, than whom no one more pure and innocent has
-passed away!”</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXXIX_NEWTON">XXXIX.<br />
-<span class="s5">NEWTON. 1770&ndash;1825.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">J<span class="smaller">OHN</span> F<span class="smaller">RANK</span>
-N<span class="smaller">EWTON</span>, the friend and associate of Dr. Lambe, Shelley,
-and the little band who met at the house of the former to share his
-vegetarian repasts, appears to have been one of the earliest converts
-of Dr. Lambe, to whom he dedicated his <i>Return to Nature</i>, in gratitude
-for the recovery of his health through the adoption of the reformed
-regimen.</p>
-
-<p>He published his little work, as he informs us in his preface, to
-impart to others the benefits which he himself had experienced; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
-especially to make known to the heads of households the fact that his
-whole family of himself, wife, and four children under nine years of
-age, with their nurse, had been living, at the date of his publication,
-for two years upon a non-flesh diet, during which time the apothecary’s
-bill, he tells us, had amounted to the sum of sixpence; and that charge
-had been incurred by himself.</p>
-
-<p>The ever-memorable meetings of the reformers at the house of Newton,
-where Shelley was a constant guest, have been thus recorded by one of
-the biographers of the great poet:&mdash;“Shelley was intimate with the
-Newton family, and was converted by them in 1813, and he began then a
-strict vegetable diet. His intimate association with the amiable and
-accomplished votaries of a <i>Return to Nature</i> was perhaps the most
-pleasing portion of his poetical, philosophical, and lovely life....
-For some years I was in the thick of it; for I lived much with a
-select and most estimable society of persons (the Newtons), who had
-‘returned to Nature,’ and I heard much discussion on the topic of
-vegetable diet. Certainly their vegetable dinners were delightful,
-elegant, and excellent repasts; flesh, fowl, fish, and ‘game’ never
-appeared&mdash;nor eggs nor butter <i>bodily</i>, but the two latter were
-admitted into cookery, but as sparingly as possible, and under protest,
-as not approved of and soon to be dispensed with. We had soups in great
-variety, that seemed the more delicate from the absence of flesh-meat.</p>
-
-<p>“There were vegetables of every kind, plainly stewed or scientifically
-disguised. Puddings, tarts, confections and sweets abounded. Cheese
-was excluded. Milk and cream might not be taken unreservedly, but they
-were allowed in puddings, and sparingly in tea. Fruits of every kind
-were welcomed. We luxuriated in tea and coffee, and sought variety
-occasionally in cocoa and chocolate. Bread and butter, and buttered
-toast were eschewed; but bread, cakes, and plain seed-cakes were
-liberally divided among the faithful.”<a name="FNanchor_222_222" id="FNanchor_222_222"></a><a href="#Footnote_222_222" class="fnanchor">[222]</a></p>
-
-<p>The cause of the publication of his book Newton thus states:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Having for many years been an habitual invalid, and having at
-length found that relief from regimen which I had long and vainly
-hoped for from drugs, I am anxious, from sympathy with those
-afflicted, to impart to others the knowledge of the benefit I have
-experienced, and to dispel, as far as in me lies, the prejudices
-under which I conceive mankind to labour on points so nearly
-connected with their health and happiness.</p>
-
-<p>“The particulars of my case I have already related at the
-concluding pages of Dr. Lambe’s <i>Reports on Cancer</i>. To the account
-there given I have little to add, but that, by continuing to
-confine myself to the regimen advised in that work, I continue to
-experience the same benefit; that the winter which has just elapsed
-has been passed <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>much more comfortably than that which preceded it,
-and that, if my habitual disorder is not completely eradicated, it
-is so much subdued as to give but little inconvenience; that I have
-suffered but a single day’s confinement for several months; and,
-upon the whole, that I enjoy an existence which many might envy who
-consider themselves to be in full possession of the blessings of
-health.</p>
-
-<p>“All that I have to regret in my present undertaking is the
-imperfect way in which it is executed. The adepts in medicine
-have gained their knowledge originally from the experience of the
-sick. I have taken my own sensations for my guide, and am myself
-alone responsible for the conclusions which I have drawn from
-them, the manuscript of this volume having been neither corrected
-nor looked over by any individual. While I make no pretensions to
-medical science, I cannot consent to be reasoned or ridiculed out
-of my feelings; nor to believe that to be an illusion, the truth
-of which has been confirmed to me by long-continued and repeated
-observation.”</p></div>
-
-<p>The use of distilled water was a cardinal article in the dietary creed
-of his friend Dr. Lambe, and upon this point Newton particularly
-insists. He appeals with much fervour, as we have just stated, to
-parents to have recourse to the natural means of prevention and
-cure, in place of vainly trying every available <i>artificial</i> method
-by medicine and drugs. He instances, with minute particularity, the
-regimen of his children, whom he asserts to have been, up to the moment
-of his writing, perfectly free from any sort of malady or disorder, and
-to be&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“So remarkably healthy that several medical men who have seen
-and examined them with a scrutinizing eye, all agreed in the
-observation that they knew nowhere a whole family which equals
-them in robustness. Should the success of this experiment, now of
-three years’ standing, proceed as it has begun, there is little
-doubt, [he ventures to flatter himself] that it must at length
-have some influence with the public, and that every parent who
-finds the illness of his family both afflicting and expensive, will
-say to himself ‘Why should I any longer be imprudent or foolish
-enough to have my children sick?’ All hail to the resolution which
-that sentiment implies! But until it becomes general, I feel it
-necessary to exhort, in the warmest language I can think of, those
-who have the young in their charge to institute an experiment
-which I have made before them with the completest success. To
-those parents especially do I address myself who, aware that
-temperance in enjoyment is the best warrant of its duration, feel
-how dangerous and how empty are all the feverous amusements of
-our assemblies, our dinners, and our theatres, compared with the
-genuine and tranquil pleasures of a happy circle at home.”</p></div>
-
-<p>He presents an alluring picture of the health-producing results for the
-young of the natural regimen. He promises that</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“They will become not only more robust but more beautiful;
-that their carriage will be erect, their step firm; that their
-development at a critical period of youth, the prematurity of which
-has been considered an evil, will be retarded; that, above all,
-the danger of being deprived of them will in every way diminish;
-while by these light repasts their hilarity will be augmented, and
-their intellects cleared in a degree which shall astonishingly
-illustrate the delightful effects of this regimen.... I will
-beg here to attempt an answer in this place to that trite and
-specious objection to Dr. Lambe’s opinions that ‘what is suitable
-to one constitution may be not so to another.’ If there be a
-single person existing, whose health would not be improved by the
-vegetable diet and distilled water, then the whole system falls
-at once to the ground. The question is simply, whether fruits and
-other vegetables be not the natural sustenance of man, who would
-have occasion for no other drink than these afford, and whose
-thirst is at present excited by an unnatural flesh diet, which
-causes his disorders bodily and mentally.... Another objection
-sometimes urged is this: ‘If children, brought up on a vegetable
-regimen, should at a future period of their lives adopt a flesh
-diet, they will certainly suffer more from the change than they
-otherwise would have done.’ The very contrary of this, I conceive,
-would happen. The stomach is so fortified by the general increase
-of health, that a person thus nourished is enabled to bear what
-one whose humours are less impaired would sink under. The children
-of our family can each of them eat a dozen or eighteen walnuts for
-supper without the most trifling indigestion, an experiment which
-those who feed their children in the usual manner would consider
-it adventurous to attempt. So also the Irish porters in London
-bear these alterations of diet successfully, and owe much of their
-actual vigour to the vegetable food of their forefathers, and
-to their own, before they emigrated from Ireland, where, in all
-probability, they did not taste flesh half-a dozen times in the
-year.”</p></div>
-
-<p>As to another well-known pretext, that the propensity to flesh-eating,
-and the relish with which it is evidently enjoyed by the majority
-of flesh eaters, is proof of its fitness, Newton justly objects the
-various unnatural and disgusting foods of many savage peoples which are
-eaten with equal relish, so that “the argument of the agreeable flavour
-proves nothing, I apprehend, by proving too much.” He exhorts the
-medical faculty generally, and those members of it who are in charge of
-hospitals, infirmaries, or workhouses, to try the effect of the pure
-regimen on the sufferers and patients&mdash;in particular, in the cases of
-the victims of cancer. Amongst others of his personal acquaintance who
-had derived the greatest benefit from the regimen, he instances Dr.
-Adam Ferguson, the historian of the Roman Republic, who lived strictly
-on a vegetable diet. He was in the habit of accompanying Mr. Newton,
-in the year 1794, in rides through the environs of Rome. He was still
-living in 1811, and he died, in fact, at the age of ninety, holding a
-professorship in the University of Edinburgh.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XL_GLEIZES">XL.<br />
-<span class="s5">GLEÏZÈS. 1773&ndash;1843.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">O<span class="smaller">F</span> all the enlightened and humane spirits to which the philosophic
-eighteenth century gave birth, and who were quickened into activity
-by the great movement which originated in France in its last quarter,
-not one, assuredly, was actuated by a purer and more exalted feeling
-than Jean Antoine Gleïzès&mdash;the most <i>enthusiastic</i>, perhaps, of all
-the apostles of humanity and of refinement. He was born at Dourgne,
-in the (present)<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span> department of the Tarn. His father was advocate to
-the old provincial parliament. His mother’s name was Anna Francos.
-After attending preliminary schools, he applied himself to the study
-of medicine&mdash;urged, says his biographer, more by love of his species
-than by predilection for the profession. His intense horror of the
-vivisectional experiments in the physiological torture-dens soon
-compelled him to abandon his intended career: the experience, however,
-gained during his brief medical course he was able to utilize more than
-once in his after life for the benefit of his neighbours.</p>
-
-<p>The earlier period of the Revolution had been hailed by him, still
-very young as he then was, as the hopeful beginning of a new era; when
-its direction, unhappily, fell into the hands of fanatical leaders,
-who, following too much the examples of the old <i>régimes</i>, thought,
-by wholesale executions, to clear the way for the establishment of a
-universal republic and of lasting peace. The youthful enthusiast, whose
-whole soul revolted from the very idea of bloodshed and of suffering,
-withdrew despairing into solitude, and devoted himself to scientific
-and literary studies, and to calm contemplation of Nature.</p>
-
-<p>In 1794, at the age of 21, Gleïzès married Aglae de Baumelle, daughter
-of a writer of some repute. At this time he seems to have entertained
-the hope of instructing his countrymen, by engaging in public teaching;
-but, disappointed in a scheme for the inauguration of a course of
-historical lectures in the central school of his department, he retired
-altogether from the active business of the world, and settled down in
-a happy and peaceful home, in a small château belonging to his wife,
-at the foot of the Pyrenees near Mezières. It was here, amidst the
-magnificent solitudes of Nature, that in 1798, in his twenty fifth
-year, he determined upon abandoning for ever the diet of blood and
-slaughter. Until the moment of his death, forty-five years later, his
-diet consisted solely of milk, fruits, and vegetables.</p>
-
-<p>So great was his scrupulousness, that there might be no possibility or
-mistake Gleïzès prepared his own food; and he always ate alone (his
-wife being unable or unwilling to follow his loftier aims), since he
-could not endure either the smell or the sight of the ordinary dishes.
-And this intense aversion it was, indeed, that compelled him to forego
-in great measure his intercourse with the world, or, at all events, to
-shun the ordinary celebrations of social “festivity.”</p>
-
-<p>Full of enthusiastic belief that the transparent truth and sublimity of
-his creed could not fail to commend themselves to the better spirits
-of the age amongst his countrymen, Gleïzès addressed himself to some
-of the more thoughtful of his contemporaries; amongst others to
-Lamartine,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span> Lamennais, and Chateâubriand. Lamartine&mdash;the author of the
-<i>Fall of an Angel</i>, in which he gives expression to his akreophagistic
-sympathies&mdash;responded, if not with the enthusiasm that might justly
-have been expected from the author of that poem, at least in a friendly
-spirit. The others kept silence. This indifferentism of those who
-should have been the first to lend the support of their names naturally
-affected him; and made much more sensible the intellectual and moral
-isolation of his existence. He was not left quite alone, however.
-There were found three or four minds of a loftier reach who had the
-courage of their convictions, and followed them out to their logical
-conclusion. These were Anquetil (the author of <i>Recherches sur les
-Indes</i>), Charles Nodier, Girod de Chantrans, and Cabantous, dean of the
-Faculty of Letters at Toulouse. His brother, Colonel Gleïzès, a member
-of the Academy of Sciences of the same university, also declared for
-the reformation. It is superflous to say that these converts were all
-men of superior moral calibre to their contemporaries, however high
-they might be exalted by popular estimates of worth.</p>
-
-<p>Deeply sensible as he was of the profound selfishness and
-indifferentism of the world surrounding him upon the subject which
-to him had all the interest and importance of a new religion, he yet
-constantly displayed the benevolence of his disposition, and the
-beneficence of his morality, in his efforts for the good of all with
-whom he came in contact, and particularly in respect to his domestics
-and his tenants, amongst whom his memory was long held in reverence.
-“His exalted nature,” states his brother, “glowed with enthusiasm for
-everything true and good.” His “life-sorrow” seems to have been the
-want of sympathy on the part of his wife, to whom, nevertheless, he
-proved an indulgent husband.</p>
-
-<p>His first book, <i>Les Mélancolies d’un Solitaire</i>, appeared in the
-year 1794, in 1800 his <i>Nuits Elysiennes</i>, and four years later
-his <i>Agrestes</i>; all more or less advocating the truth. A long
-interval elapsed before he again essayed an appeal to the world.
-His <i>Christianisme Expliqué: ou l’Unité de Croyance pour tous les
-Chrétiens</i> (Christianity Explained: or, Unity of Belief for all
-Christians) was published in 1830. Seven years later it appeared
-under the title of “Christianity Explained: or, the True Spirit of
-that Religion Misinterpreted up to the Present Day.” In this work,
-says his estimable editor and translator Herr Springer,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span> “he sought
-to prove, from the standing-point of a protestant christian, that
-Christ’s mission had for its end the abolition of the murder of animals
-(<i>Thiermord</i>), and that the whole significance of his teaching lay
-in the words spoken at the institution of the ‘Supper,’ that is to
-say, the substitution of bread instead of flesh, and wine instead of
-blood.” This undertaking, it is needless to remark, admirable as was
-its motive, could hardly, from the nature of the case, be successful.</p>
-
-<p>His last work was his <i>Thalysie: ou La Nouvelle Existence</i>, the first
-part of which was published at Paris in 1840, the second in 1842.
-He survived this his final appeal to the world on behalf of the new
-reformation but a few months. He had reached the proverbial limit of
-human existence; but that his life was shortened by disappointment
-and the bitter weariness of hope deferred, “by that sorrow which
-perpetually gnaws at the heart of the unrecognised reformer” (as his
-biographer well expresses it), we have too much reason to believe. The
-<i>Thalysie</i>&mdash;his <i>magnum opus</i>&mdash;excited, it appears, little interest,
-or even notice, upon its first appearance. It found one sympathising
-critic in M. Cabantous, to whom reference has been already made, who
-delivered a course of lectures upon it from his professorial chair. A
-few years later a Parisian advocate, M. Blot-Lequène, wrote a treatise
-in terms of strong recommendation of its principles; and Eugène
-Stourm, editor of <i>The Phalanx</i>, also eloquently advocated its claims
-upon the public notice. At length it was criticised in the <i>Révue des
-Deux Mondes</i> by Alphonse Esquiros, known to English readers by his
-contributions to that Review on English life and manners. We are hardly
-surprised that the criticism was conceived in the usual supercilious
-and prejudiced spirit.</p>
-
-<p>No attempt appears to have been made to re-publish the <i>New Existence</i>
-until Herr Springer undertook the task for his countrymen. His German
-version, with an interesting notice of the life and labours of Gleïzès,
-was published at Berlin in 1872. Criticising a flippant article in
-<i>The Food Journal</i> in the same year, Herr Springer eloquently rebukes
-the easy and arrogant tone&mdash;so successful in appealing to popular
-prejudices&mdash;and observes:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span> “Gleïzès at last published his eminent work,
-which, as Weilhaüser says, he has written with the blood of his own
-heart. If it be eccentric, as Mr. Jerrold asserts, it has only <i>the
-eccentricity of a gospel of humanity</i>. Gleïzès was so eccentric as to
-write the following lines, which were found amongst his posthumous
-papers: ‘God, pure Source of Light, in order to obey thy commands I
-wrote this book. Be gracious to protect and to support my efforts;
-for the humble creature which raises its voice from its grain of
-sand may, perhaps, be speechless to-morrow, and deep silence reign
-in the desert.’ Yes; Mr. Jerrold is right: that theory was to its
-author a religion. In the <i>Thalysie</i> we are instructed in the highest
-questions concerning the health and happiness of mankind. Surpassing
-all naturalists and philosophers, he explained to us the great mystery
-of Nature&mdash;that robbery and murder [in its full meaning] arose only
-by corruption, and by alienation from the original laws of creation,
-and that man, instead of favouring the corruption, as he has done till
-now, would be able to abolish it. In this way, and in contradiction
-to the hollow phrases of optimism and the depressing contemplation of
-pessimism, Gleïzès restores the peace of our mind, and bestows upon us
-the hope for a future reign of Wisdom and Love.”<a name="FNanchor_223_223" id="FNanchor_223_223"></a><a href="#Footnote_223_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a></p>
-
-<p>In the preface to the <i>Thalysie</i> Gleïzès thus expresses his
-convictions, his hopes, and the general purpose of his labours:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The system which I now publish to the world is not, as the usual
-acceptation of that word might seem to indicate, a collection of
-principles more or less probable, and of which it depends upon
-each one to admit or reject the consequences. It is a chain of
-principles, rigorously true and just, from which man cannot depart
-without incurring penalties proportionate to his deviation. But, in
-spite of these penalties which he has suffered, and which he still
-suffers, he is not aware of his lost condition [<i>égarement</i>]. His
-fate is that of the slave, born in servitude, who plays with his
-chains, sometimes insults the freemen, and carries his madness to
-the point of refusing freedom when it is offered to him, and of
-choosing slavery.</p>
-
-<p>“It is not that <i>all</i> men have allowed themselves to be carried
-willingly down the fatal descent: a large number have struggled
-against the press, but their diverse and scattered efforts have
-resembled the eddies of the flood, which ends with forcing together
-all the diverging waters and hurrying away with them into the gulf
-of the ocean. Or, if some few have raised and kept themselves above
-the rapid current, no permanent advantage has resulted from it to
-the human race, which has been none the less abandoned to itself.”</p></div>
-
-<p>We know that the greatest intellects amongst the Greeks<a name="FNanchor_224_224" id="FNanchor_224_224"></a><a href="#Footnote_224_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a> had taught
-the better way; but they failed, says Gleïzès, inasmuch as their
-doctrine was too exclusive and esoteric.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The condition of the human race is a plain witness of its error.
-This condition, in fact, is so alarming that it might seem
-desperate, if it were certain that men had acquired <i>all</i> their
-knowledge. But, happily, there is one branch of it&mdash;the most
-essential of all, and without which the rest is scarcely of any
-account&mdash;which is yet entirely ignored. This knowledge is precisely
-that of which these great men had glimpses, and of which they
-reserved to themselves the sole enjoyment;<a name="FNanchor_225_225" id="FNanchor_225_225"></a><a href="#Footnote_225_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a> and it is this
-knowledge, or, rather, this wisdom (and we know that with the
-Greeks these two things were comprised under the same denomination)
-which I publish. I shall give<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span> it an extension which it was not
-possible for <i>them</i> to perceive or to give; because Nature refuses
-its life-giving spirit [<i>esprit de vie</i>] to solitary and isolated
-seeds, and makes those only to fructify which enter into the common
-heritage of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>“With such support, the most feeble must have an advantage over
-the strongest without it. I have, besides, another advantage. Men
-feeling to-day, more than ever, the privation of what is wanting
-to them, invoke on all sides new principles, and demand a higher
-civilisation. It is not the first time, doubtless, that such a
-state of things has been manifested. It has been seen to supervene
-after all the moral revolutions that have left man greater than
-they have found him. But that of which we have been the witnesses
-[the revolution in France of 1789&mdash;the reforms of 1830] seems to
-have something more remarkable, more complete&mdash;one would almost be
-tempted to believe that it must be the last, and terminate that
-long sequence of vain disputes across which the human kind has
-painfully advanced, seeing it rise in the midst of the <i>débris</i>
-of all the old-world ideas which have expired or are expiring at
-one’s feet. What a moment for rebuilding! No more favourable one
-could exist; and it is urged on, so to speak, by the breeze of
-these happy circumstances that I offer to the meditation of men the
-following propositions....</p>
-
-<p>“I shall add but a few words. The principles which I have laid down
-are absolute&mdash;they cannot bend [<i>fléchir</i>]. But there are <i>steps</i>
-on the route which conduct to the heights which they occupy; and
-were there but a single step made in that direction, that single
-step could not be regarded as indifferent and unimportant. Thus
-this work&mdash;guide of those whom it shall convince&mdash;will be useful
-also to the rest of the world as, at least, a moderator and a
-check; and, I shall avow it, my hopes do not extend beyond this
-latter object. I should feel myself even perfectly satisfied, if
-this book should inspire in my contemporaries enough of esteem
-and favour to prevent them from arresting and impeding it at its
-start, and to allow it to follow its course towards a generation, I
-will not say more worthy, but better prepared than the present to
-receive it.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Gleïzès divides his great work into twelve Discourses, in two volumes,
-supplemented by a third volume which he entitles <i>Moral Proofs</i>. It is
-an almost exhaustive, as well as eloquent, <i>résumé</i> of the history and
-ethics of the subject. The only fault of this, perhaps, most heartfelt
-appeal to the reason and conscience of mankind ever published is its
-too great discursiveness. The manifest anxiety of the author to meet,
-or to anticipate, every possible objection or subterfuge on the part of
-the hostile or the indifferent, may well excuse this apparent blemish;
-and the slightest acquaintance with his <i>New Existence</i> can hardly
-fail to extort, even from the most prejudiced reader, a tribute of
-admiration to a spirit so noble and so pure, devoting all its energies
-to the furtherance of an exalted and refined morality.</p>
-
-<p>In the earlier portion of his book he reviews the dietetic habits and
-practices of the various peoples of the younger world, and notices the
-various philosophic and other writers who have left any record of their
-opinions upon flesh-eating. He next treats of modern authorities, and,
-after quoting a large number of anti-kreophagistic testimonies, in his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
-fifth Discourse he applies himself to answer the sophisms of the chief
-opponents, and particularly of its arch-enemy&mdash;his countryman, Buffon,
-in his well-known <i>Histoire Naturelle</i>&mdash;and he may be said effectually
-to have disposed of his astonishing fallacies.<a name="FNanchor_226_226" id="FNanchor_226_226"></a><a href="#Footnote_226_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“What most strikes the observer when he throws an attentive glance
-over the earth, is the <i>relative</i> inferiority of man, considered as
-what he is, in regard to what he ought to be: it is the feebleness
-of the work compared with the aptitude of the workman. All his
-inspirations are good, and all his actions bad; and it is to this
-singular fact that must be attributed, without doubt, the universal
-contempt that man exhibits towards his fellows.... We must remount
-to the source, and see if there is not in man’s existence some
-essential act which, reflecting itself on all the rest, would
-communicate to them its fatal influence. Let us consider, above
-everything, the <i>distinctive</i> quality of man&mdash;that which raises him
-above all other beings. It is clear that it is Pity,<a name="FNanchor_227_227" id="FNanchor_227_227"></a><a href="#Footnote_227_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a> source
-of that intelligence which has placed him at the head of that
-fine moral order, invincible in the midst of the catastrophes of
-Nature. His utter failure to exhibit this feeling of pity towards
-his humble fellow-beings, as well as to his own kind, engages us
-to inquire what is the <i>permanent</i> cause of such failure; and
-we find it, at first, in that unhappy facility with which man
-receives his <i>impressions</i> of the beings by whom he is surrounded.
-These impressions, transmitted with life and cemented by habit,
-have formed a creation apart and separate from himself, which is
-consequently beyond the domain of his conscience, or, if you prefer
-it, of the ordinary jurisprudence of men. Thus men continue to
-accuse themselves of being unjust, violent, cruel, and treacherous
-to one another, but they do not accuse themselves of cutting the
-throats of other animals and of feeding upon their mangled limbs,
-which, nevertheless, is the single cause of that injustice, of that
-violence, of that cruelty, and of that treachery.</p>
-
-<p>“Although all have not these vices to the same degree, and it is
-exactly this fact which aids the self-deception, I shall clearly
-prove that all have the <i>germs</i> of them; and that, if they are not
-equally developed, we must thank the circumstances only which have
-failed them.</p>
-
-<p>“It is thus that many Europeans, whom their destiny conducts to the
-cannibal countries, after some months of sojourn with the natives,
-make no difficulty of seating themselves at their banquet, and of
-sharing their horrible repast, which at first had excited their
-horror and disgust. They begin with devouring a dog: from the dog
-to the man the space is soon cleared.</p>
-
-<p>“Men believe themselves to be just, provided that they fulfil, in
-regard to their fellows, the duties which have been prescribed to
-them. But it is goodness which is the justice of man; and it is
-impossible, I repeat it, to be good towards one’s fellow without
-being so towards other existences. Let us not be the dupes of
-<i>appearances</i>. Seneca, who lived only on the herbs of his garden,
-to which he owed those last gleams of philosophy which enlightened,
-so to speak, the fall of the Roman Empire, also<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span> thinks that crime
-cannot be circumscribed: <i>Nullum intrà se manet vitium</i>. And if,
-as Ovid affirms, the sword struck men only after having been first
-dyed in the blood of the lower animals, what interest have we not
-in respecting such a barrier? Like Æolus, who held in his hands the
-bag in which the winds were confined, we may at our will, according
-as we live upon plants or upon animals, tranquillize the earth or
-excite terrible tempests upon it.</p>
-
-<p>“I am too well aware that a subterfuge will be found in excusing
-the crime by necessity, and calumniating Providence. According to
-the pretended belief of the greatest number of people, if other
-animals were not put to death, they would deprive men of the empire
-of the earth. But it is easy to reply to this objection by the
-examples of people who, holding in horror the effusion of blood,
-and robbing no being of life&mdash;even the vilest or most hateful&mdash;are
-by no means disturbed in the exercise of their sovereignty.<a name="FNanchor_228_228" id="FNanchor_228_228"></a><a href="#Footnote_228_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a>
-And it would result from the examples of these people, if one had
-not other proofs besides, that man is absolutely master of the
-means of increasing or limiting the multiplication of the species
-which are more or less in dependence upon him. And it is not less
-evident that the earth, in this latter hypothesis, would support
-an infinitely greater number of the human species. Thus will the
-vegetable regimen be <i>necessarily</i> adopted one day over the whole
-earth, when the multiplication of our species shall have reached
-a certain number fixed and pre-established by that imperious and
-irrevocable law which is intimately connected, for the most part,
-with humanity, justice, and virtue&mdash;the number at which it is
-slowly arriving, arrested by the very causes which I am striving
-to destroy, and which, for that single reason, ought to arm
-against them all generous beings who appreciate the benefit of
-existence.”<a name="FNanchor_229_229" id="FNanchor_229_229"></a><a href="#Footnote_229_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Amongst other pretexts by which men seek to excuse selfishness, is
-the assertion that its victims have little or no consciousness of
-suffering, and that their death is so unexpected that it cannot excite
-their terror. This monstrous fiction is eloquently exposed by Gleïzès,
-as it is, indeed, by the commonest everyday experience:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The instinct of life among animals generally gives them a
-presentiment and fear of death&mdash;that is to say <i>violent</i> death; for
-as for natural death it inspires in them no alarm, for the simple
-reason that it is in the course of nature. And it is the same with
-man. He is not afflicted with the thought of dying when he knows
-his hour is come; he resigns himself to that fate as to any other
-imposed upon him by necessity. The sensations of other beings
-differ in no respect from those of men; and when the horse, for
-example, is condemned to death by the lion, that is to say, when he
-hears the confused roar of that terrible beast which fills space,
-while the precise spot from which it emanates cannot be determined,
-which takes from the victim all hope of escape by flight, the
-perspiration rolls down all his limbs, he falls to the earth as if
-he had just been struck by a thunderbolt, and would die of terror
-alone if the lion did not run up to terminate the tragedy.”<a name="FNanchor_230_230" id="FNanchor_230_230"></a><a href="#Footnote_230_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a></p>
-
-<p>“There exists so great an analogy, so strong a resemblance, between
-the life of man and that of other animals who surround him, that a
-simple return to himself&mdash;simple reflection&mdash;ought to suffice to
-make him respect the latter; and if he were condemned by Nature to
-rend it from them, he might justly curse the order of things which,
-on the one hand, should have implanted in his heart the source of
-feeling so gentle, and, on the other, should have imposed on him a
-necessity so cruel.... And if this man have children, if he bear in
-his heart objects which are so dear to him, how can he unceasingly
-surround himself with images of death&mdash;of that death which must
-deprive him one day of those whom he loves, or snatch himself away
-from their love? And if he be just, if he be good, how will he not
-have repugnance for acts which will continually recall to him ideas
-of ingratitude, of cruelty, and of violence? There exists in the
-East a tree which, by a mechanical movement, inclines its branches
-towards the traveller, whom it seems to invite to repose under
-its shade. This simple image of hospitality, which is revered in
-that part of the world, makes them regard it as sacred, and they
-would punish with death him who should dare to apply a hatchet to
-its trunk. Our humble fellow-beings, should <i>they</i> be less sacred
-because they represent, not by mechanical movements, but by actions
-resembling our own, feelings the dearest to our hearts? Ah! let us
-respect them, not alone because they aid us to bear the burdens
-of the world, which would overwhelm us without them but <i>because
-they have the same right with ourselves to life</i>.... A reason which
-is without reply, at least for generous souls, is the trust and
-confidence reposed in man by other animals. Nature has not taught
-them to distrust him. He is the only enemy whom she has not pointed
-out to them. Is it not evident proof that he was not intended to be
-so? For can one believe that Nature, who holds so just a balance,
-could have been willing to deceive all other beings in favour of
-man alone? It has been observed that birds of the gentle species
-express certain cries when they perceive the fox, the weasel,
-&amp;c., although they have nothing to fear from them, without doubt,
-by reason of the analogy which they offer. They are the cries of
-hatred rather than of fear, whilst they utter these latter at sight
-of the eagle, of the hawk, &amp;c. Now, it is certain that in all the
-islands on which man has landed, the native animals have not fled
-before them. They have been able to take even birds with the hand.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Gleïzès rejects the common fallacy that, because men have <i>acquired</i> a
-lust for flesh, <i>therefore</i> it is natural or proper for them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It is a specious but very false reason to allege that, since man
-has acquired this taste, he ought to be permitted to indulge it&mdash;in
-the first place because Nature has not given him <i>cooked</i> flesh,
-and because several ages must have rolled away before fire was
-used. It is very well known that there are many countries in which
-it was not known at the period of their discovery. Nature, then,
-could have given man only <i>raw</i> or <i>living</i> flesh, and we know that
-it is repugnant to him over the whole extent of the earth. Now it
-is exactly this character which essentially distinguishes animals
-of prey from others. The former, those at least of the larger
-species, have generally an extreme repugnance, not only for cooked
-flesh, but even for that which has lost its freshness. Man, then,
-is not carnivorous but under certain abnormal conditions; and his
-senses, to which he appeals in support of his carnivorousness, are
-perverted to such a degree, that he would devour his fellow-man
-without perceiving it, if they served him up in place of veal, the
-flesh of which is said to have the same taste. Thus Harpagus ate,
-without knowing it, the corpse of his son.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Gleïzès instances the case of Cows and of Reindeer who, in Norway, have
-been denaturalised so far as to feed on fish, and readily to take to
-that unnatural food.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It would be too long to enumerate here all the causes which may
-have produced so great an aberration. This will be the matter of
-another Discourse. I shall content myself for the moment with
-saying some words upon that which perpetuates it. It is essentially
-that lightness of mind, or, rather, that sort of stupidity, which
-makes all reflection upon anything which is opposed to their habits
-painful to the generality of mankind. They would turn their head
-aside with horror if they saw what a single one of their repasts
-costs Nature. They eat animals as some amongst them launch a
-bomb into the midst of a besieged town, without thinking of the
-evils which it must bring to a crowd of individuals, strangers to
-war&mdash;women, children, and old men&mdash;evils the near spectacle of
-which they could not support, in spite of the hardness of their
-hearts.... To-day, when everything is calculated with so much
-precision [he remarks with bitterness], there will not be wanting
-persons with sufficient assurance to attempt to prove that there
-is more of advantage for the domesticated animals to be born and
-live on condition of having their throats cut, than if they had
-remained in ‘nothingness,’ or in the natural state. As for the
-word ‘nothingness,’ I confess that I do not understand it, but I
-understand the other very well; and I have never conceived how man
-could have had the barbarity to accumulate all the calamities of
-the earth upon a single individual; that is to say, to slaughter
-it in return for having caused its degeneracy. But if he thinks
-himself to escape from the influence of an action so dastardly and
-so infamous, he would be in a very great error....</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
-
-<p>“I shall finish these prolegomena with an important remark. I have
-known a large number of good souls who offered up the most sincere
-wishes for the establishment of this doctrine of humaneness,
-who thought it just and true in all its aspects, who believed
-in all that it announces; but who, in spite of so praiseworthy
-a disposition, dared not be the first to give the example. They
-awaited this movement from minds stronger than their own. Doubtless
-they are the minds which give the impulse to the world; but is it
-necessary to await this movement when one is convinced of one’s
-self? Is it permissible to temporise in a question of life or
-death for innocent beings whose sole crime is <i>to have been born</i>,
-and is it in a case like this that strength of mind should fail
-justice? No! Well-doing is, happily, not so difficult. Ah! what
-is your excuse, besides, pusillanimous souls? I blush for you at
-the miserable pretexts which keep you back. It would be necessary,
-say you, to separate one’s self from the world; to renounce one’s
-friends and neighbours. I see no such necessity, and I think,
-on the contrary, that if you truly loved the world and your
-neighbours, you would hasten to give them an example which must
-have so powerful an influence upon their present happiness and upon
-their future destiny.”<a name="FNanchor_231_231" id="FNanchor_231_231"></a><a href="#Footnote_231_231" class="fnanchor">[231]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>We have reason once again to lament the perversity of literary or
-publishing enterprise which will produce and reproduce, <i>ad infinitum</i>,
-books of no real and permanent value to the world, and altogether
-neglect its true luminaries. This is, in an especial manner, the case
-with Gleïzès. The <i>Nouvelle Existence</i> has never been republished,
-we believe, in the author’s own country; while it has never found a
-translator, perhaps scarcely a reader, in this country outside the
-Vegetarian ranks. Germany, as we have already noticed, alone has the
-honour of attempting to preserve from oblivion one of the few who have
-deserved immortality.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLI_SHELLEY">XLI.<br />
-<span class="s5">SHELLEY. 1792&ndash;1822.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">T<span class="smaller">HAT</span> a principle of profound significance for the welfare of our own
-species in particular, and for the peaceful harmony of the world
-in general&mdash;that a true spiritualism, of which some of the most
-admirable of the poets of the pre-Christian ages proved themselves not
-unconscious, has been, for the most part, altogether overlooked or
-ignored by modern aspirants to poetic fame is matter for our gravest
-lament. Thomson, Pope, Shelley, Lamartine&mdash;to whom Milton, perhaps, may
-be added&mdash;these form the small band who almost alone represent, and
-have developed the earlier inspiration of a Hesiod, Ovid, or Virgil,
-the prophet-poets who, faithful to their proper calling,<a name="FNanchor_232_232" id="FNanchor_232_232"></a><a href="#Footnote_232_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a> have
-sought to <i>unbarbarise</i> and elevate human life by arousing, in various
-degree, feelings of horror and aversion from the prevailing materialism
-of living.</p>
-
-<p>Of this illustrious band, and, indeed, of all the great intellectual
-and moral luminaries who have shed a humanising influence upon our
-planet&mdash;who have left behind them “thoughts that breathe and words
-that burn”&mdash;none can claim more reverence from humanitarians than the
-poet of poets&mdash;the influence of whose life and writings, considerable
-even now, and gradually increasing, doubtless in a not remote future
-is destined to be equal to that of the very foremost of the world’s
-teachers, and of whom our sketch, necessarily limited though it is,
-will be extended beyond the usual allotted space.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Percy Bysshe Shelley descended from an old and wealthy family long
-settled in Sussex. At the age of 13 he was sent to Eton, where (such
-was the spirit of the public and other schools at that time, and,
-indeed, of long afterwards) he was subjected to severe trials of
-endurance by the rough and rude manners of the ordinary schoolboy, and
-the harsh and unequal violence of the schoolmaster. Of an exceptionally
-refined and sensitive temperament, he was none the less determined
-in resistance to injustice and oppression, and his refusal to submit
-tamely to their petty tyrannies seems to have brought upon him more
-than the common amount of harsh treatment. It penetrated into his
-inmost soul, and inspired the opening stanzas of “The Revolt of
-Islam,” in intensity of feeling seldom equalled. Some alleviation of
-these sufferings of childhood he found in his own mental resources.
-For his amusement he translated, we are assured, several books of
-the <i>Natural History</i> of Pliny. Of Greek writers he even then (in an
-English version) read Plato, who afterwards, in his own language,
-always remained one of his chief literary companions, and he applied
-himself also to the study of French and of German. In natural science,
-Chemistry seems to have been his especial pursuit.</p>
-
-<p>In 1810, at the age of seventeen, he entered University College,
-Oxford. There he studied and wrote unceasingly. With a strong
-predilection for metaphysics, he devoted himself in particular to
-the great masters of dialectics, Locke and Hume, and to their chief
-representatives in French philosophy. Ardent and enthusiastic in
-the pursuit of truth, he sought to enlarge his knowledge and ideas
-from every possible quarter, and he engaged in correspondence with
-distinguished persons, suggested to him by choice or chance, with
-whom he discussed the most interesting philosophical questions. Like
-all truly fruitful minds, the youthful inquirer was not satisfied
-with the <i>dicta</i> of mere authority, or with the <i>consensus</i>, however
-general, of past ages, and he hesitated not, in matters of opinion in
-which every well-instructed intelligence is capable of judging for
-itself, to bring to the test of right reason the most widely-received
-dogmas of Antiquity. Actuated by this spirit, rather than by any
-matured convictions, and wishing to elicit sincere as well as
-exhaustive argument on the deepest of all metaphysical inquiries,
-in an unfortunate moment for himself, he caused to be printed an
-abstract of anti-theistic speculations, drawn from David Hume and
-other authorities, presented in a series of mathematically-expressed
-propositions. Copies of this modest thesis of two pages were sent
-either by the author, or by some other hand, to the heads of his
-College. The clerical dignitaries, listening to the dictates of
-outraged<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span> authority, rather than influenced by calm reflection, which
-would have, perhaps, shewn them the useless injustice of so extreme a
-measure, proceeded at once to expel him from the University.<a name="FNanchor_233_233" id="FNanchor_233_233"></a><a href="#Footnote_233_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a></p>
-
-<p>That in spite of this impetuous attack upon the stereotyped
-presentations of Theism, Shelley had an eminently religious temperament
-has been well insisted upon by a recent biographer:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Brimming over with love for men, he was deficient in sympathy with
-the conditions under which they actually think and feel. Could he
-but dethrone the anarch, Custom, the ‘Millennium,’ he argued, would
-immediately arrive; nor did he stop to think how different was
-the fibre of his own soul from that of the unnumbered multitudes
-around him. In his adoration of what he recognised as <i>living</i>,
-he retained no reverence for the ossified experience of past
-ages.... For he had a vital faith, and this faith made the ideals
-he conceived seem possible&mdash;faith in the duty and desirability of
-overthrowing idols; faith in the gospel of liberty, fraternity,
-equality; faith in the divine beauty of Nature; faith in the
-perfectibility of man; faith in the omnipresent soul, whereof our
-souls are atoms; faith in love, as the ruling and co-ordinating
-substance of morality. The man who lived by this faith was in no
-vulgar sense of the word ‘atheist.’ When he proclaimed himself to
-be one he pronounced his hatred of a gloomy religion which had been
-the instrument of kings and priests for the enslavement of their
-fellow beings. As he told his friend Trelawney, he used the word
-<i>Atheism</i> ‘to express his abhorrence of superstition: he took it
-up, as a knight took up a gauntlet, in defiance of injustice.’”<a name="FNanchor_234_234" id="FNanchor_234_234"></a><a href="#Footnote_234_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>So thorough was his contempt for mere received and routine thought,
-that even Aristotle, the great idol of the mediæval schoolmen, and
-still an object of extraordinary veneration in the elder University,
-became for him a kind of synonym for despotic authority&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft14">“Tomes</div>
- <div class="verse">Of reasoned Wrong glozed on by Ignorance”&mdash;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">and was, accordingly, treated with undue neglect. As for politics,
-as represented in the parliament and public Press of his day, he was
-indignantly impatient of the too usual trifling and unreality of public
-life. He seldom read the newspapers; nor could he ever bring himself to
-mix with the “rabble of the House.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus, forced into antipathy to the ordinary and orthodox business of
-life around him, the poet withdrew himself more and more from it into
-his own thoughts, and hopes, and aspirations, which he communicated to
-his familiar friends. Some of those, however, into whose society he
-chanced to be thrown, were not of a sort of mind most congenial to his
-own. Yet they all bear witness to his surpassing moral<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span> no less than
-mental, constitution. “In no individual, perhaps, was the moral sense
-ever more completely developed than in Shelley,” says one of his most
-intimate acquaintances; “in no being was the perception of right and
-wrong more acute.”</p>
-
-<p>“As his love of intellectual pursuits was vehement, and the vigour
-of his genius almost celestial, so were the purity and sanctity of
-his life most conspicuous.... I have had the happiness to associate
-with some of the best specimens of gentleness; but (may my candour
-and preference be pardoned), I can affirm that Shelley was almost the
-only example I have yet found that was never wanting, even in the most
-minute particular, of the infinite and various observances of pure,
-entire, and perfect gentility.” This is the voluntary testimony of a
-friend who was not inclined to excess of praise.<a name="FNanchor_235_235" id="FNanchor_235_235"></a><a href="#Footnote_235_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a></p>
-
-<p>The sudden end of his career at Oxford had estranged him from his
-father, who was of a temperament the very opposite to that of
-the enthusiastic reformer&mdash;harsh, intolerant, and bigoted in his
-prejudices; and the young Shelley’s marriage, shortly afterwards,
-to Harriet Westbrook, a young girl of much beauty, but of little
-cultivation of mind, and in a position of life different from his
-own, incensed him still further. The marriage, happy enough in the
-beginning, proved to be an ill-assorted one, and various causes
-contributed to the inevitable <i>dénouement</i>. After a union of some
-three years, the marriage, by mutual consent, was dissolved. Two years
-later&mdash;not, it seems, in consequence of the divorce, as sometimes has
-been suggested&mdash;the young wife put an end to her existence&mdash;a terrible
-and tragic termination of an ill-considered attachment, which must have
-caused him the deepest pangs of grief, and which seems always, and
-justly, to have cast a gloomy shadow upon his future life.</p>
-
-<p>Brief as his career was, we can refer only to the most interesting
-events in it. Of these, his enthusiastic effort to arouse a bloodless
-revolution in Ireland, such as, if effected, might have prevented the
-continued miseries of that especially neglected portion of the three
-kingdoms, is not the least noteworthy. With his lately-married wife and
-her sister he was living at Keswick, when, by a sudden inspiration, he
-resolved to cross the Channel, and engage in the work of propagating
-his principles of political and social reform. This was in the early
-part of 1812. In Dublin, where they established their head-quarters,
-he printed an <i>Address to the Irish People</i>, which, by his own hands,
-as well as by other agency, was distributed far and wide. In this
-wonderfully well-considered and reasonable manifesto, the principles
-laid down as necessary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span> to success in attempting deliverance from ages
-of bad laws and misgovernment, are as sound as the ardour and sincerity
-of his hopeless undertaking are unmistakeable. The cosmopolitan scope
-of the <i>Address</i> appears in such passages as these:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Do not inquire if a man be a heretic, if he be a Quaker, a Jew,
-or a Heathen, but if he be a virtuous man, if he love liberty and
-truth, if he wish the happiness and peace of human kind. If a man
-be ever so much ‘a believer,’ and love not these things, he is a
-heartless hypocrite and a knave.... It is not a merit to tolerate,
-but it is a crime to be intolerant.... Be calm, mild, deliberate,
-patient.... Think, and talk, and discuss.... Be free and be happy,
-but <i>first be wise and good</i>.... Habits of sobriety, regularity,
-and thought must be entered into and firmly resolved upon.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Truer in his perception of the radical causes and cure of national
-evils than most party politicians, he urged the essential need of
-ethical and social change, without which mere political change of
-parties, or increase in material wealth of some sections in the
-community, must be valueless in any true estimate of a nation’s
-prosperity. Shelley also issued, in pamphlet form, <i>Proposals for an
-Association</i>&mdash;a plan for the formation of a vast society of Irish
-Catholics, to enforce their “emancipation”&mdash;a measure which was
-not brought about until twenty years later after long and vehement
-opposition.</p>
-
-<p>Two months were devoted to this generous but futile work; the people of
-Ireland did not move, and the young reformer returned to England, but
-without abandoning his <i>propaganda</i> of the principles of liberty and
-justice. While residing in Somersetshire he published a paper entitled
-a <i>Declaration of Rights</i>, to circulate which recourse was had to
-ingenious methods. Four years later, in 1817, he published <i>A Proposal
-for putting Reform to the Vote throughout the Kingdom</i>. “He saw that
-the House of Commons did not represent the country; and acting upon his
-principle that Government is the servant of the Governed, he sought
-means for ascertaining the real will of the nation with regard to its
-Parliament, and for bringing the collective opinions of the population
-to bear upon its rulers. The plan proposed was that a large network of
-committees should be formed, and that by their means every individual
-man should be canvassed. We find here the same method of advancing
-reform by peaceable associations as in Ireland.” At the same time, in
-presence of the incalculable amount of ignorance, destitution, and
-consequent venality of the great mass of the community&mdash;the necessary
-outcome of long ages of bad and selfish legislation&mdash;Universal
-Suffrage for the present appeared to him to be not a safe experiment.
-Evidence of controversial power, is his “grave and lofty” Letter to
-Lord Ellenborough, who had recently sentenced to imprisonment the
-printers of the <i>Age of Reason</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span> “an eloquent argument in favour of
-toleration and the freedom of the intellect, carrying the matter beyond
-the instance of legal tyranny, which occasioned its composition, and
-treating it with philosophical if impassioned, seriousness.”<a name="FNanchor_236_236" id="FNanchor_236_236"></a><a href="#Footnote_236_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a>
-Before his visit to Ireland, he had been engaged (as he tells his
-correspondent, William Godwin) in writing <i>An Inquiry into the Causes
-of the Failure of the French Revolution to Benefit Mankind</i>. We have
-to lament that this Essay seems never to have been completed, since it
-is hardly doubtful that it would have been of unusual interest. Such
-was the force and activity of Shelley’s intellect, as displayed in the
-regions of practical philosophy, at the age of twenty, and before he
-had given to the world his first productions in poetry.</p>
-
-<p><i>Queen Mab</i>, written in part two years before, was finished and printed
-in 1813. Although it may have some of the defects of immaturity of
-genius, it has the charm of a genuine poetic inspiration. Intense
-hatred of selfish injustice and untruth in all their shapes, equally
-intense sympathy with all suffering, sublime faith in the ultimate
-triumph of Good, clothed in the language of entrancing eloquence and
-sublimity, are the characteristics of this unique poem. The author’s
-depreciation of his earliest poetic attempt in after years, in a letter
-addressed to the <i>Examiner</i>, only a month before his death, strikes us
-as scarcely sincere, and as having been a sort of necessary sacrifice
-on the altar of Expediency.</p>
-
-<p>In this exquisitely beautiful prophecy of a “Golden Age” to be, the
-fairy Queen Mab, the unembodied being who acts as his instructress and
-guide through the Universe, displays to his affrighted vision, in one
-vast panorama, the horrors of the Past and the Present. She afterwards,
-in a glorious apocalypse, relieves his despair by revealing to him the
-“new heavens and the new earth,” which eventually will displace the
-present evil constitution of things on our planet. On the redeemed and
-regenerated Globe:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft1">“Ambiguous Man! he that can know</div>
- <div class="verse">More misery, and can dream more joy than all:</div>
- <div class="verse">Whose keen sensations thrill within his heart,</div>
- <div class="verse">To mingle with a loftier instinct there,</div>
- <div class="verse">Lending their power to pleasure and to pain,</div>
- <div class="verse">Yet raising, sharpening, and refining each:</div>
- <div class="verse">Who stands amid the ever-varying world</div>
- <div class="verse">The burden or the glory of the Earth&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">He chief perceives the change: his being notes</div>
- <div class="verse">The gradual renovation, and defines</div>
- <div class="verse">Each movement of its progress on his mind.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
- <div class="verse">Here now the human being stands, adorning</div>
- <div class="verse">This loveliest Earth with taintless body and mind.</div>
- <div class="verse">Blest from his birth with all bland impulses,</div>
- <div class="verse">Which gently in his truthful bosom wake</div>
- <div class="verse">All kindly passions and all pure desires.</div>
- <div class="verse">Him (still from hope to hope the bliss pursuing,</div>
- <div class="verse">Which from the exhaustless store of human weal</div>
- <div class="verse">Draws on the virtuous mind), the thoughts that rise</div>
- <div class="verse">In time-destroying infiniteness, gift</div>
- <div class="verse">With self-enshrined eternity, that mocks</div>
- <div class="verse">The unprevailing hoariness of age:</div>
- <div class="verse">And Man, once fleeting o’er the transient scene,</div>
- <div class="verse">Swift as an unremembered vision, stands</div>
- <div class="verse">Immortal upon Earth. <i>No longer now</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>He slays the Lamb who looks him in the face</i>,</div>
- <div class="verse">And horribly devours his mangled flesh,</div>
- <div class="verse">Which, still avenging Nature’s broken law,</div>
- <div class="verse">Kindled all putrid humours in his frame&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">All evil passions and all vain belief&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Hatred, despair, and loathing in his mind,</div>
- <div class="verse">The germs of misery, death, disease, and crime.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">No longer now the wingèd habitants,</div>
- <div class="verse">That in the woods their sweet lives sing away,</div>
- <div class="verse">Flee from the form of Man.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">All things are void of terror. Man has lost</div>
- <div class="verse">His terrible prerogative, and stands</div>
- <div class="verse">An equal amidst equals. Happiness</div>
- <div class="verse">And Science dawn, though late, upon the Earth.</div>
- <div class="verse">Peace cheers the mind, Health renovates the frame.</div>
- <div class="verse">Disease and pleasure cease to mingle here,</div>
- <div class="verse">Reason and passion cease to combat there;</div>
- <div class="verse">Whilst each, unfettered, o’er the Earth extends</div>
- <div class="verse">Its all-subduing energies, and wields</div>
- <div class="verse">The sceptre of a vast dominion there;</div>
- <div class="verse">Whilst every shape and mode of matter lends</div>
- <div class="verse">Its force to the omnipotence of Mind,</div>
- <div class="verse">Which from its dark mine drags the gem of Truth</div>
- <div class="verse">To decorate its paradise of Peace.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In rapt vision the prophet-poet apostrophises the “New Earth”:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“O happy Earth! reality of Heaven,</div>
- <div class="verse">To which those restless souls, that ceaselessly</div>
- <div class="verse">Throng through the human universe, aspire.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Of purest spirits, thou pure dwelling-place,</div>
- <div class="verse">Where care and sorrow, impotence and crime,</div>
- <div class="verse">Languor, disease, and ignorance dare not come.</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
- <div class="verse">O happy Earth! reality of Heaven.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Genius has seen thee in her passionate dreams;</div>
- <div class="verse">And dim forebodings of thy loveliness,</div>
- <div class="verse">Haunting the human heart, have there entwined</div>
- <div class="verse">Those rooted hopes of some sweet place of bliss.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft11">and the souls</div>
- <div class="verse">That, by the paths of an aspiring change,</div>
- <div class="verse">Have reached thy haven of perpetual Peace,</div>
- <div class="verse">There rest from the eternity of toil,</div>
- <div class="verse">That framed the fabric of thy perfectness.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>From the Essay, in the form of a note, which he subjoined to the
-passage we have quoted, we extract the principal arguments:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Man, and the other animals whom he has afflicted with his malady
-or depraved by his dominion, are <i>alone diseased</i>. The Bison,
-the wild Hog, the Wolf, are perfectly exempt from malady, and
-invariably die either from external violence or from mature old
-age. But the domestic Hog, the Sheep, the Cow, the Dog, are subject
-to an incredible variety of distempers, and, like the corruptors
-of their nature, have physicians who thrive upon their miseries.
-The super-eminence of man is, like Satan’s, the super-eminence of
-pain; and the majority of his species, doomed to penury, disease,
-and crime, have reason to curse the untoward event that, by
-enabling him to communicate his sensations, raised him above the
-level of his fellow-animals. But the steps that have been taken
-are irrevocable. The whole of human science is comprised in one
-question: How can the advantages of intellect and civilisation be
-reconciled with the liberty and pure pleasures of natural life?
-How can we take the benefits and reject the evils of the system
-which is now interwoven with the fibre of our being? I believe
-that abstinence from animal food and spirituous liquors would, in
-a great measure, capacitate us for the solution of this important
-question.</p>
-
-<p>“It is true that mental and bodily derangements are attributable,
-in part, to other deviations from rectitude and nature than those
-which concern diet. The mistakes cherished by society respecting
-the connexion of the sexes, whence the misery and diseases of
-unsatisfied celibacy, unenjoyed prostitution, and the premature
-arrival of puberty, necessarily spring. The putrid atmosphere of
-crowded cities, the exhalations of chemical processes, the muffling
-of our bodies in superfluous apparel, the absurd treatment of
-infants&mdash;all these, and innumerable other causes, contribute their
-mite to the mass of human evil.</p>
-
-<p>“Comparative Anatomy teaches us that man resembles the frugivorous
-animals in everything, the carnivorous in nothing. He has neither
-claws wherewith to seize his prey, nor distinct and pointed teeth
-to tear the living fibre. A mandarin of the first class, with
-nails two inches long, would probably find them alone inefficient
-to hold even a hare. After every subterfuge of gluttony, the bull
-must be degraded into the “ox,” and the ram into the “wether,” by
-an unnatural and inhuman operation, that the flaccid fibre may
-offer a fainter resistance to rebellious nature. It is only by
-softening and disguising dead flesh by culinary preparation that it
-is rendered susceptible of mastication or digestion, and that the
-sight of its bloody juice and raw horror does not excite loathing
-and disgust.</p>
-
-<p>“Let the advocate of animal food force himself to a decisive
-experiment on its fitness, and, as Plutarch recommends, tear a
-living lamb with his teeth and, plunging<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span> his head into its vitals,
-slake his thirst with the streaming blood. When fresh from this
-deed of horror, let him revert to the irresistible instinct of
-nature that would rise in judgment against it and say, ‘Nature
-formed me for such work as this.’ Then, and then only would he be
-consistent.</p>
-
-<p>“Man resembles no carnivorous animal. There is no exception, unless
-man be one, to the rule of herbivorous animals having cellulated
-colons.</p>
-
-<p>“The orang-outang perfectly resembles man both in the order
-and in the number of his teeth. The orang-outang is the most
-anthropomorphous of the ape tribe, all of whom are strictly
-frugivorous. There is no other species of animals, which live
-on different food, in which this analogy exists.<a name="FNanchor_237_237" id="FNanchor_237_237"></a><a href="#Footnote_237_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a> In many
-frugivorous animals the canine teeth are more pointed and distinct
-than those of man. The resemblance also of the human stomach to
-that of the orang-outang is greater than to that of any other
-animal.</p>
-
-<p>“The structure of the human frame, then, is that of one fitted to
-a pure vegetable diet in every essential particular. It is true
-that the reluctance to abstain from animal food, in those who have
-been long accustomed to its stimulus, is so great in some persons
-of weak minds as to be scarcely overcome. But this is far from
-bringing any argument in its favour. A Lamb, who was fed for some
-time on flesh by a ship’s crew, refused her natural diet at the end
-of the voyage. There are numerous instances of Horses, Sheep, Oxen,
-and even Wood-Pigeons having been taught to live upon flesh until
-they have loathed their natural aliment. Young children evidently
-prefer pastry, oranges, apples, and other fruit, to the flesh of
-animals, until, by the gradual depravation of the digestive organs,
-the free use of vegetables has, for a time, produced serious
-inconveniences&mdash;<i>for a time</i>, I say, since there never was an
-instance wherein a change from spirituous liquors and animal food
-to vegetables and pure water has failed ultimately to invigorate
-the body by rendering its juices bland and consentaneous, and to
-restore to the mind that cheerfulness and elasticity which not
-one in fifty possesses on the present system. A love of strong
-liquors also is with difficulty taught infants. Almost every one
-remembers the wry faces which the first glass of port produced.
-Unsophisticated instinct is invariably unerring, but to decide on
-the fitness of animal food from the <i>perverted</i> appetites which its
-continued adoption produces, is to make the criminal a judge of his
-own cause. It is even worse, for it is appealing to the infatuated
-drunkard in a question of the salubrity of brandy.</p>
-
-<p>“Except in children, there remain no traces of that instinct which
-determines, in all other animals, what aliment is <i>natural</i> or
-otherwise; and so perfectly obliterated are they in the reasoning
-adults of our species, that it has become necessary to urge
-considerations drawn from comparative anatomy to prove that we are
-<i>naturally</i> frugivorous.</p>
-
-<p>“Crime is madness. Madness is disease. Whenever the cause of
-disease shall be discovered, the root from which all vice and
-misery have so long overshadowed the Globe will be bare to the
-axe. All the exertions of man, from that moment, may be considered
-as tending to the clear profit of his species. No sane mind in
-a sane body resolves upon real crime.... The system of a simple
-diet promises no Utopian advantages. It is no mere reform of
-legislation, whilst the furious passions and evil propensities of
-the human heart, in which it had its origin, are still unassuaged.
-It <i>strikes at the root of all evil</i>, and is an experiment which
-may be tried with success, not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span> alone by nations, but by small
-societies, families, and even individuals. In no cases has a return
-to vegetable diet produced the slightest injury; in most it has
-been attended with changes undeniably beneficial. Should ever a
-physician be born with the genius of Locke, I am persuaded that he
-might trace all bodily and mental derangements to our unnatural
-habits as clearly as that philosopher has traced all knowledge to
-sensation....</p>
-
-<p>“By all that is sacred in our hopes for the human race, I conjure
-those who love happiness and truth to give a fair trial to the
-vegetable system. Reasoning is surely superfluous on a subject
-whose merits an experience of six months would set for ever at
-rest. But it is only among the enlightened and benevolent that so
-great a sacrifice of appetite and prejudice can be expected, even
-though its ultimate excellence should not admit of dispute. It is
-found easier by the short-sighted victims of disease to <i>palliate</i>
-their torments by medicine than to <i>prevent</i> them by regimen.
-The vulgar of all ranks are invariably sensual and indocile, yet
-I cannot but feel myself persuaded that when the benefits of
-vegetable diet are mathematically proved; when it is as clear that
-those who live naturally are exempt from premature death as that
-one is not nine, the most sottish of mankind will feel a preference
-towards a long and tranquil, contrasted with a short and painful,
-life. On the average, out of sixty persons four die in three years.
-Hopes are entertained that, in April, 1814, a statement will be
-given that sixty persons, all having lived more than three years on
-vegetables and pure water, are then in <i>perfect health</i>. More than
-two years have now elapsed&mdash;<i>not one of them has died</i>. No such
-example will be found in any sixty persons taken at random.</p>
-
-<p>“Seventeen persons of all ages (the families of Dr. Lambe and Mr.
-Newton) have lived for seven years on this diet without a death,
-<i>and almost without the slightest illness</i>.... In proportion to the
-number of proselytes, so will be the weight of evidence, and when a
-thousand persons can be produced living on vegetables and distilled
-water,<a name="FNanchor_238_238" id="FNanchor_238_238"></a><a href="#Footnote_238_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a> who have to dread no disease but old age, the world
-will be compelled to regard flesh and fermented liquors as slow but
-certain poisons.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Shelley next insists on the incalculable benefits of a reformed diet
-economically, socially, and politically:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The monopolising eater of flesh would no longer destroy his
-constitution by devouring an acre at a meal; and many loaves of
-bread would cease to contribute to gout, madness, and apoplexy, in
-the shape of a pint of porter or a dram of gin, when appeasing the
-long-protracted famine of the hard-working peasant’s hungry babes.
-The quantity of nutritious vegetable matter consumed in fattening
-the carcase of an ox would afford ten times the sustenance,
-undepraved, indeed, and incapable of generating disease, if
-gathered immediately from the bosom of the earth. The most fertile
-districts of the habitable globe are now actually cultivated by men
-for [other] animals, at a delay and waste of aliment absolutely
-incapable of calculation. It is only the wealthy that can, to any
-great degree, even now, indulge the unnatural craving for dead
-flesh, and they pay for the greater licence of the privilege by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
-subjection to supernumerary diseases. Again, the spirit of the
-nation, that should take the lead in this great reform, would
-insensibly become <i>agricultural</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“The advantage of a reform in diet is obviously greater than that
-of any other. It strikes at the <i>root</i> of the evil. To remedy the
-abuses of legislation, before we annihilate the propensities by
-which they are produced, is to suppose that by taking away the
-<i>effect</i> the <i>cause</i> will cease to operate....</p>
-
-<p>“Let not too much, however, be expected from this system. The
-healthiest among us is not exempt from hereditary disease. The most
-symmetrical, athletic, and long-lived is a being inexpressibly
-inferior to what he would have been, had not the unnatural habits
-of his ancestors accumulated for him a certain portion of malady
-and deformity. In the most perfect specimen of civilised man,
-something is still found wanting by the physiological critic. Can a
-return to Nature, then, instantaneously eradicate predispositions
-that have been slowly taking root in the silence of innumerable
-Ages? Undoubtedly not. All that I contend for is, that from the
-moment of relinquishing all <i>unnatural</i> habits no new disease is
-generated; and that the predisposition to hereditary maladies
-gradually perishes for want of its accustomed supply. In cases
-of consumption, cancer, gout, asthma, and scrofula, such is the
-invariable tendency of a diet of vegetables and pure water....”</p></div>
-
-<p>He concludes this philosophic discourse with an earnest appeal to the
-various classes of society:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I address myself not to the young enthusiast only, to the ardent
-devotee of truth and virtue&mdash;the pure and passionate moralist,
-yet unvitiated by the contagion of the world. He will embrace a
-pure system from its abstract truth, its beauty, its simplicity,
-and its promise of wide-extended benefit. Unless custom has
-turned poison into food, he will hate the brutal pleasures of the
-chase by instinct. It will be a contemplation full of horror and
-disappointment to his mind that beings, capable of the gentlest and
-most admirable sympathies, should take delight in the deathpangs
-and last convulsions of dying animals.</p>
-
-<p>“The elderly man, whose youth has been poisoned by intemperance,
-or who has lived with apparent moderation, and is afflicted
-with a variety of painful maladies, would find his account in
-a beneficial change, produced without the risk of poisonous
-medicines. The mother, to whom the perpetual restlessness of
-disease, and unaccountable deaths incident to her children, are the
-causes of incurable unhappiness, would, on this diet, experience
-the satisfaction of beholding their perpetual health and natural
-playfulness.<a name="FNanchor_239_239" id="FNanchor_239_239"></a><a href="#Footnote_239_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a> The most valuable lives are daily destroyed by
-diseases that it is dangerous to palliate, and impossible to cure,
-by medicine. How much longer will man continue to pimp for the
-gluttony of Death&mdash;his most insidious, implacable, and eternal foe?”</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Some time after the melancholy death of his first wife, Shelley married
-Mary Wolstoncroft, the daughter of William Godwin, author of <i>Political
-Justice</i>&mdash;perhaps the most revolutionary of all pleas for a change in
-the constitution of society that has ever proceeded from a prosaic
-tradesman, such as, in the ordinary intercourse of life and interchange
-of ideas, his biography and correspondence (lately published) prove
-him to have been. Her mother was the celebrated and earliest advocate
-of the rights of women. Previously, the lovers had travelled through
-France and part of Germany, and an account of their six weeks’ tour was
-afterwards printed by Mrs. Shelley.</p>
-
-<p>In 1815 appeared his <i>Alastor; or the Spirit of Solitude</i>. In 1817
-he again left England for Geneva. While in Switzerland he made the
-acquaintance of Byron, which was renewed during his stay in Italy.
-In the same year he returned to this country and, after a short
-sojourn with Leigh Hunt, he settled at Great Marlow, one of the most
-picturesque parts of the Thames. There, in spite of his own ill-health,
-he showed the active benevolence of his character, not only in the
-easier form of alms-giving but also in frequent visits to the sick
-and destitute, at the risk of aggravating symptoms of consumption now
-alarmingly apparent. There, too, he composed the <i>Revolt of Islam</i>,
-or, as it was originally more fitly entitled, <i>Laon and Cythna</i>. In
-this poem, by the mouth of Laone, he again expresses his humanitarian
-convictions and sympathies. She calls upon the enfranchised nations:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“‘My brethren, we are free! The fruits are glowing</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Beneath the stars, and the night-winds are flowing</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">O’er the ripe corn; the Birds and Beasts are dreaming&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Never again may blood of bird or beast</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Stain with his venomous stream a human feast,</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">To the pure skies in accusation steaming.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Avenging poisons shall have ceased</div>
- <div class="verse mleft2">To feed disease, and fear, and madness.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft2">The dwellers of the earth and air</div>
- <div class="verse mleft2">Shall throng around our steps in gladness,</div>
- <div class="verse mleft2">Seeking their food or refuge there.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Our toil from Thought all glorious forms shall cul.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">To make this earth, our home, more beautiful,</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">And Science, and her sister Poesy,</div>
- <div class="verse">Shall clothe in light the fields and cities of the Free.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">“Their feast was such as Earth, the general Mother,</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Pours from her fairest bosom, when she smiles</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">In the embrace of Autumn&mdash;to each other</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">As when some parent fondly reconciles</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Her warring children, <i>she</i> their wrath beguiles</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">With her own sustenance; <i>they</i>, relenting, weep&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Such was this Festival, which, from their isles,</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">And continents, and winds, and oceans deep,</div>
- <div class="verse">All shapes might throng to share, that fly, or walk, or creep:</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Might share in peace and innocence, for <i>gore</i>,</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1"><i>Or poison none this festal did pollute</i>.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">But, piled on high, an overflowing store</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Of pomegranates, and citrons&mdash;fairest fruit,</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Melons, and dates, and figs, and many a root</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Sweet and sustaining, and bright grapes, ere yet</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Accursed fire their mild juice could transmute</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Into a mortal bane; and brown corn set</div>
- <div class="verse">In baskets: with pure streams their thirsting lips they wet.”<a name="FNanchor_240_240" id="FNanchor_240_240"></a><a href="#Footnote_240_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>While he was yet residing in Marlow, the Princess Charlotte, daughter
-of the Prince of Wales (afterwards George IV.,) died; and, since her
-character had been in strong contrast with her father’s and with
-royal persons’ in general, her early death seems to have caused, not
-only ceremonial mourning, but also genuine regret amongst all in the
-community having any knowledge of her exceptional amiability. The poet
-seized the opportunity of so public an event, and published <i>An Address
-to the People on the Death of the Princess Charlotte. By the Hermit of
-Marlow</i>, in which he inscribed the motto&mdash;“We pity the plumage, but
-forget the dying bird.” In this pamphlet, while paying due tribute of
-regret for the death of an amiable girl, and fully appreciating the
-sorrow caused by death as well among the destitute and obscure (with
-whom, indeed, the too usual absence of the care and sympathy of friends
-intensifies the sorrow) as among the rich and powerful, he invited, in
-studiously moderate language, attention to the many just reasons for
-national mourning in the interests of the poor no less than of princes;
-and, in particular, invited the nation to express its indignant grief
-for the fate of the Lancashire mechanics who, missing the happier
-fate of their brethren slaughtered at Peterloo, were subjected to an
-ignominious death by a government which had, by its neglect, encouraged
-the growth of a just discontent.</p>
-
-<p>In 1818 Shelley left England never to return. At this time was composed
-the principal part of his masterpiece&mdash;<i>Prometheus Unbound</i>, the most
-finished and carefully executed of all his poems. While in Rome (1819)
-he published <i>The Cenci</i>, which had been suggested to him by the famous
-picture of Guido, until lately supposed to be that of Beatrice Cenci,
-and by the traditions, current even in the poet’s time,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span> of the cruel
-fate of his heroine. Shakspere’s four great dramas excepted, <i>The
-Cenci</i> must take rank as the finest tragic drama since the days of
-the Greek masters. It is worked up to a degree of pathos unsurpassed
-by anything of the kind in literature. “The Fifth Act,” remarks Mrs.
-Shelley, his editor and commentator, “is a masterpiece. Every character
-has a voice that echoes truth in its tones.” <i>The Cenci</i> was followed
-in quick succession by the <i>Witch of Atlas</i>, <i>Adonais</i> (an elegy on
-the death of Keats), the most exquisite “In Memoriam”&mdash;not excepting
-Milton’s or Tennyson’s&mdash;ever written; and <i>Hellas</i>, which was inspired
-by his strong sympathy with the Greeks, who were then engaged in the
-war of independence.</p>
-
-<p>Of his lesser productions, the <i>Ode to the Skylark</i> is of an
-inspiration seldom equalled in its kind. With the “blythe spirit,” whom
-he apostrophises, the poet rises in rapt ecstasy “higher still and
-higher.” For the rest of his productions (the <i>Letters from Italy</i> and
-criticisms or rather eulogies on Greek art have an especial interest)
-and for the other events in his brief remaining existence we must
-refer our readers to the complete edition of his works.<a name="FNanchor_241_241" id="FNanchor_241_241"></a><a href="#Footnote_241_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a> The last
-work upon which he was engaged was his <i>Triumph of Life</i>, a poem in
-the <i>terza rima</i> of the <i>Divine Comedy</i>. It breaks off abruptly&mdash;it is
-peculiarly interesting to note&mdash;with the significant words, “Then what
-is Life, I cried?”</p>
-
-<p>The manner of his death is well known. While engaged in his usual
-recreation of boating he was drowned in the bay of Spezia. His body
-was washed on to the shore and, according to regulations then in force
-by the Italian governments of the day, in guarding against possible
-infection from the plague, it was burned where it lay, in presence of
-his friends Byron and Trelawney, and the ashes were entombed in the
-Protestant cemetery in Rome&mdash;a not unfitting disposal of the remains of
-one the most spiritualised of human beings.</p>
-
-<p>The following just estimate of the character of his genius and
-writings, by a thoughtful critic, is worth reproduction here:&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>“No man
-was more essentially a poet&mdash;‘glancing from earth to heaven.’ He was,
-indeed, ‘of imagination all compact.’ ... In all his poems he uniformly
-denounces vice and immorality in every form; and his descriptions of
-love, which are numerous, are always refined and delicate, with even
-less of sensuousness than in many of our most admired writers. It
-is true that he decried marriage, but not in favour of libertinism;
-and the evils he depicts, or laments, are those arising from the
-indissolubility of the bond, or from the opinions of society as to its
-necessity&mdash;opinions to which he himself submitted by marrying the woman
-to whom he was attached.... His reputation as a poet has gradually
-widened since his death, and has not yet reached its culminating point.
-He was the poet of the future&mdash;of an ideal futurity&mdash;and hence it was
-that his own age could not entirely sympathise with him. He has been
-called the ‘poet of poets,’ a proud title, and, in some respects,
-deserved.”<a name="FNanchor_242_242" id="FNanchor_242_242"></a><a href="#Footnote_242_242" class="fnanchor">[242]</a></p>
-
-<p>Of his creed, the article which he most firmly held, and which,
-perhaps, most distinguishes him from ordinary thinkers, was the
-<i>Perfectibility</i> of his species, and his firm faith in the ultimate
-triumph of Good. “He believed,” says the one authority who had the
-best means of knowing his thought and feeling, “that mankind had only
-to <i>will</i> that there should be no evil, and there would be none. It is
-not my part in these notes to criticise the arguments that have been
-urged against this opinion, but to mention the fact that he entertained
-it, and was, indeed, attached to it with fervent enthusiasm. That man
-could be so perfectionised as to be able to expel Evil from his own
-nature, and from the greater part of the world, was the cardinal point
-of his system. And the subject he liked best to dwell upon was the
-image of One warring with an evil principle, oppressed not only by it
-but by all, even the good, who were deluded into considering evil a
-<i>necessary</i> portion of humanity&mdash;a victim full of gratitude and of hope
-and of the spirit of triumph emanating from a reliance in the ultimate
-omnipotence of Good.” Such was the conviction which inspired his
-greatest poem <i>The Prometheus Unbound</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A principal charm of his poetry is that which repels the common class
-of readers: “He loved to <i>idealise</i> reality, and this is a task shared
-by few. We are willing to have our passing whims exalted into passions,
-for this gratifies our vanity. But few of us understand or sympathise
-with the endeavour to ally the love of abstract beauty and adoration
-of abstract Good with sympathies with our own kind.”<a name="FNanchor_243_243" id="FNanchor_243_243"></a><a href="#Footnote_243_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a> Of so rare a
-spirit it is peculiarly interesting to know something of the outward
-form:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“His features [describes one of his biographers] were not
-symmetrical&mdash;the mouth, perhaps, excepted. Yet the effect of the
-whole was extremely powerful. They breathed an animation, a fire,
-an enthusiasm, a vivid and preternatural intelligence, that I never
-met with in any other countenance. Nor was the moral expression
-less beautiful than the intellectual: for there was a softness, a
-delicacy, a gentleness, and especially (though this will surprise
-many) that air of profound religious veneration that characterises
-the best works, and chiefly the frescoes, of the great Masters of
-Florence and of Rome.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“His eyes were blue, unfathomably dark and lustrous. His hair was
-brown: but very early in life it became grey, while his unwrinkled
-face retained to the last a look of wonderful youth. It is admitted
-on all sides that no adequate picture was ever painted of him.
-Mulready is reported to have said that he was too beautiful to
-paint. And yet, although so singularly lovely, he owed less of his
-charm to regularity of feature, or to grace of movement, than to an
-indescribable personal fascination.”</p></div>
-
-<p>As to his voice, impressions varied:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Like all finely-tempered natures, he vibrated in harmony with
-the subjects of his thought. Excitement made his utterance shrill
-and sharp. Deep feeling, or the sense of beauty, lowered its
-tone to richness; but the <i>timbre</i> was always acute, in sympathy
-with his intense temperament. All was of one piece in Shelley’s
-nature. This peculiar voice, varying from moment to moment, and
-affecting different sensibilities in diverse ways, corresponds to
-the high-strung passion of his life, his finedrawn and ethereal
-fancies, and the clear vibrations of his palpitating verse. Such a
-voice, far-reaching, penetrating, and unearthly, befitted one who
-lived in rarest ether on the topmost heights of human thought.”<a name="FNanchor_244_244" id="FNanchor_244_244"></a><a href="#Footnote_244_244" class="fnanchor">[244]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>If the physical characteristics of a great Teacher or of a sublime
-Genius excite a natural curiosity, it is the principal <i>moral</i>
-characteristics which most reasonably and profoundly interest us. To
-the supremely amiable disposition of the creator of <i>The Cenci</i> and
-<i>Prometheus Unbound</i> brief reference has been made; and we shall fitly
-supplement this imperfect sketch of his humanitarian career with the
-vivid impressions left on the mind of the friend who best knew him.
-Love of truth and hatred of falsehood and injustice were not, in his
-case, limited to the pages of a book, and forgotten in the too often
-deadening influence of intercourse with the world&mdash;they permeated his
-whole life and conversation.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The qualities that struck any one newly introduced to Shelley
-were, first, a gentle and cordial goodness that animated his
-discourse with warm affection and helpful sympathy; the other, the
-eagerness and ardour with which he was attached to the cause of
-human happiness and improvement, and the fervent eloquence with
-which he discussed such subjects. His conversation was marked
-by its happy abundance, and the beautiful language in which he
-clothed his poetic ideas and philosophical notions. To defecate
-life of its misery and its evil was the ruling passion of his
-soul; he dedicated to it every power of his mind, every pulsation
-of his heart. He looked on political freedom as the direct agent
-to effect the happiness of mankind; and thus any new-sprung hope
-of liberty inspired a joy and even exultation more intense and
-wild than he could have felt for any personal advantage. Those
-who have never experienced the workings of passion on general and
-unselfish subjects cannot understand this; and it must be difficult
-of comprehension to the younger generation rising around, since
-they cannot remember the scorn and hatred with which the partisans
-of reform were regarded some few years ago, nor the persecution to
-which they were exposed.</p>
-
-<p>“Many advantages attended his birth; he spurned them all when
-balanced with what he considered his duties. He was generous to
-imprudence&mdash;devoted to heroism. These characteristics breathe
-throughout his poetry. The struggle for human weal; the resolution
-firm to martyrdom; the impetuous pursuit; the glad triumph in
-good;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span> the determination not to despair.... Perfectly gentle
-and forbearing in manner, he suffered a great deal of internal
-irritability, or rather excitement, and his fortitude to bear was
-almost always on the stretch; and thus, during a short life, he had
-gone through more experience of sensation than many whose existence
-is protracted. ‘If I die to-morrow,’ he said, on the eve of
-unanticipated death, ‘I have lived to be older than my father.’ The
-weight of thought and feeling burdened him heavily. You read his
-sufferings in his attenuated frame, while you perceived the mastery
-he held over them in his animated countenance and brilliant eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“He died, and the world showed no outward sigh; but his influence
-over mankind, though slow in growth, is fast augmenting; and in
-the ameliorations that have taken place in the political state of
-his country we may trace, in part, the operation of his arduous
-struggles.... He died, and his place among those who knew him
-intimately has never been filled up. He walked beside them like a
-spirit of good to comfort and benefit&mdash;to enlighten the darkness of
-life with irradiations of genius, to cheer with his sympathy and
-love.”<a name="FNanchor_245_245" id="FNanchor_245_245"></a><a href="#Footnote_245_245" class="fnanchor">[245]</a></p></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>W<span class="smaller">ITH</span> the name of Shelley is usually connected that of his more popular
-contemporary, Byron (1788&ndash;1824). The brother poets, it already has been
-noted, met in Switzerland; and, afterwards, they had some intercourse
-in Italy during Shelley’s last years. Excepting surpassing genius,
-and equal impatience of conventional laws and usages they had little
-in common. The one was first and above all a reformer, the other a
-satirist. To assert, however, the author of <i>Childe Harold</i> to have
-been inspired solely by cynical contempt for his species is unjust.
-A large part of his poems is pervaded apparently with an intense
-conviction of the evils of life as produced by human selfishness and
-folly. But what distinguishes the author of <i>Prometheus Unbound</i> from
-his great rival (if he may be so called) is the sure and certain
-hope of a future of happiness for the world. Thus, that belief in
-the all-importance of humane dietetics, as a principal factor in the
-production of weal or woe on earth, is far less apparent in Byron is
-matter of course.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, that in moments of better feeling, Byron revolted from the gross
-materialism of the banquets, of which, as he expresses it, England</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Was wont to boast&mdash;as if a Glutton’s tray</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Were something very glorious to behold.”<a name="FNanchor_246_246" id="FNanchor_246_246"></a><a href="#Footnote_246_246" class="fnanchor">[246]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>and that, had he not been seduced by the dinner-giving propensity
-of English society, he would have retained his early preference for
-the refined diet, we are glad to believe. In a letter to his mother,
-written in his early youth, he announces that he had determined upon
-relinquishment of flesh-eating, and his clearer mental perceptions in
-consequence of his reformed living;<a name="FNanchor_247_247" id="FNanchor_247_247"></a><a href="#Footnote_247_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a> and he seems even to have
-advanced to the extreme frugality of living, at times, upon biscuits
-and water only.</p>
-
-<p>It would have been well for him had he, like Shelley, abstained from
-gross eating and drinking upon <i>principle</i>; and had he uniformly
-adhered to the resolution formed in his earlier years, we should, in
-that case, not have to lament his too notorious sexual intemperance.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLII_PHILLIPS">XLII.<br />
-<span class="s5">PHILLIPS. 1767&ndash;1840.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">I<span class="smaller">T</span> is an obvious truth&mdash;in vain demonstrated seventeen centuries
-since by the best moral teachers of non-Christian antiquity&mdash;that
-abolition of the slaughter-house, with all the cruel barbarism
-directly or indirectly associated with it, by a necessary and logical
-corollary, involves abolition of every form of injustice and cruelty.
-Of this truth the subject of the present article is a conspicuous
-witness. During his long and active career, in social and political
-as well as in literary life, Sir Richard Phillips was a consistent
-<i>philanthropist</i>; and few, in his position of influence, have
-surpassed him in real beneficence. In the face of rancorous obloquy
-and opposition from that too numerous proportion of communities which
-systematically resist all “innovation” and deviation from the “ancient
-paths,” he fearlessly maintained the cause of the oppressed; and, as a
-prison reformer, he claims a place second only to that of Howard.</p>
-
-<p>Of his life we have fuller record than we have of some others of the
-prophets of dietetic reformation. Yet there is uncertainty as to his
-birthplace. One account represents him to have been born in London,
-and to have been the son of a brewer. Another statement, which appears
-to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span> be more authentic, reports his place of birth to have been in the
-neighbourhood of Leicester, and his father to have been a farmer. What
-is of more permanent interest is the account preserved of the reason
-of his first revolt from the practice of kreophagy. Disliking the
-business of farming, it seems, while yet quite young, not without the
-acquiescence of his parents, he had adventurously sought his living, on
-his own account, in the metropolis. What, if any, plans had been formed
-by him is not known; but it is certain that he soon found himself
-in imminent danger of starvation, and, after brief trial, he gladly
-re-sought his home. Upon his return to the farm, he found awaiting him
-the welcome of the “Prodigal Son”&mdash;although, happily, he had no just
-claim to the title of that well-known character. A “fatted calf” was
-killed, and the boy shared in the dish with the rest of the family.
-It was not until after the feast that he learned that the slaughtered
-calf had been his especial favourite and playmate. So revolting to
-his keener sensibility was the consciousness of this fact, that he
-registered a vow never again to live upon the products of slaughter.
-To this determination he adhered during the remainder of his long
-life.<a name="FNanchor_248_248" id="FNanchor_248_248"></a><a href="#Footnote_248_248" class="fnanchor">[248]</a></p>
-
-<p>His next venture, and first choice of a profession, while he was still
-quite young, led him to engage in teaching. As an advertisement he
-placed a flag at the door of a house in which he rented a room, where
-he gave elementary instruction to such children as were entrusted to
-his tuition by the townspeople of Leicester. The experiment proved not
-very successful, and at the end of a twelvemonth he tried his fortune
-elsewhere. He next turned to commerce&mdash;at first in a humble fashion.
-His business prospered, and his next important undertaking was the
-establishment of a newspaper&mdash;the <i>Leicester Herald</i>. This journal
-was what is now called a “Liberal” paper. Yet by those who affected
-to identify the welfare of England with the continued existence of
-rotten boroughs and other corruptions, it was held up to opprobrium as
-revolutionary and “incendiary.” Phillips himself had the reputation
-of an able political writer; but the chief support of the journal was
-the celebrated Dr. Priestley, whose name and contributions gave it a
-reputation it otherwise might not have gained. The responsible editor
-did not escape the perils that then environed the denouncers of legal
-or social iniquity, and Phillips, convicted of a “misdemeanour,” was
-sentenced to three years’ imprisonment in the Leicester jail. During
-his imprisonment he displayed the beneficence of his disposition in
-relieving the miseries of some of his more wretched companions. Upon
-his release, he sold his interest in the <i>Leicester Herald</i>, and for
-some time confined himself altogether to his business.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Leaving Leicester he migrated to London and set up a hosiery
-establishment, which, however, he soon converted into the more
-congenial bookshop. It was the success of the <i>Leicester Herald</i>
-that, probably, led him to think of starting a new periodical. Upon
-consultation with Priestley and other friends he was encouraged to
-proceed, and the <i>Monthly Magazine</i> was the result. It commenced in
-July 1795 and proved to be a most decided success. At first conducted
-by Priestley, it was afterwards partly under the editorship of Dr.
-Aikin, author of the <i>Country Around Manchester</i>. The proprietors
-shared in the management of the magazine, but to what extent it is
-difficult to ascertain. Amongst the contributors was “Peter Pindar,”
-so well known as the author, amongst other satirical rhymes, of the
-verses upon George III., perplexed by the celebrated “apple dumpling.”
-The monthly receipts from the sale amounted to £1,500. A quarrel
-with Aikin was followed by the resignation of the editor. Increase
-of business soon led to a removal of the publishing-house from St.
-Paul’s Churchyard to a much larger establishment in Blackfriars. His
-home was at Hampstead where, in a beautiful neighbourhood and in an
-elegant villa, the opulent publisher enjoyed the refined pleasures
-which his humaneness of living, as well as beneficent industry, had
-justly deserved. At this time he began a correspondence with C. J.
-Fox, on the subject of the History of James II., upon which the famous
-Whig statesman was then engaged. Four letters addressed to him by
-Fox have been printed, but they have no special importance. He was
-already married, and the story of his courtship has more than the mere
-gossiping interest of ordinary biography. Upon his first arrival in
-London, he had taken lodgings in the house of a milliner. One of her
-assistants was a Miss Griffiths, a beautiful young Welsh girl, who,
-learning the unconquerable aversion of their guest from the common
-culinary barbarism, had amiably volunteered to prepare his dishes on
-strictly anti-kreophagist principles. This incident induced a sympathy
-and friendship which speedily resulted in a proposal of marriage. They
-were a handsome pair; and a somewhat precipitate matrimonial alliance
-was followed by many years of unmixed happiness for both.</p>
-
-<p>In 1807 the “Livery” of London elected him to the office of High
-Sheriff of the City and County of Middlesex for the ensuing year. This
-responsible post put to the proof the sincerity of his professions as
-a reformer. Nor did he fail in the trial. During his term of power he
-effected many improvements in the treatment of the real or pretended
-criminals who, as occupants of the jails, came under his jurisdiction.
-No one who has read Howard’s <i>State of the Prisons</i>, published thirty
-years before Phillips’ entrance upon his office, or even general
-accounts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span> of them, needs to be told that they were the very nurseries
-of disease, vice, misery, and crime of all kinds&mdash;one of the many
-everlasting disgraces of the governments and civilisation of the day.
-Nor had they been appreciably improved during the interval of thirty
-years.</p>
-
-<p>The new Sheriff daily visited Newgate and the Fleet prisons and, by
-personal inquiry, made himself acquainted with the actual state of the
-occupants, and in many ways was able to ameliorate their condition. By
-his direction several collecting boxes were conspicuously displayed,
-and the alms collected were applied to the relief of the families of
-destitute debtors. He further insisted that persons, whose indictments
-had been ignored by the grand jury, should not be detained in the
-foul and pestilential atmosphere, as was then the case, but should be
-immediately released.</p>
-
-<p>In his admirable <i>Letter to the Livery of London</i>, he begins with an
-appeal to the common sentiments of humanity which ought to have some
-influence with those in authority. He reminds his readers that:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It is too much the fashion to exclude <i>feeling</i> from the
-business of public life, and a total absence of it is considered
-as a necessary qualification in a public man. Among statesmen
-and politicians he is considered as weak and incompetent who
-suffers natural affection to have any influence on his political
-calculations.”</p></div>
-
-<p>In a note to this passage he adds:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It appears to me that political errors of all kinds arise, in
-a great degree, from the studied banishment of feeling from the
-consideration of statesmen. Reasoning frequently fails us from
-a false estimate of the premises on which our deductions are
-founded. But <i>feeling</i>, which, in most respects, is synonymous
-with conscience, is almost always right. Statesmen are apt to view
-society as a machine, the several parts of which must be made by
-them to perform their respective functions for the success of
-the whole. The comparison is often made, but the analogy is not
-perfect. The parts of the social machine are made up of sensitive
-beings, each of whom (though in the obscurest situation) is
-equal, in all the affections of our nature, to those in the most
-conspicuous places. The harmony and happiness of the whole will
-depend on the <i>degree</i> of feeling exercised by the directors and
-prime movers.”</p></div>
-
-<p>After this preliminary exhortation, he presents to their contemplation
-an appalling revelation of the stupid cruelties of the criminal law
-and its administration. He gives a graphic account of the jail of
-Newgate&mdash;both of the felons’ and the debtors’ division. The dimensions
-of the entire building were 105 yards by 40 yards, of which only
-one-fourth part was used by the prisoners. Into this space were crowded
-sometimes seven or eight hundred, never less than four or five hundred,
-human beings of both sexes and of all ages. “Felons” and debtors seem
-to have fared pretty much the same, and filth, fever, and starvation
-prevailed in all parts of the jail alike. The women prisoners he
-describes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span> as pressed together so closely as, upon lying down, to
-leave no atom of space between their bodies. As for the results of
-this neglect on the part of the State, he finds it impossible to draw
-an adequate picture of them, and is at a loss to imagine how the whole
-city is not carried off by a plague. By persevering energy he obtained
-some reformation, although he failed in his proposal for a new building.</p>
-
-<p>As to the individual occupants of these pest-houses, he found a large
-number whose offences were comparatively of an innocent kind, but who
-were herded with the most savage criminals. He espoused the cause
-of several of these prisoners&mdash;especially of the women&mdash;who, after
-some years of incarceration, were frequently drifted off to Botany
-Bay, which, besides its other terrors, was for almost all of them a
-perpetual separation from their homes, their husbands, and families.
-Twice he vainly addressed a memorial to the Secretary of State (Lord
-Hawkesbury) on their behalf. The traditions and routine of office were
-too powerful even for his persistent energy.</p>
-
-<p>Romilly had lately introduced his measure for amendment of the
-barbarous and bloody penal code of this country. Sir Richard Phillips
-addressed to him also a thoughtful letter, in which were pointed out
-some of the more glaring abuses in the administration of the laws, with
-which his official experience as High Sheriff had made him familiar.
-When Mansfield was Lord Chief Justice, and Thurlow Lord Chancellor,
-the hangings were so numerous that, as he informs us, on one “hanging
-holiday” he saw nineteen persons on the gallows, the eldest of whom
-was not twenty-two years of age. The larger number, probably, had
-been sentenced to this barbarous death for theft of various kinds.
-Three hundred years had passed away since the animadversions of
-More (<i>before</i> his accession to office) in the <i>Utopia</i>, and some
-half-century since Beccaria and Voltaire had protested against this
-monstrous iniquity of criminal legislation, without effect, in England,
-at least. As far as their contemporaries and their successors for long
-afterwards were concerned these philanthropists had written wholly in
-vain.</p>
-
-<p>In the letter to Romilly Phillips insists particularly upon the
-following reforms: (1) No prisoner to be placed in irons before trial.
-(2) None to be denied free access of friends or legal advisers. (3)
-None to be deprived of adequate means of subsistence&mdash;14 ounces of
-bread then being the <i>maximum</i> of allowance of food. (4) Every prisoner
-to be discharged as soon as the grand jury shall have thrown out the
-bill of indictment. (5) Abolition of payment to jailors by exactions
-forced from the most destitute prisoners, and of various other
-exorbitant or illegal fines and extortions. (6) Separation of lunatic
-from other occupants of the jails. (7) That counsel be provided for
-those too poor to pay for themselves.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In 1811 Phillips published his <i>Treatise on the Powers and Duties of
-Juries, and on the Criminal Laws of England</i>. Three years later <i>Golden
-Rules for Jurymen</i>, which he afterwards expanded into a book entitled
-<i>Golden Rules of Social Philosophy</i> (1826), in which he lays down rules
-of conduct for the ordinary business of life&mdash;lawyers, clergymen,
-schoolmasters, and others being the objects of his admonitions. It is
-in this work that the civic dignitary&mdash;so “splendidly false” to the
-habits of his class&mdash;sets forth at length the principles upon which his
-unalterable faith in the truth of humanitarian dietetics was founded.
-The reasons of this “true confession” are fully and perspicuously
-specified, and the first forms the key-note of the rest:&mdash;<a name="FNanchor_249_249" id="FNanchor_249_249"></a><a href="#Footnote_249_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“1. <i>Because</i>, being mortal himself, and holding his life on the
-same uncertain and precarious tenure as all other sensitive beings,
-he does not find himself justified by any supposed superiority or
-inequality of condition in destroying the enjoyment of existence of
-any other mortal, except in the necessary defence of his own life.</p>
-
-<p>“2. <i>Because</i> the desire of life is so paramount, and so
-affectingly cherished in all sensitive beings, that he cannot
-reconcile it to his feelings to destroy or become a voluntary party
-in the destruction of any innocent living being, however much in
-his power, or apparently insignificant.</p>
-
-<p>“3. <i>Because</i> he feels the same abhorrence from devouring flesh in
-general that he hears carnivorous men express against eating human
-flesh, or the flesh of Horses, Dogs, Cats, or other animals which,
-in some countries, it is not customary for carnivorous men to
-devour.</p>
-
-<p>“4. <i>Because</i> Nature seems to have made a superabundant provision
-for the nourishment of [frugivorous] animals in the saccharine
-matter of Roots and Fruits, in the farinaceous matter of Grain,
-Seed, and Pulse, and in the oleaginous matter of the Stalks,
-Leaves, and Pericarps of numerous vegetables.</p>
-
-<p>“5. <i>Because</i> he feels an utter and unconquerable repugnance
-against receiving into his stomach the flesh or juices of deceased
-animal organisation.</p>
-
-<p>“6. <i>Because</i> the destruction of the mechanical organisation of
-vegetables inflicts no sensible suffering, nor violates any moral
-feeling, while vegetables serve to sustain his health, strength,
-and spirits above those of most carnivorous men.</p>
-
-<p>“7. <i>Because</i> during thirty years of rigid abstinence from the
-flesh and juices of deceased sensitive beings, he finds that he has
-not suffered a day’s serious illness, that his animal strength and
-vigour have been equal or superior to that of other men, and that
-his mind has been fully equal to numerous shocks which he has had
-to encounter from malice, envy, and various acts of turpitude in
-his fellow-men.</p>
-
-<p>“8. <i>Because</i> observing that carnivorous propensities among animals
-are accompanied by a total want of sympathetic feelings and gentle
-sentiments&mdash;as in the Hyæna, the Tiger, the Vulture, the Eagle, the
-Crocodile, and the Shark&mdash;he conceives that the practice of these
-carnivorous tyrants affords no worthy example for the imitation or
-justification of rational, reflecting, and <i>conscientious</i> beings.</p>
-
-<p>“9. <i>Because</i> he observes that carnivorous men, unrestrained by
-reflection or sentiment, even refine on the most cruel practices
-of the most savage animals [of other species], and apply their
-resources of mind and art to prolong the miseries of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span> victims
-of their appetites&mdash;bleeding, skinning, roasting, and boiling
-animals alive, and torturing them without reservation or remorse,
-if they thereby add to the variety or the delicacy of their
-carnivorous gluttony.</p>
-
-<p>“10. <i>Because</i> the natural sentiments and sympathies of human
-beings, in regard to the killing of other animals, are generally
-so averse from the practice that few men or women could devour the
-animals whom <i>they might be obliged themselves to kill</i>; and yet
-they forget, or affect to forget, the living endearments or dying
-sufferings of the being, while they are wantoning over his remains.</p>
-
-<p>“11. <i>Because</i> the human stomach appears to be naturally so averse
-from receiving the remains of animals, that few could partake
-of them if they were not disguised and flavoured by culinary
-preparation; yet rational beings ought to feel that the prepared
-substances are not the less what they truly are, and <i>that no
-disguise of food, in itself loathsome</i>, ought to delude the
-unsophisticated perceptions of a considerate mind.</p>
-
-<p>“12. <i>Because</i> the forty-seven millions of acres in England and
-Wales <i>would maintain in abundance as many human inhabitants</i>,
-if they lived wholly on grain, fruits, and vegetables; but they
-sustain only twelve millions [in 1811] <i>scantily</i>, while animal
-food is made the basis of human subsistence.</p>
-
-<p>“13. <i>Because</i> animals do not present or contain the substance of
-food in mass, like vegetables; every part of their economy being
-subservient to their mere existence, and their entire frames being
-solely composed of blood necessary for life, of bones for strength,
-of muscles for motion, and of nerves for sensation.</p>
-
-<p>“14. <i>Because</i> the practice of killing and devouring animals can
-be justified by no moral plea, by no physical benefit, nor <i>by any
-just allegation of necessity in countries where there is abundance
-of vegetable food</i>, and where the arts of gardening and husbandry
-are favoured by social protection, and by the genial character of
-the soil and climate.</p>
-
-<p>“15. <i>Because</i> wherever the number and hostility of predatory land
-animals might so tend to prevent the cultivation of vegetable food
-as to render it necessary to destroy and, perhaps, to eat them,
-there could in that case exist no necessity for destroying the
-animated existences of the distinct elements of air and water; and,
-as in most civilised countries, there exist no land animals besides
-those which are properly bred for slaughter or luxury, of course
-the destruction of mammals and birds in such countries must be
-ascribed either to unthinking wantonness or to carnivorous gluttony.</p>
-
-<p>“16. <i>Because</i> the stomachs of locomotive beings appear to have
-been provided for the purpose of conveying about with the moving
-animal nutritive substances, analogous in effect to the soil in
-which are fixed the roots of plants and, therefore, nothing ought
-to be introduced into the stomach for digestion and for absorption
-by the <i>lacteals</i>, or roots of the animal system, but the natural
-bases of simple nutrition&mdash;as the saccharine, the oleaginous, and
-the farinaceous matter of the vegetable kingdom.”<a name="FNanchor_250_250" id="FNanchor_250_250"></a><a href="#Footnote_250_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Perhaps his most entertaining book is his <i>Morning Walk from London
-to Kew</i> (1817). In it he avails himself of the various objects on his
-road for instructive moralising&mdash;as, for example, when he meets with
-a mutilated soldier, on the frightful waste and cruelty of war; or
-with a horse struggling up a precipitous hill in agony of suffering
-from the torture of the bearing-rein, on the common forms of selfish
-cruelty; or again, when he deplores the incalculable waste of food
-resources, by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span> careless indifferentism of owners of land and of the
-State in allowing the country to remain encumbered with useless, or
-comparatively useless, timber, in place of planting it with valuable
-fruit trees of various sorts according to the nature of the soil.</p>
-
-<p>His next publication of importance was his <i>Million of Facts and
-Correct Data and Elementary Constants in the entire Circle of the
-Sciences, and on all Subjects of Speculation and Practice</i> (1832) 8vo.
-It is this work by which, perhaps, Phillips is now most known&mdash;an
-immense collection and, although many of the “Constants” may be open
-to criticism or have already become obsolete, it may still be examined
-with interest. The plan of the work is that of a classified collection
-of scraps of information on all the arts and sciences. It was so
-popular that five large editions were published in seven years. His
-preface to the stereotyped edition is dated 1839. He remarks that
-“his pretensions for such a task are a prolonged and uninterrupted
-intercourse with books and men of letters. He has, for forty-nine
-years, been occupied as the literary conductor of various public
-journals of reputation; he has superintended the press in the printing
-of many hundred books in every branch of human pursuit, and he has been
-intimately associated with men celebrated for their attainments in each
-of them.” In the facts concerning anatomy and physiology will be found
-references to scientific and other authorities upon the subject of
-flesh-eating.</p>
-
-<p>Occasionally we meet with biographical facts of special interest.
-Thus, he says that, early in 1825, he suggested the first idea of the
-Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge to Dr. Birkbeck and then,
-by his advice, to Lord Brougham. His idea was the establishment of a
-fund for selling or giving away books and tracts, after the manner of
-the Religious Tract Society. As regards his astronomic paradoxes, his
-theory, in opposition to the Newtonian, that the phenomena attributed
-to gravitation are, in reality, the “proximate effects of the orbicular
-and rotatory motions of the earth” (for which he was severely
-criticised by Professor De Morgan), exhibits at least the various
-activity, if not the invariable infallibility, of his mental powers.</p>
-
-<p>A work of equal interest with a <i>Million of Facts</i> is his next
-compilation&mdash;<i>A Dictionary of the Arts of Life and Civilisation</i>
-(1833). Under the article <i>Diet</i> he well remarks:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Some regard it as a purely <i>egotistical</i> question whether men live
-on flesh or on vegetables. But others mix with it moral feelings
-towards animals. If theory prescribed <i>human</i> flesh, the former
-party would lie in wait to devour their brethren; but the latter,
-regarding the value of life to all that breathe, consider that,
-even in a balance of argument, feelings of sympathy ought to turn
-the scale.... We see all the best animal and social qualities in
-mere vegetable-feeders.... Beasts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span> of prey are necessarily solitary
-and fearful, even of one another. Physiologists, themselves
-carnivorous, differ on the subject, but they never take into
-account <i>moral</i> considerations.</p>
-
-<p>“Though it is known that the Hindus and other Eastern peoples live
-wholly on rice&mdash;that the Irish and Scotch peasantry subsist on
-potatoes and oatmeal&mdash;and that the labouring poor of all countries
-live on the food, of which an acre yields one hundred times more
-than of flesh, while they enjoy unabated health and long life&mdash;yet
-an endless play of sophistry is maintained about the alleged
-necessity of killing and devouring animals.</p>
-
-<p>“At twelve years of age the author of this volume was struck with
-such horror in accidentally seeing the barbarities of a London
-slaughter-house, that since that hour he has never eaten anything
-but vegetables. He persevered, in spite of vulgar forebodings,
-with unabated vigorous health; and at sixty-six finds himself more
-able to undergo any fatigue of mind and body than any other person
-of his age. He quotes himself because the case, in so carnivorous
-a country, is uncommon&mdash;especially in the grades of society in
-which he has been accustomed to live.... On principle he does not
-abstain from any <i>vegetable</i> luxuries or from fermented liquors;
-but any indulgence in the latter requires (he hastens to add) the
-correction of carbonate of soda. He is always in better health when
-water is his sole beverage; and such is the case with all who have
-imitated his practice.”<a name="FNanchor_251_251" id="FNanchor_251_251"></a><a href="#Footnote_251_251" class="fnanchor">[251]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Under the article “Farming,” he observes that “a man who eats 1lb.
-of flesh eats the exact equivalent of 6lbs. of wheat, and 128lbs. of
-potatoes.” That is, that he, in such proportion, wastes the national
-resources of a country.</p>
-
-<p>The High Sheriff, on the occasion of some petition to the King, had
-been knighted, (to the affected scandal of his political enemies, who,
-apparently, wished to reserve all titular or other recognition for
-their own party), and the conspicuous beneficence of his career, while
-in office, had gained for him an honourable popularity. But fortune,
-so long favourable, now for a time showed itself adverse. In 1809
-his affairs became embarrassed, and recourse to the bankruptcy court
-inevitable. Happily his friends aided him in saving from the general
-wreck the copyright of the <i>Monthly Magazine</i>. Its management was a
-chief occupation of his remaining years; and his own contributions,
-under the signature of “Common Sense,” attracted marked attention.
-In his publishing career, the most curious incident was the refusal
-of the MSS. of <i>Waverley</i>. The author’s demands seem to have been in
-excess of the value placed upon the novel by the publisher. It had been
-advertised in the first instance (he tells us) as the production of Mr.
-W. Scott. The name was then withdrawn, and the famous novel came before
-the world anonymously.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Besides the writings already noticed, Phillips compiled or edited a
-large number of school books. He tells us that all the elementary
-books, published under the names of Goldsmith, Blair and others, were
-his own productions&mdash;between the years 1798 and 1815. Nor was his
-mental activity confined to literary work; mechanical and scientific
-inventions largely occupied his attention. To prevent the enormous
-expenses of railway viaducts, embankments, and removals of streets, he
-proposed suspension roads, ten feet above the housetops, with inclined
-planes of 20° or 30°, and stationary engines to assist the rise and
-fall at each end. Cities, he maintained, might be traversed in this way
-on right lines, with intermediate points for ascent and descent. This
-bold and ingenious idea seems to be very like an anticipation of the
-elevated railways of New York, although even these have not yet reached
-the height Phillips thought to be desirable.</p>
-
-<p>He interested himself, also, in steam navigation. When Fulton was in
-England he was in frequent communication with his English friend, to
-whom he despatched a triumphant letter on the evening of his first
-voyage on the Hudson. This letter, having been shown to Earl Stanhope
-and some eminent engineers, was treated by them with derision as
-describing an impossibility. Sir R. Phillips then advertised for a
-company, to repeat on the Thames what had become an accomplished fact
-on the American rivers. After expenditure of a large sum of money in
-advertising he obtained only two ten-pound conditional subscribers.
-He then printed, with commendation, Fulton’s letters in the <i>Monthly
-Magazine</i>, and his credulity was almost universally reprobated. It is
-worth recording that, in the first steam voyage from the Clyde to the
-Thames, Phillips, three of his family, and five or six others, were the
-only passengers who had the courage to test the experiment. To allay
-the public alarms he published a letter in the newspapers, and before
-the end of that summer he saw the same packet set out on its voyage
-with 350 passengers.<a name="FNanchor_252_252" id="FNanchor_252_252"></a><a href="#Footnote_252_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a></p>
-
-<p>In 1840, the year following the final edition of his most popular book,
-he died at Brighton in the seventy-third year of his age. During his
-busy life if, by his reforming energy, he had raised up some bitter
-enemies and detractors, he had made, on the other hand, some valuable
-friendships. Amongst these&mdash;not the least noteworthy&mdash;is his intimate
-friendship with that most humane-minded lawyer, Lord Erskine, one of
-those who have best adorned the legal profession in this country.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLIII_LAMARTINE">XLIII.<br />
-<span class="s5">LAMARTINE. 1790&ndash;1869.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">O<span class="smaller">F</span> aristocratic descent, and educated at the college of the “Fathers
-of the Faith” (Pères de la Foi), Du Prat&mdash;such was the name of his
-family&mdash;imbibed in his youth principles very different from those of
-his great literary contemporary Michelet. Happily, Nature seems to have
-endowed his mother with a rare refinement and humaneness of feeling;
-and from her example and instruction he derived, apparently, the germs
-of those loftier ideas which, in maturer age, characterise a great part
-of his writings. While the first Napoléon was still emperor, he entered
-the army, from which he soon retired to employ his leisure in the more
-congenial amusement of travel.</p>
-
-<p>In 1820 he first came before the world as the author of <i>Méditations
-Poétiques</i>, of which, within four years, 45,000 copies were sold, and
-the new poet was eagerly welcomed by the party of Reaction, who thought
-to find in him a future successor to the brilliant author of the <i>Génie
-du Christianisme</i>, the literary hope of their party, and the champion
-of the Church and royalty&mdash;the political counterbalance to Béranger,
-the poet of the Revolution&mdash;for Hugo had not yet raised the standard of
-revolt. Yet this remarkable volume with the greatest difficulty found
-its way into print. “A young man, [writes one of his biographers] his
-health scarcely re-established from a cruel malady, his face pale with
-suffering and covered with a veil of sadness, through which could be
-read the recent loss of an adored being, went about from publisher
-to publisher, carrying a small packet of verses dyed with tears.
-Everywhere the poetry and the poet were politely bowed out. At length,
-a bookseller, better advised, or seduced by the infinite grace of the
-young poet, decided to accept the manuscript so often rejected.” It was
-published without a name and without recommendation. The melancholy
-beauty of the style, and the melody of the rhythm, could not fail to
-attract sympathy from readers of taste and feeling, even from those
-opposed to his political prejudices&mdash;“A rhythm of a celestial melody,
-verse supple, cadenced, and sonorous, which softly vibrates as an
-Æolian harp sighing in the evening breeze.”</p>
-
-<p>Its political, rather than its poetical, recommendations, we
-may presume, gained for the writer from the Government of Louis
-<span class="smcap">XVIII.</span> a diplomatic post at Florence, which he held until the
-dynastic revolution of 1830. For some short time he acted as secretary
-to the French<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span> Embassy in London, and during his stay in England he
-made the acquaintance of a rich Englishwoman, whom he afterwards
-married at Florence. A legacy of valuable property from an uncle, upon
-the condition of his assuming the name of Lamartine, still further
-enriched him.</p>
-
-<p>In 1829 appeared the collection of <i>Harmonies Poétiques et
-Réligieuses</i>, in which, as in all his poetry up to this time, one of
-the most characteristic features is his devotion to Legitimacy and the
-Church. The <i>renversement</i> of 1830 considerably modified his political
-and ecclesiastical ideas. “I wish,” he declared at this turning-point
-in his career, “to enter the ranks of the people; to think, speak,
-act, and struggle with them.” One of the first proofs of his advanced
-opinions was his pamphlet advocating abolition of “capital” punishment.
-He failed to obtain a seat in the Chambre des Députés of Louis
-Philippe, whether in consequence of this advocacy or by reason of his
-antecedent politics. His enforced leisure he employed in travelling,
-and in 1832, with his English wife and their young daughter Juliette
-(whose death at Beyrout caused him inconsolable grief), he set sail for
-the East in a vessel equipped and armed at his own expense. A narrative
-of these travels he published in his <i>Voyage en Orient</i> (1835). In the
-following year appeared his <i>Jocelyn</i>, a poem of charming tenderness
-and eloquence, and, in 1838, <i>La Chute d’un Ange</i> (“The Fall of an
-Angel”), in which he, for the first time, gives expression to his
-feeling of revolt from the barbarisms of the Slaughter-House. In this
-strikingly original poem, one of the most remarkable of its kind in
-any language, Lamartine discovers to us that he no longer views human
-institutions, the customs of society, and the consecrated usages of
-nations through the rose-coloured medium of traditional prejudice. It
-is penetrated with a deep consciousness of the injustice and falseness
-of a large proportion of those things which are tolerated, and even
-approved, under the sanction of religious or social law, and with
-ardent indignation against cruelty and selfishness. In the frightful
-representation of the practices of the early tyrants of the world saved
-from the “universal deluge,” he allows us to see his own feeling. One
-of more humane race thus addresses his charming heroine Daïdha:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft6">“Ces hommes, pour apaiser leur faim,</div>
- <div class="verse">N’ont pas assez des fruits que Dieu mit sous leur main.</div>
- <div class="verse">Par un crime envers Dieu dont frémit la Nature,</div>
- <div class="verse">Ils demandent au sang une autre nourriture.</div>
- <div class="verse">Dans leur cité fangeuse il coule par ruisseaux!</div>
- <div class="verse">Les cadavres y sont étalés en monceaux.</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Ils traînent par les pieds des fleurs de la prairie,</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>L’innocente brebis que leur main a nourrie,</i></div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>
- <div class="verse"><i>Et sous l’œil de l’agneau l’égorgeant sans remords,</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Ils savourent ses chairs et vivent de la mort!</i></div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">De cruels aliments incessamment repus,</div>
- <div class="verse">Toute pitié s’efface en leurs cœurs corrompus.</div>
- <div class="verse">Et leur œil, qu’au forfait le forfait habitue,</div>
- <div class="verse">Aime le sang qui coule et l’innocent qu’on tue.</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Ils aiguisent le fer en flèches, en poignard;</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Du métier de tuer ils ont fait le grand art:</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Le meurtre par milliers s’appelle une victoire,</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>C’est en lettres de sang que l’on écrit la Gloire.</i>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>From the pages of the “Primitive Book,” which he imagines to have been
-originally delivered to men, their hermit-host reads to Daïdha and her
-celestial, but incarnate, lover the true divine revelation, which is
-thus sublimely prefaced:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Hommes! ne dites pas, en adorant ces pages,</div>
- <div class="verse">Un Dieu les écrivit par la main de ses sages.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">La langue qu’il écrit chante éternellement&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Ses lettres sont ces feux, mondes du firmament</div>
- <div class="verse">Et, par delà ces cieux, des lettres plus profondes&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Mondes étincelants voilés par d’autres mondes.</div>
- <div class="verse">Le seul livre divin dans lequel il écrit</div>
- <div class="verse">Son nom toujours croissant, homme, c’est Ton Esprit!</div>
- <div class="verse">C’est ta Raison, miroir de la Raison suprême,</div>
- <div class="verse">Où se peint dans ta nuit quelque ombre de lui-même.</div>
- <div class="verse">Il vous parle, ô Mortel, mais c’est par ce seul sens.</div>
- <div class="verse">Toute bouche de chair altère ses accents.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In pronouncing the following code of morality, the voice of conscience
-and of reason coincides with the divine voice in our hearts:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Tu ne leveras point la main contre ton frère:</div>
- <div class="verse">Et tu ne verseras aucun sang sur la terre,</div>
- <div class="verse">Ni celui des humains, ni celui des troupeaux</div>
- <div class="verse">Ni celui des animaux, ni celui des oiseaux:</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Un cri sourd dans ton cœur défend de le répandre</i>,</div>
- <div class="verse">Car le sang est la vie, et tu ne peux la rendre.</div>
- <div class="verse">Tu ne te nourriras qu’avec les épis blonds</div>
- <div class="verse">Ondoyant comme l’onde aux flancs de tes vallons,</div>
- <div class="verse">Avec le riz croissant en roseaux sur tes rives&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Table que chaque été renouvelle aux convives,</div>
- <div class="verse">Les racines, les fruits sur la branche mûris,</div>
- <div class="verse">L’excédant des rayons par l’abeille pétris,</div>
- <div class="verse">Et tous ces dons du sol où la séve de vie</div>
- <div class="verse">Vient s’offrir de soi-même à ta faim assouvie.</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>La chair des Animaux crierait comme un remord,</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Et la Mort dans ton sein engendrerait la Mort!</i>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Not only is the human animal sternly forbidden to imbrue his hands in
-the blood of his innocent earth-mates: it is also enjoined upon him to
-respect and cultivate their undeveloped intelligence and reason:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Vous ferez alliance avec les ‘brutes’ même:</div>
- <div class="verse">Car Dieu, qui les créa, veut que l’homme les aime.</div>
- <div class="verse">D’intelligence et d’âme, à différents degrés,</div>
- <div class="verse">Elles ont eu leur part, vous la reconnaîtrez:</div>
- <div class="verse">Vous livez dans leurs yeux, douteuse comme un rêve,</div>
- <div class="verse">L’aube de la raison qui commence et se lève.</div>
- <div class="verse">Vous n’étoufferez pas cette vague clarté,</div>
- <div class="verse">Présage de lumière et d’immortalité:</div>
- <div class="verse">Vous la respecterez.</div>
- <div class="verse">La chaîne à mille anneaux va de l’homme à l’insecte:</div>
- <div class="verse">Que ce soit le premier, le dernier, le milieu,</div>
- <div class="verse">N’en insultez aucun, car tous tiennent à Dieu!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>From such more rational estimate should follow, necessarily, just
-treatment:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Ne les outragez pas par des noms de colère:</div>
- <div class="verse">Que la verge et le fouet ne soient pas leur salaire.</div>
- <div class="verse">Pour assouvir par eux vos brutaux appétits,</div>
- <div class="verse">Ne leur dérobez pas le lait de leurs petits:</div>
- <div class="verse">Ne les enchaînez pas serviles et farouches:</div>
- <div class="verse">Avec des mors de fer ne brisez pas leurs bouches</div>
- <div class="verse">Ne les écrasez pas sous de trop lourds fardeaux:</div>
- <div class="verse">Comprenez leur nature, adoucissez leur sort:</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Le pacte entre eux et vous, hommes, n’est pas la Mort</i>.</div>
- <div class="verse">À sa meilleure fin façonnez chaque engeance,</div>
- <div class="verse">Prêtez-leur un rayon de votre intelligence:</div>
- <div class="verse">Adoucissez leurs mœurs en leur étant plus doux,</div>
- <div class="verse">Soyez médiateurs et juges entre eux tous.</div>
- <div class="verse">&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Le plus beau don de l’homme, c’est la Miséricorde.</i>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Consistently with, and consequently from, such just human relations
-with the lower species are the admonitions to break down the walls
-of partition between the various human races, and to the proper
-cultivation of the Earth, the common mother of all:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Vous n’établirez pas ces séparations</div>
- <div class="verse">En races, en tribus, peuples ou nations.</div>
- <div class="verse">&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Vous n’arracherez pas la branche avec le fruit:</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Gloire à la main qui sème, honte à la main qui nuit</i>!</div>
- <div class="verse">Vous ne laisserez pas le terre aride et nue,</div>
- <div class="verse">Car vos pères par Dieu la trouvèrent vêtue.</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
- <div class="verse">Que ceux qui passeront sur votre trace un jour</div>
- <div class="verse">Passent en bénissant leurs pères à leur tour.</div>
- <div class="verse">Vous l’aimerez d’amour comme on aime sa mère,</div>
- <div class="verse">Vous y posséderez votre place éphémère,</div>
- <div class="verse">Comme an soleil assis les hommes, tour à tour,</div>
- <div class="verse">Possedènt le rayon tant que dure le jour.</div>
- <div class="verse">&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Par un inconcevable et maternel mystère,</div>
- <div class="verse">L’homme en la fatiguant fertilise la Terre.</div>
- <div class="verse">Nulle bouche ne sent sa tendresse tarir:</div>
- <div class="verse">Tout ce qu’elle a porté, son flanc peut le nourrir.</div>
- <div class="verse">&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Vous vous assisterez dans toutes vos misères,</div>
- <div class="verse">Vous serez l’un à l’autre enfants, pères, et mères:</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Le fardeau de chacun sera celui de tous,</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>La Charité sera la justice entre vous</i>.</div>
- <div class="verse">Votre ombre ombragera le passant, votre pain</div>
- <div class="verse">Restera sur le seuil pour quiconque aura faim:</div>
- <div class="verse">Vous laisserez toujours quelques fruits sur la branche</div>
- <div class="verse">Pour que le voyageur vers ses lèvres la penche.</div>
- <div class="verse">Et vous n’amasserez jamais que pour un temps,</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Car la Terre pour vous germe chaque printemps</i>,</div>
- <div class="verse">Et Dieu, qui verse l’onde et fait fleurir ses rives,</div>
- <div class="verse">Sait au festin des champs le nombre des convives.<a name="FNanchor_253_253" id="FNanchor_253_253"></a><a href="#Footnote_253_253" class="fnanchor">[253]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is hardly necessary to record that <i>The Fall of an Angel</i> was far
-from receiving, from the world of fashion, the applause of his earlier
-and more conventional productions.</p>
-
-<p>Lamartine was still in the East (we refer to an earlier period),
-when news of his election to the Chambre des Deputés by a Legitimist
-constituency brought him back to Paris. Among the prominent political
-leaders of the day he figured “as a progressive Conservative, strongly
-blending reverence for the antique with a kind of philosophical
-democracy. He spoke frequently on social and philanthropic questions.”
-In 1838 he became deputy for Macon, his native town. During the
-Orleanist régime he refused to hold office, professing aversion for the
-“vulgar utility” of the government of Guizot and the Bourgeois King,
-and in 1845 he openly joined the Liberal opposition. His <i>Histoire
-des Girondins</i> (1847) probably contributed to the expulsion of the
-Orleanist dynasty in the next year.</p>
-
-<p>In the scenes of the Revolution of February, 1848, he occupied a
-prominent position as mediator between the two opposite parties;
-and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span> the retention of the tricolour, in place of the Red flag, is
-attributed to his intervention. Elected a member of the Provisional
-Government, Lamartine served as Foreign Minister of the Republic. In
-this capacity he published his well-known <i>Manifesto à l’Europe</i>.
-But, in spite of the fact that ten departments had elected him as
-representative in the Assemblée Constituante, and that he was also made
-one of the five members of the Executive Commission, his popularity
-was short-lived. With all his, apparently, sincere sympathy with the
-cause of the Oppressed, traditionary associations and strong family
-attachments (sufficiently manifest in his <i>Mémoirs</i>) impeded him in
-his political course; and his compromising attitude provoked the
-distrust of more advanced political reformers. In competition with
-Louis Napoléon and Cavaignac, he was nominated for the presidency; but
-he received the support of few votes. From this period he withdrew
-into private life and devoted himself entirely to literature. His
-<i>Histoire de la Révolution</i> (1849), <i>Histoire de la Restauration</i>,
-<i>Histoire de la Russie</i>, <i>Histoire de la Turquie</i>, <i>Raphael</i> (a
-narrative of his childhood and youth) <i>Confidences</i> (1849&ndash;1851), a
-further autobiography&mdash;one of the most interesting of all his prose
-productions&mdash;and various other writings, most of them appearing,
-in the first instance, in the periodicals of the day, attested the
-activity and versatility of his genius. He also for some time conducted
-a journal&mdash;<i>Conseiller du Peuple</i>. In 1860 he collected his entire
-writings into forty-one volumes. Of them his <i>Histoire des Girondins</i>
-is, probably, the most widely known. But, next to <i>The Fall of an
-Angel</i>, it is his own Memoirs which will always have most interest
-and instruction for those who know how to appreciate true refinement
-of soul, and, making due deductions from political or traditionary
-prejudice, can discern essential worth of mind. In <i>Les Confidences</i>
-he allows us to see the natural sensibility and superiority of his
-disposition in his deep repugnance to the orthodox table&mdash;none the less
-real because he seems, unhappily, to have deemed himself forced to
-comply with the universal or, rather, fashionable barbarism. Writing of
-his early education, he tells us:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Physically it was derived (<i>découlait</i>) in a large measure from
-Pythagoras and from the <i>Emile</i>. Thus it was based upon the
-greatest simplicity of dress and the most rigorous frugality with
-regard to food. My mother was convinced, as I myself am, that
-killing animals for the sake of nourishment from their flesh and
-blood, is one of the infirmities of our human condition; that it is
-one of those curses imposed upon man either by his fall, or by the
-obduracy of his own perversity. She believed, as I do still, that
-the habit of hardening the heart towards the most gentle animals,
-our companions, our helpmates, our brothers in toil, and even in
-affection, on this earth; that the slaughtering, the appetite
-for blood, the sight of quivering flesh are the very things to
-<i>have the effect</i> (<i>sont faits pour</i>) to brutalise and harden
-the instincts of the heart. She believed, as I do still, that
-such nourishment, although, apparently, much more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span> succulent and
-active (<i>énergique</i>) contains within itself irritating and putrid
-principles which embitter the food and shorten the days of man.</p>
-
-<p>“To support these ideas she would instance the numberless refined
-and pious people of India who abstain from everything that has had
-life, and the hardy, robust pastoral race, and even the labouring
-population of our fields, who work the hardest, live the longest
-and most simply, and who do not eat meat ten times in their
-lives. She never allowed me to eat it until I was thrown into the
-rough-and-tumble (<i>pêle-mêle</i>) life of the public schools. To
-wean me from the liking for it she used no arguments, but availed
-herself of that instinct in us which reasons better than logic.
-I had a lamb, which a peasant of Milly had given me, and which I
-had trained to follow me everywhere, like the most attached and
-faithful dog. We loved each other with that first love (<i>première
-passion</i>) which children and young animals naturally have for
-each other. One day the cook said to my mother in my presence
-“Madame, the lamb is fat, and the butcher has come for it; must
-I give it him?” I screamed and threw myself on the lamb, asking
-what the butcher would do with it, and what was a ‘butcher.’ The
-cook replied that he was a man who gained his living by killing
-lambs, sheep, calves and cows. I could not believe it. I besought
-my mother and readily obtained mercy for my favourite. A few days
-afterwards my mother took me with her to the town and led me, as
-by chance, through the shambles. There I saw men with bared and
-blood-stained arms felling a bullock. Others were killing calves
-and sheep, and cutting off their still palpitating limbs. Streams
-Of blood smoked here and there upon the pavement. I was seized with
-a profound pity, mingled with horror, and asked to be taken away.
-The idea of these horrible and repulsive scenes, the necessary
-preliminaries of the dishes I saw served at table, made me hold
-animal food in disgust, and butchers in horror.</p>
-
-<p>“Although the necessity of conforming to the customs of society
-has since made me eat what others eat, I shall preserve a rational
-(<i>raisonnée</i>) dislike to flesh dishes, and I have always found it
-difficult not to consider the trade of a butcher almost on a par
-with that of the executioner. I lived, then, till I was twelve on
-bread, milk-products, vegetables and fruit. My health was not the
-less robust, nor my growth the less rapid; and perhaps it is to
-that <i>regimen</i> that I owed the beauty of feature, the exquisite
-sensibility, the serene sweetness of character and temper that I
-preserved till that date.”<a name="FNanchor_254_254" id="FNanchor_254_254"></a><a href="#Footnote_254_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Some years before the publication of his <i>Fall of an Angel</i>, Lamartine,
-from the height of the National Tribune, had given significant
-expression to the feeling of all the more thoughtful minds, vague
-though it was, of the urgent need of some new and better principle to
-inspire and govern human actions than any hitherto tried:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I see [he exclaimed] men who, alarmed by the repeated shocks
-of our political commotions, await from providence a social
-revolution, and look around them for some man, a philosopher, to
-arise&mdash;<i>a doctrine</i> which shall come to take violent possession
-of the government of minds (<i>une doctrine qui vienne s’emparer
-violemment du gouvernement des esprits</i>), and reinvigorate the
-staggered (<i>ébranlé</i>) world. They hope, they invoke, they look for
-this power, which shall impose itself by inherent right (<i>de son
-plein droit</i>) as the Arbitrator and Supreme Ruler of the Future.”</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But a few years earlier, in the same place, a still more positive
-protest&mdash;not the less noteworthy because futile&mdash;was heard upon
-the occasion of a discussion as to the introduction into France of
-foreign “Cattle,” when one of the Deputies, Alexandre de Laborde,
-maintained that flesh-meat is but an <i>object of luxury</i>; and was
-supported, at least, by one or two other thoughtful deputies who had
-the courage of their better convictions. It deserves to be noted that
-while the Left seemed not unfavourable to the humaner feeling, the
-Centre apathetic, and the Right derisively antagonistic, the minister
-of the King (Charles X.) threw all the weight of his position into
-the materialistic side of the scales. Thus this feeble and last
-public attempt in France to stop the torrent of Materialism proved
-abortive.<a name="FNanchor_255_255" id="FNanchor_255_255"></a><a href="#Footnote_255_255" class="fnanchor">[255]</a></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLIV_MICHELET">XLIV.<br />
-<span class="s5">MICHELET. 1797&ndash;1874.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">T<span class="smaller">HE</span> early life of this most original and eloquent of French historians
-passed amidst much hardship and difficulty. His father, who was a
-printer, had been employed by the government of the Revolution period
-(1790&ndash;1794), and at the political reaction, a few years later, he found
-himself reduced to poverty. From the experiences of his earlier life
-Jules Michelet doubtless derived his contempt for the common rich and
-luxuriant manner of living. Until his sixteenth year, flesh-meat formed
-no part of his food; and his diet was of the scantiest as well as
-simplest kind.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally sensitive and contemplative, and averse from the rough
-manners and petty tyranny of his schoolfellows, the young student found
-companionship in a few choice books, of which A’Kempis’ <i>Imitation
-of Christ</i> seems to have been at that time one of the most read. At
-the Sorbonne Michelet carried away some of the most valued prizes,
-which were conferred with all the <i>éclat</i> of the public awards of the
-<i>Académie</i>. At the age of 24, having graduated as doctor in philosophy,
-he obtained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span> the chair of History in the Rollin College. His manner,
-original and full of enthusiasm, though wanting often in method and
-accuracy, possessed an irresistible fascination for his readers; and
-all, who had the privilege of listening to him, were charmed by his
-earnest eloquence.</p>
-
-<p>His first principal work was his <i>Synopsis of Modern History</i> (1827).
-His version of the celebrated <i>Scienza Nuova</i> of Vico, of whom he
-regarded himself as the especial disciple, appeared soon after. Upon
-the revolution of July, Michelet received the important post of Keeper
-of the Archives, by which appointment he was enabled to prosecute his
-researches in preparation for his <i>magnum opus</i> in history, <i>L’Histoire
-de la France</i>, the successive volumes of which appeared at long
-intervals. It contains some of the finest passages in French prose, the
-episode of <i>La Pucelle d’Orleans</i> being, perhaps, the finest of all.
-Having previously held a professorship in the Sorbonne (of which he was
-deprived by Guizot, then minister), he was afterwards invited to fill
-the chair of History in the Collège de France.</p>
-
-<p>In 1847 his advanced political views deprived him once more of his
-professorial post and income, in which the Revolution of the next year,
-however, reinstated him. The <i>coup d’état</i> of 1851 finally banished
-him from public life&mdash;at least as far as teaching was concerned&mdash;for
-being too conscientious to subscribe the oath of allegiance to the
-new Empire. Michelet, like an eminent writer of the present day,
-upon principle, elected to be his own publisher; a fact which, in
-conjunction with the unpopularity of his opinions, considerably
-lessened the sale and circulation of his books; and, by this
-independency of action, the historian was a pecuniary loser to a great
-extent.</p>
-
-<p>Deprived of the means of subsistence by his conscientiousness, he
-left Paris almost penniless, and sought an asylum successively in
-the Pyrenees and on the Normandy coast. In 1856 appeared the book
-with which the name of Michelet will hereafter be most worthily
-associated&mdash;the one which may be said to have been written with his
-heart’s blood. That the taste of the reading world was not entirely
-corrupt, was proved by the rapid sale of this the most popular of
-all his productions. A new edition of <i>L’Oiseau</i> came from the press
-each year for a long period of time, and it has been translated into
-various European languages. How far the attractiveness of the book,
-through the illustrative genius of Giacomelli, influenced the buying
-public; how far the surpassing merits of the style and matter of the
-work&mdash;we will not stay to determine; but it is certain that <i>The Bird</i>
-at once established his popularity as a writer, and relieved his
-pecuniary needs. <i>L’Oiseau</i> was followed by several<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span> other eloquent
-interpretations of Nature. But the first&mdash;there can be no question with
-persons of taste&mdash;remains the masterpiece. It is, indeed, unique in its
-kind in literature&mdash;by the intense sympathy and love for the subject
-which inspired the writer. It is the only book which treats the Bird
-as something more than an object of interest to the mere classifier,
-to the natural-history collector, or to the “sportsman.” It considers
-the winged tribes&mdash;those of the non-raptorial kinds&mdash;as possessed of
-a high intelligence, of a certain moral faculty, of devoted maternal
-affection&mdash;of a soul, in fine.</p>
-
-<p>Of his remaining writings, <i>La Bible de l’Humanité</i> (1863) is one of
-the most notable, characteristic as it is of the author’s method of
-treatment of historical and ethnographical subjects.</p>
-
-<p>The calamities of his native land he so greatly loved, through the
-corrupt government which had brought upon it the devastations of a
-terrible war, ending, by a natural sequence, in the fearful struggle
-of the suffering proletariat, deeply affected the aged champion of
-the rights of humanity. Almost broken-hearted, he withdrew from his
-accustomed haunts and went to Switzerland, and afterwards to Italy. He
-died at Hyères, in 1874, in the 77th year of his age. A public funeral,
-attended by great numbers of the working classes, awaited him in the
-capital.</p>
-
-<p>In the following passage Michelet <i>virtually</i> subscribes to the creed
-of Vegetarianism. The saving clause, in which he seems to suppose the
-diet of blood to be imposed upon our species by the “cruel fatalities”
-of life, it is pretty certain he would have been the first to wish to
-cancel, had he enjoyed the opportunity of investigating the scientific
-basis of dietetic reform:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“There is no selfish and exclusive salvation. Man merits his
-salvation only <i>through the salvation of all</i>. The animals below us
-have also their rights before God. ‘Animal life, sombre mystery!
-Immense world of thoughts and of dumb sufferings! But signs too
-visible, in default of language, express those sufferings. All
-Nature protests against the barbarity of man, who misapprehends,
-who humiliates, who tortures his inferior brethren.’ This sentence,
-which I wrote in 1846, has recurred to me very often. This year
-(1863), in October, near a solitary sea, in the last hours of the
-night, when the wind, the wave were hushed in silence, I heard the
-voices of our humble domestics. From the basement of the house,
-and from the obscure depths, these voices of captivity, feeble
-and plaintive, reached me and penetrated me with melancholy&mdash;an
-impression of no vague sensibility, but a serious and positive one.</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>
-
-<p>“The further we advance in knowledge, the more we apprehend the
-true meaning of realities, the more do we understand simple but
-very serious matters which the hurry (<i>entraînement</i>) of life
-makes us neglect. Life! Death! The daily murder, which feeding
-upon other animals implies&mdash;those hard and bitter problems sternly
-placed themselves before my mind. Miserable contradiction! Let us
-hope that there may be another globe in which the base, the cruel
-fatalities of this may be spared to us.”<a name="FNanchor_256_256" id="FNanchor_256_256"></a><a href="#Footnote_256_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Extolling the greater respect of the Hindus for other life, as
-exhibited in their sacred scriptures, Michelet vindicates the
-pre-eminently beneficent character of the Cow, in Europe so
-ungratefully treated by the recipients of her bounty:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Let us name first, with honour, his beneficent nurse&mdash;so honoured
-and beloved by him&mdash;the sacred Cow, who furnished the happy
-nourishment&mdash;favourable intermediate between insufficient herbs and
-flesh, which excites horror. The Cow, whose milk and butter has
-been so long the sacred offering. She alone supported the primitive
-people in the long journey from Bactria to India. By her, in face
-of so many ruins and desolations&mdash;by this fruitful nurse, who
-unceasingly renovates the earth for him, he has lived and always
-lives.”<a name="FNanchor_257_257" id="FNanchor_257_257"></a><a href="#Footnote_257_257" class="fnanchor">[257]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>In his <i>Bird</i> he constantly preaches the faith that can remove
-mountains&mdash;the faith that regards the regeneration and pacification of
-earth as the proper destiny of our species:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The devout faith which we cherish at heart, and which we teach
-in these pages, is that man will peaceably subdue the whole
-earth, when he shall gradually perceive that every adopted being,
-accustomed to a domesticated life, or at least to that degree of
-friendship and companionship of which his nature is susceptible,
-will be a hundred times more useful to him than he can be with
-his throat cut (<i>qu’il ne pourrait l’être égorgé</i>). Man will not
-be truly man until he shall labour seriously for that which the
-Earth expects from him&mdash;the pacification and harmonious union
-(<i>ralliement</i>) of all living Nature. Hunt and make war upon the
-lion and the eagle if you will, but not upon the Weak and Innocent.”</p></div>
-
-<p>This Michelet never wearies of repeating, and he returns again and
-again to a truth which is scorned by the modern self-seeking and
-money-getting, as it was by the fighting, wholly barbarous, world:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Conquerors have never failed to turn into derision this
-gentleness, this tenderness for animated Nature. The Persians, the
-Romans in Egypt, our Europeans in India, the French in Algeria,
-have often outraged and stricken these innocent brothers of
-man&mdash;the objects of his ancient reverence. Cambyses slew the sacred
-Cow; a Roman the Ibis who destroyed unclean reptiles. But what
-means the Cow? The fecundity of the country. And the Ibis? Its
-salubrity. Destroy these animals, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span> the country is no longer
-habitable. That which has saved India and Egypt through so many
-misfortunes and preserved their fertility, is neither the Nile nor
-the Ganges. It is respect for other life, the mildness and the
-[comparatively] gentle heart of man.</p>
-
-<p>“Profound in meaning was the speech of the Priest of Saïs to the
-Greek Herodotus&mdash;‘You shall be children always.’</p>
-
-<p>“We shall always be so&mdash;we men of the West&mdash;subtle and graceful
-reasoners, so long as we shall not have comprehended, with a
-simple and more exhaustive view, the <i>motive</i> of things. To be a
-child, is to seize life only by partial glimpses. To be a man is
-to be fully conscious of <i>all its harmonious unity</i>. The child
-disports himself, shatters and destroys; he finds his happiness
-in <i>undoing</i>. And science, in its childhood, does the same. It
-cannot study unless it kills. The sole use which it makes of a
-living mind, is, in the first place, to dissect it. None carry into
-scientific pursuits that tender reverence for life which Nature
-rewards by unveiling to us her mysteries.”<a name="FNanchor_258_258" id="FNanchor_258_258"></a><a href="#Footnote_258_258" class="fnanchor">[258]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Like Shelley, he firmly believed in the indefinite amelioration of our
-world by the ultimate triumph of principles of <i>humaneness</i>, so that
-the “sting of death” and of pain might almost, if not entirely, be
-removed:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>To prevent death is, undoubtedly, impossible; but we may <i>prolong</i>
-life. We may eventually render pain rarer, less cruel, and <i>almost
-suppress</i> it. That the hardened old world laughs at our expression
-is so much the better. We saw quite such a spectacle in the days
-when our Europe, barbarised by war, centered all medical art in
-surgery, and made the knife its only means of cure, while young
-America discovered the miracle of that profound dream in which all
-pain is annihilated.</p></div>
-
-<p>He upbraids the sportsman no less than he does the scientist, and finds
-sufficient cause for the too general sterility of the intellect in the
-habituation to slaughter, and in disregard for the subject species:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Woe to the ungrateful! By this phrase I mean the sporting crowd,
-who, unmindful of the numerous benefits we owe to other animals,
-exterminate innocent life. A terrible sentence weighs upon the
-tribes of ‘sportsmen’&mdash;<i>they can create nothing</i>. They originate
-no art, no industry. They have added nothing to the hereditary
-patrimony of the human species....</p>
-
-<p>“Do not believe the axiom, that huntsmen gradually develope into
-agriculturalists. It is not so&mdash;they kill or die. Such is their
-whole destiny. We see it clearly through experience. He who has
-killed will kill&mdash;he who has created will create.</p>
-
-<p>“In the want of emotion, which every man suffers from his birth,
-the child who satisfies it habitually by murder, by a miniature
-ferocious drama of surprise and treason, of the torture of the
-weak, will find no great enjoyment in the gentle and tranquil
-emotions arising from the progressive success of toil and study,
-from the limited industry which does everything itself. To create,
-to destroy&mdash;these are the two raptures of infancy. To create is a
-long, slow process; to destroy is quick and easy.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a shocking and hideous thing to see a child partial to
-‘sport;’ to see woman enjoying and admiring murder, and encouraging
-her child. That delicate and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span> ‘sensitive’ woman would not give him
-a knife, but she gives him a gun. Kill at a distance if it pleases
-you, for we do not see the suffering. And this Mother will think it
-admirable that her son, kept confined to his room, will drive off
-<i>ennui</i> by plucking the wings from flies, by torturing a bird or a
-little dog.</p>
-
-<p>“Far-seeing mother! She will know, when too late, the evil of
-having formed a bad heart. Aged and weak, rejected of the world,
-she will experience, in her turn, her son’s brutality.</p>
-
-<p>“Among too many children we are saddened by their almost incredible
-sterility. A few recover from it in the long circle of life, when
-they have become experienced and enlightened men. But the first
-freshness of the heart? It shall return no more.”<a name="FNanchor_259_259" id="FNanchor_259_259"></a><a href="#Footnote_259_259" class="fnanchor">[259]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Although, as has already been indicated, Michelet evidently had not
-examined the <i>scientific</i> basis of akreophagy, yet all his aspirations
-and all his sympathies, it is also equally evident, were for the
-bloodless diet. With Locke and Rousseau, and many others before
-him, he presses upon mothers the vital import of not perverting
-the early preferences of their children for the foods prescribed
-by unsophisticated nature and their own truer instincts. In one of
-his books, the most often republished, in laying down rules for the
-education of young girls, he thus writes:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Purity, above everything, <i>in regimen and nourishment</i>. What are
-we to understand by this?</p>
-
-<p>“I understand by it that the young girl should have the proper
-nourishment of a child&mdash;that she should continue the mild,
-tranquilising, unexciting regimen of milk; that, if she eats at
-your table, she will be accustomed not to touch the dishes upon it,
-which for her, at least, are poisons.</p>
-
-<p>“A revolution has taken place. We have quitted the more sober
-French regimen, and have adopted more and more the coarse and
-bloody diet of our neighbours, appropriate to their climate much
-more than to ours. The worst of it all is that we inflict this
-manner of living upon our children. Strange spectacle! To see a
-mother giving her daughter, whom but yesterday she was suckling
-at her breast, this gross aliment of bloody meats, and the
-dangerous excitant wine! She is astonished to see her violent,
-capricious, passionate; but it is herself whom she ought to accuse
-as the cause. What she fails to perceive, and yet what is very
-grave, is that with the French race, so precocious, the arousing
-of the passions is so directly provoked by this food. Far from
-strengthening, it agitates, it weakens, it unnerves. The mother
-thinks it fine (<i>plaisant</i>) to have a child so preternaturally
-mature. All this comes from herself. Unduly excitable, she wishes
-her child to be such another as she, and she is, without knowing
-it, the corruptress of her own daughter.</p>
-
-<p>“All this [unnatural stimulation] is of no good to her, and is
-little better for you, Madame. You have not the heart, you say, to
-eat anything in which she has no share. Ah, well! abstain yourself,
-or, at all events, moderate your indulgence in this food, good,
-possibly, for the hard-worked man, but fatal in its consequences
-to the woman of ease and leisure&mdash;regimen which <i>vulgarises</i>
-her, perturbs her, renders her irritable, or oppresses her with
-indigestion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“For the woman and the child it is a grace&mdash;an amiable grace (<i>grâce
-d’amour</i>)&mdash;to be, above all things, <i>frugivorous</i>&mdash;to avoid the
-coarseness and foulness (<i>fétidité</i>) of flesh-meats, and to live
-rather upon innocent foods, which bring death to no one (<i>qui
-ne coûtent la mort à personne</i>)&mdash;sweet nourishment which charms
-the sense of smell as much as it does the taste. The real reason
-why the beloved ones in nothing inspire in us repugnance but, in
-comparison with men, seem ethereal, is, in a special manner, their
-[presumed] preference for herbs and for fruits&mdash;for that purity of
-regimen which contributes not a little to that of the soul, and
-assimilates them to the innocency of the flowers of the field.”<a name="FNanchor_260_260" id="FNanchor_260_260"></a><a href="#Footnote_260_260" class="fnanchor">[260]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLV_COWHERD">XLV.<br />
-<span class="s5">COWHERD. 1763&ndash;1816.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">I<span class="smaller">N</span> any history of Vegetarianism it is impossible to omit record of the
-lives and labours of the institutors of a religious community who, in
-establishing humane dietetics as an essential condition of membership,
-may well claim the honourable title of religious reformers, and to whom
-belongs the singular merit of being the first and only founders of a
-Christian church who have inculcated a true religion of life as the
-<i>basis</i> of their teaching.</p>
-
-<p>William Cowherd, the first founder of this new conception of the
-Christian religion, which assumed the name of the “Bible Christian
-Church,” was born at Carnforth, near Lonsdale, in 1763. His first
-appearance in public was as teacher of philology in a theological
-college at Beverley. Afterwards, coming to Manchester, he acted as
-curate to the Rev. J. Clowes, who, while remaining a member of the
-Established Church, had adopted the theological system of Swedenborg.
-Cowherd attached himself to the same mystic creed, and he is said
-to be one of the few students of him who have ever read through all
-the Latin writings of the Swedish theologian. He soon resigned his
-curacy, and for a short time he preached in the Swedenborgian temple
-in Peter Street. There he seems not to have found the freedom of
-opinion and breadth in teaching he had expected, and he determined to
-propagate his own convictions, independently of other authority. In
-the year 1800 he built, at his own expense, Christ Church, in King
-Street, Salford&mdash;the first meeting-place of the reformed church.<a name="FNanchor_261_261" id="FNanchor_261_261"></a><a href="#Footnote_261_261" class="fnanchor">[261]</a>
-His extraordinary eloquence and ability, as well as earnestness
-of purpose, quickly attracted a large audience, and may well have
-brought to recollection the style and matter of the great orator
-of Constantinople of the fourth century. One characteristic of his
-Church&mdash;perhaps unique at that time&mdash;was the non-appropriation of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
-sittings. Another unfashionable opinion held by him was the Pauline
-one of the obligation upon Christian preachers to maintain themselves
-by some “secular” labour, and he therefore kept a boarding school,
-which attained extensive proportions. In this college some zealous
-and able men, who afterwards were ordained by him to carry on a truly
-beneficent ministry, assisted in the work of teaching, of whom the
-names of Metcalfe, Clark, and Schofield are particularly noteworthy.
-Following out the principles of their Master, two of them took degrees
-in medicine, and gained their living by that profession. The Principal
-himself built an institute, connected with his church in Hulme, where,
-more recently, the late Mr. James Gaskill presided, who, at his death,
-left an endowment for its perpetuation as an educational establishment.</p>
-
-<p>It was in the year 1809 that Cowherd formally promulgated, as cardinal
-doctrines of his system, the principle of abstinence from flesh-eating,
-which, in the first instance, he seems to have derived from “the
-medical arguments of Dr. Cheyne and the humanitarian sentiments of
-St. Pierre.” He died not many years after this formal declaration of
-faith and practice, not without the satisfaction of knowing that able
-and earnest disciples would carry on the great work of renovating the
-religious sentiment for the humanisation of the world.</p>
-
-<p>Of those followers not the least eminent was Joseph Brotherton, the
-first M.P. for Salford, than which borough none has been more truly
-honoured by the choice of its legislative representative. A printing
-press had been set up at the Institution, and, after the death of
-the Master, his <i>Facts Authentic in Science and Religion towards a
-New Foundation of the Bible</i>, under which title he had collected the
-most various matter illustrative of passages in the Bible, and in
-defence of his own interpretation of them, was there printed. It is,
-as his biographer has well described it, “a lasting memorial of his
-wide reading and research&mdash;travellers, lawyers, poets, physicians,
-all are pressed into his service&mdash;the whole work forming a large
-quarto common-place book filled with reading as delightful as it is
-discursive. Some of his minor writings have also been printed. He was,
-besides his theological erudition, a practical chemist and astronomer,
-and he caused the dome of the church in King Street to be fitted up for
-the joint purposes of an observatory and a laboratory. His microscope
-is still preserved in the Peel Park Museum. His valuable library,
-which at one time was accessible to the public on easy terms, is now
-deposited in the new Bible Christian Church in Cross<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span> Lane. The books
-collected exhibit the strong mind which brought them together for its
-own uses. This library is the workshop in which he wrought out a new
-mode of life and a new theory of doctrine&mdash;with these instruments he
-moulded minds like that of Brotherton, and so his influence has worked
-in many unseen channels.” He died in 1816, and is buried in front of
-his chapel, in King Street, Salford.<a name="FNanchor_262_262" id="FNanchor_262_262"></a><a href="#Footnote_262_262" class="fnanchor">[262]</a></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLVI_METCALFE">XLVI.<br />
-<span class="s5">METCALFE. 1788&ndash;1862.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">A<span class="smaller">MONGST</span> the immediate disciples of the founder of the new community,
-the most active apostle of the principles of Vegetarianism, William
-Metcalfe, to whom reference has been already made, claims particular
-notice. Born at Orton in Westmoreland, after instruction in a classical
-school kept by a philologist of some repute, he began life as an
-accountant at Keighley, in Yorkshire. His leisure hours were devoted to
-mental culture, both in reading and in poetic composition. Converted by
-Cowherd in 1809, in the twenty-first year of his age, he abandoned the
-flesh diet, and remained to the end a firm believer in the truths of
-“The Perfect Way.” In the year following he married the daughter of the
-Rev. J. Wright who was at the head of the “New Church” at Keighley, and
-whom he assisted as curate. His wife, of highly-cultured mind, equally
-with himself was a persistent follower of the reformed mode of living.
-Sharing the experiences of many other dietary reformers, the young
-converts encountered much opposition from their family and friends, who
-attempted at one moment ridicule, at another dissuasion, by appealing
-to medical authority. Unmoved from their purpose, they continued
-unshaken in their convictions.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“They assured me,” he writes at a later period, “that I was rapidly
-sinking into a consumption, and tried various other methods to
-induce me to return to the customary dietetic habits of society;
-but their efforts proved ineffectual. Some predicted my death in
-three or four months; and others, on hearing me attempt to defend
-my course, hesitated not to tell me I was certainly suffering from
-mental derangement, and, if I continued to live without flesh-food
-much longer, would unquestionably have to be shut up in some insane
-asylum. All was unavailing. Instead of sinking into consumption,
-I gained several pounds in weight during the first few weeks of
-my experiment. Instead of three or four months bringing me to the
-silent grave, they brought me to the matrimonial altar.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“She [his wife] fully coincided with me in my views on vegetable
-diet, and, indeed, on all other important points was always ready
-to defend them to the best of her ability&mdash;studied to show our
-acquaintances, whenever they paid us a visit, that we could live,
-in every rational enjoyment, without the use of flesh for food.
-As she was an excellent cook, we were never at a loss as to what
-we should eat. We commenced housekeeping in January, 1810, and,
-from that date to the present time, we have never had a pound
-of flesh-meat in our dwelling, have never patronised either
-slaughter-houses or spirit shops.</p>
-
-<p>“When, again, in the course of time we were about to be blessed
-with an addition to our family, a renewed effort was made. We
-were assured it was impossible for my wife to get through her
-confinement without some <i>more strengthening food</i>. Friends
-and physicians were alike decided upon that point. We were,
-notwithstanding, unmoved and faithful to our principles. Next we
-were told by our kind advisers that the little stranger could not
-be sufficiently nourished unless the mother could eat a little
-‘meat’ once a day; or, if not that, drink a pint or half a pint of
-ale daily. To both proposals my wife turned a deaf ear; and both
-she and the child did exceedingly well.<a name="FNanchor_263_263" id="FNanchor_263_263"></a><a href="#Footnote_263_263" class="fnanchor">[263]</a> It may be proper to
-add here [remarks the biographer], that the ‘little stranger’ above
-referred to is the author of this <i>Memoir</i>,&mdash;that he is in the
-fifty-sixth year of his age, that he has never so much as <i>tasted</i>
-animal food, nor used intoxicating drinks of any kind, and that he
-is hale and hearty.”</p></div>
-
-<p>These experiences, it is scarcely necessary to remark, in the lives of
-followers of reformed dietetics, have been not seldom repeated.</p>
-
-<p>In the Academy of Sciences, instituted by Dr. Cowherd, Metcalfe was
-invited to assume the direction of the “classical” department (1811).
-In the same year he took “Orders,” and, at the solicitation of the
-secessionists from the Swedenborgian Communion (which, with some
-inconsistency, seems to have looked with indifference, or even dislike,
-upon the principles of akreophagy), he officiated at Adingham, in
-Yorkshire. By the voluntary aid of one of his admirers a church was
-built, to which was added a commodious school-room. He then resigned
-his position under Dr. Cowherd, and opened a grammar school in
-Adingham, where he was well supported by his friends.</p>
-
-<p>The United States of America, however, was the field to which he
-had long been looking as the most promising for the mission work to
-which he had devoted himself; and in this hope he had been sustained
-by his Master. In the spring of 1817 a company of forty-one persons,
-members of the Bible Christian community, embarked at Liverpool
-for Philadelphia, They comprised two clerics&mdash;W. Metcalfe and Jas.
-Clark&mdash;twenty other adults, and nineteen children. Of this band only a
-part were able to resist the numerous temptations to conformity with
-the prevalent social practices; and the vast distances which separated
-the leaders from their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span> followers were almost an insuperable bar to
-sympathy and union. Settling in Philadelphia&mdash;for them at least a name
-of real significance&mdash;Metcalfe supported his family by teaching, while
-performing the duties of his position as head of the faithful few who
-formed his church. His day-school, which was attended by the sons
-of some of the leading people of the city, proved to be pecuniarily
-successful until the appearance of yellow fever in Philadelphia, which
-broke up his establishment and involved him in great difficulties;
-for upon his school he depended entirely for his living. He had many
-influential friends, who tempted him, at this crisis of his fortunes,
-with magnificent promises of support, if only he would desert the cause
-he had at heart&mdash;the propagandism of a religion based upon principles
-of true temperance and active goodness. Both moral and physical
-superiority pointed him out as one who could not fail to bring honour
-to any undertaking, and, had he sacrificed conviction to interest, he
-might have greatly advanced his material prospects. All such seductions
-he firmly resisted.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, through the pulpit, the schoolroom, and, more widely,
-through the newspapers, he scattered the seeds of the gospel
-of Humanity. But the spirit of intolerance and persecution, of
-self-seeking religionism, and of rancorous prejudice, was by no means
-extinct even in the great republic, and the (so-called) “religious”
-press united to denounce his humane teaching as well as his more
-liberal theology. Nor did some of his more unscrupulous opponents
-hesitate, in the last resort, to raise the war-cry of “infidel” and
-“sceptic.” These assailants he treated with contemptuous silence; but
-the principle of moral dietetics he defended in the newspapers with
-ability and vigour. In 1821 he published an essay on <i>Abstinence from
-the Flesh of Animals</i>, which was freely and extensively circulated. For
-several years his missionary labours appear to have been unproductive.
-In the year 1830 he made two notable converts&mdash;Dr. Sylvester Graham,
-who was at that time engaged as a “temperance” lecturer, and was
-deep in the study of human physiology; and Dr. W. Alcott. Five years
-later, the <i>Moral Reformer</i> was started as a monthly periodical,
-which afterwards appeared under the title of the <i>Library of Health</i>.
-In 1838&ndash;9 the <i>Graham Journal</i> was also published in Boston, and
-scientific societies were organised in many of the New England towns.
-The Bible was largely appealed to in the controversy, and a sermon of
-Metcalfe’s had an extensive circulation through the United States. With
-all this controversy upon his hands, he was far from neglecting his
-private duties, and, in fact, his health was over-taxed in the close
-and constant work in the schoolrooms, overcrowded and ill-ventilated
-as they were. In the day and night school he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span> constantly employed,
-during one half of the year, from eight in the morning until ten at
-night; and Sunday brought him no remission of labour.</p>
-
-<p>In the propagandism of his principles through the press he was not
-idle. The <i>Independent Democrat</i>, and, in 1838, the <i>Morning Star</i>,
-was printed and published at his own office&mdash;by which latter journal,
-in spite of the promise of support from political friends, he was a
-pecuniary loser to a large amount. <i>The Temperance Advocate</i>, also
-issued from his office, had no better success. Several years earlier,
-about 1820, it is interesting to note, he had published a tract on <i>The
-Duty of Abstinence from all Intoxicating Drinks</i>; and the founder of
-the Bible Christian Church in America can claim the merit of having
-been the first systematically to inculcate this social reform.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1847 the Vegetarian Society of Great Britain had been
-founded, of which Mr. James Simpson had been elected the first
-president. Metcalfe immediately proposed the formation of a like
-society in the United States. He corresponded with Drs. Graham,
-Alcott, and others; and finally an American Vegetarian Convention
-assembled in New York, May 15, 1850. Several promoters of the cause,
-previously unknown to each other (except through correspondence),
-here met. Metcalfe was elected president of the Convention; addresses
-were delivered, and the constitution of the society determined upon.
-The Society was organised by the election of Dr. William Alcott as
-president, Rev. W. Metcalfe as corresponding secretary, and Dr.
-Trall as recording secretary. An organ of the society was started in
-November, 1850, under the title of <i>The American Vegetarian and Health
-Journal</i>, and under the editorship of Metcalfe. Its regular monthly
-publication, however, did not begin until 1851. In that year he was
-selected as delegate to the English Vegetarian Society, as well as
-delegate from the Pennsylvania Peace Society to the “World’s Peace
-Convention,” which was fondly supposed to be about to be inaugurated
-by the <i>Universal Exhibition</i> of that year. The proceedings at the
-annual meeting of the Vegetarian Society of Great Britain, and the
-eloquent address, amongst others, of the American representative, are
-fully recorded in the <i>Vegetarian Messenger</i> for 1852. On this occasion
-Joseph Brotherton, M.P. presided.</p>
-
-<p>Two years later he suffered the irreparable loss of the sympathising
-sharer in his hopes for the regeneration of the world. Mrs. Metcalfe
-died in the seventy-fourth year of her age, having been, during
-forty-four years, a strict abstinent. Her loss was mourned by the
-entire Vegetarian community. By far the larger part of the matter, as
-well as the expenses<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span> of publication, of the <i>American Vegetarian</i>,
-was supplied by the editor, and, being inadequately supported by the
-rest of the community, the managers were forced to abandon its further
-publication. The last volume appeared in 1854. It has been succeeded
-in later times, under happier circumstances, by the <i>Health Reformer</i>
-which is still in existence.</p>
-
-<p>In 1855 Metcalfe received an invitation to undertake the duties
-attached to the mother church at Salford. Leaving his brother-in-law
-in charge of the church in Philadelphia, he embarked for England once
-more, and the most memorable event, during his stay in this country,
-was the deeply and sincerely lamented death of Joseph Brotherton, who
-for twenty years had represented Salford in the Legislature, and whose
-true benevolence had endeared him to the whole community. Metcalfe
-was chosen to preach the funeral eulogy, which was listened to by a
-large number of Members of Parliament and municipal officers, and by
-an immense concourse of private citizens. Returning to America soon
-afterwards, at the urgent request of his friends in Philadelphia,
-he was, in 1859, elected to fill the place of President vacated by
-Dr. Alcott, whose virtues and labours in the cause he commemorated
-in a just eulogy. His own death took place in the year 1862, in the
-seventy-fifth year of his age, caused by hemorrhage of the lungs,
-doubtless the effect of excessive work. His end, like his whole
-interior if not exterior life, was, in the best meaning of a too
-conventional expression, full of peace and of hope. His best panegyric
-is to be found in his life-work; and, as the first who systematically
-taught the truths of reformed dietetics in the “New World,” he has
-deserved the unceasing gratitude of all sincere reformers in the
-United States, and, indeed, throughout the globe. By all who knew him
-personally he was as much loved as he was esteemed, and the newspapers
-of the day bore witness to the general lamentation for his loss.<a name="FNanchor_264_264" id="FNanchor_264_264"></a><a href="#Footnote_264_264" class="fnanchor">[264]</a></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLVII_GRAHAM">XLVII.<br />
-<span class="s5">GRAHAM. 1794&ndash;1851.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">A<span class="smaller">S</span> an exponent of the physiological basis of the Vegetarian theory of
-diet, in the most elaborate minuteness, the author of <i>Lectures on
-the Science of Human Life</i> has always had great repute amongst food
-reformers both in the United States and in this country. Collaterally
-connected with the ducal house of Montrose, his father, a graduate of
-Oxford, emigrated to Boston, U.S., in the year 1718. He must have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
-attained an advanced age when his seventeenth child, Sylvester,
-was born at Suffield, in Connecticut. Yet he seems to have been of
-a naturally dyspeptic and somewhat feeble constitution, which was
-inherited by his son, whose life, in fact, was preserved only by the
-method recommended by Locke&mdash;free exposure in the open air. During
-several years he lived with an uncle, on whose farm he was made to work
-with the labourers. In his twelfth year he was sent to a school in New
-York, and at fourteen he was set for a short time to learn the trade of
-paper-making. “He is described as handsome, clever, and imaginative.
-‘I had heard,’ he says, ‘of noble deeds, and longed to follow in the
-field of fame.’ Ill health soon obliged his return to the country, and
-at sixteen symptoms of consumption appeared. Various occupations were
-tried until the time, when about twenty years of age, he commenced as
-a teacher of youth, proving highly successful with his pupils. Again
-ill-health obliged the abandonment of this pursuit.”<a name="FNanchor_265_265" id="FNanchor_265_265"></a><a href="#Footnote_265_265" class="fnanchor">[265]</a></p>
-
-<p>At the age of thirty-two he married, and soon after became a preacher
-in the Presbyterian Church. Deeply interested in the question of
-“Temperance,” he was invited to lecture for that cause by the
-Pennsylvania Society (1830). He now began the study of physiology and
-comparative anatomy, in which his interest was unremitting. These
-important sciences were used to good effect in his future dietetic
-crusade. At this time he came in contact with Metcalfe, by whom he
-was confirmed in, if not in the first instance converted to, the
-principles of radical dietary reform. “He was soon led to believe that
-no permanent cure for intemperance could be found, except in such
-change of personal and social customs as would relieve the human being
-from all desire for stimulants. This idea he soon applied to medicine,
-so that the prevention and cure of disease, as well as the remedy for
-intemperance, were seen to consist mainly in the adoption of correct
-habits of living, and the judicious adaptation of hygienic agencies.
-These ideas were elaborated in an <i>Essay on the Cholera</i> (1832), and
-a course of lectures which were delivered in various parts of the
-country, and subsequently published under the title of <i>Lectures on
-the Science of Human Life</i> (2 vols., Boston, 1839). This has been
-the leading text-book of all the dietetic and nearly all the health
-reformers since.”<a name="FNanchor_266_266" id="FNanchor_266_266"></a><a href="#Footnote_266_266" class="fnanchor">[266]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><i>The Science of Human Life</i> is one of the most comprehensive as well as
-minute text books on scientific dietetics ever put forth. If it errs
-at all, it errs on the side of redundancy&mdash;a feature which it owes to
-the fact that it was published to the world as it was orally given. It
-therefore well bears condensation, and this has been judiciously done
-by Mr. Baker, whose useful edition is probably in the hands of most of
-our readers. Graham was also the author of a treatise on <i>Bread and
-Bread-Making</i>, and “Graham bread” is now universally known as one of
-the most wholesome kinds of the “staff of life.” Besides these more
-practical writings, for some time before his death he occupied his
-leisure in the production of a <i>Philosophy of Sacred History</i>, the
-characteristic idea of which seems to have been to harmonise the dogmas
-of the Jewish and Christian Scriptures with his published views on
-physiology and dietetics. He lived to complete one volume only (12mo.),
-which appeared after his death.</p>
-
-<p>Tracing the history of Medicine from the earlier times, and its more or
-less of empiricism in all its stages, Graham discovers the cause of a
-vast proportion of all the egregious failure of its professors in the
-blind prejudice which induces them to apply to the <i>temporary cure</i>,
-rather than to the <i>prevention</i>, of disease. As it was in its first
-barbarous beginning, so it has continued, with little really essential
-change, to the present moment:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Everything is done with a view to <i>cure</i> the disease, without
-any regard to its cause, and the disease is considered as
-the infliction of some supernatural being. Therefore, in the
-progress of the healing art thus far, not a step is taken towards
-investigating the laws of health and the philosophy of disease.</p>
-
-<p>“Nor, after Medicine had received a more systematic form, did
-it apply to those researches which were most essential to its
-success, but, like religion, it became blended with superstitions
-and absurdities. Hence, the history of Medicine, with very limited
-exceptions, is a tissue of ignorance and error, and only serves
-to demonstrate the absence of that knowledge upon which alone an
-enlightened system of Medicine can be founded, and to show to
-what extent a noble art can be perverted from its capabilities of
-good to almost unmixed evil by the ignorance, superstition, and
-cupidity of men. In modern times, anatomy and surgery have been
-carried nearly to perfection, and great advance has been made
-in physiology. The science of human life has been studied with
-interest and success, but this has been confined to the few, while
-even in our day, and in the medical profession itself, the general
-tendency is adverse to the diffusion of scientific knowledge.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“The result is, that men prodigally waste the resources as if the
-energies of life were inexhaustible; and when they have brought on
-disease which destroys their comforts, they fly to the physician,
-<i>not to learn by what violation of the laws of life</i> they have
-drawn the evil upon themselves, and by what means they can avoid
-the same; but, considering themselves visited with afflictions
-which they have in no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span> manner been concerned in causing, they
-require the physician’s remedies, by which their sufferings may be
-alleviated. In doing this, the more the practice of the physician
-conforms to the <i>appetites</i> of the patient, the greater is his
-popularity and the more generously is he rewarded.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything, therefore, in society tends to confine the practising
-physician to the department of therapeutics, and make him a
-mere curer of disease; and the consequence is, that the medical
-fraternity have little inducement to apply themselves to the
-study of the <i>science of life</i>, while almost everything, by which
-men can be corrupted, is presented to induce them to become the
-mere panderers of human ignorance and folly; and, if they do not
-sink into the merest empiricism, it is owing to their own moral
-sensibility rather than to the encouragement they receive to pursue
-an elevated scientific professional career.</p>
-
-<p>“Thus the natural and acquired habits of man concur to divert
-his attention from the study of human life, and hence he is left
-to <i>feel</i> his way to, or gather from what he calls experience,
-all the conclusions which he embraces. It has been observed
-that men, in their (so-called) inductive reasonings deceive
-themselves continually, and think that they are reasoning from
-facts and experience, when they are only reasoning <i>from a mixture
-of truth and falsehood</i>. The only end answered by facts so
-incorrectly apprehended is that of making error more incorrigible.
-Nothing, indeed, is so hostile to the interests of Truth as
-facts incorrectly observed. On no subjects are men so liable to
-misapprehend facts, and <i>mistake the relation between cause and
-effect</i>, as on that of human life, health, and disease.”</p></div>
-
-<p>By the opponents of dietetic reform it has been pretended that climate,
-or individual constitution, must determine the food proper for nations
-or individuals:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“We have been told that some enjoy health in warm, and others
-in cold climates some on one kind of diet, and under one set of
-circumstances, and some under another; that, therefore, what is
-best for one is not for another; that what agrees <i>well</i> with one
-disagrees with another; that what is one man’s meat is another
-man’s poison; that different constitutions require different
-treatment; and that, consequently, no rules can be laid down
-adapted to all circumstances which can be made a basis of regimen
-to all.</p>
-
-<p>“Without taking pains to examine circumstances, people consider the
-bare fact that some intemperate individuals reach old age evidence
-that such habits are not unfavourable to life. With the same loose
-reasoning, people arrive at conclusions equally erroneous in regard
-to nations. If a tribe, subsisting on vegetable food, is weak,
-sluggish, and destitute of courage and enterprise, it is concluded
-that vegetable food is the cause. Yet examination might have shown
-that causes fully adequate to these effects existed, which not only
-exonerated the diet, <i>but made it appear that the vegetable diet
-had a redeeming effect, and was the means by which the nation was
-saved from a worse condition</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“The fact that individuals have attained a great age in certain
-habits of living is no evidence that those habits are favourable to
-longevity. The only use which we can make of cases of extraordinary
-old age, is to show how the human constitution is capable of
-sustaining the vital economy, <i>and resisting the causes which
-induce death</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“If we ask <i>how</i> we must live to secure the best health and longest
-life, the answer must be drawn from physiological knowledge; but
-if we ask <i>how long</i> the best mode of living will preserve life,
-the reply is, Physiology cannot teach you that. Probably<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span> each
-aged individual has a mixture of good and bad habits, and has
-lived in a mixture of favourable and unfavourable circumstances.
-Notwithstanding apparent diversity, there is a pretty equal amount
-of what is salutary in the habits and circumstances of each. Some
-have been ‘correct’ in one thing, some in another. All that is
-proved by instances of longevity in connexion with bad habits is,
-that such individuals are able to resist causes that have, in the
-same time, sent thousands of their fellow-beings to an untimely
-grave; and, under a proper regimen, they would have sustained life,
-perhaps, a hundred and fifty years.</p>
-
-<p>“Some have more constitutional [or inherited] powers to resist the
-causes of disease than others, and, therefore, what will destroy
-the life of one may be borne by another a long time without any
-manifestations of immediate injury. There are, also, constitutional
-peculiarities, but these are far more rare than is generally
-supposed. Indeed, such may, in almost every case, be overcome by
-a correct regimen. So far as the general laws of life and the
-application of general principles of regimen are considered,
-the human constitution is <i>one</i>: there are no constitutional
-differences which will not yield to a correct regimen, and thus
-improve the individual. Consequently, what is best for one is best
-for all.... Some are born without any tendency to disease while
-others have the predisposition to particular diseases of some kind.
-But <i>differences result from causes which man has the power to
-control</i>, and it is certain that all can be removed by conformity
-to the laws of life for generations, and that the human species can
-be brought to as great uniformity, as to health and life, as the
-lower animals.”</p></div>
-
-<p>With Hufeland, Flourens, and other scientific authorities, he maintains
-that:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Physiological science affords no evidence that the human
-constitution is not capable of gradually returning to the
-primitive longevity of the species. The highest interests of our
-nature require that <i>youthfulness</i> should be prolonged. And it
-is as capable of being preserved as life itself, both depending
-on the same conditions. If there ever was a state of the human
-constitution which enabled it to sustain life [much beyond the
-present period], that state involved a harmony of relative
-conditions. The vital processes were less rapid and more complete
-than at present, development was slower, organisation more perfect,
-childhood protracted, and the change from youth to manhood took
-place at a greater remove from birth. Hence, if we now aim at long
-life, we can secure our object only by conformity to those laws by
-which youthfulness is prolonged.”</p></div>
-
-<p>As for the <i>omnivorousness</i> of the human animal:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The ourang-outang, on being domesticated, readily learns to eat
-animal food. But if this proves that animal to be <i>omnivorous</i>,
-then the Horse, Cow, Sheep, and others are all omnivorous, for
-everyone of them is easily trained to eat animal food. Horses
-have frequently been trained to eat animal food,<a name="FNanchor_267_267" id="FNanchor_267_267"></a><a href="#Footnote_267_267" class="fnanchor">[267]</a> and Sheep
-have been so accustomed to it as to refuse grass. All carnivorous
-animals can be trained to a vegetable diet, and brought to subsist
-upon it, with less inconvenience and deterioration than herbivorous
-or frugivorous animals can be brought to live on animal food.
-Comparative anatomy, therefore, proves that Man is naturally a
-frugivorous animal, formed to subsist upon fruits, seeds, and
-farinaceous vegetables.<a name="FNanchor_268_268" id="FNanchor_268_268"></a><a href="#Footnote_268_268" class="fnanchor">[268]</a></p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The <i>stimulating</i>, or alcoholic, property of flesh produces the
-delusion that it is, therefore, the most <i>nourishing</i>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Yet by so much as the stimulation exceeds that which is necessary
-for the performance of the functions of the organs, the more does
-the expenditure of vital powers exceed the renovating economy; and
-the exhaustion which succeeds is commensurate with the excess.
-Hence, though food which contains the greatest proportion of
-stimulating power causes a <i>feeling</i> of the greatest strength, it
-also produces the greatest exhaustion, which is commensurately
-importunate for relief; and, as the same food affords such by
-supplying the requisite stimulation, their <i>feelings</i> lead the
-consumers to believe that it is most strengthening.... Those
-substances, the stimulating power of which is barely sufficient to
-excite the digestive organs in the appropriation of nourishment,
-are most conducive to vital welfare, causing all the processes to
-be most perfectly performed, without any unnecessary expenditure,
-thus contributing to health and longevity.</p>
-
-<p>“Flesh-meats average about <i>thirty-five per cent</i> of nutritious
-matter, while rice, wheat, and several kinds of pulse (such as
-lentils, peas, and beans), afford from <i>eighty to ninety-five per
-cent</i>; potatoes afford twenty-five per cent of nutritious matter.
-So that one pound of rice contains more nutritious matter than two
-pounds and a half of flesh meat; three pounds of whole meal bread
-contain more than six pounds of flesh, and three pounds of potatoes
-more than two pounds of flesh.”</p></div>
-
-<p>That the human species, <i>taken in its entirety</i>, is no more carnivorous
-<i>de facto</i> than it could be <i>de jure</i>, is apparent on the plain
-evidence of facts. In all countries of our Globe, with the exception of
-the most barbarous tribes, it is, in reality, only the ruling and rich
-classes who are kreophagist. The Poor have, almost everywhere, but the
-barest sufficiency even of vegetable foods:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The peasantry of Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Turkey, Greece,
-Italy, Switzerland, France, Spain, England, Scotland, Ireland, a
-considerable portion of Prussia, and other parts of Europe subsist
-mainly on non-flesh foods. The peasantry of modern Greece [like
-those of the days of Perikles] subsist on coarse brown bread and
-fruits. The peasantry in many parts of Russia live on very coarse
-bread, with garlic and other vegetables, and, like the same class
-in Greece, Italy, &amp;c., they are obliged to be extremely frugal even
-in this kind of food. Yet they are [for the most part] healthy,
-vigorous, and active. Many of the inhabitants of Germany live
-mainly on rye and barley, in the form of coarse bread. The potato
-is the principal food of the Irish peasantry, and few portions
-of the human family are more healthy, athletic, and active, when
-uncorrupted by intoxicating substances [and, it may be added, when
-under favourable political and social conditions]. But alcohol,
-opium, &amp;c. [equally with bad laws] have extended their blighting
-influence over the greater portion of the world, and nowhere do
-these scourges so cruelly afflict the self-devoted race as in the
-cottages of the poor, and when, by these evils and neglect of
-sanitation, &amp;c., diseases are generated, sometimes epidemics, we
-are told that these things arise from their poor, meagre, low,
-<i>vegetable</i> diet. Wherever the various sorts of intoxicating
-substances are absent, and a decent degree of cleanliness is
-observed, the vegetable diet is not thus calumniated.</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
-
-<p>“That portion of the peasantry of England and Scotland who subsist
-on their barley and oatmeal bread, porridge, potatoes, and other
-vegetables, with temperate, cleanly habits [and surroundings],
-are able to endure more fatigue and exposure than any other class
-of people in the same countries. <i>Three-fourths of the whole
-human family</i>, in all periods of time [excepting, perhaps, in the
-primitive wholly predatory ages] have subsisted on non-flesh foods,
-and when their supplies have been abundant, and their habits in
-other respects correct, they have been well nourished.”</p></div>
-
-<p>That the sanguinary diet and savagery go hand in hand, and that in
-proportion to the degree of carnivorousness is the barbarous or
-militant character of the people, all History, past and present, too
-clearly testifies. Nor are the carnivorous tribes conspicuous by their
-cruel habits only:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Taking all flesh-eating nations together, though some, whose
-other habits are favourable, are, comparatively, well-formed, as
-a general average they are small, ill-formed races; and taking
-all vegetable-eating nations, though many, from excessive use
-of narcotics, and from other unfavourable circumstances, are
-comparatively small and ill-formed, as a general average they are
-much better formed races than the flesh-eaters.<a name="FNanchor_269_269" id="FNanchor_269_269"></a><a href="#Footnote_269_269" class="fnanchor">[269]</a> It is only
-among those tribes whose habits are temperate, and who subsist on
-the non-flesh diet, that the more perfect specimens of symmetry are
-found.</p>
-
-<p>“Not one human being in many thousands dies a <i>natural</i> death.
-If a man be shot or poisoned we say he dies a violent death, but
-if he is ill, attended by physicians, and dies, we say he dies a
-‘natural’ death. This is an abuse of language&mdash;the death in the
-latter case being as truly violent as if he had been shot. Whether
-a man takes arsenic and kills himself, or by small doses or other
-means, however common, gradually destroys life, he equally dies a
-violent death. He only dies a natural death who so obeys the laws
-of his nature as by neither irritation nor intensity to waste his
-energies, but slowly passes through the changes of his system to
-old age, and falls asleep in the exhaustion of vitality.”<a name="FNanchor_269a_269a" id="FNanchor_269a_269a"></a><a href="#Footnote_269a_269a" class="fnanchor">[269]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>With Flourens he adduces a number of instances both of individuals and
-of communities who have attained to protracted ages by reason of a pure
-diet. He afterwards proceeds to prove from comparative physiology and
-anatomy, and, in particular, from the conformation of the human teeth
-and stomach (which, by an astounding perversion of fact, are sometimes
-alleged to be formed carnivorously, in spite of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span> often-repeated
-scientific authority, as well as of common observation), the natural
-frugivorous character of the human species, and he quotes Linné,
-Cuvier, Lawrence, Bell, and many others in support of this truth.<a name="FNanchor_270_270" id="FNanchor_270_270"></a><a href="#Footnote_270_270" class="fnanchor">[270]</a></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLVIII_STRUVE">XLVIII.<br />
-<span class="s5">STRUVE. 1805&ndash;1870.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">G<span class="smaller">ERMANY</span>, at the present day able to boast so many earnest apostles of
-humanitarianism, until the nineteenth century was some way advanced,
-had contributed little, definitely, to the literature of <i>Humane
-Dietetics</i>. A Haller or a Hufeland, indeed, had, with more or less
-boldness, raised the banner of partial revolt from orthodox medicine
-and orthodox living, but their heterodoxy was rather hygienic than
-humane. In the history of humanitarianism in Germany the honour of the
-first place, in order of time, belongs to the author of <i>Pflanzenkost,
-die Grundlage einer Neuen Weltanschauung</i>, and of <i>Mandaras’
-Wanderungen</i>, whose life, political as well as literary, was one
-continuous combat on behalf of justice, freedom, and true progress.</p>
-
-<p>Gustav von Struve was born at München (Munich), October 11, 1805, from
-whence his father, who was residing there as Russian Minister, shortly
-afterwards removed to Stuttgart. The foundation of his education was
-laid in the gymnasium of that capital, where he remained until his
-twelfth year. From 1817 to 1822 he was a scholar in the Lyceum in
-Karlsruhe. Having finished his preparatory studies in those schools,
-he proceeded to the University of Göttingen, which, after a course of
-nearly two years, he exchanged for Heidelberg. Four years of arduous
-study enabled him to pass his first examination, and, as the result of
-his brilliant attainments and success, he received the appointment of
-<i>Attaché</i> to the Bundestag Embassy at Oldenberg.</p>
-
-<p>With such an opening, a splendid career in the service of courts and
-kings seemed to be reserved for him. His family connexions, his great
-abilities, and his unusual acquirements at so early an age guaranteed
-to him quick promotion, with reward and worldly honour. But to figure
-in the service of the oppressors of the people&mdash;to waste in luxurious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
-trifling the resources of a peasantry, supplied by them only at the
-cost of a life-time of painful destitution, to support the selfish
-greed and vain ostentation of the Jew&mdash;such was not the career which
-could stimulate the ambition of Struve. The conviction that this was
-not his proper destiny grew stronger in him, and he soon abandoned his
-diplomatic position and Oldenberg at the same time. Without wealth
-or friends, at variance with his relatives, who could not appreciate
-his higher aims, he settled himself in Göttingen (1831), and in the
-following year in Jena. His attempts to obtain fixed employment
-as professor or teacher, or as editor of a newspaper, long proved
-unsuccessful, for independent and honest thought, never anywhere
-greatly in esteem, at that time in Germany was in especial disfavour
-with all who, directly or indirectly, were under court influences. Yet
-the three years which he lived in Göttingen and Jena supplied him with
-varied and useful experiences.</p>
-
-<p>In 1833 he went to Karlsruhe. After years of long patience and effort,
-he at length effected his object (to gain a position which should
-make it possible for him to carry out his schemes of usefulness for
-his fellow-beings), and, at the end of 1836, he obtained the office
-of Obergerichts-Advocat in Mannheim. This position gave leisure
-and opportunity for the prosecution of his various scientific and
-philosophic pursuits, and to engage in literary undertakings. He
-founded periodicals and delivered lectures, the constant aim of which
-was the improvement of the world around him. At this period he wrote
-his philosophic romance, <i>Mandaras’ Wanderungen</i> (“The Wanderings of
-Mandaras”), through which he conveys distasteful truths in accordance
-with the principles of Tasso.<a name="FNanchor_271_271" id="FNanchor_271_271"></a><a href="#Footnote_271_271" class="fnanchor">[271]</a></p>
-
-<p>Struve’s active political life began in 1845. In that year were
-published <i>Briefwechsel zwischen einen ehemaligen and einen jetzigen
-Diplomaten</i>,(“Correspondence between an Old and a Modern Diplomatist”),
-which was soon followed by his <i>Oeffentliches Recht des Deutschen
-Bundes</i> (“Public Rights of the German Federation”) and his <i>Kritische
-Geschichte des Allgemeinen Staats-Rechts</i> (“Critical History of the
-Common Law of Nations”). In the same year he undertook the editorship
-of the <i>Mannheimer Journal</i>, in which he boldly fought the battles
-of political and social reform. He was several times condemned to
-imprisonment, as well<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span> as to payment of fines; but, undeterred by such
-persecution, the champion of the oppressed succeeded in worsting most
-of his powerful enemies.</p>
-
-<p>In the beginning of 1847 he founded a weekly periodical, the <i>Deutscher
-Zuschauer</i> (“The German Spectator”), in which, without actually
-adopting the invidious names, he maintained in their fullest extent
-the principles of Freedom and Fraternity; and it was chiefly by the
-efforts of Struve that the great popular demonstration at Oldenberg of
-September 12, 1847, took place, which formulated what was afterwards
-known as the “Demands of the People.” The public meeting, assembled
-at the same town March 9, 1848, which was attended by 25,000 persons,
-and which, without committing itself to the adoption of the term
-“republican,” yet proclaimed the inherent Rights of the People, was
-also mainly the work of the indefatigable Struve. He took part, too, in
-the opening of the Parliament at Frankfurt. His principal production
-at this time was <i>Grundzüge der Staats-Wischenschaft</i> (“Outlines of
-Political Science”). This book, inspired by the movement for freedom
-which was then agitating, but, as it proved, for the most part
-ineffectually, a large part of Europe, is not without significance
-in the education of the community for higher political conceptions.
-Struve and F. Hecker took a leading part in the democratic movements
-in Baden. These attempts failing, after a short residence in Paris,
-he settled near Basel (Basle). There he published his <i>Grundrechte
-des Deutschen Volkes</i> (“Fundamental Rights of the German People”),
-and, in association with Heinzen, a <i>Plan für Revolutionierung und
-Republikanisierung Deutschlands</i>. The earnest and noble convictions
-apparent in all the writings of the author, and the unmistakable purity
-of his aims, forced from the more candid of the opponents of his
-political creed recognition and high respect. Nevertheless, he narrowly
-escaped legal assassination and the <i>fusillades</i> of the Kriegsgericht
-or Military Tribunal.</p>
-
-<p>Later the unsuccessful lover of his country sought refuge in England,
-and from thence proceeded to the United States (1850). Upon the
-breaking out of the desperate struggle between the North and South, he
-threw in his lot with the former, and took part in several battles. In
-America he wrote his historical work <i>Weltgeschichte</i> (12 vols.) and,
-amongst others, <i>Abeilard und Heloise</i>. In 1861 he returned to Europe,
-and, at different periods, wrote two of his most important books,
-<i>Pflanzenkost, die Grundlage einer Neuen Weltanschauung</i> (“Vegetable
-Diet, the Foundation of a New World-View”), and <i>Das Seelenleben,
-oder die Naturgeschichte des Menschen</i> (“The Spiritual Life, or the
-Natural History of Man”), in both of which he earnestly insists, not
-only upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span> the vast and incalculable suffering inflicted, in the most
-barbarous manner, upon the victims of the <i>Table</i>, but, further, upon
-the demoralising influence of living by pain and slaughter:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The thoughts and feelings which the food we partake of provokes
-are not remarked in common life, but they, nevertheless, have their
-significance. A man who daily sees Cows and Calves slaughtered,
-or who kills them himself, Hogs ‘stuck,’ Hens plucked, or Geese
-roasted alive, &amp;c., cannot possibly retain any true feeling for
-the sufferings of his own species. He becomes hardened to them by
-witnessing the struggles of other animals as they are being driven
-by the butcher, the groans of the dying Ox, or the screams of the
-bleeding Hog, with indifference.... Nay, he may come even to find
-a devilish pleasure in seeing beings tortured and killed, or in
-actually slaughtering them himself....</p>
-
-<p>“But even those who take no part in killing, nay, do not even see
-it, are conscious that the flesh-dishes upon their tables come from
-the Shambles, and that <i>their feasting and the suffering of others
-are in intimate connexion</i>. Doubtless, the majority of flesh-eaters
-do not reflect upon the manner in which this food comes to them,
-but this thoughtlessness, far from being a virtue, is the parent of
-many vices.... How very different are the thoughts and sentiments
-produced by the non-flesh diet!”<a name="FNanchor_272_272" id="FNanchor_272_272"></a><a href="#Footnote_272_272" class="fnanchor">[272]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>The last period of his life was passed in Wien (Vienna), and in that
-city his beneficently-active career closed in August, 1870. His last
-broken words to his wife, some hours before his end, were, “I must
-leave the world ... this war ... this conflict!” With the life of
-Gustav Struve was extinguished that of one of the noblest soldiers of
-the Cross of Humanity. His memory will always be held in high honour
-wherever justice, philanthropy, and humane feeling are in esteem.</p>
-
-<p>In <i>Mandaras’ Wanderungen</i>, of a different inspiration from that of
-ordinary fiction, and which is full of refinement of thought and
-feeling, are vividly represented the repugnance of a cultivated Hindu
-when brought, for the first time, into contact with the barbarisms of
-European civilisation. To few of our English readers, it is presumable,
-is this charming story known; and an outline of its principal incidents
-will not be supererogatory here.</p>
-
-<p>The hero, a young Hindu, whose home is in one of the secluded
-valleys of the Himalaya, urged by the solicitude of the father of
-his betrothed, who wishes to prove him by contact with so different
-a world, sets out on a course of travel in Europe. The story opens
-with the arrival of his ship at Leftheim (Livorno) on the Italian
-coast. Mandaras has no sooner landed than he is accosted by two
-clerics (<i>ordensgeistliche</i>), who wish to acquire the honour and
-glory of making a convert. But, unhappily for their success, like his
-predecessor Amabed, he had already<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span> on his voyage discovered that the
-religion of the people, among whom he was destined to reside, did not
-exclude certain horrible barbarisms hitherto unknown to him in his own
-unchristian land:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“While still on board ship I had been startled when I saw the rest
-of the passengers feeding on the flesh of animals. ‘By what right,’
-I asked them, ‘do you kill other animals to feed upon their flesh?’
-They could not answer, but they continued to eat their salted
-flesh as much as ever. For my part, I would have rather died than
-have eaten a piece of it. But now it is far worse. I can pass
-through no street in which there are not poor slaughtered animals,
-hung up either entire or cut into pieces. Every moment I hear the
-cries of agony and of alarm of the victims whom they are driving
-to the slaughter-house,&mdash;see their struggles against the murderous
-knife of the butcher. Ever and again I ask of one or other of the
-men who surround me, <i>by what right</i> they kill them and devour
-their flesh; but if I receive an answer, it is returned in phrases
-which mean nothing or in repulsive laughter.”</p></div>
-
-<p>In fact the Hindu traveller had been but a brief space of time in
-Christian lands when he finds himself, almost unconsciously, in the
-position of a <i>catechist</i> rather than of a <i>catechumen</i>. One day,
-for example, he finds himself in the midst of a vast crowd, of all
-classes, hurrying to some spectacle. Inquiring the cause of so vast an
-assemblage, he learns that some persons are to be put to death with
-all the frightful circumstances of public executions. After travelling
-through a great part of Germany, he fixes his residence, for the
-purpose of study, in the University of Lindenberg. In the society of
-that place he meets with a young girl, Leonora, the daughter of a
-Secretary of Legation, who engages his admiration by her exceptional
-culture and refinement of mind. On the occasion of an excursion of
-a party of her father’s visitors, of some days, to an island on the
-neighbouring coast, the first discussion on humane dietetics takes
-place, when, being asked the reason of his <i>eccentricity</i>, he appeals
-to the ladies of the party, believing that he shall have at least
-<i>their</i> sympathy with the principles he lays down:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“From you, ladies, doubtless I shall meet with approval. Tell
-me, could you, <i>with your own hands</i>, kill to-day a gentle Lamb,
-a soft Dove, with whom perhaps you yesterday were playing? You
-answer&mdash;No? You dare not say you could. If you were to say yes,
-you would, indeed, betray a hard heart. But why could you not? Why
-did it cause you anguish, when you saw a defenceless animal driven
-to slaughter? Because you felt, <i>in your inmost soul</i>, that it is
-wrong, that it is unjust to kill a defenceless and innocent being!
-With quite other feelings would you look on the death of a Tiger
-that attacks men, than on that of a Lamb who has done harm to no
-one. To the one action attaches, naturally, justice; to the other,
-injustice. Follow the inner promptings of your heart,&mdash;no longer
-sanction the slaughter of innocent beings by feeding on their
-bodies (<i>beförden Sie nicht deren Tödtung dadurch dass Sie ihr
-Fleisch essen</i>).”</p></div>
-
-<p>This exhortation, to his surprise, was received by all “the softer sex”
-with coldness, and even with signs of impatience, excepting Leonora,
-who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span> acknowledged the force of his appeal and promised to the best
-of her power to follow his example. Pleased and encouraged by her
-approval, he proceeds:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Assuredly it will not repent you to have formed this resolution.
-The man who, with firmly-grounded habits, denies himself something
-which lies in his power, to spare pain and death to living and
-sentient beings, must become milder and more loving. The man who
-steels himself against the feeling of compassion for the lower
-animals, will be more or less hard towards his own species; while
-he who shrinks from giving pain to other beings, will so much the
-more shrink from inflicting it upon his fellow men.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Leonora, however, was a rare exception in his experience; and the more
-he saw of Christian customs, the less did he feel disposed to change
-his religion, which, by the way, was of an unexceptionable kind. Some
-time before his leaving Lindenberg, the secretary’s wife gave a dinner
-in his honour, which, in compliment to her guest, was without any
-flesh-dish. As a matter of course, the conversation soon turned upon
-Dietetics; and one of the guests, a cleric, challenged the Hindu to
-defend his principles. Mandaras had scarcely laid down the cardinal
-article of his creed as a fundamental principle in Ethics&mdash;that it is
-unjust to inflict suffering upon a living and sensitive being, which
-(as he insists) cannot be called in question <i>without shaking the very
-foundations of Morality</i> (<i>welcher nicht die Sittenlehre in ihren
-Fundamenten erschüttern will</i>)&mdash;when opponents arise on all sides of
-him. A doctor of medicine led the opposition, confidently affirming
-that the human frame itself proved men to be intended for flesh-eating.
-Mandaras replied that:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It seemed to him, on the contrary, that it is the bodily frame of
-man that especially declares <i>against</i> flesh-eating. The Tiger,
-the Lion, in short, all flesh-eating animals seized their prey,
-running, swimming, or flying, and tore it in pieces with their
-teeth or talons, devouring it there and then upon the spot. Man
-cannot catch other animals in this way, or tear them in pieces, and
-devour them as they are.... Besides he has higher, and not merely
-animal, impulses. The latter lead him to gluttony, intemperance,
-and many other vices. Providence has given him reason to prove what
-is right and what wrong, and power of will to avoid what he has
-discovered to be wrong. The doctor, however, in place of admitting
-this argument, grew all the warmer. ‘In all Nature,’ said he, ‘one
-sees how the lower existence is serviceable to the higher. As man
-does, so do other animals seize upon the weaker, and the weakest
-upon plants, &amp;c.’”</p></div>
-
-<p>To this the Hindu philosopher in vain replies, <i>that</i> the sphere of
-man, is <i>wider</i>, and ought therefore to be <i>higher</i> than that of other
-animals, for the larger the circle in which a being can freely move,
-the greater is the possible degree of his perfection; <i>that</i>, if we
-are to place ourselves on the plane of the carnivora in one point,
-why not in all, and recognise also treachery, fierceness, and murder
-in general, as proper to man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span> <i>that</i> the different character of the
-Tiger, the Hyæna, the Wolf on the one side, and of the Elephant, the
-Camel, the Horse on the other, instruct us as to the mighty influence
-of food upon the disposition, and certainly not to the advantage of
-the flesh-eaters; <i>that</i> man is to strive not after the lower but the
-higher character, &amp;c., &amp;c. To this the hostess replies: “This may
-be all very beautiful and good, but how is the housekeeper to be so
-skilful as to provide for all her guests, if she is to withhold from
-them flesh dishes?” “Exactly as our housekeepers do in the Himalayan
-valley&mdash;exactly as our hostess does to-day,” rejoins Mandaras. He
-alleges many other arguments, and in particular the high degree
-of reasoning faculty, and even of moral feeling, exhibited by the
-miserable slaves of human tyranny. Various are the objections raised,
-which, it is needless to say, are successfully overthrown by the
-champion of Innocence, and the company disperse after a prolonged
-discussion.</p>
-
-<p>The second division of the story takes us to the Valley of Suty, the
-Himalayan home of Mandaras, and introduces us to his amiable family.
-A young German, travelling in that region, chances to meet with the
-father of Urwasi (Mandaras’s betrothed), whom he finds bowed down
-with grief for the double loss of his daughter, who had pined away in
-the protracted absence of her lover and succumbed to the sickness of
-hope deferred, and of his destined son-in-law, who, upon his return
-to claim his mistress, had fallen (as it appeared) into a death-swoon
-at the shock of the terrible news awaiting him. The old man conducts
-the stranger to the scene of mourning, where Damajanti, the sister
-of Mandaras, with her friend Sunanda, is engaged in weaving garlands
-of flowers to deck the bier of her beloved brother. An interesting
-conversation follows between the European stranger and the Hindu
-ladies, who are worthy representatives of their countrywoman,
-Sakuntalà.<a name="FNanchor_273_273" id="FNanchor_273_273"></a><a href="#Footnote_273_273" class="fnanchor">[273]</a> Accidentally they discover that he is a flesh-eater.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Sunanda</i>: Is it possible that you really belong to those men who
-think it lawful to kill other beings to feed upon their bleeding
-limbs?</p>
-
-<p><i>Theobald</i>: In my country it is the ordinary custom. Do you not, in
-your country, use such food?</p>
-
-<p><i>Damajanti</i>: Can you ask? Have not other animals feeling? Do they
-not enjoy their existence?</p>
-
-<p><i>Theobald</i>: Certainly; but they are so much below us, that there
-can be no <i>reciprocity</i> of duties between us.</p>
-
-<p><i>Damajanti</i>: The higher we stand in relation to other animals,
-the more are we bound to disregard none of the eternal laws of
-Morality, and, in particular, that of Love. Hateful is it, at all
-events, to inflict pain upon an innocent being capable of feeling
-pain. Or do you consider it permissible to strike a dog, to witness
-the trembling of his limbs, and to hear his cries?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><i>Theobald</i>: By no means. I hold, also, that it is wrong to torture
-them, because we ought to feel no pleasure in the sufferings of
-other animals.</p>
-
-<p><i>Damajanti</i>: We ought to feel no <i>pleasure</i>! That is very cold
-reasoning. Detestation&mdash;disgust, rather, is the sensation we ought
-to have. Where this sentiment is real, there can be no desire
-to profit by the sufferings of others. Yet, where the feelings
-of disgust for what is bad are weaker than inclination to the
-self-indulgence which it promises, there is no possibility of their
-triumphing. For <i>gain</i> the butcher slaughters the victim; for
-<i>horrible luxury</i> other men participate in this murder, while they
-devour the pieces of flesh, in which, a few moments before, the
-blood was still flowing, the nerves yet quivering, the life still
-breathing!</p>
-
-<p><i>Theobald</i>: I admit it: but all this is new to me. From childhood
-upwards I have been accustomed to see animals driven to the
-slaughter-house. It gave me no pleasure rather it was a positively
-displeasing spectacle; but I did not think about it&mdash;whether we
-have the right to slaughter for food, because I had never heard
-doubt expressed on the matter.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunanda</i>: Ah! Now I can well believe that the men in your country
-<i>must</i> be hard and cold. Every softer feeling <i>must</i> be hardened,
-every tenderer one be dulled in the daily scenes of murder which
-they have before their eyes, by the blood which they shed daily,
-which they taste daily. Happy am I that I live far from your world.
-A thousand times would I rather endure death than live in so
-horrible a land.</p>
-
-<p><i>Damajanti</i>: To me, too, residence in such a land would be torture.
-Yet, were I a man, had I the power of eloquence, I would go from
-village to village, from town to town, and vehemently denounce
-such horrors. I should think that I had achieved more than the
-founders of all religions, if I should succeed in inspiring men
-with sympathy for their fellow-beings. What is religious belief,
-if it tolerates this murder, or rather sanctions it? What is all
-Belief without Love? And what is a Love <i>that excludes from its
-embrace the infinitely larger part of living beings</i>? Sweet and
-fair indeed is it to live in a valley which harbours only mild and
-loving people; but it is greater, and worthier of the high destiny
-of human life, to battle amongst the Bad for Goodness, to contend
-for the Light amongst the prisoners of Darkness. What is Life
-without Doing? We women, indeed, cannot, and dare not ourselves
-venture forth into the wild surge of rough and coarse men; but it
-is our business at least to incite to all that is True, Beautiful,
-and Good; to have regard for no man who is not ardent for what is
-noble, to accept none of them who does not come before us adorned
-with the ornament of worthy actions (der nicht mit dem Schmucke
-würdigen Thaten vor uns tritt).</p></div>
-
-<p>This eloquent discourse takes place while the three friends are
-watching, during the night, at the bier of the supposed dead. At
-the moment when the last funeral rites are to be performed, equally
-with the spectators we are surprised and pleased at the unexpected
-resuscitation of Mandaras, who, it appeared, had been in a trance,
-from which at the critical moment he awoke. With what transports he
-is welcomed back from the confines of the shadow-land, may easily be
-divined. For some time they live together in uninterrupted happiness;
-the young German, who had adopted their simple mode of living,
-remaining with them. In the intervals of pleasing labours in the
-field and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span> the garden, they pass their hours of recreation in refined
-intellectual discourse and speculation, the younger ones deriving
-instruction from the experienced wisdom of the venerable sage. The
-conversation often turns upon the relations between the human and
-non-human races; and, in the course of one of his philosophical
-prelections, the old man, with profound insight, declares that “so
-long as other animals continue to be excluded from the circle of Moral
-Existence, in which Rights and Duties are recognised, so long is there
-no step forward in Morality to be expected. So long as men continue
-to support their lives upon bodies essentially like to their own,
-without misgiving and without remorse, so long will they be fast bound
-by blood-stained fetters (<i>mit blutgetränkten Fesseln</i>) to the lower
-planes of existence.”</p>
-
-<p>At length the sorrowful day of separation arrives. It is decided that
-Mandaras should return to Germany, a wider sphere of useful action than
-the Himalayan valleys presented; and an additional reason is found
-in the discovery that his mother herself had been German. With much
-painful reluctance in parting from beloved friends, he recognises the
-force of their arguments, and once more leaves his peaceful home for
-the turmoil of European cities. After suffering shipwreck, in which
-he rescues a mother and child&mdash;at the expense of what he had held
-as his most precious possession, a casket of relics of his beloved
-Urwasi&mdash;Mandaras lands once again at Livorno. He finds his old friends
-as eager as ever for proselytising “the heathen,” and quite unconscious
-of the need of conversion for themselves. At the death of the aged
-father of Damajanti, she, with her friend Sunanda and Theobald, who
-still remains with them, and (as may have been divined) is the devoted
-lover of the charming Sunanda, determines to leave her ancestral abode
-and join her brother in his adopted German home. When they arrive at
-the appointed place of meeting they are overwhelmed with grief to find
-that he, for whose sake so long a pilgrimage had been undertaken, had
-been taken from them for ever. Having lost his passport he had been
-arrested on suspicion and imprisoned. In confinement he had shrunk from
-the European flesh-dishes, and, unsupplied with proper nourishment or a
-sufficiency of it, had died (in the true sense of the word) a <i>martyr</i>,
-to the last, to his moral principles. With great difficulty his final
-words in writing are discovered, and these, in the form of letters to
-his sister, declare his unshaken faith and hopes for the future of the
-World. There are, also, found short poems, which are published at the
-end of his Memoirs, and are fully worthy of the refined mind of the
-author of <i>Mandaras</i>. Thus ends a romance which, for beauty of idea and
-sentiment, may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span> be classed with the <i>Aventures de Télémaque</i> of Fénélon
-and, still more fitly, with the <i>Paul et Virginie</i> of St. Pierre.<a name="FNanchor_274_274" id="FNanchor_274_274"></a><a href="#Footnote_274_274" class="fnanchor">[274]</a></p>
-
-<p>The space we have been tempted to give to <i>Mandaras’s Wanderings</i>
-precludes more than one or two further extracts from Struve’s admirable
-writings. His <i>Pflanzenkost</i>, perhaps the best known, as it is his
-most complete, exposition of his views on Humane Dietetics, appeared
-in the year 1869. In it he examines Vegetarianism in all its varied
-aspects&mdash;in regard to Sociology, Education, Justice, Theology, Art and
-Science, Natural Economy, Health, War and Peace, the practical and
-real Materialism of the Age, Health, Refinement of Life, &amp;c. From the
-section which considers the Vegetable Diet in its relations to National
-Economy we quote the following just reflections:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Every step from a lower condition to a higher is bound up with
-certain difficulties. This is especially the case when it is a
-question of shaking off habits strengthened by numbers and length
-of time. Had the human race, however, not the power to do so,
-then the step from Paganism to Christianity, from predatory life
-to tillage, in particular from savage barbarousness to a certain
-stage in civilisation, would have been impossible. All these steps
-brought many struggles in their train, which to many thousands
-produced some hardships (<i>Schaden</i>); to untold millions, however,
-incalculable benefits. So, also, the steps onward from Flesh-Diet
-cannot be established without some disturbances. The great majority
-of men hold fast to old prejudices. They struggle, not seldom with
-senseless rage, against enlightenment and reason, and a century
-often passes away before a new idea has forced the way for the
-spread of new blessings.</p>
-
-<p>“Therefore, we need not wonder if we, also, who protest and stand
-out against the evils of Flesh-Eating, and proclaim the advantages
-of the Vegetable Diet, find violent opponents. The gain which would
-accrue to the whole race of man by the acceptance of that diet is,
-however, so great and so evidently destined, that our final victory
-is certain....</p>
-
-<p>“Doubtless the Political Economy of our days will be shaken to its
-foundations by the step from the flesh to the non-flesh diet; but
-this was also the case when the nomads began to practise tillage,
-and the hunters found no more <i>game</i>. The relics of certain
-barbarisms must be shaken off. All barbarians, or semi-barbarians,
-will struggle desperately against this with their selfish
-coarseness (<i>eigenthümlichen Rohheit</i>). But the result will be that
-the soil which, under the influence of the Flesh-Régime supported
-one man only, will, with the unfettered advantages of the Vegetable
-Diet support five human beings. Liebig, even, recognised so much
-as this&mdash;that the Flesh-Diet is twelve times more costly than the
-Non-Flesh.”<a name="FNanchor_275_275" id="FNanchor_275_275"></a><a href="#Footnote_275_275" class="fnanchor">[275]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Struve’s <i>Seelenleben</i>,<a name="FNanchor_276_276" id="FNanchor_276_276"></a><a href="#Footnote_276_276" class="fnanchor">[276]</a> published in the same year with the
-<i>Pflanzenkost</i>, and his last important work, forms a sort of <i>résumé</i>
-of his opinions already given to the world, and is, therefore, a more
-comprehensive exposition of his opinions on Sociology and Ethics than
-is found in his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span> earlier writings. It is full of the truest philosophy
-on the Natural History of Man, inspired by the truest refinement of
-soul. In the section entitled <i>Moral</i> he well exposes the futility
-of hap-hazard speeches, meaning nothing, which, vaguely and in an
-indefinite manner addressed to the child, are allowed to do duty for
-<i>practical</i> moral teaching:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“They tell children, perhaps, that they must not be cruel either
-to ‘Animals’ or to human beings weaker than themselves. But when
-the child goes into the kitchen, he sees Pigeons, Hens, and Geese
-slaughtered and plucked; when he goes into the streets, he sees
-animals hung up with bodies besmeared with blood, feet cut off, and
-heads twisted back. If the child proceeds still further, he comes
-upon the slaughter-house, in which harmless and useful beings of
-all kinds are being slaughtered or strangled. We shall not here
-dwell upon all the barbarisms bound up in the butchery of animals;
-but in the same degree in which men abuse their superior powers, in
-regard to other species, do they usually cause their tyranny to be
-felt by weaker human beings in their power.</p>
-
-<p>“What avails all the fine talk about morality, in contrast with
-<i>acts of barbarism and immorality presented to them on all sides</i>?</p>
-
-<p>“It is no proof of an exalted morality when a man acts justly
-towards a person stronger than himself, who can injure him.
-<i>He alone acts justly who fulfils his obligatory duties
-(Verpflichtungen) in regard to the weaker.</i> ... He, who has
-no <i>human</i> persons under him, at least can strike his horse,
-barbarously drive his calf, and cudgel his dog. The relations
-of men to the inferior species are so full of significance, and
-exercise so mighty an influence upon the development of human
-character, that Morality wants a wider province that shall embrace
-those beings within it.”</p></div>
-
-<p>In the chapter devoted especially to Food and Drinks (<i>Speise und
-Trank</i>) Struve warns those whom it most concerns that:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The monstrous evils and abuses, which gradually and stealthily
-have invaded our daily foods and drinks, have now reached to such a
-pitch that they can no longer be winked at. He who desires to work
-for the improvement of the human species, for the elevation of the
-human soul, and for the invigoration of the human body, dares not
-leave uncontested the general dominant unnaturalness of living.</p>
-
-<p>“With a people struggling for Freedom the Kitchen must be no
-murderous den (<i>Mördergrube</i>); the Larder no den of corruption;
-the Meal no occasion for stupefaction. In despotic states the
-oppressors of the People may intoxicate themselves with spirituous
-drink, and bring disease and feebleness upon themselves with
-unlawful and unwholesome meats. The sooner such men perish (<i>zu
-grunde gehen</i>) the better. But in free states (or in such as are
-striving for Freedom), Simplicity, Temperance, Soberness must be
-the first principles of citizen-life. No people can be free whose
-individual members are still slaves to their own passions.<a name="FNanchor_277_277" id="FNanchor_277_277"></a><a href="#Footnote_277_277" class="fnanchor">[277]</a>
-Man must first free himself from these before he can, <i>with any
-success</i>, make war upon those of his fellow-men.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Weighty words coming from a student of Science and of Human Life.
-Still weightier coming from one who had devoted so large a part of his
-existence to assist, and had taken so active a part in, the struggles
-of the people for Justice and Freedom.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XLIX_DAUMER">XLIX.<br />
-<span class="s5">DAUMER. 1800&ndash;1875.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">O<span class="smaller">NE</span> of the earliest pioneers of the New Reformation in Germany, chiefly
-from what may be termed the religious-philosophical standpoint, and one
-whose useful learning was equalled only by his true conception of the
-significance of the religious sentiment, was born at Nürnberg, in the
-last year of the eighteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>Of a naturally feeble constitution, unable to mix in the ordinary
-amusements of school-life, he found ample leisure for literature and
-for music, to which especially he was devoted. Much of his time, also,
-was given to theological, and, in particular, biblical reading, so that
-his mother unhesitatingly fixed upon the clerical profession as his
-future career. He attended the Gymnasium of his native town, at that
-time under the direction of Hegel, who exercised a permanent influence
-upon his mental development. In the eighteenth year of his age he
-proceeded to the University of Erlangen for the study of theology.
-Doubts, however, began to disturb his contentment with orthodoxy;
-and, more and more dissatisfied with its systems, the young student
-relinquished the course of life for which he had believed himself
-destined; and, after attending the lectures of Schelling, he went
-to Leipsic to apply himself wholly to philology. Having completed
-the usual course of study, he was appointed teacher, and afterwards
-Professor of Latin in the Nürnberg Gymnasium (1827). Unpleasant
-relations with the Rector of the schools (whose orthodoxy seems to have
-been less questionable than his amiability), and also, in part, his
-feeble health, obliged him to resign this post, and from that time he
-gave himself up exclusively to literary occupations, which were, for
-the most part, in the domain of philosophic theology.</p>
-
-<p>During his professoriate Daumer had written his <i>Urgeschichte des
-Menschengeistes</i> (“Primitive History of the Human Mind”), which was
-succeeded, at an interval of some years, by his <i>Andeutungen eines
-Systems Speculativer Philosophie</i> (“Intimations of a System of
-Speculative Philosophy”), in which he attempted to found and formulate
-a philosophic Theism. The unreality of the professions and trifling of
-those who had most reputation in the “religious” world, estranged him
-more and more from the prevalent interpretations of Christianity.</p>
-
-<p>His <i>Philosophie, Religion, und Alterthum</i> appeared in 1833. Two
-years later his <i>Züge zu einer neuen Philosophie der Religion
-and Religionsgeschichte</i> <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>(“Indications for a New Philosophy of
-Religion and History of Religion”). In 1842 was published <i>Der
-Feuer-und-Moloch-Dienst der Hebräer</i> (“The Fire and Moloch-Worship of
-the Hebrews”), and (1847) <i>Die Geheimnisse des Christlichen Alterthums</i>
-(“The Mysteries of Christian Antiquity”), in which he pointed out
-that human sacrifice, and even cannibalism, were connected with the
-old Baal-worship of the Jews, and maintained the newer religion to
-be, in one important respect, not so much a purification of Judaism,
-as an apparently retrograde movement to the still older religionism.
-Besides these and other philosophic writings, Daumer published a free
-translation of the Persian poet Hafiz. <i>Hafiz</i> was followed by <i>Mahomed
-und seine Werke: eine Sammlung Orientalischer Geschichte</i> (“Mahommed
-and his Actions: a Résumé of Oriental History”) 1848; and in 1855 by
-<i>Polydora: ein Weltpoetisches Liederbuch</i> (“Polydora: A Book of Lays
-from the World’s Poetry”).</p>
-
-<p>In his <i>Anthropologismus und Kriticismus</i> (“Anthropology and
-Criticism”), 1844, are many assaults upon the orthodox dietetic
-practices; and in <i>Enthüllungen über Kaspar Hauser</i> (“Revelations
-in regard to Kaspar Hauser”) he displays the noxious influences of
-flesh-eating upon a “wild boy of the woods,” who had been deserted or
-lost by his parents in his childhood, and who had lived an entirely
-natural life in the forests, eating only wild fruits. When he had
-been reclaimed from the <i>savage</i> state, his guardians, it seems,
-thought that the most effectual method of “civilising” their charge
-was to force him to discard fruits for flesh. The result, as shown by
-Professor Daumer, who watched the case with the greatest interest,
-was not reassuring for the orthodox believers. The inveteracy of the
-practice of kreophagy, which blinds men to its essential barbarism, as
-well as its anti-ethical, anti-humanising influences, is eloquently
-insisted upon:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Among the reforms necessary for the triumph of true refinement and
-true morality, which ought to be our earnest aim, is the Dietetic
-one, which, if not the weightiest of all (<i>allerwichtigste</i>), yet,
-undoubtedly, is one of the weightiest. Still is the ‘civilised’
-world stained and defiled by the remains of a horrible barbarity;
-while the old-world revolting practice of slaughter of animals and
-feeding on their corpses still is in so universal vogue, that men
-have not the faculty even of recognising it as such, as otherwise
-they would recognise it; and aversion from this horror provokes
-censure of such eccentricity, and amazement at any manifestion of
-tendency to reform, as at something absurd and ridiculous&mdash;nay,
-arouses even bitterness and hate. To extirpate this barbarism is a
-task, the accomplishment of which lies in the closest relationship
-with the most important principles of humaneness, morality,
-æsthetics, and physiology. A foundation for real culture&mdash;a
-thorough civilising and refining of humanity&mdash;is clearly impossible
-so long as an organised system of murder and of corpse-eating
-(<i>organisirten Mord-und-Leichenfratz System</i>) prevails by
-recognised custom.</p>
-
-<p>“That through a manner of living, of a character so fostering of
-corrupting and putrefying principles, is generated and nourished a
-whole host of diseases which,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span> otherwise, would not exist, is so
-easy to see, that only an extremely obstinate love of flesh-meat
-can blind one to the fact. Before I renounced flesh-eating, which,
-unhappily, I had not the courage to do before I had lived a half
-century, I suffered from time to time from a frightful neuralgia,
-which tortured me many long days and nights. Since I abstained from
-that diet I have rid myself of this evil entirely. Observations of
-other individuals, in respect of the same and other maladies, have
-led me to the same conclusion. Worms, for instance, from which it
-formerly suffered, have entirely disappeared in a child, when it no
-longer was fed upon flesh.</p>
-
-<p>“That through the <i>cadaverous</i> diet, also, very great disadvantages
-are derived to the spiritual and moral nature of men, appears to me
-to be proved by my experience in the case of my former foster-son,
-the celebrated Kaspar Hauser. This young man, maintained during his
-close confinement upon bread and water, for a long time after his
-introduction to the world ate nothing else, and wished for nothing
-else, as food. While he was accustomed, without ill-effect, to take
-bread-sops, oatmeal, and plain chocolate, from flesh, which had
-for him an intolerable odour, he had conceived a violent aversion.
-Living in this way he always looked sufficiently well-nourished,
-he developed a remarkable intelligence, and exhibited an
-extraordinarily refined and tender feeling. He was induced at last,
-but only by the most extraordinary caution and gradually, to take
-the usual flesh-dishes, by being given at first only a few drops
-of flesh-soup in his bread-sops, and, when he had grown in some
-measure accustomed to it, by infusing stronger ingredients, and so
-on.</p>
-
-<p>“There was now manifested the most disastrous change in his mind
-and disposition: learning became for him strangely difficult&mdash;the
-nobility of his nature disappeared into the background, and he
-turned out to be nothing more than a very ordinary individual.
-They ascribed this, of course, to every other cause than to
-his habituation to the flesh-diet. I myself was at that time
-very remote from the opinion of which I now am. From my present
-standpoint, however, I certainly cannot doubt that dietetic
-barbarism is for man of the most essential harm, not alone in a
-physical, but also in an intellectual and moral, point of view,
-however much it may, at present, be taken under the patronage of
-physiologists and physicians&mdash;upon no other ground, apparently,
-than because they themselves, to a melancholy degree, are devotedly
-attached to this inhuman diet. For, alas! man is wont to make use
-of his reason to justify by specious show of reasoning what he
-likes and delights in upon quite other grounds.”<a name="FNanchor_278_278" id="FNanchor_278_278"></a><a href="#Footnote_278_278" class="fnanchor">[278]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Of the rest of the little band of the propagators of the truer
-Philosophy in Germany no longer living&mdash;who resolutely bore aloft
-the standard of the Humanitarian Creed, at a time when it was yet
-more scouted and scorned by the infidels than even at the present
-day&mdash;deserving as they are of everlasting gratitude and remembrance
-at the hands of their more fortunate successors, the limits of this
-book compel us to be content with recording here the witness of one
-or two more only; while for acquaintance with the numerous able and
-eloquent expositions of their living representatives&mdash;of such earnest
-humanitarian and social reformers as Ed. Baltzer, Emil Weilshäuser,
-Theodor Hahn, Dr. Aderholdt, A. von Seefeld, R. Springer, and
-others&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span> we must refer our readers, who wish to form an adequate idea
-of contemporary German <i>anti-kreophagistic</i> literature (as also in
-regard to the equally extensive contemporary English literature of the
-subject), to the original works themselves.</p>
-
-<p>From <i>Der Weg zum Paradiese</i> (“The Way to Paradise”) the following
-extract sufficiently represents the inspiration of the writer, Dr. W.
-Zimmermann:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Men are almost entirely everything that they are by the force of
-custom; and this force, for the most part, resists every other
-power, and remains victorious over all. Reason itself, morality,
-and conscience are submissive to it. In the matter of Dietary
-Reform it displays itself as the enemy <i>par excellence</i> (<i>die
-Hauptmacht</i>). People will fall back upon alleged <i>impossibilities</i>,
-although it is a question only of will and resolution. They will
-reject many of the dietetic propositions hitherto advanced as
-dangerous ‘abstractions,’ although they are founded in history,
-reason, and human destiny; although a brief enquiry ought to
-suffice to convince one of the first importance of the Reform. For
-although one must suppose that all would prefer a long, healthy,
-and happy existence to a feeble, painful life upon the old regimen,
-yet will the majority of human beings think it easier to attempt to
-assuage their torments and pains by uncertain, and, by no means,
-unhazardous medicine, rather than to remove them by obedience to
-Nature’s laws. As it is with most of the highest truths, so is
-it especially with Dietary Reform. People will reject it as an
-<i>abstraction</i>, and pronounce it an <i>impossibility</i>. In the future,
-however, by the greater number of the higher minds&mdash;for such a
-sacrifice of the lower and unnatural appetite we dare not expect
-from the ordinary run of men&mdash;will it be regarded in practice as
-a great blessing. For even now there are many exceptions in the
-social organism for whom Nature’s laws are superior to unreasoning
-impulse; for whom morality is superior to materialistic and mere
-sensual living; for whom duty is superior to superfluity. Besides,
-we are advancing towards a humaner century; and, as the present
-is a humaner time than the century before, so later will there
-be a milder <i>régime</i> than now. Just as, in our days, exposure
-of children, combats of gladiators, torture of prisoners, and
-other atrocities are held to be scandalous and shameful, while
-in earlier times they were thought quite justifiable and right,
-so in the future will the murder of animals, to feed upon their
-corpses, be pronounced to be immoral and indefensible. Already
-(1846) are associations being formed for the protection of these
-beings; already now are there many who, like the nobler spirits
-of antiquity, apply to their diet the watchword of morality (<i>das
-Losungswort der Moral</i>) <i>to do good and to abstain from wrong is
-always, and above everything, possible</i>, and no longer give their
-sanction, by feeding on animals, to the torture and killing of
-innocent sentient beings.</p>
-
-<p>“According to the <i>number</i> of proselytes will the importance of
-the evidence be adjudged. When thousands, practising natural diet,
-are observed in the midst of diseased flesh-eaters to be in the
-enjoyment of a prolonged, happy, old age, without disease and the
-sufferings of a vicious method of life, then will the way be laid
-down for <i>the many</i> to abandon the living upon the corpses of other
-animals.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Of a like inspiration is the indignant protest of another of the
-apostles of Humanitarianism in Germany:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“What humiliation, what disgrace for us all, <i>that it should be
-necessary</i> for one man to exhort other men not to be inhuman and
-irrational towards their fellow-creatures!</p></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Do they recognise, then, no mind, no soul in them&mdash;have they not
-feeling, pleasure in existence, do they not suffer pain? Do their
-voices of joy and sorrow indeed fail to speak to the human heart
-and conscience&mdash;so that they can murder the jubilant lark, in the
-first joy of his spring-time, who ought to warm their hearts with
-sympathy, from delight in bloodshed or for their ‘sport,’ or with
-a horrible insensibility and recklessness only to practise their
-aim in shooting! Is there no <i>soul</i> manifest in the eyes of the
-living or dying animal&mdash;no expression of suffering in the eye of
-a deer or stag hunted to death&mdash;nothing which accuses them of
-murder before the avenging Eternal Justice?... Are the souls of
-all other animals but man mortal, or are they essential in their
-organisation? Does the world-idea (<i>Welt-Idee</i>) pertain to them
-also&mdash;the soul of nature&mdash;a particle of the Divine Spirit? I know
-not; but I feel, and every reasonable man feels like me, it is in
-miserable, intolerable contradiction with our human nature, with
-our conscience, with our reason, with all our talk of humanity,
-destiny, nobility; it is in frightful (<i>himmelschreinder</i>)
-contradiction with our poetry and philosophy, with our nature and
-with our (pretended) love of nature, with our religion, with our
-teachings about <i>benevolent design</i>&mdash;that we bring into existence
-merely to kill, to maintain our own life by the destruction of
-other life.... It is a frightful wrong that other species are
-tortured, worried, flayed, and devoured by us, in spite of the fact
-that we are not obliged to this by necessity; while in sinning
-against the defenceless and helpless, just claimants as they are
-upon our reasonable conscience and upon our compassion, we succeed
-only in brutalising ourselves. This, besides, is quite certain,
-that man has no real pity and compassion for his own species, so
-long as he is pitiless towards other races of beings.”<a name="FNanchor_279_279" id="FNanchor_279_279"></a><a href="#Footnote_279_279" class="fnanchor">[279]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="L_SCHOPENHAUER">L.<br />
-<span class="s5">SCHOPENHAUER. 1788&ndash;1860.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">T<span class="smaller">HE</span> chief interpreter of Buddhistic ideas in Europe, and whose bias
-in this direction is exercising so remarkable an influence upon
-contemporaneous thought, in Germany in particular, was born at
-Dantzig, the son of a wealthy merchant of that city. His mother,
-herself distinguished in literature, was often the centre of the most
-eminent persons of the day at Weimar. At a very early age devoted to
-the philosophies of Plato and of Kant, Arthur Schopenhauer studied
-at the Universities of Göttingen and Berlin. His course of studies,
-both scientific and literary, was, even for a German, unusually severe
-and searching; and his acquirements were encyclopædic in their range.
-Unlike most German students, it is worth noting, he was addicted
-neither to beer-drinking nor to duelling.</p>
-
-<p>His most important writings are: <i>Die Welt als Wille und Vorstellung</i>
-(“The World as Will and Representation”), 2 vols; <i>Die Grund<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>probleme
-der Ethik</i> (“The Ground-Problems of Ethics”); <i>Parerga und
-Paralipomena</i> (“Incidental and Neglected Subjects”), 2 vols; <i>Das
-Fundament der Moral</i> (“The Foundation of Morality”), 1840.</p>
-
-<p>The peculiar characteristics of his philosophy are uncompromising
-opposition to the hollow doctrines of easy-going Optimism&mdash;an
-antagonism which, indeed, assumes the form of an exaggerated
-Pessimism&mdash;and (what especially distinguishes him from most
-systematisers and formularisers of morals) his making <i>Compassion</i> the
-principal, and, indeed, the exclusive source of moral action; and it
-is his vindication of the <i>rights</i> of the subject species, in marked
-contrast with the silence, or even positive depreciation and contempt
-for them, on the part of ordinary moralists, which will always entitle
-him to take exceptionally high rank among reformers of Ethical systems,
-in spite of his exaggerations and short-comings in other respects.
-Dr. David Strauss (<i>Der Alte und der Neue Glaube</i>) thus writes of his
-claims on these grounds:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Criminal history shows us how many torturers of men, and
-murderers, have first been torturers of the lower animals. <i>The
-manner in which a nation, in the aggregate, treats the other
-species, is one chief measure of its real civilisation.</i> The
-Latin races, as we know, come forth badly from this examination;
-we Germans not half well enough. Buddhism has done more, in this
-direction, than Christianity; and Schopenhauer more than all
-ancient and modern philosophers together. The warm sympathy with
-sentient nature, which pervades all the writings of Schopenhauer,
-is one of the most pleasing aspects of his thoroughly intellectual,
-though often unhealthy and unprofitable, philosophy.”</p></div>
-
-<p>This, it is necessary to add, plainly is written in ignorance of the
-numerous writings of earlier and contemporaneous humanitarian dietists,
-to whom, of course, is due a higher, because more consistent and more
-logical, position than even Schopenhauer can claim, who, from ignorance
-of the physical and moral arguments of anti-kreophagy (it reasonably
-may be presumed), at the same time that he established the rights of
-the subject species on the firmest basis, and included them as an
-essential part of any moral code, yet, with a strange, but too common,
-inconsistency, did not perceive that to hand over the Cow, the Ox, or
-the Sheep, &amp;c., to the butcher, is in most flagrant violation of his
-own ethical standard. While, then, the author of the <i>Foundation of
-Morality</i> cannot claim the highest place, absolutely; outside the ranks
-of anti-kreophagistic writers, a high rank may properly be conceded
-to him as one of the most eminent moralists who, short of entire
-emancipation, have done most to vindicate the position of the innocent
-non-human races.<a name="FNanchor_280_280" id="FNanchor_280_280"></a><a href="#Footnote_280_280" class="fnanchor">[280]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span> Especially has he denounced the horrible outrage
-upon the commonest principles of justice by the pseudo-scientific
-torturers of the physiological laboratory.<a name="FNanchor_281_281" id="FNanchor_281_281"></a><a href="#Footnote_281_281" class="fnanchor">[281]</a> It is thus that he lays
-the foundations of morality:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“A Pity, without limits, which unites us with all living
-beings&mdash;<i>in that</i> we have the most solid, the surest guarantee
-of morality. <i>With that</i> there is no need of casuistry. Whoso
-possesses it will be quite incapable of causing harm or loss to
-any one, of doing violence to any one, of doing ill in any way.
-But rather he will have for all long-suffering, he will aid the
-helpless with all his powers, and each one of his actions will
-be marked with the stamp of justice and of love. Try to affirm:
-‘this man is virtuous, only he knows no pity,’ or rather: ‘he is
-an unjust and wicked man: nevertheless, he is compassionate.’ The
-contradiction is patent to everyone. Each one to his taste: but for
-myself, I know no more beautiful prayer than that which the Hindus,
-of old used in closing their public spectacles (just as the English
-of to-day end with a prayer for their king). They said: ‘May All
-that have life be delivered from suffering!’”</p></div>
-
-<p>Enforcing his teaching that the principles and mainspring of all moral
-action must be justice and love, Schopenhauer maintains that the real
-influence of these first of virtues is tested, especially, by the
-conduct of men to other animals:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Another proof that the moral motive, here proposed, is, in fact,
-the true one, is, that in accordance with it the lower animals
-themselves are protected. The unpardonable forgetfulness in which
-they have been iniquitously left hitherto by all the [popular]
-moralists of Europe is well known. It is pretended that the
-[so-called] beasts have no rights. They persuade themselves that
-our conduct in regard to them has nothing to do with morals, or (to
-speak in the language of their morality) that we have no duties
-towards ‘animals:’ a doctrine revolting, gross, and barbarous,
-peculiar to the west, and which has its root in Judaism. In
-Philosophy, however, it is made to rest upon a hypothesis, admitted
-in the face of evidence itself, of an absolute difference between
-man and ‘beast.’ It is Descartes who has proclaimed it in the
-clearest and most decisive manner: and, in fact, it was a necessary
-consequence of his errors. The Cartesian-Leibnitzian-Wolfian
-philosophy, with the assistance of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span> entirely abstract notions, had
-built up the ‘rational psychology,’ and constructed an immortal
-<i>anima rationalis</i>: but, visibly, the world of ‘beasts,’ with its
-very natural claims, stood up against this exclusive monopoly&mdash;this
-<i>brevet</i> of immortality decreed to man alone&mdash;and, silently,
-Nature did what she always does in such cases&mdash;she protested. Our
-philosophers, feeling their scientific conscience quite disturbed,
-were forced to attempt to consolidate their ‘rational psychology’
-by the aid of empiricism. They, therefore, set themselves to work
-to hollow out between man and ‘beast’ an enormous abyss, of an
-immeasurable width; by this they would wish to prove to us, in
-contempt of evidence, an impassable difference. It was at all these
-efforts that Boileau already laughed:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">‘Les animaux ont-ils des Universités?</div>
- <div class="verse">Voit-on fleurir chez eux les Quatre Facultés?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In accordance with this theory, ‘beasts’ would have finished with
-no longer knowing how to distinguish themselves from the external
-world, with having no more consciousness of their own existence
-than of mine. Against these intolerable assertions one remedy only
-was needed. Cast a single glance at an animal, even the smallest,
-the lowest in intelligence. See the unbounded <i>egoism</i> of which
-it is possessed. It is enough to convince you that ‘beasts’ have
-thorough consciousness of their <i>ego</i>, and oppose it to the
-world&mdash;to the <i>non-ego</i>. If a Cartesian found himself in the
-claws of a Tiger, he would learn, and in the most evident way
-possible, whether the Tiger can distinguish between the <i>ego</i> and
-the <i>non-ego</i>. To these sophisms of the philosophers respond the
-sophisms of the people. Such are certain <i>idiotisms</i>, notably those
-of the German, who, for eating, drinking, conception, birth, death,
-corpse (when ‘beasts’ are in question), has special terms; so much
-would he fear to employ the same words as for men. He thus succeeds
-in dissimulating, under this diversity of terms, the perfect
-identity of things.</p>
-
-<p>“The ancient languages knew nothing of this sort of synonymy,
-and they simply called things which are the same by one and the
-same name. These artificial ideas, then, must needs have been
-an invention of the priesthood [<i>prétraille</i>] of Europe, a lot
-of sacrilegious people who knew not by what means to debase, to
-vilipend the eternal essence which lives in the substance of every
-animated being. In this way they have succeeded in establishing
-in Europe those wicked habits of hardness and cruelty towards
-‘beasts,’ which a native of High Asia could not behold without a
-just horror. In English we do not find this infamous invention;
-that is owing, doubtless, to the fact that the Saxons, at the
-moment of the conquest of England, were not yet Christians.
-Nevertheless, the pendent of it is found in this particularity of
-the English language: all the names of animals there are of the
-<i>neuter gender</i>: and, as a consequence, when the name is to be
-represented by the pronoun, they use the neuter <i>it</i>, absolutely as
-for inanimate objects. Nothing is more shocking than this idiom,
-especially when the <i>primates</i> are spoken of&mdash;the Dog, for example,
-the Ape, and others. One cannot fail to recognise here a dishonest
-device (<i>fourberie</i>) of the priests to debase [other] animals
-to the rank of things. The ancient Egyptians, for whom Religion
-was the unique business of life, deposed in the same tombs human
-mummies and those of the Ibis, &amp;c.; but in Europe it would be an
-abomination, a crime, to inter the faithful Dog near the place
-where his master lies; and yet it is upon this tomb sometimes that,
-more faithful and more devoted than man ever was, he has awaited
-death.</p>
-
-<p>“If you wish to know how far the identity between ‘beast’ and
-man extends, nothing will conduct to such knowledge better than
-a little Zoology and Anatomy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span> Yet what are we to say when an
-anatomical bigot is seen at this day (1839) to be labouring to
-establish an absolute, radical, distinction between man and other
-animals; proceeding so far in enmity against true Zoologists&mdash;those
-who, without conspiracy with the priesthoods, without platitude,
-without <i>tartuferie</i>, permit themselves to be conducted by Nature
-and Truth&mdash;as to attack them, to calumniate them!</p>
-
-<p>“Yet this superiority [of man over other mammals of the higher
-species] depends but upon a more ample development of the
-brain&mdash;upon a difference in one part of the body only; this
-difference, besides, being but one of <i>quantity</i>. Yes, man and
-other animals are, both as regards the moral and the physical,
-identical <i>in kind</i>, without speaking of other points of
-comparison. Thus one might well recall to them&mdash;these Judaising
-westerns, these menagerie-keepers, these adorers of ‘reason’&mdash;that
-if <i>their</i> mother has given suck to them, Dogs also have <i>theirs</i>
-to suckle <i>them</i>. Kant fell into this error, which is that of
-his time and of his country: I have already brought the reproach
-against him. The morality of Christianity has no regard for
-‘beasts;’ it is therein a vice, and it is better to avow it than
-to eternise it. We ought to be all the more astonished at it,
-because this morality is in striking accord with the moral codes of
-Brahmanism and of Buddhism.</p>
-
-<p>“Between pity towards ‘beasts’ and goodness of soul there is a
-very close connexion. One might say without hesitation, when
-an individual is wicked in regard to them, that he cannot be a
-<i>good</i> man. One might, also, demonstrate that this pity and the
-social virtues have the same source.... That [better section of
-the] English nation, with its greater delicacy of feeling, we
-see it taking the initiative, and distinguishing itself by its
-unusual compassion towards other species, giving from time to time
-new proofs of it&mdash;this compassion, triumphing over that ‘cold
-superstition’ which, in other respects, degrades the nation, has
-had the strength to force it to fill up the chasm which Religion
-had left in morality. This Chasm is, in fact, the reason why
-in Europe and in N. America, we have need of societies for the
-protection of the lower animals. In Asia the Religions suffice to
-assure to ‘beasts’ aid and protection (?), and there no one thinks
-of Societies of that kind. Nevertheless in Europe, also, from day
-to day [rather by intervals of <i>decades</i>] is being awakened the
-feeling of the Rights of the lower animals, in proportion as,
-little by little, disappear, vanish, the strange ideas of man’s
-domination over [other] animals, as if they had been placed in the
-world but for our service and enjoyment, for it is thanks to those
-ideas that they have been treated as <i>Things</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Such are, certainly, the causes of that gross conduct, of that
-absolute want of regard, of which Europeans are guilty towards the
-lower animals; and I have shown the source of those ideas, which is
-in the <i>Old Testament</i>, in section 177 of the second volume of my
-<i>Parerga</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_282_282" id="FNanchor_282_282"></a><a href="#Footnote_282_282" class="fnanchor">[282]</a></p></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>O<span class="smaller">F</span> the many eminent scientists who, in recent times, indirectly have
-affirmed the <i>wantonness</i> of slaughtering for human food, the most
-famous of European Chemists, Justus von Liebig, may seem to demand
-especial notice. <span class="smcap">The</span> founder of the science of Organic
-Chemistry and the method of Organic Analysis (1803&ndash;1873), educated at
-the Universities of Bonn and Erlangen, received his diploma of Doctor
-in Philosophy (physical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span> and mathematical sciences) at the age of
-nineteen. Two years later, chiefly by the influence of Humboldt, he
-was named Professor Extraordinary of Chemistry at Giessen, whither a
-crowd of disciples flocked from all parts of Germany and from England.
-In 1832 he accepted a Chair at Munich. All the Scientific Societies of
-Europe were eager in offering him honorary distinctions.</p>
-
-<p>It is his application of his Special Science to the advancement of
-Agriculture, and his more philosophic, though (it must be added)
-occasionally contradictory views upon the comparative values of Foods,
-which give him his best title to remembrance with posterity. We can
-enumerate only a few of his numerous works: <i>Ueber Theorie und Praxis
-der Landwirthschaft</i> (“Upon the Theory and Practice of Agricultural
-Economy),” Brunswick, 1824, translated into English; <i>Anleitung zur
-Analyse Organische Körper</i> (“Introduction to the Organic Analysis
-of Bodies”), 1837; <i>Die Organische Chemie in ihren Anwendung auf
-Physiologie und Pathologie</i> (“Organic Chemistry in its Relationship
-to Physiology and Pathology”), 1839; “Researches upon Alimentary
-Chemistry,” 1849; <i>Chemische Briefe</i> (“Letters upon Chemistry
-considered in Relation with Industry, Agriculture, and Physiology”),
-1852.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever opinions this eminent German Chemist may have published
-elsewhere inconsistent with the statements below, such inconsistency,
-no more than in the case of Buffon, can weaken the force of his more
-reasonable utterance. Upon the essential ultimate identity of the
-nutritive properties of animal and vegetable substance he thus clearly
-pronounces:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Vegetable fibrine and animal fibrine, vegetable albumen and
-animal albumen, differ at the most (<i>höchstens</i>) in form. If these
-principles in nourishment fail, the nourishment of the animal will
-be cut off; if they obtain them, then the grass-feeding animal gets
-the same principles in his food as those upon which the flesh-eater
-entirely depends. Vegetables produce in their organism the blood
-of all beings. So that when the flesh-eaters consume the blood and
-flesh of the vegetable-eaters, they take to themselves exactly and
-simply the vegetable principles.</p>
-
-<p>“Vegetable Foods, in particular Corn of all kinds, and through
-these Bread, contain as much iron as the flesh of Oxen or as other
-kinds of flesh.</p>
-
-<p>“Certain it is, that of three men, of whom the one has fed upon
-ox-flesh and bread, the other upon bread and cheese, the third
-upon potatoes, each considers it a peculiar hardship from quite
-different points of view; yet in fact the only difference between
-them is the action of the peculiar elements of each food upon the
-brain and nervous system. A Bear, who was kept in a zoological
-garden, displayed, so long as he had bread exclusively for
-nourishment, quite a mild disposition. Two days of feeding with
-flesh made him vicious, aggressive, and even dangerous to his
-attendant. It is well known that the <i>vis irritabilis</i> of the Hog
-becomes so excessive through flesh-eating that he will then attack
-a man.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“The flesh-eating man needs for his support an enormous extent of
-land, wider and more extensive even than the Lion and the Tiger.
-A nation of Hunters in a circumscribed territory is incapable
-of multiplying itself for that reason. The carbon necessary for
-maintaining life must be taken from animals, of whom in the limited
-area there can be only a limited number. These animals collect
-from the plants the elements of their blood and their organs, and
-supply them to the Indians living by the chase, who devour them
-unaccompanied by the substance (<i>stoffen</i>) which during the life
-of the animal maintained the life processes. While the Indian, by
-feeding upon a single animal, might contrive to <i>sustain</i> his life
-and health a certain number of days, he must, in order to gain
-for that time the requisite heat, devour <i>five</i> animals. His food
-contains a superfluity of nitrogenous substance. What is wanting to
-it during the greater portion of the year is the necessary quantity
-of carbon, and hence the inveterate inclination of flesh consumers
-for brandy.</p>
-
-<p>“The practical illustration of agricultural superiority cannot be
-more clearly and profoundly given than in the speech of the North
-American Chief, which the Frenchman Crevecous has reported to us.
-The Chief, recommending to his tribe the practice of Agriculture,
-thus addressed it: ‘Do you not observe that, while we live upon
-Flesh, the white men live [<i>in part</i>] upon Grain? That Flesh takes
-more than thirty months to grow to maturity, and besides is often
-scarce? That each of these miraculous grains of corn, which they
-bury in the earth, gives back to them more than a hundredfold? That
-Flesh has four legs upon which to run away, and we have only two
-to overtake them? That the Corn remains and grows where the white
-men sow it; that the winter, which for us is a time of toilsome
-hunting, is for them the time of rest? Therefore have they so many
-children, and live so much longer than we. I say, then, to each
-one who hears me: Before the trees over our wigwams have died from
-old age, and the maples have ceased to supply us with sugar, the
-race of the corn-planter will have exterminated the race of the
-flesh-eater, because the hunters determine not to sow.’”<a name="FNanchor_283_283" id="FNanchor_283_283"></a><a href="#Footnote_283_283" class="fnanchor">[283]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Liebig’s views as to the mischievous effects of the propensity of
-farmers, and of so-called agriculturists, to convert arable into
-pasture land are sufficiently well known.<a name="FNanchor_284_284" id="FNanchor_284_284"></a><a href="#Footnote_284_284" class="fnanchor">[284]</a></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX">APPENDIX.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3 id="Ia_HESIOD">I.<br />
-HESIOD.</h3>
-
-<p>T<span class="smaller">HE</span> original of the English version, given in the beginning of this
-work, is as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Νήπιοι, οὐδὲ ἴσασιν, ὀσῳπλέον ἣμισυ Παντός,</div>
- <div class="verse">Οὐδ’ ὃσον ἐν Μαλάχῃ τε καὶ Ἀσφοδέλῳ μέγ’ ὄνειαρ.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Χρύσεον μὲν πρώτιστα γένος μερόπων ἀνθρώπων</div>
- <div class="verse">Ἀθάνατοι ποίησαν Ὀλύμπια δώματ’ ἔχοντες.</div>
- <div class="verse">Ὣστε θεοί δ’ ἐζωον ἀκηδέα θυμὸν ἔχοντες,</div>
- <div class="verse">Νόσφιν ἄτερ τε πόνων καὶ ὀϊζύος· οὐδέ τι δειλὸν</div>
- <div class="verse">Γῆρας ἐπῆν, αἰεὶ δε πόδας καὶ χεῖρας ὁμοῖοι</div>
- <div class="verse">Τέρποντ’ ἐν θαλίῃσι κακῶν ἔκτοσθεν ἀπάντων·</div>
- <div class="verse">Θνῆσκον δ’ ὡς ὑπνῳ δεδμημένοι· ἐσθλὰ δὲ πάντα</div>
- <div class="verse">Τοῖσιν ἔην· καρπὸν δ’ ἔφερε ζείδωρος Ἄρουρα</div>
- <div class="verse">Αὐτομάτη, πολλόν τε καὶ ἄφθονον· οἱ δ’ ἐθελημοὶ</div>
- <div class="verse">Ἣσυχοι εργ’ ἐνέμοντο σὺν ἐσθλοῖσιν πολέεσσιν,</div>
- <div class="verse">[Ἀφνειοὶ μήλοισι, φίλοι μακάρεσσι θεοῖσι]<a name="FNanchor_285_285" id="FNanchor_285_285"></a><a href="#Footnote_285_285" class="fnanchor">[285]</a></div>
- <div class="verse">Αὐτὰρ ἐπειδὴ τοῦτο γένος κατὰ γαῖα κάλυψεν,</div>
- <div class="verse">Τοὶ μὲν δαίμονες εἰσι Διὸς μεγάλου διὰ βουλὰς</div>
- <div class="verse">Ἐσθλοί, ἐπιχθόνιοι, φύλακες θνητῶν ἀνθρώπων,<a name="FNanchor_286_286" id="FNanchor_286_286"></a><a href="#Footnote_286_286" class="fnanchor">[286]</a></div>
- <div class="verse">Οἳ ῥα φυλάσσουσιν τε δίκας καὶ σχέτλια ἔργα,</div>
- <div class="verse">Ἡρα ἑσσάμενοι πάντῃ φοιτῶντες ἐπ’ αῖαν,</div>
- <div class="verse">Πλαυτοδόται· καὶ τοῦτο γέρας βασιλήϊον ἔσχον.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Ζεὺς δὲ Πατὴρ τρίτον ἄλλο γένος μερόπων ἀνθρώπων</div>
- <div class="verse">Χάλκειον ποίησε&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*</div>
- <div class="verse mleft12">Οὐδέ τι σῖτον</div>
- <div class="verse">Ἣσθιον, ἀλλ’ ἀδάμαντος ἔχον κρατερόφρονα θυμόν,</div>
- <div class="verse">Ἄπλητοι· μεγάλη δὲ βίν καὶ χεῖρες ἄαπτοι</div>
- <div class="verse">Ἐξ ὤμων ἐπέφυκον ἐπὶ στιβαροῖσι μέλεσσιν.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft4">Ἔργα καὶ Ἣμεραι (<i>Works and Days</i>), <i>passim</i>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 id="II_Golden_Verses">II.</h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hang2"><i>Extracts from “The Golden Verses”</i> (Χρυσᾶ Ἔπη).
-<i>An Exposition of Pythagorean Doctrine, of the Third Century, B.C., in
-Hexameters.</i> (See pages <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.)</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft7">κρατεῖν δ’ εἰθίζεο τῶνδε&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Γαστρὸς μὲν πρώτιστα, καὶ ὑπνοῦ, λαγνείης τε,</div>
- <div class="verse">Καὶ θυμοῦ· πρήξεις δ’ αἰσχρόν ποτε μήτε μετ’αλλοῦ</div>
- <div class="verse">Μήτ’ ἰδίῃ· πάντων δε μαλίστ’ αἰσχύνεο σαυτόν.</div>
- <div class="verse">Εἶτα Δικαιοσύνην ἀσκεῖν ἐργῳ τε λόγῳ τε.</div>
- <div class="verse">Μηδ’ ἀλογίστως σαυτὸν ἐχειν περὶ μηδὲν ἔθιζε·</div>
- <div class="verse">Αλλα γνῶθε μὲν ὡς θανέειν πέπρωται ἃπασι.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Μηδεὶς μήτε λόγῳ σε παρείπῃ, μήτε τι ἔργῳ,</div>
- <div class="verse">Πρήξαι μήτ’ εἰπείν ὃ τι τοι μὴ βέλτερον ἔστι·</div>
- <div class="verse">Εἰθίζου δε διαίταν ἔχειν καθάρειον, ἄθρυπτον.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Μηδ’ ὓπνον μαλακοῖσιν ἐπ’ ὄμμασι προσδέξασθαι</div>
- <div class="verse">Πρὶν τῶν ἡμερινῶν ἔργων τρὶς ἓκαστον ἐπελθεῖν&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Πῆ παρέβην· Τί δ’ ἔρεξα· Τί μοι δέον ουκ ἐτελέσθη·&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Ἀρξάμενος δ’ ἀπὸ πρώτου ἐπέξιθι καὶ μετεπείτα</div>
- <div class="verse">Δειλὰ μὲν ἐκπρήξας, ἐπεπλήσσεο· Χρηστὰ δε τέρπνου.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Ταῦτα πόνει, ταῦτ’ ἐκμελέτα· τούτων χρὴ ἐρᾷν.</div>
- <div class="verse">Ταῦτα σε τῆς θείης Ἀρετῆς εἰς ἴχνια θήσει·</div>
- <div class="verse">Ναὶ μὰ Τὸν ἁμετέρᾳ ψυχᾷ Παραδόντα Τετρακτύν,</div>
- <div class="verse">Παγὰν ἀενάον Ψύσεως&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*</div>
- <div class="verse mleft10">Τούτων δε κρατήσας</div>
- <div class="verse">Γνώσῃ ἀθανάτων τε Θεῶν, θνητῶν τ’ ἀνθρώπων</div>
- <div class="verse">Σύστασιν, ῇτε ἓκαστα διέρχεται, ῇτε κπατεῖται.</div>
- <div class="verse">Γνώσῃ δ’ ᾖ θέμις ἐστὶ, Φύσω περὶ παντὸς ὁμοίην</div>
- <div class="verse">Ὦστε σε μήτε ἄελπτ’ ἐλπιζειν, μήτε τι λήθειν.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Γνώσῃ δ’ ἀνθρώπους αὐθαίρετα πήματ’ ἔχοντας</div>
- <div class="verse">Τλήμονες, οἳ τ’ ἀγαθῶν πέλας ὄντων οὐκ ἐσοπῶσιν</div>
- <div class="verse">Οὔτε κλύουσι· λύσιν δὲ Κακῶν παῦποι συνίσασι.</div>
- <div class="verse">Ζεῦ Πάτερ, ἦ πολλῶν κε κακῶν λύσειας ἃπαντας,</div>
- <div class="verse">Εἰ πᾶσιν δείξαις οἳω τῷ δαίμονι χρῶνται.</div>
- <div class="verse">Ἄλλα σὺ θάρσει, ἐπεὶ θεῖον γένος ἐστὶ βροτοῖσιν,</div>
- <div class="verse">Οἷς ἱερα προφέπουσα Φύσις δείκνυσιν ἒκαστα</div>
- <div class="verse">Ὧν εἰ σοί μέτεστι, κρατήσεις ὧν σε κελεύω</div>
- <div class="verse">Ἐξακέσας, ψυχὴν δὲ πόνην ἀπὸ τῶνδε σαώσεις.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Ἀλλ’ εἴργου βρωτῶν ὧν εἴπομεν, ἔν τε καθάρμοις,</div>
- <div class="verse">Ἐν τε λύσει ψυχῆς κρίνην, καὶ φράζευ ἓκαστα,</div>
- <div class="verse">Ἡνίοχον γνώμην στήσας καθύπερθεν ἀρίστην·</div>
- <div class="verse">Ἠν δ’ ἀπολείψας σῶμα ἐς αἰθερ’ ἐλεύθερον ἔλθης,</div>
- <div class="verse">Ἔσσεαι ἀθάνατος, θεὸς, ἀμβρότος, οὐκ ἔτι θνητός.<a name="FNanchor_287_287" id="FNanchor_287_287"></a><a href="#Footnote_287_287" class="fnanchor">[287]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 id="III_Buddhist_Canon">III.</h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I<span class="smaller">N</span> <i>Texts from the Buddhist Canon</i>, Love or Compassion for all living
-beings is thus inculcated by Buddha, in a sermon addressed to a number
-of women (belonging to a class of hunters) whose husbands were then
-engaged on one of their predatory excursions:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“He who is humane does not kill; he is ever able to preserve [his
-own?] life. This principle is imperishable. Whosoever observes it,
-no calamity shall betide that man. Politeness, indifference to
-worldly things, hurting no one, without place for annoyance&mdash;this
-is the character of the Brahma Heaven. Ever exercising love towards
-the infirm; pure, according to the teaching of Buddha; knowing when
-sufficient has been had; knowing when to stop.</p>
-
-<p>“There are eleven advantages which attend the man who practises
-compassion, and is tender to all that lives: his body is always
-in health (happy); he is blessed with peaceful sleep, and when
-engaged in study he is also composed; he has no evil dreams, he is
-protected by Heaven (Devas) and loved by men; he is unmolested by
-poisonous things, and escapes the violence of war; he is unharmed
-by fire or water; he is successful wherever he lives, and, when
-dead, goes to the Heaven of Brahma.”</p></div>
-
-<p>When he had uttered these words, both men and women were admitted into
-the company of his disciples, and obtained rest.</p>
-
-<p>There was, in times gone by, a certain mighty King, called Ho-meh
-(<i>love-darkness</i>), who ruled in a certain district where no tidings of
-Buddha or his merciful doctrine had yet been heard; but the religious
-practices were the usual ones of sacrifice and prayer to the gods for
-protection. Now it happened that the King’s mother, being sick, the
-physicians having vainly tried their medicine, all the wise men were
-called to consult as to the best means of restoring her health.... On
-the King asking them [the Brahman priests] what should be done, they
-replied ... sacrifices of a hundred beasts of different kinds should
-be offered on the four hills (or to the four quarters), with a young
-child, as a crowning oblation to Heaven. [Here follows a description
-of the King ordering a hundred head of Elephants, Horses, Oxen, and
-Sheep to be driven along the road from the Eastern Gate towards the
-place of sacrifice, and how their piteous cries rang through heaven
-and earth.&mdash;<i>Editor’s Note.</i>] On this Buddha, moved with compassion,
-came to the spot, and preached a sermon on “Love to all that Live,” and
-added these words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“If a man live a hundred years, and engage the whole of his time
-and attention in religious offerings to the gods, sacrificing
-Elephants and Horses, and other life, all this is not equal to <i>one
-act of pure love in saving life</i>.”</p></div>
-
-<p>See <i>Texts from the Buddhist Canon, commonly known as Dhammapada&mdash;with
-accompanying Narratives&mdash;Translated from the Chinese</i>, by Samuel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span> Beal,
-Professor of Chinese, University College, London&mdash;Trübner, 1878: and
-the similar scene in <i>The Light of Asia</i>, where Buddha interposes at
-the moment of a religious sacrifice:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft8">“But Buddha softly said,</div>
- <div class="verse">‘Let him not strike, great King!’ and therewith loosed</div>
- <div class="verse">The victim’s bonds, none staying him, so great</div>
- <div class="verse">His presence was. Then, craving leave, he spake</div>
- <div class="verse">Of life which all can take but none can give,</div>
- <div class="verse">Life, which all creatures love and strive to keep,</div>
- <div class="verse">Wonderful, dear and pleasant unto each,</div>
- <div class="verse">Even to the meanest; yea, a boon to all</div>
- <div class="verse">Where Pity is, for Pity makes the world</div>
- <div class="verse">Soft to the Weak, and noble for the Strong.</div>
- <div class="verse">Unto the dumb lips of his flock he lent</div>
- <div class="verse">Sad pleading words, shewing how man, who prays</div>
- <div class="verse">For mercy to the Gods, is merciless,</div>
- <div class="verse">Being as God to those: albeit all Life</div>
- <div class="verse">Is linked and kin, and what we slay have given</div>
- <div class="verse">Meek tribute of the milk and wool, and set</div>
- <div class="verse">Fast trust upon the hands that murder them.</div>
- <div class="verse">&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">“Nor, spake he, shall one wash his spirit clean</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>By blood</i>; nor gladden gods, being good, with blood;<a name="FNanchor_288_288" id="FNanchor_288_288"></a><a href="#Footnote_288_288" class="fnanchor">[288]</a></div>
- <div class="verse">Nor bribe them, being evil: nay, nor lay</div>
- <div class="verse">Upon the brow of innocent bound beasts</div>
- <div class="verse">One hair’s weight of that answer all must give</div>
- <div class="verse">For all things done amiss or wrongfully,</div>
- <div class="verse">Alone&mdash;each for himself&mdash;reckoning with that</div>
- <div class="verse">The fixed arithmic of the Universe,</div>
- <div class="verse">Which meteth good for good and ill for ill,</div>
- <div class="verse">Measure for measure, unto deeds, words, thoughts.</div>
- <div class="verse">&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">“While still our Lord went on, teaching how fair</div>
- <div class="verse">This earth were, if all living things be linked</div>
- <div class="verse">In friendliness, and common use of foods,</div>
- <div class="verse">Bloodless and pure; the golden grain, bright fruits,</div>
- <div class="verse">Sweet herbs which grow for all, the waters wan,</div>
- <div class="verse">Sufficient drinks and meats&mdash;which when these heard,</div>
- <div class="verse">The might of gentleness so conquered them,</div>
- <div class="verse">The priests themselves scattered their altar-flames</div>
- <div class="verse">And flung away the steel of sacrifice:</div>
- <div class="verse">And through the land next day passed a decree</div>
- <div class="verse">Proclaimed by criers, and in this wise graved</div>
- <div class="verse">On rock and column: ‘Thus the King’s will is:&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">There hath been slaughter for the Sacrifice,</div>
- <div class="verse">And slaying for the Meat, but henceforth none</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>
- <div class="verse">Shall spill the blood of life, nor taste of flesh,</div>
- <div class="verse">Seeing that Knowledge grows, and Life is one,</div>
- <div class="verse">And mercy cometh to the merciful.’”<a name="FNanchor_289_289" id="FNanchor_289_289"></a><a href="#Footnote_289_289" class="fnanchor">[289]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>See also the annexed extracts from the Buddhist Sacred Scriptures,
-written probably about the third century B.C.:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>“The Short Paragraphs on Conduct.”&mdash;The Kûla Sîlam.</i></p>
-
-<p>1. “Now wherein, Vâsettha, is his [the true disciple’s] Conduct
-good? Herein, O Vâsettha, that putting away the Murder of that
-which lives, he abstains from Destroying Life. The cudgel and
-the sword he lays aside; and, full of Modesty and Pity, he is
-compassionate and kind to all beings that have life.</p>
-
-<p>“This is the kind of Goodness that he has.</p>
-
-<p>[After strict prohibitions of Robbery and Unchastity, Gautama
-Buddha proceeds.]</p>
-
-<p>4. “Putting away Lying, he abstains from speaking Falsehood.
-He speaks Truth. From the Truth he never swerves. Faithful and
-trustworthy, he injures not his fellow-men by deceit.</p>
-
-<p>“This is the kind of Goodness that he has.</p>
-
-<p>5. “Putting away Slander, he abstains from Calumny. What he learns
-here he repeats not elsewhere, to raise a quarrel against the
-people here. What he learns elsewhere, &amp;c. Thus he lives as a
-binder together of those who are divided, an encourager of those
-who are friends, impassioned for Peace, a speaker of words that
-make for Peace.</p>
-
-<p>“This, too, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>6. “Putting away Bitterness of Speech, he abstains from harsh
-language. Whatever word is humane, pleasant to the ear, lovely,
-reaching to the heart, urbane&mdash;such are the words he speaks.</p>
-
-<p>7. “Putting away Foolish Talk, he abstains from Vain Conversation,
-&amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>8. “He abstains from Injuring any Herb [uselessly] or any Animal.
-He takes but one meal a day, abstaining from food at night-time, or
-at the wrong time, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>10. “He abstains from Bribery, Cheating, Fraud, and Crooked Ways.</p>
-
-<p>“This, too, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>11. “He refrains from Maiming, Killing, Imprisoning,
-Highway-Robbery, Plundering Villages, or obtaining money by threats
-of Violence.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>1. “And he lets his mind pervade one quarter of the World with
-thoughts of Love, and so the second, and so the third, and so
-the fourth. And thus the whole Wide World above, below, around,
-and everywhere, does he continue to pervade with heart of
-Love&mdash;far-reaching, grown great, and beyond measure.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>2. “Just, Vâsettha, as a mighty Trumpeter makes himself heard, and
-that without difficulty, in all the four directions, even so, of
-all Things that have Shape or Life, there is not one that he passes
-by or leaves aside; but he regards them all with mind set free, and
-deep-felt love.</p>
-
-<p>“Verily this, Vâsettha, is the way to a state of union with Brahmâ.</p>
-
-<p>3. “And he lets his mind pervade all parts of the World with
-thoughts of Pity, Sympathy, and Equanimity.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>9. “When he had thus spoken, the young Brâhmans, Vâsettha and
-Bhâradvâga, addressed the Blessed One, and said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>‘Most excellent, Lord, are the words of thy mouth, most excellent!
-Just as if a man were to set up that which is thrown down, or
-were to reveal that which is hidden away, or were to point out
-the right road to him who has gone astray, or were to bring a
-Lamp into the Darkness, so that those who have eyes can see
-eternal forms&mdash;just even so, Lord, has the Truth been made known
-to us, in many a figure, by the Blessed One. And we, even we,
-betake ourselves, Lord, to the Blessed One, as our Refuge, to the
-Truth and to the Brotherhood. May the Blessed One accept us as
-disciples, as true believers from this time forth, so long as life
-endures!’”&mdash;<i>Buddhist Suttas</i>, Translated from Pâli, by T. W. Rhys
-Davids. <i>Sacred Books of the East.</i> Ed. by Max Müller, Clarendon
-Press, Oxford. 1881.</p></div>
-
-<p>As for the older (sacerdotal) religionism of the Peninsula&mdash;that of
-Brahma&mdash;the force of Truth obliges us here to remark that, while the
-great mass of the Hindus continue to shrink with disgust and abhorrence
-from the Slaughter-house and from the sanguinary diet of their
-conquerors and rulers, Mohammedan and Christian, the richer classes,
-and even many of the Brahmins and priests have long conformed, in great
-measure at least, to Western dietetic practices; and (the flesh of the
-Cow or Ox excepted), no more than other religionists do they scruple to
-violate the laws of their Sacred Books&mdash;the <i>Vedas</i>&mdash;which, however,
-are not so <i>humane</i> as the teaching of the great Founder of Buddhism,
-as preserved in the Buddhist Sacred Scriptures, the <i>Tripataka</i>, being
-more essentially ritual and ceremonial than its popular off-shoot.
-Yet there are traces in the sacred writings of Hinduism of a strong
-consciousness of the irreligionism of feeding upon slaughtered animals,
-as in the Laws of Manu, their Sacred Legislator, where it is laid down
-that:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The man who forsakes not the Laws, and eats not flesh-meat like
-a blood-thirsty demon, shall attain good-will in this world, and
-shall not be afflicted with Maladies.”&mdash;(Quoted in the Works of Sir
-Wm. Jones, <i>vol. iii., 206</i>.)</p>
-
-<p>“The man who perceives in his own soul the Supreme Good present
-in all beings acquires equanimity towards them all, and shall be
-absorbed, at last, in the highest Essence&mdash;even in that of the
-Almighty himself.”&mdash;<i>Conclusion of the Laws of Manu.</i></p></div>
-
-<p>It is superfluous to insist upon the fact that inhabitants of the
-hotter and, in particular, of the tropical regions of the globe
-have, as a matter of course, even less valid pretexts for resorting
-to <i>butchering</i> than have the natives of colder climates; and that
-proportionally, therefore, is the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span> reprobation to which they are
-obnoxious. (See, among other recent testimony, that of Shib Chunder
-Bose in his interesting book&mdash;<i>The Hindus as they Are</i>. London: Ed.
-Stanford, 1881). The writer has usefully exposed the yearly-increasing
-evils to India from the example of English dietetic habits.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<h3 id="IVa_OVID">IV.<br />
-OVID.</h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>T<span class="smaller">HE</span> original (the peculiar beauties of which cannot easily be
-represented in a modern idiom) of the English version already given in
-this work, with the concluding verses omitted in that translation, is
-here subjoined:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft8">Primusque animalia mensis</div>
- <div class="verse">Arcuit imponi: primus quoque talibus ora</div>
- <div class="verse">Docta quidem solvit, sed non et credita, verbis:&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">“Parcite, mortales, dapibus temerare nefandis</div>
- <div class="verse">Corpora. <i>Sunt Fruges; sunt deducentia ramos</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Pondere Poma suo, tumidæque in vitibus Uvæ.</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Sunt Herbæ Dulces; sunt, quæ mitescere flammâ,</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Mollirique queant. Nec vobis lacteus Humor</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Eripitur, nec Mella thymi redolentia florem.</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Prodiga divitias alimentaque mitia Tellus</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Suggerit: atque epulas sine Cæde et Sanguine præbet.</i></div>
- <div class="verse">Carne Feræ sedant jejunia; <i>nec tamen Omnes</i>.</div>
- <div class="verse">Quippe Equus, et Pecudes, Armentaque gramine vivunt.</div>
- <div class="verse">At quibus ingenium est immansuetumque ferumque&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Armeniæ Tigres, iracundique Leones,</div>
- <div class="verse">Cumque Lupis Ursi&mdash;dapibus cum sanguine gaudent.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Heu quantum Scelus est&mdash;in viscera viscera condi,</div>
- <div class="verse">Congestoque avidum pinguescere corpore corpus,</div>
- <div class="verse">Alteriusque animantem animantis vivere leto!</div>
- <div class="verse">Scilicet in tantis opibus, quas optima Matrum</div>
- <div class="verse">Terra parit, <i>nil to nisi tristia mandere sævo</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Vulnera dente juvat, ritusque referre Cyclopum?</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Nec, nisi perdideris alium, placare voracis</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Et male morati poteris jejunia ventris?</i></div>
- <div class="verse">At vetus illa Ætas, cui fecimus Aurea nomen,</div>
- <div class="verse">Fœtibus arboreis et, quas humus educat, Herbis</div>
- <div class="verse">Fortunata fuit: nee polluit ora Cruore.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Tunc et Aves tutas movere per aëra pennas,</div>
- <div class="verse">Et Lepus impavidus mediis erravit in agris:</div>
- <div class="verse">Nec sua credulitas piscem suspenderat hamo.</div>
- <div class="verse">Cuncta sine insidiis, nullamque timentia Fraudem,</div>
- <div class="verse">Plenaque Pacis erant. Postquam non utilis auctor</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>
- <div class="verse">Victibus invidit (quisquis fuit ille virorum),</div>
- <div class="verse">Corporeasque dapes avidam demersit in alvum.</div>
- <div class="verse">Fecit iter sceleri; primâque e cæde Ferarum</div>
- <div class="verse">Incaluisse putem maculatum sanguine ferrum.</div>
- <div class="verse">Idque satis fuerat; nostrumque petentia letum</div>
- <div class="verse">Corpora missa neci, salvâ pietate, fatemur:</div>
- <div class="verse">Sed quàm danda neci, tàm non epulanda, fuerunt.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Quid meruistis, Oves, placidum pecus, inque tuendos</div>
- <div class="verse">Natum homines, pleno quæ fertis in ubere nectar?</div>
- <div class="verse">Mollia quæ nobis vestras velamina Lanas</div>
- <div class="verse">Præbetis, Vitâque magis quàm morte juvatis.</div>
- <div class="verse">Quid meruêre Boves&mdash;animal sine fraude dolisque</div>
- <div class="verse">Innocuum, simplex, natum tolerare labores?</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Immemor est demùm, nee Frugum, munere dignus,</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Qui potuit, curvi dempto modo pondere aratri,</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Ruricolam mactare suum: qui trita labore</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Illa, quibus toties durum renovaverat Arvum,</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Tot dederat messes, percussit colla securi.</i>”</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">“Nec satis est quòd tale nefas committitur: <i>ipsos</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Inscripsêre Deos sceleri</i>, numenque Supernum</div>
- <div class="verse">Cæde Laboriferi credunt gaudere Juvenci!</div>
- <div class="verse">Victima labe carens, et præstantissima formâ,</div>
- <div class="verse">(Nam placuisse nocet), vittis præsignis et auro,</div>
- <div class="verse">Sistitur ante aras, auditque ignara precantem:</div>
- <div class="verse">Imponique suæ videt, inter cornua, fronti</div>
- <div class="verse">Quas coluit fruges, percussaque sanguine cultros</div>
- <div class="verse">Inficit in liquidâ prævisos forsitan undâ.</div>
- <div class="verse">Protinus ereptas viventi pectore fibras</div>
- <div class="verse">Inspiciunt: mentesque Deûm scrutantur in illis!<a name="FNanchor_290_290" id="FNanchor_290_290"></a><a href="#Footnote_290_290" class="fnanchor">[290]</a></div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">“Unde fames Homini vetitorum tanta ciborum?</div>
- <div class="verse">Audetis vesci, <i>genus O Mortale</i>! Quod, oro,</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>
- <div class="verse">Ne facite: et monitis animos advertite nostris.</div>
- <div class="verse">Cumque Boûm dabitis cæsorum membra palato</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Mandere vos vestros scite et sentite Colonos</i>.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">“Neve Thyestêis cumulemur viscera mensis.</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Quàm male consuescit, quàm se parat ille cruori.</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Impius humano, Vituli qui guttura cultro</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Rumpit, et immotas præbet mugitibus aures!</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Aut qui vagitus similes puerilibus Hœdum</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Edentem jugulare potest; aut Alite vesci</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Cui dedit ipse cibos&mdash;Quantum est, quod desit in istis</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Ad plenum facinus! Quò transitus inde paratur!</i></div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">“Bos aret, aut mortem senioribus imputet annis:</div>
- <div class="verse">Horriferum contra Borean Ovis arma ministret;</div>
- <div class="verse">Ubera dent saturæ manibus præstanda Capellæ.</div>
- <div class="verse">Retia cum pedicis, laqueosque, artesque dolosas</div>
- <div class="verse">Tollite: nec Volucrem viscatâ fallite virgâ,</div>
- <div class="verse">Nec formidatis Cervos eludite pinnis,</div>
- <div class="verse">Nec celate cibis uncos fallacibus hamos.</div>
- <div class="verse">Perdite, si qua nocent: verùm hæc quòque perdite tantùm:</div>
- <div class="verse">Ora vacent epulis, alimentaque congrua carpant.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft8"><i>Metamorphoseon</i>, <i>Lib.</i> xv. 72&ndash;142, 462&ndash;478.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Nor is this the only passage in his writings in which the Pagan poet
-proves himself to have been not without that humaneness and feeling so
-rare alike in non-Christian and in Christian poetry. In the charming
-story of the visit of the disguised and incarnate Celestials to the
-cottage of the pious peasants, Philemon and Baucis, Ovid takes the
-opportunity to present an alluring picture of the innocent fruits which
-were placed before the divine guests&mdash;a picture which, probably, was
-present to Milton in recording the similar hospitality of Eve.</p>
-
-<p>Among the fragrant dishes&mdash;“savoury fruits, of taste to please true
-appetite”&mdash;appear Figs, Nuts, Dates, Plums, Grapes, Apples, Olives,
-Radishes, Onions, and Endive, with Honey, Eggs, and Milk:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft1">“Ponitur hìc bicolor sinceræ bacca Minervæ,</div>
- <div class="verse">Conditaque in liquidâ Corna autumnalia fæce:</div>
- <div class="verse">Intubaque et Radix, et Lactis massa Coacti:</div>
- <div class="verse">Ovaque, non acri leviter versata Favillâ.</div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Hìc Nux, hìc mista est rugosis Carica Palmis,</div>
- <div class="verse">Prunaque, et in patulis redolentia Mala canistris,</div>
- <div class="verse">Et de purpureis collectæ vitibus Uvæ.</div>
- <div class="verse">Candidus in medio Favus est: super omnia vultus</div>
- <div class="verse">Accessêre boni.”&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>We are not surprised, however, that, notwithstanding all this variety
-of sufficient foods, ignorant peasants, imitating the vicious examples
-of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span> their rich neighbours, thought it due to “hospitality” to sacrifice
-life; and they were on the point of slaughtering the only <i>non-human</i>
-being belonging to them&mdash;a Goose, the “guardian of the cottage”&mdash;when
-the heavenly visitants intervene, and forbid the unnecessary
-barbarism:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft1">“Unicus anser erat, minimæ custodia villæ,</div>
- <div class="verse">Quem Dîs hospitibus domini mactare parabant.</div>
- <div class="verse">Ille celer pennâ tardos ætate fatigat,</div>
- <div class="verse">Eluditque diu. Tandemque est visus ad ipsos</div>
- <div class="verse">Confugisse Deos. Superi vetuêre necari:</div>
- <div class="verse">‘Dîque sumus,’” &amp;c.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>When the rest of the inhabitants of Phrygia, were, for their
-wickedness, destroyed by indignant Heaven, the two old peasants, we
-may add, found safety from the general <i>Deluge</i>. (<i>Metam.</i> viii.
-664&ndash;688).<a name="FNanchor_291_291" id="FNanchor_291_291"></a><a href="#Footnote_291_291" class="fnanchor">[291]</a></p>
-
-<p>It may be noted in this place that the great “Epicurean” poet, Horace
-(Ovid’s contemporary), <i>bon-vivant</i> though he was, and apparently
-uninspired by humanitarian feeling, yet now and again expresses his
-conviction of the superiority of the Fruit to the Flesh banquet, and of
-the greater compatibility of the former with the poetic genius. E.g.
-<i>Carmina</i> I., 31. <i>Ad Apollinem</i>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft4"><i>Me pascunt Olivæ</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Me Cichorea levesque Malvæ.</i></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">(“Olives, Endives, and easily-digested Mallows are
- my fare.”)</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p><i>Satire II.</i> 2. “Frugality.:”&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Quæ virtus et quanta, boni, sit vivere Parvo,</div>
- <div class="verse">&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Discite non inter lances mensasque nitentes,</div>
- <div class="verse">Cum stupet insanis acies fulgoribus, et cum</div>
- <div class="verse">Acclinis falsis animus meliora recusat,</div>
- <div class="verse">Verum hic impransi mecum disquirite&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft5"><i>Male Vervum examinat omnis</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Corruptus judex</i>.</div>
- <div class="verse">&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Cum labor extuderit fastidia, siccus, inanis</div>
- <div class="verse">Sperne cibum vilem: nisi Hymettia mella Falerno</div>
- <div class="verse">Ne biberis diluta. . . .</div>
- <div class="verse mleft9"><i>Cum sale Panis</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Latrantem stomachum bene leniet.</i> . . .</div>
- <div class="verse mleft6"><i>Non in caro nidore voluptas</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Summa sed in te ipso. Tu pulmentaria qucere</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Sudando</i>: pinguem vitiis albumque neque ostrea,</div>
- <div class="verse">Nec scarus aut poterit peregrina juvare lagois.</div>
- <div class="verse">&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>
- <div class="verse mleft9"><i>Num vesceris istâ</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Quam laudas, plumâ? Cocto num adest honor idem?</i></div>
- <div class="verse">&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft13">At vos</div>
- <div class="verse">Præsentes Austri, coquite horum obsonia.</div>
- <div class="verse">&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft15">Ergo</div>
- <div class="verse">Si quis nunc mergos suaves edixerit assos,</div>
- <div class="verse">Parebit pravi docilis Romana juventus.</div>
- <div class="verse">&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Accipe nunc, victus tenuis quæ quantaque secum</div>
- <div class="verse">Afferat. Imprimis valeas bene. . . . .”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>His arraignment of the rich glutton, who obliges and allows the poor
-man to starve in the midst of plenty, is worthy of the morality of
-Seneca:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft15">“Ergo,</div>
- <div class="verse">Quod superat, non est melius quo insumere possis?</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Cur eget indignus quisquam te divite?</i>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<h3 id="V_MUSONIUS">V.<br />
-MUSONIUS (1<span class="smaller">ST</span> C<span class="smaller">ENTURY</span>, A.D.),</h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smaller">A</span> S<span class="smaller">TOIC</span> writer of great repute with his contemporaries, son of a
-Roman Eques, was born at Volsinii (Bolsena), in Etruria, at the end
-of the reign of Augustus. He was banished by Nero, who especially
-hated the professors of the <i>Porch</i>; but by Vespasian he was held in
-extraordinary honour when the rest of the philosophers were expelled
-from Rome. The time of his death is uncertain. He was the author of
-various philosophical works which are characterised by Suïdas as
-“distinguished writings of a highly philosophic nature,” who also
-attributes to him (but on uncertain evidence) letters to Apollonius
-of Tyana. We are indebted for knowledge of his opinions to a work (of
-unknown authorship) entitled <i>Memoirs of Musonius the Philosopher</i>. It
-is from this work that Stobæus (<i>Anthologion</i>), Aulus Gellius, Arrian,
-and others seem to have borrowed, in quoting the <i>dicta</i> of the great
-Stoic teacher. All the extant fragments of his writings are carefully
-collected by Peerlkamp (Haarlem, 1822). (See also Herr Ed. Baltzer’s
-valuable monograph, <i>Musonius: Charakterbild aus Der Römischen
-Kaiserzeit</i>. Nordhausen, 1871):&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“On diet he used to speak often and very earnestly, as of a matter
-important in itself and in its effects. For he thought that
-continence in meats and drinks is the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span> beginning and groundwork of
-temperance. Once, forsaking his usual line of argument, he spoke as
-follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“‘As we should prefer cheap fare to costly, and that which is easy
-to that which is hard to procure, so also, that which is akin
-to man to that which is not so. Akin to us is that from plants,
-grains, and such other vegetable products as nourish him well;
-also what is derived from (other) animals&mdash;not slaughtered, but
-otherwise serviceable. Of these foods the most suitable are such
-as we may use at once without fire, for such are readiest to hand.
-Such are fruits in season, and some herbs, milk, cheese, and
-honeycombs. Moreover such as need fire, and belong to the classes
-of grains or herbs, are also not unsuitable, but are all, without
-exception, akin to man.’</p>
-
-<p>“Eating of flesh-meat he declared to be <i>brutal</i>, and adapted to
-savage animals. It is heavier, he said, and hindering thought and
-intelligence; the vapour arising from it is turbid and darkens the
-soul, so that they who partake of it abundantly are seen to be
-slower of apprehension. As man is [at his best] most nearly related
-to the Gods of all beings on earth, so, also, his <i>food</i> should be
-most like to that of the Gods. They, he said, are content with the
-steams that rise from earth and waters, and we shall take the food
-most like to theirs, if we take that which is <i>lightest and purest</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“So our soul also will be pure and clear, and, being so, will be
-best and wisest, as Heracleitus judges when he says the clear
-soul is wisest and best. As it is, said Musonius, we are fed far
-worse than the irrational beings; for they, though they are driven
-fiercely by appetite as by a scourge, and pounce upon their food,
-still are devoid of cunning and contrivance in regard to their
-fare&mdash;being satisfied with what comes in their way, seeking only
-to be filled and nothing further. But we invent manifold arts and
-devices the more to sweeten the pleasure of food and to deceive the
-gullet. Nay, to such a pitch of daintiness and greediness have we
-come, that some have composed treatises, as of music and medicine,
-so also of cookery, which greatly increase the pleasure in the
-gullet, but ruin the health. At any rate, you may see that those
-who are fastidious in the choice of foods are far more sickly in
-body&mdash;some even, like craving women, loathing customary foods, and
-having their stomachs ruined. Hence, as good-for-nothing steel
-continually needs sharpening, so their stomachs at table need the
-continual whet of some strong tasting food.... Hence, too, it is
-our duty to eat for life, not for pleasure (only), at least if we
-are to follow the excellent saying of Socrates, that, while most
-men lived to eat, he ate to live. For, surely, no one, who aspires
-to the character of a virtuous man, will deign to resemble the
-many, and live for eating’s sake as they do, hunting from every
-quarter the pleasure which comes from food.</p>
-
-<p>“Moreover, that God, who made mankind, provided them with meats
-and drinks for preservation, not for pleasure, will appear from
-this. When food is most especially performing its proper function
-in digestion and assimilation, then it gives no pleasure to the man
-at all&mdash;yet we are then fed by it and strengthened. <i>Then</i> we have
-no sensation of pleasure, and yet this time is longer than that in
-which we are eating. But if it were for pleasure that God contrived
-our food, we ought to derive pleasure from it throughout this
-longer time, and not merely at the passing moment of consumption.
-<i>Yet, nevertheless, for that brief moment of enjoyment we make
-provision of ten thousand dainties</i>; we sail the sea to its
-furthest bounds; <i>cooks are more sought after than husbandmen</i>.
-Some lavish on dinners the price of estates, and that though their
-bodies derive no benefit from the costliness of the viands.</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span>
-
-<p>“Quite the contrary; <i>it is those who use the cheapest food who are
-the strongest</i>. For example, you may, for the most part, see slaves
-more sturdy than masters, country-folk than towns-folk, poor than
-rich&mdash;more able to labour, sinking less at their work, seldomer
-ailing, more easily enduring frost, heat, sleeplessness, and the
-like. Even if cheap food and dear strengthens the body alike,
-still we ought to choose the cheap; for this is more sober and
-more suited to a virtuous man; inasmuch as what is easy to procure
-is, for good men, more proper for food than what is hard&mdash;what is
-free from trouble than what gives trouble&mdash;what is ready than what
-is not ready. To sum up in a word the whole use of diet, I say
-that we ought to make its aim health and strength, for these are
-the only ends for which we should eat, and they require no large
-outlay.”<a name="FNanchor_292_292" id="FNanchor_292_292"></a><a href="#Footnote_292_292" class="fnanchor">[292]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<h3 id="VI_LESSIO">VI.<br />
-LESSIO. 1554&ndash;1623,</h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>B<span class="smaller">ORN</span> at Brechten, a town in Brabant, of influential family, this noted
-Hygeist, at a very early age, exhibited so exceptional a disposition as
-to be known among his school-fellows as the “prophet.” His ardour for
-learning was so intense as to cause him to forget the hours of meals,
-and to reduce his time for sleep to the shortest period possible.
-Having obtained a scholarship at the Arras College in Louvain, Lessio
-pursued the course of studies there with the greatest success, and by
-his fellow-students was proclaimed “prince of philologers.” At the age
-of seventeen he entered the Society of Jesus. Two years later he was
-elected to the Chair of Philosophy at Douai. In 1585 he accepted the
-Professorship of Theology at Louvain.</p>
-
-<p>So extraordinary were the respect and veneration which he had attracted
-in his Order and from all who had access to him, that not only did his
-death cause the greatest regret, but (as we are assured) his friends
-contended among themselves for possession of every possible relic and
-memento “of one who had composed so admirable works.” He was interred
-before the high altar of the church of his college in Louvain. Held
-in high honour during life, after his death so rare an ornament of
-his Church was signally eulogised by the Pope, Urbano VIII.; and he
-was even believed to have worked miracles. His praises are especially
-recorded in a book entitled <i>De Vitâ et Moribus R. P. Leonardi
-Lessii</i>&mdash;reprinted at Paris, 1644.</p>
-
-<p>Principal Writings: <i>De Justitiâ et de Jure Actionum, Humanarum, &amp;c.</i>
-(reprinted seven times). Many of the propositions, it seems, eventually
-came under the censure of the Theological Faculty, the Bishops, and the
-Pontiffs.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><i>Quæ Fides et Religio sit Capessenda, Consultatio.</i> Anvers, 1610.
-In the estimation of S. François de Sales, a work “not so much that of
-Lessio as of an Angel of the Judgment (Ange du Grand Conseil).”</p>
-
-<p><i>Hygiasticon</i> (Anvers, 1613&ndash;14, 8vo); it is superfluous to remark, his
-really valuable work. It was translated from the Latin into French by
-Sebastian Hardy, with the title of <i>Le Vrai Régime de Vivre pour la
-Conservation du Corps et de l’Ame</i>. Paris, 1646. Another editor, <i>La
-Bonnodière</i>, added notes, republishing it under the title of <i>De la
-Sobriété et de Ses Avantages</i>. Paris, 1701.</p>
-
-<p>“Lessio,” writes the author of the article in the <i>Biographie
-Universelle</i>, “having been condemned by the physicians to have no
-more than two years longer to live, himself studied the principles of
-<i>Hygiene</i>, was struck by the example of Cornaro, resolved to imitate
-him, and found himself so well from such imitation that he translated
-his book (<i>Della Vita Sobria</i>), joining to it the results of his own
-experience, to which he owed the prolongation of his life by forty
-years.” For the rest, he was a man of extensive erudition; and Justus
-Lipsius celebrates, in some fine verse, the variety of his talents.
-(See <i>Biog. Universelle Ancienne et Moderne</i>. À Paris, chez Michaud,
-1819.)</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Hygiasticon</i> is prefaced by testimonials from three eminent
-physicians, setting forth their concurrence in the principles of the
-author. The English translation (1634) has prefixed to it addresses, in
-verse, to him; one of which is by Crashaw, the friend of Cowley, and
-a <i>Dialogue between Glutton and Echo</i>, also in verse. Affixed to this
-edition are an English version of Cornaro, by George Herbert, and a
-translation of an anonymous treatise by another Italian writer&mdash;<i>That a
-Spare Diet is better than a Splendid and Sumptuous One: A Paradox</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In his chap. v. “Of the Advantages which a Sober Diet brings to the
-Body, and first, That it freeth almost from all Diseases”&mdash;Lessio
-promises the adherents of it, that in the first place:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It cloth free a man and preserve him from almost all manner
-of diseases. For it rids him of catarrhs, coughs, wheezings,
-dizziness, and pain in the head and stomach. It drives away
-apoplexies, lethargies, falling-sickness, and other ill-affections
-of the brain. It cures the gout in the feet and in the hands; the
-sciatica and diseases in the joints. It also prevents crudity
-(indigestion), the parent of all diseases. In a word, it so tempers
-the humours, and maintains them in an equal proportion, that they
-hurt not any way, either in quantity or quality. And this both
-reason and experience do confirm. For we see that those who keep
-themselves to a sober course of diet are very seldom, or rather
-never, molested with diseases; and if at any time they happen to
-be oppressed with sickness, <i>they do bear it much better, and
-sooner recover than those others whose bodies are full fraught with
-ill-humours</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“I know very many who, though they be weak by natural constitution,
-and well grown in years, and continually busied in employments of
-the mind, nevertheless by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span> the help of this temperance, live in
-health, and have passed the greater part of their lives, which have
-been many years long, without any notable sickness....</p>
-
-<p>“The self-same comes to pass in wounds, bruises, puttings out of
-joint, and breaking of bones; in regard that there is either no
-flux at all of ill-humours, or, at least, very little of that part
-affected.... Furthermore an abstinent diet doth arm and fortify
-against the plague; for the venom thereof is much better resisted
-if the body be clear and free&mdash;wherefore Sokrates brought to pass
-that he himself was never sick of the plague, which ofttimes
-greatly wasted the city of Athens, where he lived, as Laertius
-writeth. The third commodity of the diet is that, although it doth
-not cure such diseases as are incurable in their own nature, yet
-it doth <i>so much mitigate and allay them as that they are easily
-borne</i>, and do not much hinder the functions of the mind. This is
-seen by daily experience.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Lessio proceeds to descant upon the other benefits of the reformed
-regimen&mdash;such as that it prolongs life (other things being equal) to
-extreme old age, produces cheerfulness, activity, memory, and the
-like.<a name="FNanchor_293_293" id="FNanchor_293_293"></a><a href="#Footnote_293_293" class="fnanchor">[293]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Moffet, another hygienic writer of the sixteenth century, demands
-indignantly:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Till God (<i>i.e.</i>, Superstition or Fraud) would have it so [the
-slaying of other animals for food], who dared to touch with his
-lips the remnant of a dead carcase? or to set the prey of a wolf,
-or the meat of a falcon, upon his table? Who, I say, durst feed
-upon those members which, lately, did see, go, bleat, low, feel,
-and move?<a name="FNanchor_294_294" id="FNanchor_294_294"></a><a href="#Footnote_294_294" class="fnanchor">[294]</a></p>
-
-<p>“Nay, tell me, can civil and human eyes yet abide the slaughter of
-an innocent ‘beast,’ the cutting of his throat, the smashing him on
-the head, the flaying of his skin, the quartering and dismembering
-of his limbs, the sprinkling of his blood, the ripping up of his
-veins, the enduring of ill-savours, the heaving of heavy sighs,
-sobs, and groans, the passionate struggling and panting for life,
-which only hard-hearted butchers can endure to see?</p>
-
-<p>“Is not the earth sufficient to give us meat, but that we must also
-rend up the bowels of ‘beasts,’ birds, and fishes? Yes, truly,
-there is enough in the earth to give us meat; yea, verily, and
-choice of meats, needing either none or no great preparation, which
-we may take without fear, and cut down without trembling; which,
-also, we may mingle a hundred ways to delight our taste, and feed
-on safely to fill our bellies.”&mdash;<i>Health’s Improvement</i>, by Dr. W.
-Moffet (ed. 1746), as quoted by Ritson. The author died in 1604.</p></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>T<span class="smaller">HE</span> author of the <i>Anatomy of Abuses</i>, a writer of the same period,
-denouncing the unnatural and luxurious living of his time, compares the
-two diets with equal force and truth:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I cannot persuade myself otherwise, but that our <i>niceness</i>
-and <i>cautiousness</i> in diet hath altered our nature, distempered
-our bodies, and made us subject to hundreds of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span> diseases and
-<i>discrasies</i> (indigestions) more than ever our forefathers were
-subject unto, and consequently of shorter life than they.... Who
-are sicklier than they who fare deliciously every day? Who is
-corrupter? Who belcheth more? Who looketh worse? Who is weaker and
-feebler than they? Who hath more filthy phlegm and putrefaction
-(replete with gross humours) than they? And, to be brief, who dieth
-sooner than they?</p>
-
-<p>“Do we not see the poor man who eateth brown bread (whereof some
-is made of rye, barley, <i>peason</i>, beans, oats, and such other
-gross grains), and drinketh small drink, yea, sometimes water, and
-feedeth upon milk, butter and cheese&mdash;I say do we not see such a
-one healthfuller, stronger, fairer complexioned, and longer-living
-than the other that fares daintily every day; and how should it be
-otherwise?”&mdash;<i>Stubbes’s Anatomy of Abuses</i>, 1583. Quoted by Ritson
-(<i>Abstinence from Flesh: A Moral Duty.</i>).</p></div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<h3 id="VII_COWLEY">VII.<br />
-COWLEY. 1620&ndash;1667.</h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A<span class="smaller">MONG</span> the poets of the age second only to Milton and to Dryden. <i>The
-Garden</i>, from which we extract the following just sentiments, is
-prefixed by way of dedication to the <i>Kalendarium Hortense</i> of John
-Evelyn, his personal and political friend. <i>The Gardener’s Almanac</i>, it
-is worthy of note, is one of the earliest prototypes of the numerous
-more modern treatises of the kind. It had reached a tenth edition in
-1706.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“When Epicurus to the world had taught</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">That pleasure is the chiefest good,</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">(And was, perhaps, i’th’ right, if rightly understood),</div>
- <div class="verse">His life he to his doctrine brought,</div>
- <div class="verse">And in a garden’s shade that Sovereign pleasure sought:</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Whoever a true <i>Epicure</i> would be.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">May there find cheap and virtuous luxury.</div>
- <div class="verse">Vitellius his table which did hold</div>
- <div class="verse">As many creatures as the ark of old&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">That fiscal table to which every day</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">All countries did a constant tribute pay&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Could nothing more delectable afford</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Than Nature’s Liberality&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Helped with a little Art and Industry&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">Allows the meanest gardener’s board.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1"><i>The wanton Taste no Flesh nor Fowl can choose,</i></div>
- <div class="verse mleft1"><i>For which the Grape or Melon it would lose,</i></div>
- <div class="verse mleft1"><i>Though all th’ inhabitants of Earth and Air</i></div>
- <div class="verse mleft1"><i>Be listed in the Glutton’s bill of fare.</i></div>
- <div class="verse">&nbsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Scarce any Plant is growing here.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Which against Death some weapon does not bear.</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Let Cities boast that they provide</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">For life the ornaments of Pride;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">But ’tis the Country and the Field</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">That furnish it with Staff and Shield.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft11"><i>The Garden.</i> Chertsey, 1666.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<h3 id="VIII_TRYON">VIII.<br />
-TRYON. 1634&ndash;1703.</h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>O<span class="smaller">NE</span> of the best known of the seventeenth century humane Hygeists, was
-born at Bibury, a village in Gloucestershire. His father was a tiler
-and plasterer, who by stress of poverty was forced to remove his son,
-when no more than six years of age, from the village school, and to set
-him at the work of spinning and carding, (the woollen manufacture being
-then extensively carried on in Gloucestershire). At eight years of age
-he became so expert, he tells us, as to be able to spin four pounds a
-day, earning two shillings a week. At the age of twelve he was made
-to work at his father’s employment. At this period he first learned
-to read. He next took to keeping sheep. With the sum of three pounds,
-realised by the sale of his four sheep, he went to London to seek his
-fortune, when seventeen years old, and bound himself apprentice to a
-“castor-maker,” in Fleet Street. His master was an Anabaptist&mdash;“an
-honest and sober man;” and, after two years’ apprenticeship, Tryon
-adopted the same religious creed. All his spare time was now devoted
-entirely to study; and, with the usual ardour of scholars who depend
-upon their own talents and exertions, he scarcely gave any time to food
-or sleep. The holiday period, too, spent by his fellow-apprentices in
-eating and drinking, and gross amusements, was utilised in the same
-way. Science, and Physiology in particular, attracted his attention.</p>
-
-<p>At the age of twenty-three he first adopted the reformed diet, “my
-drink being only water, and food only bread and some fruit, and that
-but once a day for some time; but afterwards I had more liberty given
-me by my guide, Wisdom, to eat butter and cheese; my clothing being
-mean and thin; for, in all things, self-denial was now become my real
-business.” This strict life he maintained for more than a year, when he
-relapsed, at intervals, during the next two years. At the end of this
-period he had become confirmed in his reform, and he remained to the
-end strictly akreophagist, and, indeed, strictly frugal, “contenting
-myself with herbs, fruits, grains, eggs, butter and cheese for food,
-and pure water for drink.” About two years after his marriage he made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span>
-voyages to Barbadoes and to Holland in the way of trade&mdash;“making
-beavers.” He finally settled himself in England, and at the age of
-forty-eight he published his first book on <i>Dietetics</i>.</p>
-
-<p>His brief autobiography, from which the above facts are drawn, ends at
-this period. His editor adds, as to his appearance and character: “his
-aspect easily discovered something extraordinary; his air was cheerful,
-lively, and brisk; but grave with something of authority, though he was
-of the easiest access. Notwithstanding he was of no strong make, yet,
-through his great temperance, regularity, and by the strength of his
-spirits and vigour of his mind, he was capable of any fatigue, even to
-his last illness, equally with any of the best constitutions of men
-half his years. Through all his lifetime he had been a man of unwearied
-application, and so indefatigable that it may be as truly said of him
-as it can be of any man that he was never idle; but of such despatch
-that, though fortune had allotted him as great multiplicity of business
-as, perhaps, to any one of his contemporaries, yet, without any
-neglect thereof, he found leisure to make such a search into Nature,
-that perhaps few of this age equalled him therein: and not only into
-Nature, but also into almost all arts and sciences, of some whereof he
-was an improver, and of all innocent and useful ones an encourager and
-promoter.”<a name="FNanchor_295_295" id="FNanchor_295_295"></a><a href="#Footnote_295_295" class="fnanchor">[295]</a></p>
-
-<p>In spite of that penetration of mind and justness of thought which
-influenced him to abandon the cruelty and coarseness of the orthodox
-diet, the author of <i>The Way to Health</i> could not free himself from
-certain of the credulous fancies of his age; and, it must be admitted,
-his writings are by no means exempt from such prejudices. It is as a
-moral reformer that he has deserved our respect, and of his numerous
-books the following are noteworthy:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>A Treatise on Cleanliness in Meats and Drinks.</i> London, 1682.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Way to Health, Long Life, &amp;c.</i> 1683, 1694, 1697. 3 vols., 8vo.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friendly Advice to the Gentlemen-Planters of the East and West
-Indies.</i> London, 1684.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Way to Make All People Rich: or, Wisdom’s Call to Temperance
-and Frugality.</i> 1685.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wisdom’s Doctrine: or, Aphorisms and Rules for Preserving the
-Health of the Body and the Peace of the Mind.</i> 1696.</p>
-
-<p><i>England’s Grandeur and the Way to Get Wealth: or, Promotion of
-Trade Made Easy and Lands Advanced.</i> 1699. 4<i>to.</i></p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Nothing can be more just or forcible than these expostulations:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Most men will, in words, confess that there is no blessing this
-world affords comparable to health. Yet rarely do any of them
-value it as they ought to do till they feel the want of it. To
-him that hath obtained this goodly gift the meanest food&mdash;even
-bread and water&mdash;is most pleasant, and all sorts of exercise and
-labour delightful. But the contrary makes all things nauseous and
-distasteful. What are full-spread Tables, Riches, or Honours, to
-him that is tormented with distempers? In such a condition men do
-desire nothing so much as <i>Health</i>. But no sooner is that obtained,
-but their thoughts are changed, forgetting those solemn promises
-and resolutions they made to God and their own souls, going on in
-the old road of <i>Gluttony</i>, taking little or no care to continue
-that which they so much desired when they were deprived of it.</p>
-
-<p>“Happy it were if men did but use the tenth part of that care and
-diligence to preserve their minds and bodies in Health, as they
-do to procure those dainties and superfluities which do generate
-Diseases, and are the cause of committing many other evils, there
-being but few men that do know how to use riches as they ought.
-For there are not many of our wealthy men that ever consider that
-as little and mean food and drink will suffice to maintain a
-<i>lord</i> in perfect health as it will a <i>peasant</i>, and render him
-more capable of enjoying the benefits of the Mind and pleasures
-of the Body, far beyond all ‘dainties and superfluities.’ But,
-alas! the momentary pleasures of the <i>Throat-Custom</i>, vanity,
-&amp;c., do ensnare and entice most people to exceed the bounds of
-necessity or convenience; and many fail through a false opinion or
-misunderstanding of Nature&mdash;childishly imagining that the richer
-the food is, and the more they can cram into their bellies, the
-more they shall be strengthened thereby. But experience shews to
-the contrary; for are not such people as accustom themselves to the
-richest foods, and most <i>cordial</i> drinks, generally the most infirm
-and diseased?</p>
-
-<p>“Now the sorts of foods and drinks that breed the best blood and
-finest spirits, are Herbs, Fruits, and various kinds of Grains;
-also Bread, and sundry sorts of excellent food made by different
-preparations of Milk, and all dry food out of which the sun hath
-exhaled the gross humidity, by which all sorts of Pulses and Grains
-become of a firmer substance. So, likewise, Oil is an excellent
-thing, in nature more sublime and pure than Butter.” ...</p></div>
-
-<p>As to the unsuspected cause of the various diseases so abundant:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Many of the richest sort of people in this nation might know by
-woful experience, especially in London, who do yearly spend many
-hundreds, I think I may say thousands, of pounds on their <i>ungodly
-paunches</i>. Many of whom may save themselves that charge and trouble
-they are usually at in learning of <i>Monsieur Nimble-heels</i>, the
-Dancing-Master, how to go upright; for their bellies are swollen up
-to their chins, which forces them ‘to behold the sky,’<a name="FNanchor_296_296" id="FNanchor_296_296"></a><a href="#Footnote_296_296" class="fnanchor">[296]</a> but not
-for contemplation sake you may be sure, but out of pure necessity,
-and without any more impressions of reverence towards the Almighty
-Creator than their fellow-brutes; for their brains are sunk into
-their bellies; <i>injection and ejection</i> is the business of their
-life, and all their precious hours are spent between the platter
-and the glass and the close-stool. Are not these fine fellows to
-call themselves <i>Christians</i> and <i>Right-Worshipfuls</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_297_297" id="FNanchor_297_297"></a><a href="#Footnote_297_297" class="fnanchor">[297]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>In his xiv chapter, “Of Flesh and its Operation on the Body and Mind,”
-Tryon employs all his eloquence in proving that the practice of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>
-slaughtering for food is not only cruel and barbarous in itself, but
-originates, or, at all events, intensifies the worst passions of men.</p>
-
-<p>Eulogising the milder manners of the followers of Pythagoras, and of
-the Hindus generally, he tells his countrymen that:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The very same, and far greater, advantages would come to
-pass amongst Christians, if they would cease from contention,
-oppression, and (what tends and disposes them thereunto) the
-killing of other animals, and eating their flesh and blood; and,
-in a short time, human murders and devilish feuds and cruelties
-amongst each other would abate, and, perhaps, scarce have a
-being amongst them. For <i>separation</i> has greater power than most
-imagine, whether it be from evil or from good; for whatever any
-man separates himself from, that property in him presently is
-weakened. Likewise, <i>separation</i> from cruelty does wonderfully
-dispel the dark clouds of ignorance, and makes the understanding
-able to distinguish between the good and evil principles&mdash;first in
-himself, and then in all other things proportionably. But so long
-as men live under the power of all kinds of uncleanness, violence,
-and oppression, they cannot see any evil therein. For this cause,
-those who do not separate themselves from these evils, but are
-contented to follow the multitude in the left-hand-way, and resolve
-to continue the religion of their fore-fathers&mdash;though thereby they
-do but continue mere <i>Custom</i>, the greatest of tyrants&mdash;’tis, I
-say, impossible for such people ever to understand or know anything
-<i>truly</i>, either of divine or of human things....</p>
-
-<p>“It is a grand mistake of people in this age to say or suppose:
-That Flesh affords not only a stronger nourishment, but also more
-and better than Herbs, Grains, &amp;c.; for the truth is, it does yield
-more stimulation, <i>but not of so firm, a substance, nor so good
-as that which proceeds from the other food</i>; for flesh has more
-matter for corruption, and nothing so soon turns to putrefaction.
-Now, ’tis certain, such sorts of food as are subject to putrify
-<i>before</i> they are eaten, are also liable to the same afterwards.
-Besides, Flesh is of soft, moist, gross, phlegmy quality, and
-generates a nourishment of a like nature; thirdly, Flesh heats the
-body, and causeth a drought; fourthly, Flesh does breed great store
-of noxious humours; fifthly, it must be considered that ‘beasts’
-and other living creatures are subject to diseases<a name="FNanchor_298_298" id="FNanchor_298_298"></a><a href="#Footnote_298_298" class="fnanchor">[298]</a> and many
-other inconveniences, and uncleannesses, surfeits, over-driving,
-abuses of cruel butchers, &amp;c., which renders their flesh still more
-unwholesome. But on the contrary, all sorts of dry foods, as Bread,
-Cheese, Herbs, and many preparations of Milk, Pulses, Grains, and
-Fruits; as their original is more clean, so, being of a sound firm
-nature, they afford a more excellent nourishment, and more easy
-of concoction; so that if a man should exceed in quantity, the
-Health will not, thereby, be brought into such danger as by the
-superfluous eating of flesh....</p>
-
-<p>“What an ill and ungrateful sight is it to behold dead carcasses,
-and pieces of bloody, raw, flesh! It would undoubtedly appear
-dreadful, and no man but would abhor to think of putting it in
-his mouth, had not Use and Custom from generation to generation
-familiarised it to us, which is so prevalent, that we read in some
-countries the mode is to eat the bodies of their dead parents
-and friends, thinking they can no way afford them a more noble
-sepulchre than their own bowells. And because it is <i>usual</i>, they
-do it with as little regret or nauseousness as others have when
-they devour the leg of a Rabbit or the wing of a Lark. Suppose a
-person were bred up in a place where it were not a <i>custom</i> to kill
-and eat flesh, and should come into our Leadenhall Market, or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span> view
-our Slaughter Houses, and see the communication we have with dead
-bodies, and how blythe and merry we are at their funerals, and
-what honourable sepulchres we bury the dead carcasses of beasts
-in&mdash;nay, their very guts and entrails&mdash;would he not be filled with
-astonishment and horror? Would he not count us cruel monsters, and
-say we were <i>brutified</i>, and performed the part of beasts of prey,
-to live thus on the spoils of our fellow-creatures?</p>
-
-<p>“Thus, Custom has awakened the inhuman, fierce nature, which makes
-killing, handling, and feeding upon flesh and blood, without
-distinction, so easy and familiar unto mankind. And the same is
-to be understood of men killing and oppressing those of their own
-kind; for do we not see that a soldier, who is trained up in the
-wars of bloody-minded princes, shall kill a hundred men without any
-trouble or regret of spirit, and such as have given him no more
-offence than a sheep has given the butcher that cuts her throat. If
-men have but Power and Custom on their side, they think all is well.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Whatever may be thought of the zealous attempt of the pious author to
-meet the assertions of the (practical) materialists, who draw their
-arguments from the Jewish Sacred Scriptures, or elsewhere, his replies
-to the common subterfuges or prejudices of the orthodox dietists are
-able and conclusive. His <i>humane</i> arguments, indeed, are worthy of the
-most advanced thinkers of the present day; and those who are versed
-in the anti-kreophagist literature of the last thirty years&mdash;in the
-controversy in the press, and on the platform&mdash;will, perhaps, be
-surprised to find that the ordinary prejudices or subterfuges of this
-year “of Grace” are identical with those current in the year 1683. We
-wish that we could transcribe some of these replies. We cannot forbear,
-however, to quote his representation of the changed condition of things
-under the imagined humanitarian <i>régime</i>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Here all contention ceaseth, no hideous cries nor mournful groans
-are heard, neither of man nor of ‘beast.’ No channels running with
-the blood of slaughtered animals, no stinking shambles, nor bloody
-butchers. No roaring of cannons, nor firing of towns. No loathsome
-stinking prisons, nor iron grates to keep men from enjoying their
-wife, children, and the pleasant air; nor no crying for want of
-food and clothes. No rioting, nor wanton inventions to destroy as
-much in one day as a thousand can get by their hard labour and
-travel. No dreadful execrations and coarse language. No galloping
-horses up hills, without any consideration or fellow-feeling
-of the victim’s pains and burdens. No deflowering of virgins,
-<i>and then exposing them and their own young to all the miseries
-imaginable</i>. No letting lands and farms so dear that the farmer
-must be forced to oppress himself, servants, and cattle almost
-to death, and all too little to pay his rent. No oppressions of
-inferiors by superiors; neither is there any want, because there
-is no superfluity nor gluttony. No noise nor cries of wounded men.
-No need of chirurgeons to cut bullets out of their flesh; nor no
-cutting off hands, broken legs, and arms. No roaring nor crying out
-with the torturing pains of the gout, nor other painful diseases
-(as leprous and consumptive distempers), except through age, and
-the relics of some strain they got whilst they lived intemperately.
-Neither are their children afflicted with such a great number of
-diseases; but are as free from distempers as lambs, calves, or the
-young ones of any of the ‘beasts’ who are preserved sound and
-healthful, because they have not outraged God’s law in Nature, the
-breaking of which is the foundation of most, or all, cruel diseases
-that afflict mankind; there being nothing that makes the difference
-between Man and ‘Beasts’ in health, but only superfluity and
-intemperance, both in quality and in quantity.”</p></div>
-
-<p>His chapter, in which he deals with the relations between the sexes and
-the married state, shews him to have been as much in advance of his
-time, in a sound knowledge and apprehension of Physiology, and of the
-laws of Health, in that important part of hygienic science, as he was
-in the special branch of Diet.<a name="FNanchor_299_299" id="FNanchor_299_299"></a><a href="#Footnote_299_299" class="fnanchor">[299]</a></p>
-
-<p>Affixed to this work is a very remarkable Essay, in the shape of <i>A
-Dialogue between an East-Indian Brachman and a French Gentleman,
-concerning the Present Affairs of Europe</i>. In this admirable piece, the
-author ably exposes the folly no less than the horrors of war&mdash;and,
-in particular, <i>religious</i> war&mdash;all which he ultimately traces to
-the first source&mdash;the iniquities and barbarism of the Shambles. The
-Dialogue is worthy of the most trenchant of the humanitarian writers
-of the next century. It was by meeting with <i>The Way to Health</i> that
-Benjamin Franklin, in his youth, was induced to abandon the flesh-diet,
-to which revolutionary measure he ascribes his success, as well as
-health in after life.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<h3 id="IX_HECQUET">IX.<br />
-HECQUET. 1661&ndash;1737.</h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>T<span class="smaller">HIS</span> meritorious medical reformer, at first intended for the Church,
-happily (in the event) adopted the profession which he has so truly
-adorned, by his virtues, as well as by his enlightened labours. After
-a long and severe course of Anatomy and Physiology, in 1684 he was
-admitted as “Doctor” at Reims, and as Fellow (<i>Agrégé</i>) in the College
-of Physicians in his native town. He then returned to Paris to perfect
-himself in physiological science. Disgusted with the <i>tricasseries</i>
-which were excited against him by the members of his profession,
-he withdrew (in 1688) to Port-Royal-des-Champs, where he succeeded
-Hamon, who had just died, as physician. Here he practised the reforms
-he taught, while he devoted himself to the most laborious works of
-charity, giving all his time and attention to the poor for several
-leagues round, and travelling the distances, great as they were, on
-foot.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>His health enfeebled by excessive labour in this way, he was induced
-to retire from his post at Port-Royal, and he went back to the capital
-where, having gone through the necessary formalities, he was regularly
-enrolled as Doctor of the Paris University, receiving the official hat
-after an examination of “rare success” (1697).</p>
-
-<p>Soon afterwards the Faculty named him <i>Docteur-Régent</i>, and appointed
-him to the post of Professor of <i>Materia Medica</i>. “Hecquet had soon
-numerous and illustrious patients, and his services were eagerly
-sought for, particularly in religious communities and in hospitals. He
-attached himself to that of Charity.” In 1712 he was named Dean of the
-Faculty. In the midst of so much work, he found time to publish several
-medical books.</p>
-
-<p>“He exercised his art with a noble disinterestedness. The poor were
-his favourite patients. He presented himself at the houses of the rich
-only when absolutely obliged, or when courtesy required it. He had
-much studied his art, and contributed with all his power, to advance
-it, as well by his writings as by his guidance and encouragement of
-young physicians.... He was in correspondence with the most famous
-savants and physicians of his age. His style in Latin is correct, and
-does not want eloquence; in French he is more negligent, and a little
-unpolished. He was animated (<i>vif</i>) in debate, and strongly attached to
-his opinions; but he sought Truth in good faith.”</p>
-
-<p>Amongst his numerous works are:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>De l’Indécence aux Hommes d’Accoucher les Femmes, et de l’Obligation,
-de Celles-ci de nourrir leurs enfants.</i> (On the Indecency of Male
-Physicians Attending Women in Child-Birth) 1708. <i>Traité des Dispenses
-du Carême</i>, 1709&mdash;his most celebrated book. <i>De la Digestion et des
-Maladies de l’Estomac</i>, 1712. <i>Novus Medicinæ Conspectus cum Appendice
-De Peste</i>, 1722. “He there combats the various systems upon the origin
-of diseases, which he attributes to the disorders which supervene, in
-accordance with the laws which direct the movement of the blood:” the
-Plague, upon which he writes, was desolating the south of France at
-that time. Also, at this period, various <i>brochures</i> upon the Small-Pox.</p>
-
-<p><i>La Médecine, la Chirurgie, et la Pharmacie des Pauvres</i> (1740&ndash;2),
-his most popular book&mdash;<i>La Brigandage de la Médecine</i> (1755),
-which he supplemented with <i>Brigandage de la Chirurgie, et de la
-Pharmacie</i>&mdash;will sufficiently mark his attitude towards the orthodox
-Schools of Medicine of his day. <i>Le Naturalisme des Convulsions dans
-les Maladies</i> (1755), with several other books upon the same subject.
-The history of the <i>Convulsionnaires</i> occupies a curious episode in
-the religious history of the period, as it has occupied, and, in some
-measure still, in fact, occupies<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span> the attention of physiologists and
-psychologists of our own age. Hecquet, with the physiologists of the
-present time, attributes the phenomena to physical and natural causes.
-<i>La Médecine Naturelle</i>: “in this work the author alleges that it is
-not in the blood only that is to be sought the causes of maladies, but
-also in the nervous fluid.”<a name="FNanchor_300_300" id="FNanchor_300_300"></a><a href="#Footnote_300_300" class="fnanchor">[300]</a></p>
-
-<p>The books in which he treats of reform in Dietetics are the <i>Traité des
-Dispenses and La Médecine des Pauvres</i>.</p>
-
-<p>However <i>dietetically</i> heterodox and heretical, the author of <i>The
-Treatise on Dispensations</i> was of unsuspected ecclesiastical as well
-as theological orthodoxy; yet he takes occasion, at the outset of
-his book, to reproach his Church with its indifferentism towards so
-essentially important a matter as Dietetics&mdash;scientific or moral:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It will, perhaps, be found that much theology enters into this
-undertaking. We acknowledge it. One might even expect that some
-zealous ecclesiastic or other would have done himself the credit of
-sustaining so beautiful a cause (que quelque ecclesiastique zelé
-se seroit fait gloire de soutenir une si belle cause). It might be
-hoped, especially in an age like ours, when physical science is
-in honour and for the benefit of everyone, and in which Medicine
-has become the property of every condition.... It ought then to
-have been the duty of so many Abbés, Monks and Religious Orders,
-who invest themselves with the titles of physicians&mdash;who receive
-their pay, who fill their employments&mdash;to advocate this part of
-ecclesiastical discipline [abstinence]. But, instead of doing so,
-though they undertake the care of the body, they, in fact, apply
-themselves solely to the <i>healing</i> of maladies.... One can see
-enough of it, nevertheless, to be convinced that the public has
-gained less from their <i>secrets</i> than they themselves, while their
-patients die more than ever under their hands....”</p></div>
-
-<p>In Chap. VI., <i>Que les Fruits, les Grains, les Legumes sont les Alimens
-les plus Naturels à l’Homme</i>, after appealing to <i>Gen.</i> i. and “the
-Garden of Eden,” Hecquet proceeds to insist that our foods should be
-analogous and consistent with the juices which maintain our life; and
-these are Fruits, Grains, Seeds, and Roots. But prejudice, of long
-standing, opposes itself to this truth. The false ideas attached to
-certain traditional terms have warped the minds of the majority of the
-world, and they have succeeded in persuading themselves that it is upon
-stimulating foods that depend the strength and health of men. From
-thence has come the love of wine, of spirituous liquors, and of gross
-meats. The ambiguity (équivoque) comes from confounding the idea of
-Remedy with that of Food.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Here the greater part of the world take alarm. ‘How,’ say they,
-‘can we be supported on Grains, which furnish but dry meal, fitter
-to cloy than to nourish; on Fruits, which are but condensed water;
-with vegetables, which are fit but for manure (fumier)?’ But this
-meal, well prepared, forms Bread, the strongest of all aliments,
-this condensed water is the same that has caused the Trees to
-attain so great bulk, this <i>fumier</i> becomes such only because
-they prepare vegetables badly, and eat of them to excess. Besides,
-how can men affect to fear failure in strength, in eating what
-nourishes even the most robust animals, who would become even
-formidable to us, if only they knew their own strength.”</p></div>
-
-<p>In Chap. VII., <i>Que l’Usage de la Viande n’est pas le plus naturel à
-l’Homme, ni absolument Nécessaire</i>, he remarks:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“It is incredible how much Prejudice has been allowed to operate
-in favour of [flesh] meat, while so many facts are opposed to the
-pretended necessity of its use.”</p>
-
-<p>Having entered into the physiological argument, now so well-worn, among
-other reasons he adduces the fact that “the soundest part of the world,
-or the most enlightened, have believed in the obligation to abstain
-from flesh,” and “the very nature of flesh, which is digested with
-difficulty, and which furnishes the worst juices.”</p>
-
-<p>Nature being uniform in her method of procedure, is anything else
-necessary to determine whether Man is intended to live upon flesh-meats
-than to compare the organs which have to prepare them for his
-nourishment, with those of animals whom Nature manifestly has destined
-for carnage? And herein it may be clearly recognised, since men have
-neither fangs nor talons to tear flesh, that it is very far from being
-the food most natural to them.</p>
-
-<p>He quotes numerous examples of eminent persons, as well as of nations
-in all times, and adds, as an argument not easy to be answered, that:&mdash;
-“It is proved it would not be difficult to nourish animals who live
-on flesh with non-flesh substances, while it is almost impossible to
-nourish with flesh those who live ordinarily upon vegetable substances.”</p>
-
-<p>Hecquet devotes several chapters to a description of various Fruits and
-Herbs, and also of various kinds of Fish, which he holds to be much
-less objectionable and more innocent food than flesh. Comparing the two
-diets, we must acknowledge:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It causes our nature to revolt, and excites horror to eat raw
-flesh, and as it is presented to us naturally; and it becomes
-supportable for us to the taste and to the sight only after long
-preparation of cooking, which deprives it of what is inhuman and
-disgusting in its original state; and, often, it is only after
-<i>many</i> various preparations and strange seasonings that it can
-become agreeable or sanitarily good. It is not so with other meats:
-the majority, as they come from the hand of Nature, without cookery
-and without art, are found proper to nourish, and are pleasant to
-the taste&mdash;plain proof that they are intended by Nature to maintain
-our health. Fruits are of such property that, when well-chosen and
-quite ripe, they excite the appetite by <i>their own virtue</i>, and
-might become, without preparation, sufficing.... If Vegetables or
-Fish have need of fire to accommodate them to our nature, the fire
-appears to be used less to <i>correct</i> these sorts of foods than to
-penetrate them, to make them soft and tender, and to develope what
-in them is most proper and suitable for health.... In fine, it is
-clear that vegetables and fish have need of less, and less strange
-and récherché, condiments&mdash;all sensible marks that these aliments
-are the most natural and suited to man.”<a name="FNanchor_301_301" id="FNanchor_301_301"></a><a href="#Footnote_301_301" class="fnanchor">[301]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>Hecquet’s <i>Traité des Dispenses</i> received the formal approval and
-commendation of several “doctors regent” of the Faculty of Medicine
-of the Paris University, which testimonies are prefixed to the second
-edition of 1710. With his English contemporary, Dr. Cheyne, and other
-medical reformers, however, he experienced much insult and ridicule
-from anonymous professional critics.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<h3 id="Xa_POPE">X.<br />
-POPE. 1688&ndash;1744.</h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft8"><i>Primâque e cæde ferarum</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Incaluisse putem maculatum sanguine ferrum.</i></div>
- <div class="verse mleft13">(Ovid <i>Metam.</i> XV. 106).</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I cannot think it extravagant to imagine that mankind are no
-less, in proportion, accountable for the ill use of their dominion
-over the lower ranks of Beings, than for the exercise of tyranny
-over their own species. The more entirely the inferior creation
-is submitted to our power, the more answerable we should seem for
-the mismanagement of it; and the rather, as the very condition of
-Nature renders these beings incapable of receiving any recompense
-in another life, for their ill-treatment in this.</p>
-
-<p>“It is observable of those noxious animals, who have qualities
-most powerful to injure us, that they naturally avoid mankind, and
-never hurt us unless provoked, or necessitated by hunger. Man, on
-the other hand, <i>seeks</i> out and pursues even the most inoffensive
-animals on purpose to persecute and destroy them. Montaigne thinks
-it some reflection on human nature itself, that few people take
-delight in seeing ‘beasts’ caress or play together, but almost
-every one is pleased to see them lacerate and worry one another.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry this temper is become almost a distinguishing character
-of our own nation, from the observation which is made by foreigners
-of our beloved <i>Pastimes</i>&mdash;Bear-baiting, Cock-fighting, and the
-like. We should find it hard to vindicate the destroying of
-anything that has Life, merely out of wantonness. Yet in this
-principle our children are bred, and one of the first pleasures we
-allow them is the licence of inflicting Pain upon poor animals.
-Almost as soon as we are sensible what Life is ourselves, we make
-it our Sport to take it from other beings. I cannot but believe a
-very good use might be made of the fancy which children have for
-Birds and Insects. Mr. Locke takes notice of a mother who permitted
-them to her children; but rewarded or punished them as they treated
-well or ill. This was no other than entering them betimes into a
-daily exercise of Humanity, and improving their very diversion to a
-Virtue.</p>
-
-<p>“I fancy, too, some advantage might be taken of the common notion,
-that ’tis ominous or unlucky to destroy some sorts of Birds, as
-Swallows or Martins. This opinion might possibly arise from the
-confidence these Birds seem to put in us, by building under our
-roofs, so that it is a kind of violation of the laws of Hospitality
-to murder them. As for Robin-red-breasts, in particular, ’tis
-not improbable they owe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span> their security to the old ballad of the
-<i>Children in the Wood</i>. However it be, I don’t know, I say, why
-this prejudice, well-improved and carried as far as it would go,
-might not be made to conduce to the preservation of many innocent
-beings, who are now exposed to all the wantonness of an ignorant
-barbarity....</p>
-
-<p>“When we grow up to be men we have another succession of sanguinary
-Sports&mdash;in particular, <i>Hunting</i>. I dare not attack a diversion
-which has such Authority and Custom to support it; but must have
-leave to be of opinion, that the agitation of that exercise, with
-the example and number of the chasers, not a little contribute to
-resist those checks which Compassion would naturally suggest in
-behalf of the Animal pursued. Nor shall I say, with M. Fleury,
-that this sport is a remain of the Gothic Barbarity; but I must
-animadvert upon a certain custom yet in use with us, barbarous
-enough to be derived from the Goths or even the Scythians&mdash;I mean
-that savage compliment our Huntsmen pass upon ladies of quality who
-are present at the death of a Stag, when they put the knife into
-their hands to cut the throat of a helpless, trembling, and weeping
-creature.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft3">“<i>Questuque cruentus,</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Atque imploranti similis.</i>”<a name="FNanchor_302_302" id="FNanchor_302_302"></a><a href="#Footnote_302_302" class="fnanchor">[302]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“But if our ‘Sports’ are destructive, our <i>Gluttony</i> is more so,
-and in a more inhuman manner. Lobsters roasted alive, Pigs whipt
-to death, Fowls sewed up,<a name="FNanchor_303_303" id="FNanchor_303_303"></a><a href="#Footnote_303_303" class="fnanchor">[303]</a> are testimonies of our outrageous
-Luxury. Those who (as Seneca expresses it) divide their lives
-betwixt an anxious Conscience and a Nauseated Stomach, have a
-just reward of their gluttony in the diseases it brings with it.
-For human savages, like other wild beasts, find snares and poison
-in the provisions of life, and are allured by their appetite to
-their destruction. I know nothing more shocking or horrid than the
-prospect of one of their kitchens covered with blood, and filled
-with the cries of Beings expiring in tortures. It gives one an
-image of a giant’s den in a romance, bestrewed with the scattered
-heads and mangled limbs of those who were slain by his cruelty.</p>
-
-<p>“The excellent Plutarch (who has more strokes of good nature in
-his writings than I remember in any author) cites a saying of Cato
-to this effect:&mdash;<i>That ’tis no easy task to preach to the Belly
-which has no ears.</i> Yet if (says he) we are ashamed to be so out
-of fashion as not to offend, let us at least offend with <i>some</i>
-discretion and measure. If we kill an animal for our provision, let
-us do it with the meltings of compassion, and without tormenting
-it. Let us consider that it is, in its own nature, cruelty to put a
-living being to death&mdash;we, at least destroy a soul that has sense
-and perception.<a name="FNanchor_304_304" id="FNanchor_304_304"></a><a href="#Footnote_304_304" class="fnanchor">[304]</a></p>
-
-<p>“History tells us of a wise and polite nation that rejected a
-person of the first quality, who stood for a justiciary office,
-only because he had been observed, in his youth, to take pleasure
-in teasing and murdering of Birds. And of another that expelled a
-man out of the Senate for dashing a bird against the ground who
-had taken refuge in his bosom. Every one knows how remarkable the
-Turks are for their Humanity in this kind. I remember an Arabian
-author, who has written a Treatise to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span> show how far a man, supposed
-to have subsisted in a desert island, without any instruction, or
-so much as the sight of any other man, may, by the pure light of
-Nature, attain the knowledge of Philosophy and Virtue. One of the
-first things he makes him observe is the benevolence of Nature, in
-the protection and preservation of her creatures.<a name="FNanchor_305_305" id="FNanchor_305_305"></a><a href="#Footnote_305_305" class="fnanchor">[305]</a> In imitation
-of which, the first act of virtue he thinks his self-taught
-philosopher would, of course, fall into, is to relieve and assist
-all the animals about them in their wants and distresses....</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps that voice or cry, so nearly resembling the human, with
-which Nature has endowed so many different animals, might purposely
-be given them to move our Pity, and prevent those cruelties we are
-to apt to inflict upon our Fellow Creatures.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Pope quotes, in part, the admirable verses of Ovid, Metam. XV., with
-Dryden’s translation&mdash;and an apposite <i>fable</i> of the Persian Pilpai,
-which illustrates the base ingratitude of men who torture and slaughter
-their fellow labourers.&mdash;“I know it” (this common ingratitude) said
-the Cow, “by woful experience; for I have served a man this long time
-with milk, butter, and cheese, and brought him, besides, a Calf every
-year&mdash;but now I am old, he turns me into this pasture with design to
-sell me to a butcher, who, shortly, will make an end of me.”&mdash;<i>The
-Guardian</i>, LXI, May 21, 1713.</p>
-
-<p>With Pilpai or Bidpai’s fable, compare that of La Fontaine on the same
-subject&mdash;<i>L’Homme et la Couleuvre</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<h3 id="XIa_CHESTERFIELD">XI.<br />
-CHESTERFIELD. 1694&ndash;1773.</h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>T<span class="smaller">O</span> the expression of the opinion or feeling of Lord Chesterfield on
-butchering, given, in its place, in the body of this work (page 140),
-is here subjoined the remainder of his paper in <i>The World</i>. The value
-of such testimony may be deemed proportionate to the extreme rarity
-of any protests of this sort from those who, by their influential
-position, are the most <i>bound</i> to make them:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Although this reflection [the fact of the preying of the
-stronger upon the weaker throughout Nature] had force enough to
-<i>dispythagorise</i> me <i>before my companions</i> [in his college at
-the University of Oxford] <i>had time to make observations upon my
-behaviour, which could by no means have turned to my advantage in
-the world</i>, I for a great while retained so tender a regard for
-all my fellow-creatures, that I have several times brought myself
-into imminent peril by putting butcher-boys in mind, that their
-Sheep were going to die, and that they walked full as fast as
-could reasonably be expected, without the cruel blows they were so
-liberal in bestowing upon them. As I commonly came<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span> off the worst
-in these disputes, and as I could not but observe that I often
-aggravated, never diminished, the ill-treatment of these innocent
-sufferers, I soon found it necessary to consult my own ease, as
-well as security, by turning down another street, whenever I met
-with an adventure of this kind, rather than be compelled to be a
-spectator of what would shock me, or be provoked to run myself into
-danger, without the least advantage to those whom I would assist.</p>
-
-<p>“I have kept strictly, ever since, to this method of fleeing from
-the sight of cruelty, wherever I could find ground-room for it;
-and I make no manner of doubt, that I have more than once escaped
-the horns of a Mad Ox, as all of that species are called, that do
-not choose to be tortured as well as killed. But, on the other
-hand, these escapes of mine have very frequently run me into great
-inconveniences. I have sometimes been led into such a series of
-blind alleys, that it has been matter of great difficulty to me to
-find my way out of them. I have been betrayed by my hurry into the
-middle of a market&mdash;<i>the proper residence of Inhumanity</i>. I have
-paid many a six-and-eightpence for non-appearance at the hour my
-lawyer had appointed for business; and, what would hurt some people
-worse than all the rest, I have frequently arrived too late for the
-dinners I have been invited to at the houses of my friends.</p>
-
-<p>“All these difficulties and distresses, I began to flatter myself,
-were going to be removed, and that I should be left at liberty
-to pursue my walks through the straightest and broadest streets,
-when Mr. Hogarth first published his Prints upon the subject of
-Cruelty.<a name="FNanchor_306_306" id="FNanchor_306_306"></a><a href="#Footnote_306_306" class="fnanchor">[306]</a> But whatever success so much ingenuity, founded upon
-so much humanity, might deserve, all the hopes I had built of
-seeing a Reformation, proved vain and fruitless. I am sorry to say
-it, but there still remain in the <i>streets</i> of this metropolis,
-more scenes of Barbarity than, perhaps, are to be met with in all
-Europe besides. Asia (at least in the larger population of it&mdash;the
-Hindus) is well known for compassion to ‘brutes’; and nobody who
-has read Busbequius, will wonder at me for most heartily wishing
-that our common people were no crueller than Turks.</p>
-
-<p>“I should have apprehensions of being laughed at, were I to
-complain of want of compassion in our Laws [!]; the very word
-seeming contradictory to any idea of it. But I will venture to own
-that to me it appears strange, that the men against whom I should
-be enabled to bring an action for laying a little dirt at my door,
-may, with <i>impunity</i>, drive by it half-a-dozen Calves, <i>with their
-tails lopped close to their bodies and their hinder parts covered
-with blood</i>....</p>
-
-<p>“To conclude this subject&mdash;as I cannot but join in opinion with Mr.
-Hogarth, that the frequency of murders among us is greatly owing
-to those scenes of Cruelty, which the lower ranks of people are so
-much accustomed to; <i>instead of multiplying such scenes</i>, I should
-rather hope that some proper method might be fixed upon either
-<i>for preventing them</i>, or removing them out of sight; so that our
-infants might not grow up into the world in a familiarity with
-blood.</p>
-
-<p>“If we may believe the Naturalists, that a Lion is a gentle animal
-until his tongue has been dipped in blood, <i>what precaution ought
-we to use to prevent MAN from being inured to it, who has such
-superiority of power to do mischief</i>.”&mdash;<i>The World</i>, No. LXI., Aug.
-19, 1756.</p></div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XII_JENYNS">XII.<br />
-JENYNS. 1704&ndash;1787.</h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A S<span class="smaller">UPPORTER</span> of the Walpole Administration, he represented the county
-of Cambridge, and during twenty-five years held the office of
-Commissioner of the Board of Trade. He wrote papers in <i>The World</i> and
-other periodicals, and published two volumes of Poems. His principal
-book is the <i>Free Enquiry into the Origin of Evil</i>, in which he
-seeks to reconcile the obvious evils in the constitution of things
-with his optimistic creed. Johnson, who, with all his orthodoxy, was
-pessimistic, severely criticised this apology for Theism. In striking
-contrast with the indifferentism of the vast majority of his class,
-his just and humane feeling is sufficiently remarkable. The line of
-reasoning, in his comprehensive arraignment of the various atrocities
-perpetrated, sanctioned, or condoned by English Society or English Law
-in the last century, and which, for the most part, still continue (it
-is scarcely necessary to add), <i>logically</i> leads to the abolition of
-the Slaughter-House&mdash;the fountain and origin of the evil:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“How will Man, that sanguinary Tyrant, be able to excuse himself
-from the charge of those innumerable cruelties inflicted on his
-unoffending subjects, committed to his care, and placed under
-his authority, by their common father? To what horrid deviations
-from these benevolent intentions are we daily witnesses! No small
-part of Mankind derive their chief amusement from the deaths and
-sufferings of inferior Animals. A much greater part still, consider
-them only as engines of wood or iron, useful in their several
-occupations. The Carman drives his Horse as the Carpenter his nail
-by repeated blows; and so long as these produce the desired effect,
-and they both go, they neither reflect nor care whether either of
-them have any sense of feeling.</p>
-
-<p>“The Butcher knocks down the stately Ox with no more compassion
-than the Blacksmith hammers a horse-shoe, and plunges his knife
-into the throat of the innocent Lamb with as little reluctance as
-the Tailor sticks his needle into the collar of a coat.<a name="FNanchor_307_307" id="FNanchor_307_307"></a><a href="#Footnote_307_307" class="fnanchor">[307]</a> If
-there are some few who, formed in a softer mould, view with pity
-the sufferings of these defenceless beings, <i>there is scarce one
-who entertains the least idea that Justice or Gratitude can be due
-to their Merits or their Services</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“The social and friendly Dog, if by barking, in defence of his
-master’s person and property, he happens unknowingly to disturb
-his rest&mdash;the generous Horse, who has carried his ungrateful
-master for many years, with ease and safety, worn out with age
-and infirmities contracted in his service, is by him condemned to
-end his miserable days in a dust-cart, where the more he exerts
-his little remains of spirit, the more he is whipped to save his
-stupid driver the trouble of whipping some other less obedient
-to the lash. Sometimes, having been taught the practice of many
-unnatural and useless feats in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span> Riding-House, he is, at last,
-turned out and consigned to the dominion of a hackney-coachman, by
-whom he is every day corrected for performing those tricks which he
-has learned under so long and severe a discipline. [Add the final
-horrors of the <i>Knackers’ Yard</i>, to which sort of hell the worn-out
-Horse is usually consigned.]</p>
-
-<p>“The Sluggish Bear, in contradiction to his nature, is taught to
-dance, for the diversion of an ignorant mob, by placing red-hot
-irons under his feet. The majestic Bull is tortured by every mode
-that malice can invent, for no offence but that he is unwilling
-to assail his diabolical tormentors.<a name="FNanchor_308_308" id="FNanchor_308_308"></a><a href="#Footnote_308_308" class="fnanchor">[308]</a> These and innumerable
-other acts of Cruelty, Injustice, and Ingratitude are every day
-committed&mdash;not only with impunity, but <i>without censure, and even
-without observation</i>....</p>
-
-<p>“The law of self-defence, undoubtedly, justifies us in destroying
-those animals that would destroy us, that injure our properties,
-or annoy our persons; but not even these, whenever their situation
-incapacitates them from hurting us....</p>
-
-<p>“If there are any [there are vast numbers even now], whose tastes
-are so vitiated, and whose hearts are so hardened, as to delight in
-such inhuman sacrifices [the tortures of the Slaughter-House and of
-the Kitchen], and to partake of them without remorse, they should
-be looked upon as demons in human shape, and expect a retaliation
-of those tortures <i>which they have inflicted on the Innocent for
-the gratification of their own depraved and unnatural appetites</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“So violent are the passions of anger and revenge in the human
-breast, that it is not wonderful that men should persecute their
-real or imaginary enemies with cruelty and malevolence. But that
-there should exist in Nature a being who can receive pleasure from
-giving pain would be totally incredible, if we were not convinced
-by melancholy experience that there are not only many&mdash;but that
-this unaccountable disposition is in some manner inherent in the
-nature of men.<a name="FNanchor_309_309" id="FNanchor_309_309"></a><a href="#Footnote_309_309" class="fnanchor">[309]</a> For as he cannot be taught by example, nor led
-to it by temptation, nor prompted to it by interest, it must be
-derived from his native constitution.<a name="FNanchor_310_310" id="FNanchor_310_310"></a><a href="#Footnote_310_310" class="fnanchor">[310]</a></p>
-
-<p>“We see children laughing at the miseries which they inflict on
-every unfortunate animal who comes within their power. All Savages
-are ingenious in contriving and executing the most exquisite
-tortures, and [not alone] the common people of all countries
-are delighted with nothing so much as with Bull-Baitings,
-Prize-Fightings, ‘Executions,’ and all spectacles of cruelty and
-horror.... They arm Cocks with artificial weapons which Nature had
-kindly denied to their malevolence, and with shouts of applause and
-triumph see them plunge them into each other’s hearts. They view
-with delight the trembling Deer and defenceless Hare flying for
-hours in the utmost agonies of terror and despair, and, at last,
-sinking under fatigue, devoured by their merciless pursuers. They
-see with joy the beautiful Pheasant and harmless Partridge drop
-from their flight, weltering in their blood, or, perhaps, perishing
-with wounds and hunger under the cover of some friendly thicket,
-to which they have in vain retreated for safety.... And to add to
-all this, they spare neither labour nor expense to preserve and
-propagate these innocent animals for no other end than to multiply
-the objects of their persecution.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“What name should we bestow upon a Supreme Being whose whole
-endeavours were employed, and whose whole pleasure consisted, in
-terrifying, ensnaring, tormenting, and destroying mankind; whose
-superior faculties were exerted in fomenting animosities amongst
-them, in contriving engines of destruction, inciting them to use
-them in maiming and murdering each other; whose power over them
-was employed in assisting the rapacious, deceiving the simple, and
-oppressing the innocent? Who, without provocation or advantage,
-should continue, from day to day, void of all pity and remorse,
-thus to torment mankind for diversion; and, at the same time,
-endeavouring, with the utmost care, to preserve their lives and
-propagate their species, in order to increase the number of victims
-devoted to his malevolence? I say, what name detestable enough
-could we find for such a being. Yet if we impartially consider the
-case, and our intermediate situation, with respect to inferior
-animals, just such a being is a ‘Sportsman,’ [and let us add,
-by way of corollary, <i>à fortiori</i> one who consciously sanctions
-the daily and hourly cruelties of the Slaughter-House and the
-Butcher.”]&mdash;<i>Disquisition II.</i> “On Cruelty to Animals,” by Soame
-Jenyns.</p></div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<h3 id="XIII_PRESSAVIN">XIII.<br />
-PRESSAVIN. 1750.</h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A<span class="smaller">N</span> eminent Surgeon of Lyon, in the Medical and Surgical College of
-which city he held a professorship, and where he collected an extensive
-Anatomical Museum. At the Revolution of 1789 he embraced its principles
-with ardour, and filled the posts of Municipal Officer and of Procureur
-de la Commune. On the day of the Lyon executions, under the direction
-of the revolutionary tribunals, Sept. 9, 1792, Pressavin intervened,
-and attempted to save several of the condemned. In the Convention
-Nationale, to which he had been elected deputy, he voted for the
-execution of the King; in other respects he was opposed to the extreme
-measures of the violent revolutionists, and in Sept., 1793, he was
-expelled from the Society of the Jacobins. In 1798 he was named Member
-of the Council of Five Hundred, for two years, by the department of the
-Rhone. The date of his death seems to be uncertain.</p>
-
-<p>His chief writings are:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>Traité des Maladies des Nerfs</i>, 1769. <i>Traité des Maladies
-Vénériennes, où l’on indique un Nouveau Remède</i>, 8vo., 1773. Last, and
-most important, <i>L’Art de Prolonger la Vie et de Conserver la Santé</i>,
-8vo. Paris, 1786. It was translated into Spanish, Madrid, 8vo., 1799.</p>
-
-<p>Pressavin thus expresses his convictions as to the fatal effects of
-Kreophagy:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“We cannot doubt that, if Man had always limited himself to the use
-of the nourishment destined for his organs, he would not be seen,
-to-day, to have become the victim of this multitude of maladies
-which, by a premature death, mows down (moissonne) the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span> greatest
-number of individuals, before Age or Nature has put bounds to the
-career of his life. Other Animals, on the contrary, almost all
-arrive at that term without having experienced any infirmity. I
-speak of those who live free in the fields; for those whom we
-have subjected to our needs (real or pretended), and whom we call
-<i>domestic</i>, share in the penalty of our abuses, experience nearly
-the same alteration in their temperament, and become subject to an
-infinity of maladies from which Wild Animals are exempt.</p>
-
-<p>“Men, then, coming from the hands of Nature, lived a long
-time without thinking of immolating living beings to gratify
-(s’assouvir) their appetite. They are, without doubt, those happy
-times which our ancient poets have represented to us under the
-agreeable allegory of the <i>Golden Age</i>. In fact Man, <i>by natural
-organisation</i> mild, nourishing himself only on vegetable-foods,
-must have been originally of pacific disposition, quite fitted
-(bien propre) to maintain among his fellows that happy Peace which
-makes the delights of Society. Ferocity, I repeat it, is peculiar
-to carnivorous animals; the blood which they imbibe maintains that
-character in them....</p>
-
-<p>“But if this faculty (reflection), which is called Reason, has
-furnished Man with so great resources for extending his enjoyments
-and increasing his well-being, how many evils have not the
-multiplied abuses, which he has made of them, drawn upon him? That
-which regards his Food is not the one of them which has <i>least</i>
-contributed to his degradation, as well physical as moral....</p>
-
-<p>“Among other evidences of this, country-people, who subsist upon
-the non-flesh diet, are exempt from the multitude of maladies which
-engender corruption of the juices of the blood, such as <i>humoral</i>,
-putrid, and malign fevers, from Apoplexy, from <i>Cachexy</i>, from
-Gout, and from an infinity of miserable disorders&mdash;their offspring;
-they arrive at a very advanced Age, free from the infirmities which
-early affect our old <i>Sybarites</i>. On the contrary, the inhabitants
-of towns, who make flesh their principal food, pass their lives
-miserably, a prey to all these maladies which one may regard, for
-that reason, endemic among them.</p>
-
-<p>“Another very evident proof that Flesh is not a food natural to man
-is that, whoever has abstained, during a certain time, when he goes
-back to it&mdash;it is rare that this new regimen does not soon become
-in him the germ of a disease, the graver in proportion to the
-abstinence from that food. We have opportunities of observing this
-after the Fasts of the Catholics&mdash;in the majority of those who have
-faithfully practised abstinence from flesh.”</p></div>
-
-<p>He admits that there may be some constitutions, whose organs of
-digestion have been so corrupted by the long use of flesh, that a
-<i>sudden</i> change may be unadvisable; but a gradual reform cannot but be
-always beneficial:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I do not doubt that Apoplexy, that fatal Malady so common among
-the rich people of the towns, might be escaped by those who are
-threatened with it, by entire abstinence from flesh. A Sanguine
-or humoral <i>plethora</i> is always the predisposing cause of this
-disease. A sudden rarefaction of the blood or of the humours in the
-vessels is the proximate cause of it; this rarefaction takes place
-only by the predisposition of the juices of the body to corruption.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Pressavin devotes a considerable proportion of his Treatise to the
-arguments from Comparative Physiology.&mdash;While firmly persuaded both<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span>
-of the unnaturalness, and of the fatal mischiefs, of the diet of
-blood,<a name="FNanchor_311_311" id="FNanchor_311_311"></a><a href="#Footnote_311_311" class="fnanchor">[311]</a> he expresses his despair of an early triumph of Reason and
-Humanity by means of a general dietetic reformation.<a name="FNanchor_312_312" id="FNanchor_312_312"></a><a href="#Footnote_312_312" class="fnanchor">[312]</a></p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<h3 id="XIV_SCHILLER">XIV.<br />
-SCHILLER. 1759&ndash;1805.</h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A<span class="smaller">FTER</span> Goethe the greatest of German Poets, began life as a surgeon
-in the army. In his twenty-second year he produced his first drama,
-<i>Die Räuber</i> (“The Robbers”). Some passages in it betrayed the “cloven
-hoof” of revolutionary, or at least democratic, bias, and he brought
-upon himself the displeasure of the sovereign Duke of Würtemberg, in
-consequence of which he was forced to leave Stuttgart. His principal
-dramas are <i>Wallenstein</i>, <i>Wilhelm Tell</i>, <i>Die Jungfrau von Orleans</i>,
-<i>Maria Stuart</i>, and <i>Don Carlos</i>, of which <i>Wallenstein</i> is, usually,
-placed first in merit. Even greater than the dramatic power of Schiller
-is the genius of his ballad poetry, and in lyrical inspiration he is
-the equal of Goethe. <i>Das Lied von der Glocke</i> (“The Lay of the Bell”),
-one of his most widely-known ballads, is also one of the most beautiful
-in its kind.</p>
-
-<p>In prose literature, his <i>Briefe Philosophische</i> (“Philosophical
-Letters”), and his correspondence with his great poetical rival, are
-the most interesting of his writings.</p>
-
-<p>In <i>Das Eleusische Fest</i> (“The Eleusinian Feast”) and <i>Der Alpenjäger</i>
-(“The Hunter of the Alps”) are to be found the humanitarian sentiments
-as follow:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Schwelgend bei dem Siegesmahle</div>
- <div class="verse">Findet sie die rohe Schaar,</div>
- <div class="verse">Und die blutgefüllte Schaale</div>
- <div class="verse">Bringt man ihr zum Opfer dar</div>
- <div class="verse">Aber schauernd, mit Entsetzen,</div>
- <div class="verse">Wendet sie sich weg and spricht:</div>
- <div class="verse">’<i>Blut’ge Tigermahle</i> netzen</div>
- <div class="verse">Eines Gottes Lippen nicht.</div>
- <div class="verse">Reine Opfer will er haben</div>
- <div class="verse">Früchte, die der Herbst bescheert&mdash;</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span>
- <div class="verse">Mit des Feldes frommen gaben</div>
- <div class="verse">Wird der Heilige verehrt.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Und sie nimmt die Wucht des Speeres</div>
- <div class="verse">Aus des Jäger’s rauher hand;</div>
- <div class="verse">Mit dem Schaft des Mordgewehres</div>
- <div class="verse">Furchet sie den leichten Sand,</div>
- <div class="verse">Nimmt von ihres Kranzes Spitze</div>
- <div class="verse">Einen Kern mit Kraft gefüllt,</div>
- <div class="verse">Senkt ihn in die zarte Ritze,</div>
- <div class="verse">Und der Trieb des Keimes schwillt.<a name="FNanchor_313_313" id="FNanchor_313_313"></a><a href="#Footnote_313_313" class="fnanchor">[313]</a></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza padtop1">
- <div class="verse">Mit des Jammers Stummen Blicken</div>
- <div class="verse">Fleht sie zu dem harten Mann,</div>
- <div class="verse">Fleht umsonst, denn, loszudrücken,</div>
- <div class="verse">Legt er schon den Bogen an;</div>
- <div class="verse">Plötzlich aus der Felsenspalte</div>
- <div class="verse">Tritt der Geist, der Bergesalte</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Und mit seinen Götterhänden</div>
- <div class="verse">Schützt er das gequälte Thier:</div>
- <div class="verse">“<i>Musst du Tod und Jammer Senden</i>”</div>
- <div class="verse">Ruft er “bis herauf zu mir?</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Raum fur alle hat die Erde</i></div>
- <div class="verse">Was verfolgst du meine Heerde?”<a name="FNanchor_314_314" id="FNanchor_314_314"></a><a href="#Footnote_314_314" class="fnanchor">[314]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<h3 id="XV_BENTHAM">XV.<br />
-BENTHAM. 1749&ndash;1832.</h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>T<span class="smaller">HIS</span> great legal reformer was educated at Westminster, and at the
-age of thirteen proceeded to Queen’s College, Oxford. At the age of
-sixteen he took his first degree in Arts. The mental uneasiness with
-which he signed the obligatory test of the “Thirty-nine Articles” he
-vividly recorded in after years. At the Bar, which he soon afterwards
-entered, his prospects were unusually promising; but unable to
-reconcile his standard of ethics with the recognised morality of the
-Profession, he soon withdrew from it. His first publication,&mdash;<i>A
-Fragment on Government</i>, 1776&mdash;which appeared without his name, was
-assigned to some of the most distinguished men of the day. His next,
-and principal work, was his <i>Introduction to the Principles of Morals
-and Legislation</i> (1780), not published until 1789. At this period
-he travelled extensively in the East of Europe. <i>Panopticon: or the
-Inspection-House</i> (on prison discipline), appeared in 1791. The <i>Book
-of Fallacies</i> (reviewed by Sidney Smith, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span> the <i>Edinburgh</i>), in
-which the “wisdom of our ancestors” delusion was, mercilessly exposed
-(1824), is the best known, and is the most lively of all his writings.
-<i>Rationale of Judicial Procedure</i>, and the <i>Constitutional Code</i>,
-are those which have had most influence in effecting legislative and
-judicial reform.</p>
-
-<p>Bentham stands in the front rank of legal reformers; and as a fearless
-and consistent opponent of the iniquities of the English Criminal
-Law, in particular, he has deserved the gratitude and respect of all
-thoughtful minds. Yet, during some sixty years, he was constantly held
-up to obloquy and ridicule by the enemies of Reform, in the Press and
-on the Platform; and his name was a sort of synonym for <i>utopianism</i>,
-and revolutionary doctrine. In his own country his writings were long
-in little esteem; but elsewhere, and in France especially, by the
-interpretation of Dumont, his opinions had a wider dissemination.
-In <i>Morals</i>, the foundation of his teaching is the principle of the
-greatest Happiness of the Greatest Number; that other things are good
-or evil in proportion as they advance or oppose the general Happiness,
-which ought to be the end of all morals and legislation.</p>
-
-<p>Not the least of his merits as a moralist is his assertion of the
-rights of other animals than man to the protection of Law, and his
-protest against the culpable selfishness of the lawmakers in wholly
-abandoning them to the capricious cruelty of their human tyrants. The
-most eminent of the disciples of Bentham, John Stuart Mill (who found
-himself forced to defend the teaching of his master, in this respect,
-against the sneers of Whately, Archbishop of Dublin, and others),
-repeats this protest, and declares that&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The reasons for legal intervention in favour of children apply not
-less strongly to the case of those unfortunate slaves and victims
-of the most brutal part of mankind, the lower animals. It is by
-the grossest misunderstanding of the principles of Liberty, that
-the infliction of exemplary punishment on ruffianism practised
-towards these defenceless beings has been treated as a meddling by
-Government with things beyond its province&mdash;an interference with
-domestic life. The domestic life of domestic tyrants is one of the
-things which it <i>is the most imperative on the Law to interfere
-with</i>. And it is to be regretted that metaphysical scruples,
-respecting the nature and source of the authority of governments,
-should induce many warm supporters of laws against cruelty to
-the lower animals to seek for justification of such laws in the
-incidental consequences of the indulgence of ferocious habits
-to the interest of human beings, <i>rather than in the intrinsic
-merits of the thing itself</i>. What it would be the duty of a human
-being, possessed of the requisite physical strength, to prevent by
-force, if attempted in his presence, it cannot be less incumbent
-on society generally to repress. The existing laws of England are
-chiefly defective in the trifling&mdash;often almost nominal&mdash;maximum
-to which the penalty, even in the worst cases, is limited.”
-(<i>Principles of Political Economy</i>, ed. 1873.)</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The observations both of Bentham and of Mill upon this subject,
-slighted though they are, are pregnant with consequences. It is thus
-that the former authority expresses his opinion:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“What other agents are those who, at the same time that they
-are under the influence of man’s direction, are susceptible of
-Happiness? They are of two sorts: (1) Other Human beings, who
-are styled <i>Persons</i>. (2) Other Animals who, on account of their
-interests having been neglected by the insensibility of the ancient
-Jurists, stand degraded into the class of <i>Things</i>. Under the
-Gentoo and Mahometan religions, the interests of the rest of the
-animal kingdom seem to have met with <i>some</i> attention. Why have
-they not, universally, with as much as those of human beings,
-allowance made for the differences in point of sensibility?
-<i>Because the Laws that are have been the work of mutual fear</i>&mdash;a
-sentiment which the less rational animals have not had the same
-means, as men have, of turning to account. Why <i>ought</i> they not [to
-have the same allowance made]? No reason can be given....</p>
-
-<p>“The day has been (and it is not yet past) in which the greater
-part of the Species, under the denomination of <i>Slaves</i>, have been
-treated by the Laws exactly upon the same footing&mdash;as in England,
-for example, the inferior races of beings are still. The day <i>may</i>
-come, when other Animals may obtain those rights <i>which never could
-have been withholden from them but by the hand of Tyranny</i>. The
-French have already (1790) recognised that the blackness of the
-skin is no reason why a human being should be abandoned, without
-redress, to the caprice of a tormentor.</p>
-
-<p>“It may come one day to be recognised that the number of the legs,
-the villosity of the skin, or the termination of the <i>os sacrum</i>,
-are reasons equally insufficient for abandoning a sensitive being
-to the same fate. What else is it should fix the insuperable
-line? Is it the faculty of reason, or, perhaps, the faculty of
-discourse? But a full-grown Horse or Dog is, beyond comparison, a
-more rational, as well as more conversable animal, than an infant
-of a day, or a week, or even of a month old. But suppose the case
-were otherwise, what would it avail? The question is not, can they
-reason? Nor is it, can they talk? But, <i>can they suffer</i>?”<a name="FNanchor_315_315" id="FNanchor_315_315"></a><a href="#Footnote_315_315" class="fnanchor">[315]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<h3 id="XVI_SINCLAIR">XVI.<br />
-SINCLAIR. 1754&ndash;1835.</h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>T<span class="smaller">HIS</span> celebrated Agricultural Reformer and active promoter of various
-beneficent enterprises was a most voluminous writer. During sixty years
-he was almost constantly employed in producing more or less useful
-books. He was born at Thurso Castle, in Caithness, and received<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span> his
-education at the Edinburgh High School, and at the Universities of
-Glasgow and Oxford. In 1775 he was admitted a member of the Faculty of
-Advocates, and afterwards was called to the English Bar. Five years
-later he was elected to represent his county in the Legislature; and
-for more than half a century Sir John Sinclair occupied a prominent
-position in the world of politics, as well as of science and
-literature. His reputation as an Agriculturist extended far and wide
-throughout Europe and America; and statesmen and political economists,
-if they did not aid them as they ought to have done, professed for his
-labours the highest esteem.</p>
-
-<p>His principal writings are: (1) <i>A History of the Revenue of Great
-Britain</i>, 3 vols.; (2) <i>A Statistical Account of Scotland</i>, a most
-laborious work; (3) <i>Considerations on Militias and Standing Armies</i>;
-(4) <i>Essays on Agriculture</i>; (5) Not the least important, <i>The Code of
-Health and Longevity</i>, in which the sagacious and indefatigable author
-has collected a large number of interesting particulars in regard to
-the diet of various peoples. Comparing the two diets, he asserts:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The Tartars, who live wholly on animal food, possess a degree of
-ferocity of mind and fierceness of character which form the leading
-feature of all carnivorous animals. On the other hand, an entire
-diet of vegetable matter, as appears in the Brahmin and Gentoo,
-gives to the disposition a softness, gentleness, and mildness of
-feeling directly the reverse of the former character. It also has
-a particular influence on <i>the powers of the mind</i>, producing
-liveliness of imagination and acuteness of judgment in an eminent
-degree.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Sir John Sinclair elsewhere quotes the following sufficiently
-condemnatory remarks from the <i>Encyclopédie Methodique</i>, vol. vii.,
-part 1:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The man who sheds the blood of an Ox or a Sheep will be habituated
-more easily than another to witness the effusion of that of his
-fellow-creatures. Inhumanity takes possession of his soul, and the
-trades, whose occupation is to sacrifice animals for the purpose
-of supplying the [pretended] necessities of men, impart to those
-who exercise them a ferocity which their relative connections with
-Society but imperfectly serve to mitigate.”&mdash;<i>Code of Health and
-Longevity</i>, vol. i., 423, 429, and vol. iii., 283.<a name="FNanchor_316_316" id="FNanchor_316_316"></a><a href="#Footnote_316_316" class="fnanchor">[316]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XVII_BYRON">XVII.<br />
-BYRON. 1788&ndash;1824.</h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“As we had none of us been apprised of his peculiarities with
-respect to food, the embarrassment of our host [Samuel Rogers] was
-not little, on discovering that there was nothing upon the table
-which his noble guest could eat or drink. Neither [flesh] meat,
-fish, nor wine would Lord Byron touch; and of biscuits and soda
-water, which he asked for, there had been, unluckily, no provision.
-He professed, however, to be equally well pleased with potatoes and
-vinegar; and of these meagre materials contrived to make rather a
-hearty meal....</p>
-
-<p>“We frequently, during the first months of our acquaintance dined
-together alone.... Though at times he would drink freely enough
-of claret, he still adhered to his system of abstinence in food.
-<i>He appeared, indeed, to have conceived a notion that animal food
-has some peculiar influence on the character</i>;<a name="FNanchor_317_317" id="FNanchor_317_317"></a><a href="#Footnote_317_317" class="fnanchor">[317]</a> and I remember
-one day, as I sat opposite to him, employed, I suppose, rather
-earnestly over a ‘beef-steak,’ after watching me for a few seconds,
-he said in a grave tone of inquiry,&mdash;‘Moore, don’t you find eating
-<i>beef-steak</i> makes you ferocious?’”&mdash;<i>Life, Letters, and Journals
-of Lord Byron</i>, by Thomas Moore. New Edition. Murray, 1860.</p></div>
-
-<p>In these Memorials of Byron, reference to his aversion from all
-“butcher’s meat” is frequent; and for the greater part of his life,
-he seems to have observed, in fact, an extreme abstinence as regards
-eating; although he had by no means the same repugnance for fish as
-for flesh-eating. That this abstinence from flesh-meats was founded
-upon physical or mental, rather than upon moral, reasons, has already
-been pointed out. Nor, unhappily, was he as abstinent in drinking as in
-eating; to which fact, in great measure, must be attributed the failure
-of his purer eating to effect all the good which, otherwise, it would
-have produced.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>T<span class="smaller">HE</span> observations of the author of a book entitled <i>Philozoa</i>, published
-in 1839, and noticed with approval by Schopenhauer, are sufficiently
-worthy of note, and may fitly conclude this work:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Many very intelligent men have, at different times of their lives,
-abstained wholly from flesh; and this, too, with very considerable
-advantage to their health. Mr. Lawrence, whose eminence as a
-surgeon is well known, lived for many years on a vegetable diet.
-Byron, the poet, did the same, as did P. B. Shelley, and many other
-distinguished <i>literati</i> whom I could name. Dr. Lambe and Mr. F.
-Newton have published very able works in defence of a diet of
-herbs, and have condemned the use of flesh as tending to undermine
-the constitution by a sort of slow poisoning. Sir R. Phillips
-has published <i>Sixteen Reasons for Abstaining from the Flesh of
-Animals</i>, and a large society exists in England of persons who eat
-nothing which has had life.</p>
-
-<p>“The most attentive researches, which I have been able to make
-into the health of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span> all these persons, induce me to believe that
-vegetable food is the natural diet of man. I tried it once with
-very considerable advantage. My strength became greater, my
-intellect clearer, my power of continued exertion protracted, and
-my spirits much higher than they were when I lived on a mixed diet.
-I am inclined to think that the ‘inconvenience’ which some persons
-profess to experience from vegetable food is only <i>temporary</i>.
-A few repeated trials would soon render it not only safe but
-agreeable, and a disgust for the taste of flesh, <i>under any
-disguise</i>, would be the result of the experiment. The Carmelites,
-and other religious orders, who subsist only on the productions
-of the vegetable world, live to a greater age than those who feed
-on flesh; and, in general, frugivorous persons are milder in
-their disposition than other people. The same quantity of ground
-has been proved to be capable of sustaining a <i>larger<a name="FNanchor_318_318" id="FNanchor_318_318"></a><a href="#Footnote_318_318" class="fnanchor">[318]</a> and
-stronger population</i> on a vegetable than on a flesh-meat diet; and
-experience has shown <i>that the juices of the body are more pure,
-and the viscera much more free from disease, in those who live in
-this simple way</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“All these facts, taken collectively, point to a period in
-the history of civilisation when men will cease to slay their
-fellow-mortals for food, and will tend to realise the fictions
-of Antiquity, and of the Sybilline oracles respecting a ‘Golden
-Age.’”<a name="FNanchor_319_319" id="FNanchor_319_319"></a><a href="#Footnote_319_319" class="fnanchor">[319]</a></p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="INDEX">INDEX.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="index">
-
-<ul class="index"><li class="ifrst"> Abernethy John, M.D., <i>Surgical Observations on Tumours</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Aderholdt A., M.D., referred to, <a href="#Page_271">271&ndash;284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Æsop, <i>Fable of the Wolf</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Alcott Wm., M.D., referred to, <a href="#Page_262">262&ndash;264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Anquetil Du Perron, <i>Récherches sur les Indes</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_177">177&ndash;210</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Apollonius of Tyana (<i>Life</i> by Philostratus), quoted and referred to, <a href="#Page_50">50&ndash;51</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Arbuthnot John, M.D., <i>Essay Concerning Aliments</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Arnold Edwin, <i>The Light of Asia</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_296">296</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Attalus, noticed by Seneca, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Axon W. E. A.,(Biog. Sketches of George Nicholson, Sir R. Phillips, and William Cowherd), referred to, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Baker Thomas, Abstract of Graham’s <i>Science of Human Life</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Baltzer Eduard, <i>Porphyry</i> and <i>Musonius</i>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Bartolini Biagio, M.D. (Notice of Cornaro), referred to, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Bentham Jeremy, quoted, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Blot-Lequène, Critique of <i>Thalysie</i>, quoted by R. Springer, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Bonnodière La, <i>De la Sobriété et de ses Avantages</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_306">306</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Bossuet Jacques Bénigne, <i>Discours sur l’Histoire Universelle</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Brewster Sir David, <i>More Worlds than One</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Brotherton Joseph, M.P., President of the English Vegetarian Society, referred to, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Buddha Gautama, referred to and noticed, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295&ndash;296</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Buddhist Sacred Scriptures, Texts from the Buddhist Canon, commonly known as <i>Dhammapada</i>, also the <i>Kûla Sîlam</i>, translated from the Pâli, <a href="#Page_295">295&ndash;299</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Buffon George Louis Le Clerc de, <i>Histoire Naturelle</i>, quoted and referred to, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Burigni de (Translator of Porphyry, and author of a Treatise against Flesh-Eating, noticed by Voltaire), <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Busbecq Augier de, on the Turks, referred to by Lord Chesterfield, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Byron George Gordon, Lord, <i>Life, Letters, and Journals</i>, by Moore, and <i>Poems</i>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Cabantous J., Doyen de in Faculté de Lettres, Toulouse, noticed by R. Springer, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Chantrans Girod de, noticed by R. Springer, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Charron Pierre, <i>De la Sagesse</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Chesterfield Philip Dormer, Lord, <i>The World</i>, CXC., quoted, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320&ndash;321</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Cheyne George, M.D., <i>Essay on the Gout</i>; <i>Of Health and a Long Life</i>; <i>English Malady: or, a Treatise of Nervous Diseases of all Kinds</i>; <i>Essay on Regimen</i>; <i>Natural Method of Curing the Diseases of the Body, and the Disorders of the Mind Depending on the Body</i>, referred to and quoted, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120&ndash;128</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Christian Sacred Scriptures, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Chrysostom Ioannes, <i>Homilies</i>, <i>Golden Book</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_76">76&ndash;81</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Cicero Marcus Tullius, <i>Epistles</i> vii. 1, quoted, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Clarke James, referred to, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Clemens Titus Flavius (of Alexandria), <i>Pædagogus</i> or <i>Instructor</i>, <i>Stromata</i> or <i>Miscellanies</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_56">56&ndash;63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> <i>Clementine Homilies</i>, quoted and referred to, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Cocchi Antonio, M.D., <i>Del Vitto Pithagorico Per Uso Della Medicina</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_157">157&ndash;159</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Collyns C. H., <i>The Times</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Cornaro Luigi di, <i>Trattato della Vita Sobria, Amorevole Esortazione, &amp;c.</i>; <i>Lettera a Barbaro</i>, quoted and referred to, <a href="#Page_83">83&ndash;90</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Cowherd William, noticed, <a href="#Page_258">258&ndash;260</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Cowley Abraham, <i>The Garden</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_308">308&ndash;309</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Cowper William, <i>The Task</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Cuvier George, &amp;c., Baron de, <i>Leçons d’Anatomie Comparative, III.</i>, 169, 373, 443, 465, 480
-<i>Régne Animal</i>, noticed by Shelley, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Daumer Georg, <i>Anthropologismus und Kriticismus</i>; <i>Enthüllungen über Kaspar Hauser</i>, referred to and quoted, <a href="#Page_281">281&ndash;283</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> <i>Dietetic Reformer</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span>
-Eden Sir F. M., <i>State of the Poor</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Epikurus, <i>De Sobrietate Contra Gulam</i>, quoted by Gassendi, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Erasmus Desiderius, <i>Encomium Moriæ</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Erskine Thomas, Lord, referred to, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Essenians and Essenism, noticed, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Euripides, quoted by Athenæus, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Evelyn John, <i>Acetaria: On Sallets</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_107">107&ndash;110</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Ferdusi, quoted by Sir William Jones, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Ferguson Adam, referred to, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Flaubert G., <i>Légende de St. Julien</i>, quoted in <i>Fortnightly Review</i>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Flourens, I. M. P., <i>Longévité de la Race Humaine</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Fontaine La, Jean de, <i>Fables</i> x. 2, quoted, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Forster T., M.D., <i>Philozoa</i>, &amp;c., quoted, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Franklin Benjamin, <i>Autobiography</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Galen, Greek Physician, referred to, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Gaskill James, referred to, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Gay John, <i>Fables</i>&mdash;<i>Pythagoras and the Countryman</i>; <i>The Court of Death</i>; <i>The Shepherd’s Dog and the Boy</i>; <i>The Wild Boar and the Ram</i>; <i>The Philosopher and the Pheasants</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_115">115&ndash;119</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Gassendi Pierre, <i>Letter</i> to Van Helmont, <i>Ethics</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_100">100&ndash;104</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Gibbon Edward, <i>History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire</i>, xxvi, quoted and referred to, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Gleïzès Jean Antoine, <i>Thalysie: ou la Nouvelle Existence</i>; <i>Les Nuits Elysiennes</i>, &amp;c., quoted, <a href="#Page_208">208&ndash;218</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Gleïzès Colonel, referred to, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Grævius Johann Georg, referred to, <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Graham Sylvester, M.D., <i>The Science of Human Life</i>, referred to and quoted, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> <i>Golden Verses The</i>, referred to and quoted, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Göthe Johann Wolfgang von, <i>Italienische Reise</i>; <i>Werther’s Leiden</i>, &amp;c., referred to, <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Goltz Bogumil, <i>Das Menschendasein in Seinen Weltewigen Zügen und Zeichen</i>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Gompertz Lewis, referred to by Forster, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Greg W. R., <i>Social Problems</i>, referred to and quoted, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Gützlaff V., M.D., <i>Schopenhauer über die Thiere und den Thierschutz</i>; <i>Ein Beitrag zur ethischen Seite der Vivisectionsfrage</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Hahn Theodor, <i>Die Naturgemässe Diät: die Diät der Zukunft</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Haller Albrecht von, M.D., quoted, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Hardy Sebastian, <i>Le Vrai Régîme de Vivre</i>, &amp;c., referred to, <a href="#Page_306">306</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Hare Edward, <i>Life of William Lambe, M.D.</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Hartley David, M.D., <i>Observations on Man</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Hartlib Samuel, <i>A Design for Plenty, by a Universal Planting of Fruit-Trees</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Hawkesworth John, <i>Edition of Swift’s Works</i>; <i>Adventurer</i>, quoted and referred to, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Hecquet Philippe, M.D., <i>De L’Indécence aux Hommes d’Accoucher les Femmes, &amp;c.</i>; <i>Traité des Dispenses du Carême</i>; <i>La Médicine, La Chirurgie, et la Pharmacie des Pauvres</i>; <i>La Brigandage de la Médicine</i>, &amp;c., referred to and quoted, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314&ndash;318</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Helps Sir Arthur, <i>Animals and Their Masters</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_329">329</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Hesiodos, Ἔργα καὶ Ἣμεραι (<i>Works and Days</i>), quoted, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Hierokles, Χρυσᾶ Επη (<i>Golden Verses</i>), referred to and quoted, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Hindu Sacred Books, <i>Laws of Manu</i>, referred to and quoted, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Hippokrates, Περὶ Ὑγιαίνης Διαίτης (<i>On the Healthful Regimen</i>), referred to, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Hogarth William, <i>Four Stages of Cruelty</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Hogg Jefferson, <i>Life of Shelley</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Horatius Flaccus, <i>Odes</i>, <i>Ars Poet.</i>, <i>Sat. II. 2.</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299&ndash;303</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Howard John, <i>Life of</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Hufeland Christian Wilhelm, M.D., <i>Makrobiotik, oder die Kunst das Menschliche Leben zu Verlängern</i>, &amp;c., quoted and referred to, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Hypatia, referred to, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Iamblichus, <i>Life of Pythagoras</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Jenyns Soame, quoted, <a href="#Page_322">322&ndash;324</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Jewish Sacred Scriptures, quoted and referred to, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Jones Sir William, <i>Asiatic Researches</i>, iv. 12, quoted, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Josephus Flavius, <i>Antiquities of the Jews</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Julianus, Emperor, <i>Misopogon (Beard Hater)</i>, noticed, <a href="#Page_74">74&ndash;76</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Juvenalis Decimus Junius, <i>Sat.</i> <span class="smaller">I</span>., xv., &amp;c., quoted, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Kalidâsa, <i>Sakúntala</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Kingsford Anna, M.D., <i>The Perfect Way in Diet</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Laborde Alexandre de, referred to, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Lamartine Alphonse de, <i>Mémoires</i>; <i>La Chute d’un Ange</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_247">247&ndash;252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span> Lambe William, M.D., <i>Additional Reports on Regimen</i>, referred to and quoted, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198&ndash;205</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Lawrence William, Professor, F.R.C.S., <i>Lectures on Physiology</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Lémery Louis, M.D., <i>Traité des Alimens</i>, referred to,</li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Lesage Alain Réné, <i>Gil Blas</i> ii. 2, quoted, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Lessio Leonard, <i>Hygiasticon</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_305">305&ndash;307</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Liebig Justus von, <i>Chemische Briefe</i>, referred to and quoted, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290&ndash;292</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Linné Karl von, <i>Amœnitates Accademicæ</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_164">164&ndash;165</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Lipsius Justus von, edition of Seneca, quoted, <a href="#Page_31">31&ndash;32</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Locke John, <i>Thoughts on Education</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Lucretius Titus Carus, <i>De Rerum Naturâ II.</i>, referred to and quoted, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Lyford H. G., M.D., referred to, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> <i>Mahâbhârata</i>, Story of the Princess Savîtri, quoted, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Mandeville Bernard de, M.D., <i>Fable of the Bees</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_113">113&ndash;115</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Martin John, referred to, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Mayor J. E. B., Professor, <i>Musonius</i> and <i>Juvenal</i>, quoted and referred to, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Metcalfe William, M.D., <i>Essay on Abstinence from the Flesh of Animals</i>; <i>Moral Reformer</i>; <i>American Vegetarian and Health Journal</i>, &amp;c., noticed, <a href="#Page_260">260&ndash;264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Michelet Jules, <i>La Bible de l’Humanité</i>; <i>La Femme</i>; <i>L’Oiseau</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_252">252&ndash;258</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Mill John Stuart, <i>Principles of Political Economy</i>; <i>Dissertations</i>, referred to and quoted, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Milton John, <i>Paradise Lost</i>, v., xi.; <i>Latin Poem</i> addressed to Diodati, quoted, <a href="#Page_110">110&ndash;112</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Moffet Thomas, M.D., <i>Health’s Improvement</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Montaigne Michel de, <i>Essais</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_94">94&ndash;99</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> More Sir Thomas, <i>Utopia</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_90">90&ndash;94</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Musonius Rufus, in <i>Anthologion</i> of Stobæus, quoted by Professor Mayor, <a href="#Page_303">303&ndash;305</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Neo-Platonism, referred to, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Newman F. W., Professor, President of the English Vegetarian Society, <i>Lectures on Vegetarianism</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Newton Sir Isaac, referred to by Voltaire (<i>Elémens de la Philosophie de Newton</i>), and by Haller, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Newton J. F., <i>The Return to Nature</i>, quoted and referred to, <a href="#Page_205">205&ndash;208</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Nichols T. L., M.D. (Hygienic Literature), referred to, <a href="#Page_314">314</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Nicholson George, <i>On the Conduct of Man to Inferior Animals</i>; <i>The Primeval Diet of Man</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_190">190&ndash;196</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Nicholson E. B., <i>The Rights of an Animal</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_329">329</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Nodier Charles, referred to, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Oswald John, <i>The Cry of Nature</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_179">179&ndash;183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Ovidius Naso, <i>Metamorphoses</i>, xv.; <i>Fasti</i>, iv., quoted, <a href="#Page_23">23&ndash;27</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299&ndash;303</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Paley William, <i>Principles of Moral and Political Philosophy</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_169">169&ndash;172</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Phillips Sir Richard, <i>Golden Rules of Social Philosophy</i>; <i>Medical Journal</i> (July 27, 1811); <i>Dictionary of the Arts of Life and Civilisation</i>, quoted and referred to, <a href="#Page_235">235&ndash;244</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Philolaus, <i>Pythagorean System</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Philostratus, <i>Life of Apollonius of Tyana</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_50">50&ndash;51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Pilpai, <i>Fable of the Cow</i>, quoted by Pope, <a href="#Page_320">320</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Pitcairn Archibald, M.D., referred to, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Plato, <i>Republic</i> ii; <i>Laws</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_12">12&ndash;22</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Plinius the Elder, <i>Hist. Naturalis</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Plotinus, noticed by Donaldson, <a href="#Page_65">65&ndash;66</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Plutarch, <i>Essay on Flesh-Eating</i>; <i>Symposiacs</i>; <i>Parallel Lives</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_41">41&ndash;49</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Pope Alexander, <i>Pastorals</i>; <i>Essay on Man</i>; <i>The Guardian</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128&ndash;132</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318&ndash;320</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Porphyry, Περὶ Τῆς Ἀπόχης (<i>On Abstinence</i>); <i>Life of Pythagoras</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_63">63&ndash;74</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Pressavin Jean Baptiste, Membre du Collége Royale de Chirurgie, Lyon, Demonstrateur en Matière Médicale-Chirurgicale à Lyon, <i>L’Art de Prolonger la Vie et de Conserver la Santé</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_324">324&ndash;326</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Proklus, referred to, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Pythagoras (in Hierokles, Diogenes, Iamblichus, Porphyry, and Cocchi) noticed and quoted, <a href="#Page_4">4&ndash;11</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Ramazzini Bernardo, M.D., referred to, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Ray John, <i>Historia Plantarum</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Richardson B. W., M.D., <i>Salutisland</i>; <i>Hygieia</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Richter Jean Paul, <i>Levana</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Ritson Joseph, <i>Abstinence from Animal Food: a Moral Duty</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_185">185&ndash;190</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Rorarius, <i>Quòd Animalia Bruta Sæpe Utantur Ratione Melius Homine</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Rousseau Jean Jacques, <i>De l’Inégalité Parmi les Hommes</i>; <i>Emile</i>; <i>Julie: ou la Nouvelle Héloise</i>; <i>Confessions</i>, referred to and quoted, <a href="#Page_159">159&ndash;164</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Sadi, Persian Poet, referred to, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Sakya Muni, referred to, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span> Schiller Johann Friedrich, <i>Das Eleusische Fest</i>; <i>Alpenjäger</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_326">326&ndash;327</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Schopenhauer Arthur, <i>Fundament der Moral</i> (<i>Le Fondement de la Morale</i>); <i>Parerga und Paralipomena</i>, quoted and referred to, <a href="#Page_286">286&ndash;290</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Seefeld A. von, referred to, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Seneca Marcus Annæus, <i>Epistolæ ad Lucilium</i>; <i>De Clententiâ</i>; <i>De Vitâ Beatâ</i>; <i>De Irâ</i>; <i>Questiones Naturales</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_27">27&ndash;40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Sextius Quintus, referred to, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Shelley Percy Bysshe, <i>Queen Mab</i> and <i>Note</i>; <i>The Revolt of Islam</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_218">218&ndash;234</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Shakespeare William, <i>As You Like It</i>, ii. 1; <i>Cymbeline</i>, i. 6, referred to and quoted, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Simpson James, President of English Vegetarian Society, referred to, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Sinclair Sir John, <i>The Code of Health and Longevity</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_330">330</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Sloane Sir Hans, <i>Nat. Hist. of Jamaica</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Smith Adam, <i>The Wealth of Nations</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Smith John, <i>Fruits and Farinacea: the Proper Food of Man</i>, edited by Professor Newman, quoted, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Smith Sydney, quoted, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Sotion, referred to by Seneca, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Sparrman André, referred to, <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Sperone Speroni, referred to, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Springer Robert, German translator of <i>Thalysie, ou la Nouvelle Existence</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Strauss David Friedrich Dr., <i>Der Alte und der Neue Glaube</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_287">287</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Struve Gustav, <i>Mandaras’ Wanderungen</i>; <i>Das Seelenleben</i>; <i>Die Pflanzenkost</i>, quoted;, <a href="#Page_271">271&ndash;281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> St. Pierre Bernardin, <i>Paul et Virginie</i>; <i>Etudes de la Nature</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_173">173&ndash;176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Stubbs Philip, <i>Anatomy of Abuses</i>, quoted by Ritson, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Swedenborg Emanuel, referred to, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Swift Jonathan, Dean, <i>Gulliver’s Travels</i>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Tertullianus Quintus Septimius, <i>De Jejuniis Adversus Psychicos</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_51">51&ndash;55</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Thomson James, <i>The Seasons</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_134">134&ndash;137</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Trelawney F., <i>Life of Shelley</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Tryon Thomas, <i>The Way to Health and Long Life</i>; <i>A Treatise on Cleanliness in Meats and Drinks</i>; <i>The Way to make all People Rich</i>; <i>England’s Grandeur</i>; <i>Dialogue between an East-India Brachman and a French Gentleman</i>, &amp;c., <a href="#Page_309">309&ndash;314</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Villeneuve C. de, M.D., referred to, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Virgilius Maro, <i>Georgica</i>; <i>Æneis</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Volney Constantine Comte de, <i>Voyages en Syrie et en Egypte</i>, referred to and quoted, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Voltaire François Marie Arouet de, <i>Essai sur les Mœurs et L’Esprit des Nations</i>; <i>Dictionnaire Philosophique</i> (Art. <i>Viande</i>); <i>Princesse de Babylone</i>; <i>Lettres d’Amabed à Shastasid</i>; <i>Dialogue du Chapon et de la Poularde</i>, quoted and referred to, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141&ndash;156</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Weilshäuser Emil, quoted by R. Springer, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Wesley John, <i>Journals</i>, referred to, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> Williamson John (noticed by Ritson, and by writer in <i>Gentleman’s Magazine</i>, Aug. 1787), <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"> <i>Woman and the Age</i>, an Essay, referred to, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Young Thomas, <i>On Cruelty</i>, referred to by Forster (<i>Philozoa</i>), <a href="#Page_333">333</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"> Zimmerman W., M.D. <i>Der Weg zum Paradiese</i> (<i>The Way to Paradise</i>), quoted, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li></ul>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="s5 center padtop3">J<span class="smaller">OHN</span> H<span class="smaller">EYWOOD</span>,
-Excelsior Steam Printing and Bookbinding Works, Hulme Hall Road, Manchester.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<p class="s2 center padtop1">FOOTNOTES:</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Quoted by Sir Arthur Helps in his <i>Animals and their
-Masters</i>. (Strahan, 1873.) The further just remark of Arnold upon this
-subject may here be quoted:&mdash;“Kind, loving, submissive, conscientious,
-much-enduring we know them to be; but <i>because</i> we deprive them of
-all stake in the future&mdash;<i>because</i> they have no selfish, calculated
-aims&mdash;these are not virtues. Yet, if we say a ‘vicious’ Horse, why not
-say a ‘virtuous’ Horse?”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> That the indescribable atrocities inflicted in the final
-scene of the slaughter-house, are far from being the only sufferings
-to which the victims of the Table are liable, is a fact upon which,
-at this day, it ought to be superfluous to insist. The frightful
-sufferings during “the middle passage,” in rough weather, and
-especially in severe storms, have over and over again been recounted
-even by spectators the least likely to be easily affected by the
-spectacles of lower animal suffering. Thousands of Oxen and Sheep,
-year by year, are thrown <i>living</i> into the sea during the passage
-from the United States alone. In the year 1879, according to the
-official report, 14,000 thus perished, while 1,240 were landed dead,
-and 450 were slaughtered on the quay upon landing to prevent death
-from wounds.&mdash;See, among other recent works on humane Dietetics, the
-<i>Perfect Way in Diet</i> of Dr. Anna Kingsford for some most instructive
-details upon this subject. The reader is also referred to the Lecture
-recently addressed to the Students of Girton College, Cambridge, by the
-same able and eloquent writer, for other aspects of the humanitarian
-argument.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Cf. Horace (whom, however, we do not quote as an
-authority)&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Let olives, endives, mallows light</div>
- <div class="verse">Be all my fare;”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">and Virgil thus indicates the charm of a rural existence for him who
-realises it:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Whatever fruit the branches and the mead</div>
- <div class="verse">Spontaneous bring, he gathers for his need.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> The same apparent contradiction&mdash;the co-existence of
-“flocks and herds” with the prevalence of the non-flesh diet&mdash;appears
-in the Jewish theology, in <i>Genesis</i>. It is obvious, however, that in
-both cases the “flocks and herds” might be existing for other purposes
-than for slaughter.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> <i>Daimones.</i> The <i>dæmon</i> in Greek theology was simply a
-lesser divinity&mdash;an <i>angel</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Compare Spenser’s charming verses (“Faery Queen,” Book
-ii., canto 8): “And is there care in heaven,” &amp;c.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> His moral principles are reduced to these:&mdash;“1. Mercy
-established on an immovable basis. 2. Aversion to all cruelty. 3. A
-boundless compassion for all creatures.” Quoted from Klaproth by Huc,
-<i>Chinese Empire</i>, xv. Buddhism was to Brahminism, sacerdotally, what
-early Christianity was to Mosaism.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> All the varieties of the bear tribe, it is perhaps
-scarcely necessary to observe, are by organisation, and therefore by
-preference, frugivorous. It is from necessity only, for the most part,
-that they seek for flesh.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> Compare Montaigne (<i>Essais</i>, Book II., chap. 12), who, to
-the shame of the popular opinion of the present day, ably maintains the
-same thesis.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> The allegory of the trials and final purification of
-the soul was a favourite one with the Greeks, in the charming story
-of the loves and sorrows of Psyche and Eros. Apuleius inserted it in
-his fiction of <i>The Golden Ass</i>, and it constantly occurs in Greek and
-modern art.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Beans, like lean flesh, are very nitrogenous, and it is
-possible that Pythagoras may have deemed them too invigorating a diet
-for the more aspiring ascetics. This may seem at least a more solid
-reason than the absurd conjectures to which we have referred.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> “As regards the fruits of this system of training or
-belief (the Pythagorean), it is interesting to remark,” says the
-author of the article Pythagoras in Dr. Smith’s <i>Dictionary of Greek
-and Roman Biography</i>, “that, wherever we have notices of distinguished
-Pythagoreans, we usually hear of them as men of great uprightness,
-conscientiousness, and self-restraint, and as capable of devoted and
-enduring friendship.” Amongst them the names of Archytas, and Damon,
-and Phintias are particularly eminent. Archytas was one of the very
-greatest geniuses of antiquity: he was distinguished alike as a
-philosopher, mathematician, statesman, and general. In mechanics he was
-the inventor of the wooden flying dove&mdash;one of the wonders of the older
-world. Empedokles (the Apollonius of the 5th century <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>),
-who devoted his marvellous attainments to the service of humanity, may
-be claimed as, at least in part, a follower of Pythagoras.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> “Quæ Philosophia fuit, facta Philologia est.” (Ep.
-cviii.) Compare Montaigne, <i>Essais</i>, i., 24, on Pedantry, where he
-admirably distinguishes between <i>wisdom</i> and <i>learning</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> <i>The Republic of Plato.</i> By Davies and Vaughan.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> In support of this thesis Plato adduces arguments derived
-from analogy. Amongst the non-human species the sexes, he points out,
-are nearly equal in strength and intelligence. In human savage life the
-difference is far less marked than in artificial conditions of life.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> Ὄψον&mdash;the name given by the Greeks generally to
-everything which they considered rather as a “relish” than a necessary.
-Bread was held to be&mdash;not only in name but in fact&mdash;the veritable
-“staff of life.” Olives, figs, cheese, and, at Athens especially, fish
-were the ordinary Ὄψον.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Translated by Davies and Vaughan. 1874.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> The <i>four</i> sacred Pythagorean virtues&mdash;justice,
-temperance, wisdom, fortitude. See notice of Plato above.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> Upon which excellent maxim Hierokles justly remarks: “The
-judge here appointed is the most just of all, and the one which is
-[ought to be] most at home with us, viz.: conscience and right reason.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> <i>Nineteenth Century</i>, October, 1877. The Greek original
-of the <i>Golden Verses</i> is found in the text of Mullach, in <i>Fragmenta
-Philosophorum Græcorum</i>. Paris, 1860.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> The Romans, we may remark, imported the gladiatorial
-fights from Spain.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> <i>Hist. Naturalis VIII.</i> 7. His nephew says of these huge
-slaughter-houses that “there is no novelty, no variety, or anything
-that could not be seen once for all.” On one occasion, in the year
-<span class="smcap">A.D.</span> 284, we are credibly informed that 1,000 ostriches, 1,000
-stags, 1,000 fallow-deer, besides numerous wild sheep and goats, were
-mingled together for indiscriminate slaughter by the wild beasts of
-the forest or the equally wild beasts of the city. (See <i>Decline and
-Fall.</i>)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Some traces of it may be found, <i>e.g.</i>, in Lucretius
-(<i>De Rerum Nat. II.</i>, where see his touching picture of the bereaved
-mother-cow, whose young is ravished from her for the horrid sacrificial
-altar); Virgil (<i>Æneis VII.</i>), in his story of Silvia’s deer&mdash;the most
-touching passage in the poem; Pliny, <i>Hist. Nat.</i> In earlier Greek
-literature, Euripides seems most in sympathy with suffering&mdash;at least
-as regards his own species.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> I see and approve the better way; I pursue the
-worse.&mdash;<i>Metam.</i> vii., 20.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> In a note on this passage Lipsius, the famous Dutch
-commentator, remarks: “I am quite in accord with this feeling. The
-constant use of flesh meat (<i>assidua</i> κρεοφαγία) by Europeans
-makes them stupid and irrational (<i>brutos</i>).”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> Lipsius suggests, with much reason, that Seneca actually
-wrote the opposite respecting his father, “who had no dislike for this
-philosophy, but who feared calumny,” &amp;c.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> On this melancholy truth compare Montaigne’s <i>Essais</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> Ep. xxv. Lipsius here quotes Lucan “still more a
-philosopher than a poet”:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“<i>Discite quam parvo liceat producere vitam,</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Et quantum natura petat.</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>. . Satis est populis fluviusque Ceresque.</i>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Learn by how little life may he sustained, and how much nature
-requires. The gifts of Ceres and water are sufficient nourishment for
-all peoples.”&mdash;(<i>Pharsalia.</i>)</p>
-
-<p>Also Euripides:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Ἐπεὶ τί δεῖ βροτοῖσι . . . .</div>
- <div class="verse mleft7">. . . πλὴν δύοιν μόνον,</div>
- <div class="verse">Δημητρὸς ἀκτῆς, πώματος θ’ ὑδρηχόου,</div>
- <div class="verse">Ἃπερ πάρεστι καὶ πέφυχ’ ἡμᾶς τρέφειν·</div>
- <div class="verse">Ὧν οὐκ ἀπαρκεῖ πλησμονή· τρυφῇ γέ τοι</div>
- <div class="verse">Ἄλλων ἐδεστῶν μηχανὰς θηρεύομεν.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Which may be translated:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“<i>Since what need mortals, save twain things alone,</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Crush’d grain (heaven’s gift), and streaming water-draught?</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Food nigh at hand, and nature’s aliment&mdash;</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Of which no glut contents us. Pampered taste</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Hunts out device of other eatables.</i>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">(Fragment of lost drama of Euripides, preserved in
-<i>Athenæus</i> iv. and in <i>Gellius</i> vii.)</p>
-
-<p>See, too, the elder Pliny, who professes his conviction that
-“the plainest food is also the most beneficial” (<i>cibus simplex
-utilissimus</i>), and asserts that it is from his eating that man derives
-most of his diseases, and from thence that all the drugs and all the
-arts of physicians abound. (<i>Hist. Nat.</i> xxvi., 28.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> Cf. Pope’s accusation of the gluttony of his species:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Of half that live, the butcher and the tomb.”</div>
- <div class="verse mleft14">&mdash;<i>Essay on Man.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> Compare Juvenal <i>passim</i>, Martial, Athenæus, Plutarch,
-and Clement of Alexandria.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> <i>Ep.</i> cx. Cf. St. Chrysostom (<i>Hom.</i> i. on <i>Coloss.</i> i.)
-who seems to have borrowed his equally forcible admonition on the same
-subject from Seneca.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> <i>Epistola</i> vii. and <i>De Brevitate Vitæ</i> xiv. As to the
-effect of the gross diet of the later <i>athletes</i>, Ariston (as quoted by
-Lipsius) compared them to columns in the <i>gymnasium</i>, at once “sleek
-and stony”&mdash;λιπαροὺς καὶ λιθίνους. Diogenes of Sinope, being
-asked why the athletes seemed always so void of sense and intelligence,
-replied, “Because they are made up of ox and swine flesh.” Galen, the
-great Greek medical writer of the second century of our æra, makes the
-same remark upon the proverbial stupidity of this class, and adds: “And
-this is the universal experience of mankind&mdash;that a gross stomach does
-not make a refined mind.” The Greek proverb, “παχεῖα γαστὴρ λεπτὸν οὐ
-τίκτει νόον,” exactly expresses the same experience.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> <i>De Clementiâ</i> i. and ii. The author has been accused of
-flattering a notorious tyrant. The charge is, however, unjust, since
-Nero, at the period of the dedication of the treatise to him, had not
-yet discovered his latent viciousness and cruelty. Like Voltaire, in
-recent times, Seneca bestowed perhaps unmerited praise, in the hope of
-flattering the powerful into the practice of justice and virtue.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> Cf. the sad experiences of the great Jewish prophet. “The
-prophets prophesy falsely,” &amp;c.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> In the original, “dumb animals” (<i>mutis animalibus</i>)&mdash;a
-term which, it deserves special note, Seneca usually employs, rather
-than the traditional expressions “beasts” and “brutes.” The term
-“dumb animals” is not strictly accurate, seeing that almost all
-<i>terrestrials</i> have the use of voice though it may not be intelligible
-to human ears. Yet it is, at all events, preferable to the old
-traditional terms still in general use.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> Compare the advice of the younger Pliny&mdash;“Read much
-rather than many books.” (<i>Letters</i> vii., 9 in the excellent revision
-of Mr. Bosanquet, Bell and Daldy, 1877) and Gibbon’s just remarks
-(<i>Miscellaneous Works</i>).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> See this finely and wittily illustrated in <i>Micromégas</i>
-(one of the most exquisite satires ever written), where the philosopher
-of the star Sirius proposes the same questions to the contending
-metaphysicians and <i>savans</i> of our planet.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> This essay ranks among the most valuable productions that
-have come down to us from antiquity. Its sagacious anticipation of the
-modern argument from comparative physiology and anatomy, as well as
-the earnestness and true feeling of its eloquent appeal to the higher
-instincts of human nature, gives it a special interest and importance.
-We have therefore placed it separately at the end of this article.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> Περὶ τοῦ Τὰ Ἄλογα Λογῶ Χρῆσθαι&mdash;“An Essay to
-prove that the Lower Animals reason.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> This essay is remarkable as being, perhaps, the first
-speculation as to the existence of other <i>worlds</i> than ours.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> As regards this complete silence of Plutarch, it may
-be attributed to his eminently <i>conservative</i> temperament, which
-shrank from an exclusive system that so completely broke with the
-sacred traditions of “the venerable Past.” Besides, Christianity had
-not assumed the imposing proportions of the age of Lucian, whose
-indifference is therefore more surprising than that of Plutarch.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> See, for example, the <i>Isis and Osiris</i>, 49. And yet,
-with Francis Bacon, and Bayle, and Addison, he prefers Atheism to
-fanatical Superstition.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> Of the many eminent persons who have been indebted
-to, or who have professed the greatest admiration for, the writings
-of Plutarch are Eusebius, who places him at the head of all Greek
-philosophers, Origen, Theodoret, Aulus Gellius, Photius, Suidas,
-Lipsius. Theodore of Gaza, when asked what writer he would first
-save from a general conflagration of libraries, answered, “Plutarch;
-for he considered his philosophical writings the most beneficial to
-society, and the best substitute for all other books.” Amongst moderns,
-Montaigne, Montesquieu, Voltaire, and especially Rousseau, recognise
-him as one of the first of moralists.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> See Milton (<i>Paradise Lost</i>, xi.), and Shelley (<i>Queen
-Mab</i>).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> Cf. Pope:&mdash;“Of half that live, the butcher and the
-tomb.”&mdash;<i>Moral Essays.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> <i>Parallel Lives: Cato the Censor.</i> Translated by John and
-William Langhorne, 1826.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> See <i>Odyssey</i>, xii., 395, of the oxen of the sun
-impiously slaughtered by the companions of Ulysses.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> “Hinc subitæ mortes, atque intestata Senectus.”&mdash;“Hence
-sudden deaths, and age without a will.” Juvenal, <i>Sat.</i> I.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a>
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“The anarch Custom’s reign.”</div>
- <div class="verse mleft6">Shelley: <i>Revolt of Islam</i>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> Such it seems, were some of the popular methods of
-torture in the Slaughter Houses in the first century of our æra.
-Whether the “calf-bleeding,” and the preliminary operations which
-produce the <i>pâté de foie gras</i>, &amp;c., or the older methods, bear away
-the palm for ingenuity in culinary torture, may be a question.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> See Περὶ Σαρκοφαγίας Λόγος&mdash;in the Latin
-title, <i>De Esu Carnium</i>&mdash;“On Flesh-Eating,” Parts 1 and 2. We shall
-here add the authority of Pliny, who professes his conviction that
-“the plainest food is the most beneficial.” (<i>Hist. Nat.</i> xi., 117);
-and asserts that it is from his eating that man derives most of his
-diseases. (xxv., 28.) Compare the feeling of Ovid, whom we have already
-quoted&mdash;<i>Metamorphoses</i> xv. We may here refer our readers also to the
-celebration, by the same poet, of the innocent and peaceful gifts of
-<i>Ceres</i>, and of the superiority of her pure table and altar&mdash;<i>Fasti</i>
-iv., 395&ndash;416.
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse"><i>Pace, Ceres, læta est.</i> At vos optate, Coloni,</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1"><i>Perpetuam pacem</i>, perpetuumque ducem.</div>
- <div class="verse">Farra Deæ, micæque licet salientis honorem</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Detis: et in veteres turea grana focos.</div>
- <div class="verse">Et, si thura aberant, unctas accendite tædas.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">Parva bonæ Cereri, <i>sint modo casta</i>, placent.</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>A Bove succincti cultros removete ministri:</i></div>
- <div class="verse mleft1"><i>Bos aret</i>&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Apta jugo cervix non est ferienda securi:</i></div>
- <div class="verse mleft1"><i>Vivat, et in durâ sæpe laboret humo.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>And the fine picture of Virgil of the agricultural life in the ideal
-“Golden Age,” in which slaughter for food and war was unknown:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft13"><i>Ante</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Impia quam cæsis gens est epulata juvencis.</i></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft12">“Before</div>
- <div class="verse">An impious world the labouring oxen slew.”&mdash;<i>Georgics II.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> “The proclamation of the birth of Apollonius to his
-mother by Proteus, and the incarnation of Proteus himself&mdash;the chorus
-of swans which sang for joy on the occasion&mdash;the casting out of devils,
-raising the dead, and healing the sick&mdash;the sudden disappearances and
-reappearances of Apollonius&mdash;his adventures in the Cave of Trophonius,
-and the sacred Voice which called him at his death, to which may be
-added his claim as a teacher to reform the world&mdash;cannot fail to
-suggest the parallel passages in the Gospel history.... Still, it must
-be allowed that the resemblances are very general, and on the whole
-it seems probable that the life of Apollonius was not written with a
-<i>controversial</i> aim, as the resemblances, though real, only indicate
-that a few things were borrowed, and exhibit no trace of a systematic
-parallel.”&mdash;<i>Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography.</i> Edited by Wm.
-Smith, LL.D. So great was the estimation in which he was held, that
-the emperor Alexander Severus (one of the very few good Roman princes)
-placed his statue or bust in the imperial <i>Larium</i> or private Chapel,
-together with those of Orpheus and of Christ.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> Cf. Virgil, <i>Georgics</i> II.: “Fundit humo <i>facilem</i> victum
-<i>justissima</i> Tellus.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> So greatly was he esteemed by the later and leading
-Fathers of the Church that Cyprian, the celebrated Bishop of Carthage,
-and “the doctor and guide of all the Western Churches,” was accustomed
-to say, whenever he applied himself to the study of his writings, “<i>Da
-mihi magistrum</i>” (“Give me my master”).&mdash;Jerome, <i>De Viris Illustribus</i>
-I., 284.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> <i>On Fasting or Abstinence Against the Carnal-Minded.</i> The
-style of Tertullian, we may remark, is, for the most part, obscure and
-abrupt.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> It is worth noting that neither the original
-(βρωμάτων) of the “Authorised Version,” nor the <i>meats</i> of the “A. V.”
-itself, says anything about <i>flesh-eating</i> in this favourite resort of
-its apologists. Both expressions merely signify foods of <i>any kind</i>;
-so that the passage in question of this Pastoral Letter&mdash;which is
-apparently post-Pauline&mdash;can be made to condemn <i>absolute</i> fasting
-only: nor does the context warrant any other interpretation. As to
-St. Paul, the great opponent of the earlier Christian belief and
-practice, it must be conceded that he seems not to have shared the
-abhorrence of the immediately accredited disciples of Jesus for the
-sanguinary diet, especially of St. Matthew, of St. James, and of St.
-Peter, who, as we are expressly assured by Clement of Alexandria,
-St. Augustine, and others, lived entirely on <i>non-flesh</i> meats. The
-apparent indifferentism of St. Paul upon the question of abstinence is
-best and most briefly explained by his avowed principle of action&mdash;from
-the missionary point of view useful, doubtless, but from the point of
-view of abstract ethics not always satisfactory&mdash;the being “all things
-to all men.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> Compare Seneca, <i>Epistles</i>, cx., and Chrysostom,
-<i>Homilies</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> <i>Aquis sobrius, et cibis ebrius.</i> This important
-truth we venture to commend to the earnest attention of those
-philanthropists, or hygeists, who are adherents of what may be termed
-the <i>semi</i>-temperance Clause&mdash;who abstain from alcoholic drinks but not
-from flesh.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> A more accurate version of the original than that of the
-<i>A. V.</i> (1 <i>Cor.</i> viii., 8&ndash;13). We may here quote the conclusion of
-the argument of the Greek-Jew Apostle&mdash;“Wherefore, if [the kind of]
-meat is a cause of offence to my brother, I will eat no flesh while the
-world stands, that I may not be a cause of offence to my brother”&mdash;and
-press it, more particularly, upon the attention of English residents,
-and especially of Christian <i>missionaries</i>, amongst the sensitive and
-refined Hindus who form so overwhelming a proportion of the population
-of the British Empire. According to the evidence of the missionaries of
-the various Christian churches themselves, their habits of flesh-eating
-have not infrequently been found to prejudice all but the lowest caste
-of Hindus against the reception of other ideas of Christian and Western
-“civilisation.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> <i>Usque ad choleram ortygometras cruditando.</i> In the
-present case it seems that the wanderers in the Arabian deserts were
-not so much clamorous for flesh as for <i>some</i> kind of sustenance,
-or rather for something more than the <i>manna</i> with which they were
-supplied; since the late Egyptian slaves are reported to have said, “We
-remember the fish that we did eat in Egypt freely&mdash;the cucumbers, the
-melons, and the leeks, and the onions, and the garlic; but now our soul
-is dried away: <i>there is nothing at all</i> besides this manna before our
-eyes.”
-</p>
-<p>
-We may here take occasion to observe that the fact of the existence of
-<i>sacrifice</i> throughout their history necessarily involves the practice
-of flesh-eating&mdash;indeed, the two practices are, historically, clearly
-connected. What, however, we may fairly deduce from their simple and
-frugal living in the Egyptian slavery, lasting, as it did, through
-several centuries, during which period they must have been weaned
-from the gross living of their previous barbarous <i>pastoral</i> life, is
-this&mdash;that but for the sacrificial rites (and, perhaps, the necessities
-of the desert) the Jews would have, like other Eastern peoples,
-probably adopted this <i>frugal</i> living&mdash;of cucumbers, melons, onions,
-&amp;c.&mdash;in their new homes. Such, at least, seems to be a legitimate
-inference from the highly-significant fact that, throughout their
-sacred scriptures, not flesh-meats but corn, and oil, and honey, and
-pomegranates, and figs, and other vegetable products (in which their
-land originally abounded), are their highest dietary <i>ideal</i>&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>,
-“O that my people would have hearkened to me; for if Israel had walked
-in my ways.... He should have fed them with the finest wheat flour: and
-with honey out of the stony rock should I have satisfied thee.” (Ps.
-lxxxi., 17; cf. also Ps. civ., 14, 15.) It is equally significant of
-the latent and secret consciousness of the <i>unspiritual</i> nature of the
-products of the Slaughter-House, even in the Western world, that in the
-<i>liturgies</i> or “public services” of the Christian churches, wherever
-food is prayed for or whenever thanks are returned for it, there is (as
-it seems) a natural shrinking from mention of that which is obtained
-only by cruelty and bloodshed, and it is “the kindly fruits of the
-earth” which represent the legitimate dietary wants of the petitioners.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> “For they that are after the Flesh do mind the things
-of the Flesh; but they that are after the Spirit the things of the
-Spirit. For to be <i>carnally minded is death</i>; but to be <i>spiritually
-minded is life and peace</i>.... So then they that are in the flesh cannot
-please God.... Therefore, brethren, we are debtors not to the flesh,
-to live after the flesh. For if ye live after the flesh, ye shall die;
-but if ye, through the spirit, do mortify the deeds of the body, ye
-shall live.” (<i>Rom.</i> viii., 5, &amp;c.) A more spiritual apprehension of
-‘divine verities,’ if we may so say, than the apparently more equivocal
-utterance of the same great reformer elsewhere. Here it is well to
-observe, once for all that the whole significance of the utterances
-of St. Paul upon flesh-eating depends upon the bitter controversies
-between the older Jew and the newer Greek or Roman sections of the
-rising Church. It is, in fact, a question of the lawfulness of
-eating the flesh of the victims of the Pagan and Jewish sacrificial
-altars&mdash;not of the question of flesh-eating in the <i>abstract</i> at all.
-In fine, it is a question not of <i>ethics</i>, but of theological ritual.
-It is greatly to be lamented that the confused and obscure translation
-of the <i>A. V.</i> has for so many centuries hopelessly mystified the whole
-subject&mdash;as far, at least, as the mass of the community is concerned.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> See <i>De Jejuniis Adversus Psychicos</i>. (Quinti. Sept.
-Flor. Tertulliani Opera. Edited by Gersdorf, Tauchnitz.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> In the <i>Clementine Homilies</i>, which had a great authority
-and reputation in the earlier times of Christianity, St. Peter is
-represented, in describing his way of living to Clement of Rome, as
-professing the <i>strictest</i> Vegetarianism. “I live,” he declares, “upon
-bread and olives only, with the addition, rarely, of kitchen herbs”
-(ἄρτῳ μόνῳ καὶ ἐλαίαις χρῶμαι καὶ σπανίως λαχάνοις xii. 6.)
-Clement of Alexandria (<i>Pædagogus</i> ii. 1) assures us that “Matthew
-the apostle lived upon seeds, and hard-shelled fruits, and other
-vegetables, without touching flesh;” while Hegesippus, the historian
-of the Church (as quoted by Eusebius, <i>Ecclesiastical Hist.</i> ii. 2,
-3) asserts of St. James that “he never ate any animal food”&mdash;οὔδε
-εμψυχον ἔφαγε: an assertion repeated by St. Augustine (<i>Ad.
-Faust</i>, xxii. 3) who states that James, the brother of the Lord, “lived
-upon seeds and vegetables, never tasting flesh or wine” (<i>Jacobus,
-frater Domini, seminibus et oleribus usus est, non carne nec vino</i>).
-The connexion of the beginnings of Christianity with the sublime
-and simple tenets of the Essenes, whose communistic and abstinent
-principles were strikingly coincident with those of the earliest
-Christians, is at once one of the most interesting and one of the most
-obscure phenomena in its nascent history. The Essenes, “the sober
-thinkers,” as their assumed name implies, seem to have been to the more
-noisy and ostentatious Jewish sects, what the Pythagoreans were to the
-other Greek schools of philosophy&mdash;<i>practical moralists</i> rather than
-mere talkers and theorisers. They first appear in Jewish history in
-the first century <span class="smcap">B.C.</span> Their communities were settled in the
-recesses of the Jordan valley, yet their members were sometimes found
-in the towns and villages. Like the Pythagoreans, they extorted respect
-even from the worldly and self-seeking religionists and politicians of
-the capital. See Josephus (<i>Antiquities</i> xiii. and xviii.), and Philo,
-who speak in the highest terms of admiration of the simplicity of their
-life and the purity of their morality. Dean Stanley (<i>Lectures on the
-Jewish Church</i>, vol. iii.) regards St. John the Baptist as Essenian in
-his substitution of “reformation of life” for “the sanguinary, costly
-gifts of the sacrificial slaughter-house.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> It is a curious and remarkable inconsistency, we may here
-observe, that the modern ardent admirers of the Fathers and Saints of
-the Church, while professing unbounded respect for their <i>doctrines</i>,
-for the most part ignore the one of their <i>practices</i> at once the
-most ancient, the most highly reputed, and the most universal. <i>Quod
-semper, quod ubique</i>, &amp;c., the favourite maxim of St. Augustine and the
-orthodox church, is, in this case, “more honoured in the breach than
-in the observance.” Partial and periodical Abstinence, it is scarcely
-necessary to add, however consecrated by later ecclesiasticism, is
-sufficiently remote from the daily <i>frugal</i> living of a St. James, a
-St. Anthony, or a St. Chrysostom.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> The full title of the treatise is&mdash;<i>The Miscellaneous
-Collection of T. F. Clemens of Gnostic (or Speculative) Memoirs upon
-the true Philosophy</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> This celebrated term distinguished the superiority of
-<i>knowledge</i> (<i>gnosis</i>) of “the most polite, the most learned, and
-the most wealthy of the Christian name.” During the first three or
-four centuries the Gnostics formed an extremely numerous as well as
-influential section of the Church. They sub-divided themselves into
-more than fifty particular sects, of whom the followers of Marcion and
-the Manicheans are the most celebrated. Holding opinions regarding the
-Jewish sacred scriptures and their authority the opposite to those
-of the Ebionites or Jewish Christians, they agreed, at least a large
-proportion of them, with the latter on the question of kreophagy.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> <i>History of the Literature of Ancient Greece</i>, by K. O.
-Müller, continued by J. W. Donaldson, D.D., vol. iii., 58.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> The argument here suggested, although rarely, if ever,
-adduced, may well be deemed worthy of the most serious consideration.
-It is, to our mind, one of the most forcible of all the many reasons
-for abstinence. That the life even of a really useful member of the
-human community should be supported by the slaughter of hundreds of
-innocent and intelligent beings is surely enough to “give us pause.”
-What, then, shall be said of the appalling fact, that every day
-thousands of worthless, and too often worse than useless, human lives
-go down to the grave (to be thenceforth altogether forgotten) after
-having been the cause of the slaughter and suffering of countless
-beings, surely far superior to themselves in all real worth? To
-object the privilege of an “immortal soul” is, in this case, merely
-a miserable subterfuge. Sidney Smith calculated that <i>forty-four</i>
-wagon-loads of flesh had been consumed by himself during a life of
-seventy years! (See his letter to Lord Murray.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> It was the fond belief of the <i>mediating</i> Christian
-writers that the best parts of Greek philosophy were derived, in whole
-or in part, from the Jewish Sacred Scriptures. For this belief, which
-has prevailed so widely, which, perhaps, still lingers amongst us,
-and which has engaged the useless speculation of so many minds, an
-Alexandrian Jew of the age of the later Ptolemies is responsible. It is
-now well known that he deliberately forged passages in the (so-called)
-Orphic poems and “Sybilline” predictions, in order to gain the
-respect of the Greek rulers of his country for the Jewish Scriptures.
-This patriotic but unscrupulous Jew is known by his Greek name of
-Aristobulus. He was preceptor or counsellor of Ptolemy VI.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> 2 <i>Sam.</i> vi., 19. Clement, in common with all the first
-Christian writers, quotes from the <i>Septuagint</i> version, which differs
-considerably from the Hebrew. The English translators of the latter,
-presuming that “flesh” must have formed part of the royal bounty,
-gratuitously insert that word in the context.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> <i>Pædagogus</i> ii. 1, “On Eating.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72"></a><a name="Footnote_72a_72a" id="Footnote_72a_72a"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> These works, which would have been highly interesting,
-have, with so many other valuable productions of Greek genius, long
-since perished.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> <i>Miscellanies</i> vii. “On Sacrifices.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> See Plutarch’s denunciation of the very same practice of
-the butchers of his day, <i>Essay on Flesh Eating</i>. Unfortunately for
-the credit of Jewish humanity, it must be added that the method of
-butchering (enjoined, it is alleged, by their religious laws) entails
-a greater amount of suffering and torture to the victim than even the
-Christian. This fact has been abundantly proved by the evidence of many
-competent witnesses. The cruelty of the Jewish method of slaughter was
-especially exposed at one of the recent International Congresses of
-representatives of European Societies for Prevention of Cruelty.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> <i>Miscellanies</i> ii., 18. We have used for the most
-part the translation of the writings of Clement, published in the
-Ante-Nicene Library, by Messrs. Clarke, Edinburgh, 1869. The Greek text
-is corrupt.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> Περὶ Ἀποχῆς Τῶν Εμψύχων</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> “The first book discussed alleged contradictions and
-other marks of human fallibility in the Scriptures; the third treated
-of Scriptural interpretation, and, strangely enough, repudiated the
-allegories of Origen; the fourth examined the ancient history of
-the Jews; and, the twelfth and thirteenth maintained the point now
-generally admitted by scholars&mdash;that <i>Daniel</i> is not a prophecy, but a
-retrospective history of the age of Antiochus Epiphanes.”&mdash;<i>Donaldson</i>
-(<i>Hist. of Gr. Lit.</i>)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> In justice to the old Greek Theology which, as it really
-was, has enough to answer for, it must be remarked that its Demonology,
-or belief in the powers of subordinate divinities&mdash;in the first
-instance merely the internunciaries, or mediators, or <i>angels</i> between
-Heaven and Earth&mdash;was a very different thing from the <i>Diabolism</i> of
-Christian theology, a fact which, perhaps, can be adequately recognised
-by those only who happen to be acquainted with the history of that
-most widely-spread and most fearful of all superstitions. Necessarily,
-from the vague and, for the most part, merely secular character of the
-earlier theologies, the <i>infernal</i> horrors, with the frightful creed,
-tortures, burnings, &amp;c., which characterised the faith of Christendom,
-were wholly unknown to the religion of Apollo and of Jupiter.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> Neo or New-Platonism may be briefly defined as a
-<i>spiritual</i> development of the Socratic or Platonic teaching. In the
-hands of some of its less judicious and rational advocates it tended
-to degenerate into puerile, though harmless, superstition. With the
-superior intellects of a Plotinus, Porphyry, Longinus, Hypatia, or
-Proclus, on the other hand, it was, in the main at least, a sublime
-attempt at the purification and spiritualisation of the established
-orthodox creed. It occupied a position midway between the old and the
-new religion, which was so soon to celebrate its triumph over its
-effete rival. That Christianity, on its spiritual side (whatever the
-ingratitude of its later authorities), owes far more than is generally
-acknowledged to both the old and newer Platonism, is sufficiently
-apparent to the attentive student of theological history.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> Author of a <i>Treatise on the Abandonment of the Flesh
-Diet</i>, 1709. He died in the year 1737.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> Voltaire might have added the examples of the Greek
-<i>Coenobites</i>. There is at least one celebrated and long-established
-religious community, in the Sinaitic peninsula, which has always
-rigidly excluded all flesh from their diet. Like the community of La
-Trappe, these religious Vegetarians are notoriously the most free from
-disease and most long-lived of their countrymen.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> Article <i>Viande</i> (<i>Dict. Phil.</i>) In other passages in
-his writings the philosopher of Ferney, we may here remark, expresses
-his sympathy with the humane diet. See especially his <i>Essai sur les
-Mœurs et l’Esprit des Nations</i> (introduction), and his Romance of
-<i>La Princesse de Babylone</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_83_83" id="Footnote_83_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> Οἰκειώσις strictly means adoption, admission to
-intimacy and family life, or “domestication.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_84_84" id="Footnote_84_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> The founder of the new Academy at Athens, and the
-vigorous opponent of the Stoics.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_85_85" id="Footnote_85_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> That unreasoning arrogance of human selfishness, which
-pretends that all other living beings have come into existence for the
-sole pleasure and benefit of man, has often been exposed by the wiser,
-and therefore more humble, thinkers of our race. Pope has well rebuked
-this sort of monstrous arrogance:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Has God, thou fool, worked solely for thy good,</div>
- <div class="verse">Thy joy, thy pastime, thy attire, thy food?</div>
- <div class="verse">&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&emsp;&nbsp;&emsp;*&nbsp;</div>
- <div class="verse">Know, Nature’s children all divide her care,</div>
- <div class="verse">The fur that warms a monarch, warmed a bear.</div>
- <div class="verse">While man exclaims: ‘See, all things for my use!’</div>
- <div class="verse">‘See, man for mine,’ replies a pampered goose.</div>
- <div class="verse">And just as short of reason he must fall,</div>
- <div class="verse">Who thinks <i>all made for one, not one for all</i>.”</div>
- <div class="verse mleft14"><i>Essay on Man, III.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>And, as a commentary upon these truly philosophic verses, we may
-quote the words of a recent able writer, answering the objection,
-“Why were sheep and oxen created, if not for the use of man? replies
-to the same effect as Porphyry 1600 years ago:” It is only pride and
-imbecility in man to imagine all things made for his sole use. There
-exist millions of suns and their revolving orbs which the eye of man
-has never perceived. Myriads of animals enjoy their pastime unheeded
-and unseen by him&mdash;many are injurious and destructive to him. All exist
-for purposes but partially known. Yet we must believe, in general, that
-all were created for their own enjoyment, for mutual advantage, and for
-the preservation of universal harmony in Nature. If, merely because we
-can eat sheep pleasantly, we are to believe that they exist only to
-supply us with food, we may as well say that man was created solely
-for various parasitical animals to feed on, “<i>because</i> they do feed on
-him.”&mdash;(<i>Fruits and Farinacea: the Proper Food of Man.</i> By J. Smith.
-Edited by Professor Newman. Heywood, Manchester; Pitman, London.) See,
-also, amongst other philosophic writers, the remarks of Joseph Ritson
-in his “Essay on Abstinence from Animal Food a Moral Duty”&mdash;(Phillips,
-London, 1802). As to Oxen and Sheep, it must be further remarked that
-they have been made what they are by the intervention of man alone. The
-original and wild stocks (especially that of sheep) are very different
-from the metamorphosed and almost helpless domesticated varieties.
-Naturam violant, pacem appellant.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_86_86" id="Footnote_86_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> The Artificer or <i>Creator, par excellence</i>. In the
-Platonic language, the usual distinguishing name of the subordinate
-creator of our imperfect world.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_87_87" id="Footnote_87_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> Cf. Ovid’s <i>Metam.</i>, xv.; Plutarch’s <i>Essay on
-Flesh-Eating</i>; Thomson’s <i>Seasons</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_88_88" id="Footnote_88_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88_88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a> Περὶ Ἐποχῆς κ. τ. λ. In the number of the
-traditionary reformers and civilisers of the earlier nations, the name
-of Orpheus has always held a foremost place. In early Christian times
-Orpheus and the literature with which his name is connected occupy
-a very prominent and important position, and some celebrated forged
-prophecies passed current as the utterances of that half-legendary
-hero. Horace adopts the popular belief as to his radical dietetic
-reform in the following verses:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Silvestres homines sacer, interpresque Deorum,</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Cædibus et fœdo victu</i> deterruit Orpheus.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft15">&mdash;<i>Ars Poetica.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Virgil assigns him a place in the first rank of the Just in the Elysian
-paradise.&mdash;<i>Æn.</i> vi.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_89_89" id="Footnote_89_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89_89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a> In his witty satire, the <i>Misopogon</i> or <i>Beard-Hater</i>&mdash;“a
-sort of inoffensive retaliation, which it would be in the power of few
-princes to employ”&mdash;directed against the luxurious people of Antioch,
-who had ridiculed his frugal meals and simple mode of living, “he
-himself mentions his vegetable diet, and upbraids the gross and sensual
-appetite” of that orthodox but corrupt Christian city. When they
-complained of the high prices of flesh-meats, “Julian publicly declared
-that a <i>frugal city ought to be satisfied with a regular supply of
-wine, oil, and bread</i>.”&mdash;<i>Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire</i>, xxiv.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_90_90" id="Footnote_90_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90_90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a> Gibbon, <i>Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire</i>, xxii.
-The philosophical fable of Julian&mdash;<i>The Cæsars</i>&mdash;has been pronounced
-by the same historian to be “one of the most agreeable and instructive
-productions of ancient wit.” Its purpose is to estimate the merits or
-demerits of the various Emperors from Augustus to Constantine. As for
-the <i>Enemy of the Beard</i>, it may be ranked, for sarcastic wit, almost
-with the <i>Jupiter in Tragedy</i> of Lucian.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_91_91" id="Footnote_91_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91_91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a> Article, “Chrysostom,” in the <i>Penny Cyclopædia</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_92_92" id="Footnote_92_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92_92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a> Baur’s <i>Life and Work of St. Paul</i>. Part ii., chap. 3.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_93_93" id="Footnote_93_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93_93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a> We here take occasion to observe that, while final
-appeals to our sacred Scriptures to determine any sociological
-question&mdash;whether of slavery, polygamy, war, or of dietetics&mdash;cannot be
-too strongly deprecated, a candid and impartial inquirer, nevertheless,
-will gladly recognise traces of a consciousness of the unspiritual
-nature of the sacrificial altar and shambles. He will gladly recognise
-that if&mdash;as might be expected in so various a collection of sacred
-writings produced by different minds in different ages&mdash;frequent
-sanction of the materialist mode of living may be urged on the one
-side; on the other hand, the inspiration of the more exalted minds is
-in accord with the practice of the true spiritual life. Cf. <i>Gen.</i> i.,
-29, 30; <i>Isaiah</i> i., 11&ndash;17, and xi., 9 <i>Ps.</i> l., 9&ndash;14; <i>Ps.</i> lxxxi.,
-14&ndash;17; <i>Ps.</i> civ., 14, 15; <i>Prov.</i> xxiii., 2, 3, 20, 21; <i>Prov.</i>
-xxvii., 25&ndash;27: <i>Prov.</i> xxx., 8, 22; <i>Prov.</i> xxxi., 4; <i>Eccl.</i> vi.,
-7; <i>Matt.</i> vi. 31; 1 <i>Cor.</i> viii., 13, and ix., 25; <i>Rom.</i> viii.,
-5&ndash;8, 12, 13; <i>Phil.</i> iii., 19, and iv., 8; <i>James</i> ii., 13, 4, and
-iv., 1&ndash;3; 1 <i>Pet.</i> ii., 11. Perhaps, next to the alleged authority of
-<i>Gen.</i> ix. (noticed and refuted by Tertullian, as already quoted), the
-trance-vision of St. Peter is most often urged by the <i>bibliolaters</i>
-(or those who revere the <i>letter</i> rather than the <i>true inspiration</i>
-of the Sacred Books) as a triumphant proof of biblical sanction of
-materialism. Yet, unless, indeed, <i>literalism</i> is to over-ride the
-most ordinary rules of common sense, as well as of criticism, all
-that can be extracted from the “Vision” (in which were presented to
-the sleeper “all manner of four-footed beasts of the earth, and <i>wild
-beasts</i> and <i>creeping things</i>,” which it will hardly be contented he
-was expected to eat) is the fact of a mental illumination, by which the
-Jewish Apostle recognises the folly of his countrymen in arrogating to
-themselves the exclusive privileges of the “Chosen People.” Besides,
-as has already been pointed out, the earliest traditions concur in
-representing St. Peter as always a strict abstinent, insomuch that he
-is stated to have celebrated the “Eucharist” with nothing but bread and
-salt.&mdash;<i>Clement Hom.</i>, xiv., 1.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_94_94" id="Footnote_94_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94_94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a> <i>Homily</i>, lxix. on <i>Mat.</i> xxii., 1&ndash;14.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_95_95" id="Footnote_95_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95_95"><span class="label">[95]</span></a> The <i>male</i> sex, according to our ideas, might have
-been more properly apostrophised; and St. Chrysostom may seem, in
-this passage and elsewhere, to be somewhat partial in his invective.
-Candour, indeed, forces us to remark that the “Golden-mouthed,” in
-common with many others of the Fathers, and with the Greek and Eastern
-world in general, depreciated the qualities, both moral and mental,
-of the feminine sex. That the weaker are what the stronger choose
-to make them, is an obvious truth generally ignored in all ages and
-countries&mdash;by modern satirists and other writers, as well as by a
-Simonides or Solomon. The <i>partial</i> severity of the Archbishop of
-Constantinople, it is proper to add, may be justified, in some measure,
-by the contemporary history of the Court of Byzantium, where the
-beautiful and licentious empress Eudoxia ruled supreme.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_96_96" id="Footnote_96_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96_96"><span class="label">[96]</span></a> St. Chrysostom seems to have derived this forcible
-appeal from Seneca. Compare the remarks of the latter, Ep. cx.: “At,
-mehercule, ista solicite scrutata varieque condita, cum subierint
-ventrem, una atque cadem fæditas occupabit. Vis ciborum voluptatem
-contemnere? <i>Exitum specta.</i>”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_97_97" id="Footnote_97_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97_97"><span class="label">[97]</span></a> The <i>Homilies</i> of St. John Chrysostom, Archbishop of
-Constantinople, Translated by Members of the English Church. Parker,
-Oxford. See <i>Hom.</i> vii. on <i>Phil.</i> ii. for a forcible representation of
-the inferiority, in many points, of our own to other species.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_98_98" id="Footnote_98_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98_98"><span class="label">[98]</span></a> For example, we may refer to the fact of trials of
-“criminal” dogs, and other non-human beings, with all the formalities
-of ordinary courts of justice, and in the gravest manner recorded by
-credible witnesses. The convicted “felons” were actually hanged with
-all the circumstances of human executions. Instances of such trials are
-recorded even so late as the sixteenth century.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_99_99" id="Footnote_99_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99_99"><span class="label">[99]</span></a> His biographer, Marinus, writes in terms of the highest
-admiration of his virtues as well as of his genius, and of the
-perfection to which he had attained by his unmaterialistic diet and
-manner of living. He seems to have had a remarkably cosmopolitan mind,
-since he regarded with equal respect the best parts of all the then
-existing religious systems; and he is said even to have paid solemn
-honours to all the most illustrious, or rather most meritorious, of
-his philosophic predecessors. That his intellect, sublime and exalted
-as it was, had contracted the taint of superstition must excite our
-regret, though scarcely our wonder, in the absence of the light of
-modern science; nor can there be any difficulty in perceiving how the
-miracles and celestial apparitions&mdash;which form a sort of halo around
-the great teachers&mdash;originated, viz., in the natural enthusiasm of his
-zealous but uncritical disciples. One of his principal works is <i>On
-the Theology of Plato</i>, in six books. Another of his productions was
-a Commentary on the <i>Works and Days of Hesiod</i>. Both are extant. He
-died at an advanced age in 485, having hastened his end by excessive
-asceticism.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_100_100" id="Footnote_100_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_100_100"><span class="label">[100]</span></a> <i>Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire</i>, xl. This
-testimony of the great historian to the merits of the last of the
-New-Platonists is all the more weighty as coming from an authority
-notoriously the most unimpassioned and unenthusiastic, perhaps,
-of all writers. Compare his remarkable expression of personal
-feeling&mdash;guardedly stated as it is&mdash;upon the question of kreophagy in
-his chapter on the history and manners of the Tartar nations (chap.
-xxvi).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_101_101" id="Footnote_101_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_101_101"><span class="label">[101]</span></a> <i>Trattato della Vita Sobria</i>, 1548.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_102_102" id="Footnote_102_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_102_102"><span class="label">[102]</span></a> <i>Sævior armis Luxuria.</i> We may be tempted to ask
-ourselves whether we are reading denunciations of the gluttony and
-profusion of the sixteenth century or contemporary reports of public
-dinners in our own country, <i>e.g.</i>, of the Lord Mayor’s annual dinner.
-The vast amount of slaughter of all kinds of victims to supply the
-various dishes of <i>one</i> of these exhibitions of national gluttony
-can be adequately described only by the use of the Homeric word
-<i>hecatomb</i>&mdash;slaughter of hundreds.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_103_103" id="Footnote_103_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_103_103"><span class="label">[103]</span></a> <i>Amorevole Esortazione a Seguire La Vita Ordinata e
-Sobria.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_104_104" id="Footnote_104_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_104_104"><span class="label">[104]</span></a> Cornaro’s heterodoxy in dietetics was not allowed, as
-may well be supposed, to pass unchallenged by his contemporaries. One
-of his countrymen, a person of some note, Sperone Speroni, published
-a reply under the title of “Contra la Sobrietà;” but soon afterwards
-recanting his errors (<i>rimettendosi spontaneamente nel buon sentiero</i>)
-he wrote a Discourse in favour of Temperance. About the same time there
-appeared in Paris an “Anti-Cornaro,” written “against all the rules
-of good taste,” and which the editors of the <i>Biographie Universelle</i>
-characterise as full of remarks “<i>tout à fait oiseuses</i>.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_105_105" id="Footnote_105_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_105_105"><span class="label">[105]</span></a> More points out very forcibly that to hang for theft is
-tantamount to offering a premium for <i>murder</i>. Two hundred and fifty
-years later Beccaria and other humanitarians vainly advanced similar
-objections to the criminal code of christian Europe. It is hardly
-necessary to remark that this Draconian bloodthirstiness of English
-criminal law remained to belie the name of “civilisation” so recently
-as fifty years ago.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_106_106" id="Footnote_106_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_106_106"><span class="label">[106]</span></a> Erasmus (who, to lash satirically and more effectively
-the various follies and crimes of men places the genius of Folly itself
-in the pulpit) seems to have shared the feeling of his friend in regard
-to the character of “sport.” “When they (the ‘sportsmen’) have run down
-their victims, what strange pleasure they have in cutting them up! Cows
-and sheep may be slaughtered by common butchers, but those animals that
-are killed in hunting must be mangled by none under a gentleman, who
-will fall down on his knees, and drawing out a slashing dagger (for a
-common knife is not good enough) after several ceremonies shall dissect
-all the joints as artistically as the best skilled anatomist, while
-all who stand round shall look very intently and seem to be mightily
-surprised with the novelty, though they have seen the same thing a
-hundred times before; and he that can but dip his finger and taste of
-the blood shall think his own bettered by it. And yet the constant
-feeding on such diet does but assimilate them to the nature (?) of
-those animals they eat,” &amp;c.&mdash;<i>Encomium Moriæ</i>, or <i>Praise of Folly</i>.
-If we recall to mind that three centuries and a half have passed away
-since More and Erasmus raised their voices against the sanguinary
-pursuits of hunting, and that it is still necessary to reiterate the
-denunciation, we shall justly deplore the slow progress of the human
-mind in all that constitutes true morality and refinement of feeling.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_107_107" id="Footnote_107_107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_107_107"><span class="label">[107]</span></a> <i>Utopia</i> II.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_108_108" id="Footnote_108_108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_108_108"><span class="label">[108]</span></a> For a full and eloquent exposition of the social evils
-which threaten the country from the natural but mischievous greed
-of landowners and farmers, our readers are referred, in particular,
-to Professor Newman’s admirable Lectures upon this aspect of the
-Vegetarian creed, delivered before the Society at various times.
-(Heywood: Manchester.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_109_109" id="Footnote_109_109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_109_109"><span class="label">[109]</span></a> <i>Utopia.</i> Translated into English by Ralph Robinson,
-Fellow of Corpus Christi College. London: 1556; reprinted by Edward
-Arber, 1869. We have used this English edition as more nearly
-representing the style of Sir Thomas More than a modern version. It is
-a curious fact that no edition of the <i>Utopia</i> was published in England
-during the author’s lifetime&mdash;or, indeed, before that of Robinson,
-in 1551. It was first printed at Louvain; and, after revision by the
-author, it was reprinted at Basle, under the auspices of Erasmus, still
-in the original Latin.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_110_110" id="Footnote_110_110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_110_110"><span class="label">[110]</span></a> “With plaintive cries, all covered with blood, and in
-the attitude of a suppliant.” See the story of the death of Silvia’s
-deer (<i>Æneis</i>, viii.)&mdash;the most touching episode in the whole epic of
-Virgil. The affection of the Tuscan girl for her favourite, her anxious
-care of her, and the deep indignation excited amongst her people by the
-murder of the deer by the son of Æneas and his intruding followers&mdash;the
-cause of the war that ensued&mdash;are depicted with rare grace and feeling.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_111_111" id="Footnote_111_111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_111_111"><span class="label">[111]</span></a> “It was in the slaughter, in the primæval times, of
-wild beasts (I suppose) the knife first was stained with the warm
-life-blood.”&mdash;See <i>Ovid Metam.</i> xv.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_112_112" id="Footnote_112_112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_112_112"><span class="label">[112]</span></a> <i>Christian</i> theology, to which doubtless Montaigne here
-refers, the force of truth compels us to note, has always uttered
-a very “uncertain sound” in regard to the rights and even to the
-frightful sufferings of the non-human species. Excepting, indeed,
-two or three isolated passages in the Jewish and Christian sacred
-Scriptures which, according to the theologians, bear a somewhat
-<i>equivocal</i> meaning, it is not easy to discover what <i>particular</i>
-theological or ecclesiastical maxims Montaigne could adduce.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_113_113" id="Footnote_113_113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_113_113"><span class="label">[113]</span></a> We use the term in deference to universal custom,
-although Francis Bacon protested 250 years ago that “Antiquity, as
-we call it, is the young state of the world; for those times are
-ancient when the world is ancient, and not those we vulgarly account
-ancient by computing backwards&mdash;so that the present time is the real
-Antiquity.”&mdash;<i>Advancement of Learning, I.</i> See also <i>Novum Organum</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_114_114" id="Footnote_114_114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_114_114"><span class="label">[114]</span></a> Compare Shakspere’s eloquent indignation:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft8">“Man, proud Man,</div>
- <div class="verse">Dressed in a little brief authority,</div>
- <div class="verse">Most ignorant of what he’s most assured&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse">His glassy essence&mdash;like an angry ape,</div>
- <div class="verse">Plays such fantastic tricks before high heaven,” &amp;c.</div>
- <div class="verse mleft15"><i>Measure for Measure.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_115_115" id="Footnote_115_115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_115_115"><span class="label">[115]</span></a> With these just and common-sense arguments of Montaigne
-compare the very remarkable treatise (remarkable both by the profession
-and by the age of the author) of Hieronymus or Jerome Rorarius,
-published under the title&mdash;“That the [so-called] irrational animals
-often make use of reason better than men.” (<i>Quod Animalia Bruta
-Sæpe Utantur Ratione Melius Homine.</i>) It was given to the world by
-the celebrated physician, Gabriel Naudé, in 1648, one hundred years
-after it was written, and, as pointed out by Lange, it is therefore
-earlier than the Essais of Montaigne. “It is distinguished,” according
-to Lange, “by its severe and serious tone, and by the assiduous
-emphasising of just such traits of the lower animals as are most
-generally denied to them, as being products of the higher faculties
-of the soul. With their virtues the vices of men are set in sharp
-contrast. We can therefore understand that the MS., although written
-by a priest, who was a friend both of Pope and Emperor, had to wait
-so long for publication.” (<i>Hist. of Materialism.</i> Vol. i., 225. Eng.
-Trans.) It is noteworthy that the title, as well as the arguments, of
-the book of Rorarius reveals its original inspiration&mdash;the Essay of
-Plutarch. Equally heterodox upon this subject is the <i>De La Sagesse</i> of
-Montaigne’s friend, Pierre Charron.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_116_116" id="Footnote_116_116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_116_116"><span class="label">[116]</span></a> <i>Essais</i> de Michel de Montaigne, II., 12.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_117_117" id="Footnote_117_117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_117_117"><span class="label">[117]</span></a> See Article in <i>English Cyclopædia</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_118_118" id="Footnote_118_118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_118_118"><span class="label">[118]</span></a> See <i>Elémens de la Philosophie de Newton</i>. The whole
-passage breathes the true spirit of humanity and philosophy, and
-deserves to be quoted in full in this place: “Il y a surtout dans
-l’homme une disposition à la compassion aussi généralement répandue que
-nos autres instincts. Newton avait cultivé ce sentiment d’humanité,
-et il l’etendait jusqu’aux animaux. Il était fortement convaincu avec
-Locke, que Dieu a donné aux animaux une mésure d’idées, et les mêmes
-sentiments qu’à nous. Il ne pouvait penser que Dieu, qui ne fait rien
-en vain, eût donné aux animaux des organes de sentiment, <i>afin qu’elles
-n’eussent point de sentiment</i>. Il trouvait une contradiction bien
-affreuse à croire que les animaux sentent, et à les faire souffrir.
-Sa morale s’accordait en ce point avec sa philosophie. <i>Il ne cédait
-qu’avec répugnance à l’usage barbare de nous nourrir du sang et de
-la chair des êtres semblables à nous</i>, que nous caressons tous les
-jours. Il ne permit jamais dans sa maison qu’on les fit mourir par
-des morts lentes et recherchées, pour en rendre la nourriture plus
-délicieuse. Cette compassion qu’il avait pour les animaux se tournait
-en vraie charité pour les hommes. En effet, <i>sans l’humanité&mdash;vertu
-qui comprend toutes les vertus&mdash;on ne mériterait guère le nom de
-philosophe</i>.”&mdash;<i>Elémens</i> v. An expression of feeling in sufficiently
-striking contrast to the ordinary ideas. Compare <i>Essay on the Human
-Understanding</i>, ii., 2.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_119_119" id="Footnote_119_119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_119_119"><span class="label">[119]</span></a> <i>History of Materialism.</i>&mdash;We may here observe that
-Descartes seems to have adopted his extraordinary theory as to the
-non-human races as a sort of <i>dernier resort</i>. In a letter to one
-of his friends (Louis Racine) he declares himself driven to his
-theory by the rigour of the dilemma, that (seeing the innocence of
-the victims of man’s selfishness) it is necessary either that they
-should he insensible to suffering, or that God, who has made them,
-should be unjust. Upon which Gleïzès makes the following reflection:
-“This reasoning is conclusive. One must either be a Cartesian, or
-allow that man is very vile. Nothing is more rigorous than this
-consequence.”&mdash;(<i>Thalysie Ou La Nouvelle Existence</i>). La Fontaine
-has well illustrated the absurdity of the animated machine theory in
-<i>Fables</i> x. 1.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_120_120" id="Footnote_120_120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_120_120"><span class="label">[120]</span></a> See “<i>Elémens de la Philosophie de Newton</i>.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_121_121" id="Footnote_121_121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_121_121"><span class="label">[121]</span></a> <i>Suspecta mihi semper fuerit</i> (he writes) <i>ipsa hominis</i>
-φιλαυτία.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_122_122" id="Footnote_122_122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_122_122"><span class="label">[122]</span></a> See Gassendi’s Letter, <i>Viro Clarissimo et Philosopho
-ac Medico Expertissimo Joanni Baptistæ Helmontio Amico Suo Singulari</i>.
-Dated, Amsterdam, 1629.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_123_123" id="Footnote_123_123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_123_123"><span class="label">[123]</span></a> <i>Physics.</i> Book II. <i>De Virtutibus.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_124_124" id="Footnote_124_124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_124_124"><span class="label">[124]</span></a> See <i>Philosophiæ Epicuri Syntagma. De Sobrietate contra
-Gulam.</i> (“View of the Philosophy of Epikurus: On Sobriety as opposed to
-Gluttony.”) Part III. Florentiæ, 1727. Folio. Vol. III.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_125_125" id="Footnote_125_125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_125_125"><span class="label">[125]</span></a> <i>Advancement of Learning</i>, iv., 2. Bacon’s suggestion
-seems to imply that human beings were still vivisected, for the “good”
-of science, in his time. Celsus, the well-known Latin physician of
-the second century, had protested against this cold-blooded barbarity
-of deliberately cutting up a living human body. The wretched victims
-of the vivisecting knife were, it seems, slaves, criminals, and
-captives, who were handed over by the authorities to the physiological
-“laboratory.” Harvey, Bacon’s contemporary, is notorious (and, it ought
-to be added, infamous) for the number and the unrelenting severity of
-his experiments upon the non-human slaves, which, though constantly
-alleged by modern vivisectors to have been the means by which he
-discovered the “circulation of the blood,” have been clearly proved to
-have served merely as demonstrations in physiology to his pupils. But
-we no longer wonder at Harvey’s indifference to the horrible suffering
-of which he was the cause, when we read the similar atrocities of
-vivisection and “pathology” of our own time. From the cold-blooded
-cruelties of Harvey, who was accustomed to amuse Charles I. and his
-family with his demonstrations, it is a pleasant relief to turn to
-the better feeling of Shakspere on that subject. See his <i>Cymbeline</i>
-(i., 6), where the Queen, who is experimenting in poisons, tells her
-physician,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“I will try the force of these thy compounds on such creatures as</div>
- <div class="verse">We count not worth the hanging&mdash;but none human.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">and is reminded that she would “from this practice but make hard
-her heart.” Such a rebuke is in keeping with the true feeling which
-inspired the poet to picture the undeserved pangs of the hunted Deer in
-<i>As You Like It</i>, ii., 1.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_126_126" id="Footnote_126_126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_126_126"><span class="label">[126]</span></a> <i>Advancement of Learning.</i> viii., 2.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_127_127" id="Footnote_127_127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_127_127"><span class="label">[127]</span></a> See <i>Acetaria</i> (page 170). By John Evelyn.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_128_128" id="Footnote_128_128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_128_128"><span class="label">[128]</span></a> The tract of Samuel Hartlib, entitled, <i>A Design for
-Plenty, by a Universal Planting of Fruit Trees</i>, which appeared during
-the Commonwealth Government, no doubt suggested to Evelyn his kindred
-publication. Hartlib (of a distinguished German family) settled in this
-country somewhere about the year 1630. By his writings, in advocacy
-of better agriculture and horticulture, he has deserved a grateful
-commemoration from after-times. Cromwell gave him a pension of £300,
-which was taken away by Charles II., and he died in poverty and
-neglect. It was to him Milton dedicated his <i>Tractate on Education</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_129_129" id="Footnote_129_129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_129_129"><span class="label">[129]</span></a> Locke (one of the very highest names in Philosophy) had
-already exhorted English mothers to make their children abstain “wholly
-from flesh,” at least until the completion of the fourth or fifth
-year. He strongly recommends a very sparing amount of flesh for after
-years; and thinks that many maladies may be traceable to the foolish
-indulgence of mothers in respect to diet.&mdash;See <i>Thoughts on Education</i>,
-1690.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_130_130" id="Footnote_130_130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_130_130"><span class="label">[130]</span></a> He quotes, amongst others, Tertullian <i>De Jejuniis</i>
-(On Fasting), cap. iv.; Jerome (<i>Adv. Jovin</i>); Clemens of Alexandria
-(<i>Strom.</i> vii.); Eusebius, <i>Preparatio Evangelica</i> (Preparation for the
-Gospel), who cites several abstinents from amongst the philosophers of
-the old theologies.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_131_131" id="Footnote_131_131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_131_131"><span class="label">[131]</span></a> <i>Acetaria</i> (“A Discourse of Salads”). Dedicated to Lord
-Somers, of Evesham, Lord High Chancellor of England, and President of
-the Royal Society, London, 1699.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_132_132" id="Footnote_132_132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_132_132"><span class="label">[132]</span></a> Translated by Cowper from the Latin poems of Milton. In
-a note to the original poem Thomas Warton justly remarks that “Milton’s
-panegyrics on temperance both in eating and in drinking, resulting from
-his own practice, are frequent.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_133_133" id="Footnote_133_133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_133_133"><span class="label">[133]</span></a> <i>Paradise Lost</i>, v. and xi. Cf. <i>Queen Mab</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_134_134" id="Footnote_134_134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_134_134"><span class="label">[134]</span></a> <i>Le sang humain abruti ne pouvait plus s’élever aux
-choses intellectuelles.</i> See <i>Discours sur L’Histoire Universelle</i>, a
-historical sketch which, though necessarily infected by the theological
-prejudices of the bishop, is, for the rest, considering the period in
-which it was written, a meritorious production as one of the earliest
-attempts at a sort of “philosophy of history.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_135_135" id="Footnote_135_135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_135_135"><span class="label">[135]</span></a> <i>Penny Cyclopædia</i>, Article Mandeville.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_136_136" id="Footnote_136_136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_136_136"><span class="label">[136]</span></a> Upon which Ritson aptly remarks: “The sheep is not so
-much ‘designed’ for the <i>man</i> as the <i>man</i> is for the <i>tiger</i>, this
-animal being naturally carnivorous, which man is not. But nature, and
-justice, and humanity are not always one and the same thing.” To this
-remark we may add with equal force, that almost all the living beings
-upon whom our species preys have been so artificially changed from
-their natural condition for the gratification of its selfish appetite
-as to be with difficulty identified with the original stocks. So much
-for this theory of creative <i>design</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_137_137" id="Footnote_137_137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_137_137"><span class="label">[137]</span></a> <i>Fable of the Bees</i>, i. 187, &amp;c.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_138_138" id="Footnote_138_138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_138_138"><span class="label">[138]</span></a> <i>Fable</i> xxxvi., <i>Pythagoras and the Countryman</i>. This
-fable of Gay may have been suggested by that of Æsop&mdash;preserved by
-Plutarch&mdash;who represents a wolf watching a number of shepherds eating
-a sheep, and saying to himself&mdash;“If <i>I</i> were doing what <i>you</i> are now
-about, what an uproar you would make!” See also the instructive fable
-of La Fontaine&mdash;<i>L’Homme et la Couleuvre</i>, one of the finest in the
-whole twelve Books (<i>Livre</i> x., 2), in which the Cow and Ox accuse the
-base ingratitude of Man for the cruel neglect, and, finally, for the
-barbarous slaughter of his fellow-labourers. The Cow, appealed to by
-the Adder, replies:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft9">“Pourquoi dissimuler?</div>
- <div class="verse">Je nourris celui-ci depuis longues années:</div>
- <div class="verse">Il n’a sans mes bienfaits passé nulles journées.</div>
- <div class="verse">Tout n’est que pour lui seul: mon lait et mes enfants</div>
- <div class="verse">Le font à la maison revenir les mains pleines.</div>
- <div class="verse">Même j’ai rétabli sa santé, que les ans</div>
- <div class="verse mleft2">Avaient altérée; et mes peines</div>
- <div class="verse">Ont pour but son plaisir ainsi que son besoin.</div>
- <div class="verse">Enfin me voilà vieille. <i>Il me laisse</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Sans herbe.</i> S’il voulait encore me laisser paître!</div>
- <div class="verse">Mais je suis attachée. . . . .</div>
- <div class="verse">Force coups, peu de gré. Puis, quand il était vieux,</div>
- <div class="verse">On croyait l’honorer chaque fois que les hommes</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Achetaient de son sang l’indulgence des dieux</i>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_139_139" id="Footnote_139_139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_139_139"><span class="label">[139]</span></a> <i>The Wild Boar and the Ram.</i> For admirable rebukes of
-human arrogance, see <i>The Elephant and the Bookseller</i> and <i>The Man and
-the Flea</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_140_140" id="Footnote_140_140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_140_140"><span class="label">[140]</span></a> He was at one time so corpulent that he could not get in
-and out of his carriage in visiting his patients at Bath.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_141_141" id="Footnote_141_141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_141_141"><span class="label">[141]</span></a> One of the many excellences of the non-flesh dietary
-is this essential quality of fruits and vegetables, that they contain
-in themselves sufficient liquid to allow one to dispense with a large
-proportion of all extraneous drinks, and certainly with all alcoholic
-kinds. Hence it is at once the easiest and the surest preventive of all
-excessive drinking. Much convincing testimony has been collected to
-this effect by the English and German Vegetarian Societies.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_142_142" id="Footnote_142_142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_142_142"><span class="label">[142]</span></a> It is neither necessary nor possible for everyone to
-practise so extreme abstemiousness; but it is instructive to compare it
-for a moment with the ordinary and prevalent indulgence in eating.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_143_143" id="Footnote_143_143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_143_143"><span class="label">[143]</span></a> <i>A Life of George Cheyne, M.D.</i>, Parker and Churchill,
-1846. See also <i>Biog. Britannica</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_144_144" id="Footnote_144_144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_144_144"><span class="label">[144]</span></a> Dr. Samuel Johnson gave up wine by the advice of Cheyne,
-and drank tea with Mrs. Thrale and Boswell till he died, æt. 75.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_145_145" id="Footnote_145_145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_145_145"><span class="label">[145]</span></a> Bayle, the author of the great <i>Dictionnaire Historique
-et Critique</i> (1690), to whom belongs the lasting honour of having
-inaugurated the critical method in history and philosophy, which
-has since led to such extensive and important results, seems also
-to have been the first explicitly to state the difficulties of that
-greatest <i>crux</i> of Theology&mdash;the problem of the existence, or rather
-dominance, of Evil. His rival Le Clerc, in his <i>Bibliothéque</i>, took up
-the orthodox cudgels. Lord Shaftesbury, the celebrated theologian and
-moralist, wrote his dialogue&mdash;<i>The Moralists</i> (1709)&mdash;in direct answer
-to Bayle, followed the next year by the <i>Theodike or Vindication of
-the Deity</i> of Leibnitz. Two of the most able and distinguished of the
-Anti-Optimists are Voltaire and Schopenhauer, the former of whom never
-wearies of using his unrivalled powers of irony and sarcasm on the
-<i>Tout est Bien</i> theory. As for the latter philosopher, he has carried
-his Anti-Optimism to the extremes of Pessimism.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_146_146" id="Footnote_146_146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_146_146"><span class="label">[146]</span></a> Pope here is scarcely logical upon his own premiss.
-It seems impossible, upon any grounds of reason or analogy, to deny
-to the lower animals a posthumous existence while vindicating it for
-ourselves, inasmuch as the <i>essential</i> conditions of existence are
-identical for many other beings. To the serious thinker the question
-of a post-terrestrial state of existence must stand or fall for both
-upon the same grounds. Yet what can well be more weak, or more of
-a subterfuge, than the pretence of many well-meaning persons, who
-seek to excuse their indifferentism to the cruel sufferings of their
-humble fellow-beings by the expression of a belief or a hope that
-there is a future retributive state for them? It must be added that
-this idle speculation&mdash;whether the non-human races are capable of
-post-terrestrial life or no&mdash;might, to any serious apprehension,
-seem to be wholly beside the mark. But what can be more monstrously
-ridiculous (γέλοιον, in Lucian’s language) than the
-inconsistency of those who would maintain the affirmative, and yet
-persist in <i>devouring</i> their clients? <i>Risum teneatis, amici!</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_147_147" id="Footnote_147_147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_147_147"><span class="label">[147]</span></a> <i>Spence’s Anecdotes</i> and <i>The Guardian</i>, May 21, 1713.
-His indignation was equally aroused by the tortures of the vivisectors
-of the day. And he demands how do men know that they have “a right
-to kill beings whom they [at least, the vast majority] are so little
-above, for their own curiosity, or even for some use to them.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_148_148" id="Footnote_148_148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_148_148"><span class="label">[148]</span></a> See <i>Travels</i>, &amp;c. Part IV.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_149_149" id="Footnote_149_149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_149_149"><span class="label">[149]</span></a> <i>Dict. Phil.</i>, in article <i>Viande</i>, where it is lamented
-that his book, as far as appeared, had made no more converts than had
-the Treatise of Porphyry fifteen centuries before.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_150_150" id="Footnote_150_150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_150_150"><span class="label">[150]</span></a> See the amusing scene of the gourmand Canon Sedillo and
-Dr. Sangrado, who had been called in to the gouty and fever-stricken
-patient: “‘Pray, what is your ordinary diet?’ [asks the physician.] ‘My
-usual food,’ replied the Canon, ‘is broth and juicy meat.’ ‘Broth and
-juicy meat!’ cried the doctor, alarmed. ‘I do not wonder to find you
-sick; such dainty dishes are poisoned pleasures and snares that luxury
-spreads for mankind, so as to ruin them the more effectually.... What
-an irregularity is here! what a frightful regimen! You ought to have
-been dead long ago. How old are you, pray?’ ‘I am in my sixty-ninth
-year,’ replied the Canon. ‘Exactly,’ said the physician; ‘an early old
-age is always the fruits of intemperance. If you had drunk nothing
-else than pure water all your life, and had been satisfied with
-simple nourishment&mdash;such as boiled apples, for example&mdash;you would
-not now be tormented with the gout, and all your limbs would perform
-their functions with ease. I do not despair, however, of setting you
-to rights, provided that you be wholly resigned to my directions.’”
-(<i>Adventures of Gil Blas</i>, ii., 2.) We may comment upon the satire
-of the novelist (for so it was intended), that irony or sarcasm is a
-legitimate and powerful weapon when directed against falsehood; that
-there was, and is, only too much in the practice and principles of the
-profession open to ridicule; but that the attempted ridicule of the
-better living does not redound to the penetration or good sense of the
-satirist.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_151_151" id="Footnote_151_151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_151_151"><span class="label">[151]</span></a> Compare the similar thoughts of the Latin poet, <i>Metam.</i>
-xv.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_152_152" id="Footnote_152_152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_152_152"><span class="label">[152]</span></a> <i>Autumn.</i> Read the verses which immediately follow,
-describing, with profound pathos, the sufferings and anguish of the
-hunted Deer and Hare.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_153_153" id="Footnote_153_153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_153_153"><span class="label">[153]</span></a> <i>Summer.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_154_154" id="Footnote_154_154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_154_154"><span class="label">[154]</span></a> <i>Observations on Man, II., 3.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_155_155" id="Footnote_155_155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_155_155"><span class="label">[155]</span></a> Quam vehementes haberent tirunculi impetus primos ad
-optima quæque <i>si quis exhortaretur, si quis impelleret</i>! The general
-failure Seneca traces partly to the fault of the schoolmasters, who
-prefer to instil into the minds of their pupils a knowledge of <i>words</i>
-rather than of <i>things</i>&mdash;of <i>dialectics</i> rather than of <i>dietetics</i>
-(nos docent disputare non vivere), and partly to the fault of parents
-who expect a head in place of a heart training. (See <i>Letters to
-Lucilius</i>, cviii.) <i>Quis doctores docebit?</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_156_156" id="Footnote_156_156"></a><a href="#FNanchor_156_156"><span class="label">[156]</span></a> An instance of the common confusion of thought and
-logic. The too obvious fact that a large proportion of animals are
-carnivorous neither proves nor justifies the carnivorousness of the
-<i>human</i> species. The real question is, is the human race originally
-<i>frugivorous</i> or <i>carnivorous</i>? Is it allied to the Tiger or to the
-Ape?</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_157_157" id="Footnote_157_157"></a><a href="#FNanchor_157_157"><span class="label">[157]</span></a> “Who is this female personification ‘Nature’? What are
-‘her principles,’ and where does she reside?” asks Ritson quoting this
-passage.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_158_158" id="Footnote_158_158"></a><a href="#FNanchor_158_158"><span class="label">[158]</span></a> <i>The World.</i> No. 190, as quoted by Ritson.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_159_159" id="Footnote_159_159"></a><a href="#FNanchor_159_159"><span class="label">[159]</span></a> Persian poets of the tenth and thirteenth centuries of
-our era.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_160_160" id="Footnote_160_160"></a><a href="#FNanchor_160_160"><span class="label">[160]</span></a> <i>Asiatic Researches.</i> iv. 12</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_161_161" id="Footnote_161_161"></a><a href="#FNanchor_161_161"><span class="label">[161]</span></a> <i>Elémens de la Philosophie de Newton</i>, v. Haller, the
-founder of modern physiology, assures us that “Newton, while he was
-engaged upon his <i>Optics</i>, lived almost entirely on bread, and wine,
-and water” (<i>Newtonus, dum</i> Optica <i>scribebat, solo pœnè vino pane
-et aquâ vixit</i>).&mdash;<i>Elements of Physiology</i>, vi., 198.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_162_162" id="Footnote_162_162"></a><a href="#FNanchor_162_162"><span class="label">[162]</span></a> A fact which brings out into strong relief the entirely
-superfluous luxuries of living of the English residents.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_163_163" id="Footnote_163_163"></a><a href="#FNanchor_163_163"><span class="label">[163]</span></a> <i>Essai sur les Mœurs et l’Esprit des Nations</i>,
-introduction section xvi., and chap. iii. and iv.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_164_164" id="Footnote_164_164"></a><a href="#FNanchor_164_164"><span class="label">[164]</span></a> See <i>Gen.</i> ix. and <i>Ecclesiastes</i> iii., 18, 19.&mdash;Note by
-Voltaire.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_165_165" id="Footnote_165_165"></a><a href="#FNanchor_165_165"><span class="label">[165]</span></a> See <i>Lettres d’Amabed à Shastasid</i>. See also article
-<i>Viande</i> in the <i>Dictionnaire Philosophique</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_166_166" id="Footnote_166_166"></a><a href="#FNanchor_166_166"><span class="label">[166]</span></a> <i>La Princesse de Babylone.</i> Cf. <i>Dialogue du Chapon et
-de la Poularde</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_167_167" id="Footnote_167_167"></a><a href="#FNanchor_167_167"><span class="label">[167]</span></a> See article <i>Bêtes</i> in the <i>Dict. Phil.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_168_168" id="Footnote_168_168"></a><a href="#FNanchor_168_168"><span class="label">[168]</span></a> <i>Elements of Physiology.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_169_169" id="Footnote_169_169"></a><a href="#FNanchor_169_169"><span class="label">[169]</span></a> Cf. Virgil’s “Magna parens frugum.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_170_170" id="Footnote_170_170"></a><a href="#FNanchor_170_170"><span class="label">[170]</span></a> See the <i>Nouvelle Biographie Universelle</i>. Didot, Paris.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_171_171" id="Footnote_171_171"></a><a href="#FNanchor_171_171"><span class="label">[171]</span></a> <i>Græcorum Chirurgici Libri.</i> Firenze, 1754.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_172_172" id="Footnote_172_172"></a><a href="#FNanchor_172_172"><span class="label">[172]</span></a> <i>Dissertazione sopra l’uso esterno appresso gli Antichi
-dell’acqua fredda sul corpo umano.</i> Firenze, 1747.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_173_173" id="Footnote_173_173"></a><a href="#FNanchor_173_173"><span class="label">[173]</span></a> <i>Del Vitto Pithagorico Per Uso Della Medicina: Discorso
-D’Antonio Cocchi.</i> Firenze, 1743. A translation appeared in Paris in
-1762 under the title of <i>Le Régime de Pythagore</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_174_174" id="Footnote_174_174"></a><a href="#FNanchor_174_174"><span class="label">[174]</span></a> <i>Del Vitto Pithagorico.</i> Amongst the heralds and
-forerunners of Cocchi deserve to be mentioned with honour Ramazzini
-(1633&ndash;1714), who earned amongst his countrymen the title of Hippokrates
-the Third; Lessio (in his <i>Hygiastricon</i>, or Treatise on Health), in
-the earlier part of the 17th century; and Lemcry, the French Physician
-and Member of the Académie, author of <i>A Treatise on all Sorts of
-Food</i>, which was translated into English by D. Hay, M.D., in 1745.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_175_175" id="Footnote_175_175"></a><a href="#FNanchor_175_175"><span class="label">[175]</span></a> Rousseau adds in a note: “I know that the English boast
-loudly of their humanity and of the good disposition of their nation,
-which they term ‘good nature,’ but it is in vain for them to proclaim
-this far and wide. Nobody repeats it after them.” Gibbon, in the
-well-known passage in his xxvith chapter, in which he speculates upon
-the influence of flesh-eating in regard to the savage habits of the
-Tartar tribes, quoting this remark of Rousseau, in his ironical way,
-says: “Whatever we may think of the general observation, <i>we</i> shall not
-easily allow the truth of his example.”&mdash;<i>Decline and Fall of the Roman
-Empire</i>, xxvi.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_176_176" id="Footnote_176_176"></a><a href="#FNanchor_176_176"><span class="label">[176]</span></a> He corrects this mistake in a note: “One of my English
-translators has pointed out this error, and both [of my translators]
-have rectified it. Butchers and surgeons are received as witnesses, but
-the former are not admitted as jurymen or peers in <i>criminal</i> trials,
-while surgeons are so.” Even this amended statement needs revision.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_177_177" id="Footnote_177_177"></a><a href="#FNanchor_177_177"><span class="label">[177]</span></a> How the French apostle of humanitarianism and refinement
-of manners, if he were living, would regard the recently reported
-practice of French and other physicians of sending their patients to
-the slaughter-houses to drink the blood of the newly-slaughtered oxen
-may be more easily imagined than expressed.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_178_178" id="Footnote_178_178"></a><a href="#FNanchor_178_178"><span class="label">[178]</span></a> Rather <i>carnes consumere nati</i>&mdash;“born simply to
-devour.”&mdash;See <i>Hor.</i>, Ep. I., 2.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_179_179" id="Footnote_179_179"></a><a href="#FNanchor_179_179"><span class="label">[179]</span></a> <i>Emile: ou de l’Education</i>, II.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_180_180" id="Footnote_180_180"></a><a href="#FNanchor_180_180"><span class="label">[180]</span></a> <i>Julie</i> IV., <i>Lettre</i> 10. See also her protests against
-shooting and fishing.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_181_181" id="Footnote_181_181"></a><a href="#FNanchor_181_181"><span class="label">[181]</span></a> <i>Confessions.</i> One of his friends, Dussault, surprised
-him, it seems, on one occasion eating a “cutlet.” Rousseau, conscious
-of the betrayal of his principles, “blushed up to the whites of
-his eyes.” (See Gleïzè’s <i>Thalysic</i>.) In truth, as we have already
-observed, his principles on the subject of <i>dietetics</i>, as on some
-other matters, were better than his practice. His sensibility was
-always greater than his strength of mind.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_182_182" id="Footnote_182_182"></a><a href="#FNanchor_182_182"><span class="label">[182]</span></a> <i>Amœnitates Academicæ</i>, x., 8.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_183_183" id="Footnote_183_183"></a><a href="#FNanchor_183_183"><span class="label">[183]</span></a> This little word “seems” here, as in very many other
-controversies, has a vast importance and needs a double emphasis.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_184_184" id="Footnote_184_184"></a><a href="#FNanchor_184_184"><span class="label">[184]</span></a> Buffon here entirely ignores the true cause of the
-“inanition” of the poor classes of the community. It is not the want
-of <i>flesh</i>-meats, but the want of all solid and nutritious <i>meat</i> of
-any kind, which is to be found amply in the abundant stores supplied by
-Nature at first hand in the various parts of the vegetable world. Were
-the poor able to procure, and were they instructed how best to use, the
-most nourishing of the various <i>farinacea</i>, fruits, and kitchen herbs,
-supplied by the home and foreign markets, we should hear nothing or
-little of the scandalous scenes of starvation which are at present of
-daily occurrence in our midst. The example of the Irish living upon
-a few potatoes and buttermilk, or of the Scotch peasantry, instanced
-by Adam Smith, proves how all-sufficient would be a diet judiciously
-selected from the riches of the vegetable world. For, <i>à fortiori</i>, if
-the Irish, living thus meagrely, not only support life, but exhibit
-a <i>physique</i> which, in the last century, called forth the admiration
-of the author of <i>The Wealth of Nations</i>, might not our English poor
-thrive upon a richer and more substantial vegetable diet which could
-easily be supplied but for the astounding indifference of the ruling
-classes?</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_185_185" id="Footnote_185_185"></a><a href="#FNanchor_185_185"><span class="label">[185]</span></a> <i>Hist. Naturelle, Le Bœuf.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_186_186" id="Footnote_186_186"></a><a href="#FNanchor_186_186"><span class="label">[186]</span></a> Edition of Swift’s Works. Canon Sydney Smith, equally
-celebrated as a <i>bon-vivant</i> and as a wit, at the termination of his
-life writes thus to his friend Lord Murray: “You are, I hear, attending
-more to diet than heretofore. If you wish for anything like happiness
-in the <i>fifth</i> act of life <i>eat and drink about one-half what you could
-eat and drink</i>. Did I ever tell you my calculation about eating and
-drinking? Having ascertained the weight of what I could live upon, so
-as to preserve health and strength, and what I did live upon, I found
-that, between ten and seventy years of age, I had eaten and drunk
-<i>forty-four horse wagon-loads of meat and drink more than would have
-preserved me in life and health</i>! The value of this mass of nourishment
-I considered to be worth seven thousand pounds sterling. It occurred
-to me <i>that I must, by my voracity, have starved to death fully a
-hundred persons</i>. This is a frightful calculation, but irresistibly
-true.” Commentary upon this candid statement is superfluous. <i>Ab uno
-disce omnes.</i> If amongst the richer classes the ordinary liver may
-consume a somewhat smaller quantity of life during his longer or
-shorter existence, at all events the <i>sum total</i> must be a sufficiently
-startling one for all who may have the courage and candour to reflect
-upon this truly appalling subject. Another thought irresistibly
-suggests itself. What <i>proportion</i> of human lives thus supported is of
-any real value in the world?</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_187_187" id="Footnote_187_187"></a><a href="#FNanchor_187_187"><span class="label">[187]</span></a> In reply to this sort of apology it is obvious to
-ask&mdash;“Have the <i>frugivorous</i> races, who form no inconsiderable
-proportion of the <i>mammals</i>, no claim to be considered?”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_188_188" id="Footnote_188_188"></a><a href="#FNanchor_188_188"><span class="label">[188]</span></a> To this very popular fallacy it is necessary only to
-object that Nature may very well be supposed able to maintain the
-proper balance for the most part. For the rest, man’s proper duty is
-to harmonise and regulate the various conditions of life, as far as
-in him lies, not indeed by satisfying his selfish propensities, but
-by assuming the part of a benevolent and beneficent superior. To this
-we may add with some force, that man appeared on the scene within a
-comparatively very recent geological period, so that the Earth fared,
-it seems, very well without him for countless ages.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_189_189" id="Footnote_189_189"></a><a href="#FNanchor_189_189"><span class="label">[189]</span></a> And, in point of fact, two-thirds at least of the whole
-human population of our globe.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_190_190" id="Footnote_190_190"></a><a href="#FNanchor_190_190"><span class="label">[190]</span></a> This popular excuse is perhaps the feeblest and most
-disingenuous of all the defences usually made for flesh-eating. Can
-the mere gift of life compensate for all the horrible and frightful
-sufferings inflicted, in various ways, upon their victims by the
-multiform selfishness and barbarity of man? To what unknown, as well as
-known, tortures are not every day the victims of the slaughter-house
-subjected? From their birth to their death, the vast majority&mdash;it is
-too patent a fact&mdash;pass an existence in which freedom from suffering of
-one kind or other&mdash;whether from insufficient food or confined dwellings
-on the one hand, or from the positive sufferings endured <i>in transitu</i>
-to the slaughter-house by ship or rail, or by the brutal savagery of
-cattle-drivers, &amp;c.&mdash;is the exception rather than the rule.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_191_191" id="Footnote_191_191"></a><a href="#FNanchor_191_191"><span class="label">[191]</span></a> <i>Moral and Political Philosophy</i>, i., 2. It is deeply
-to be deplored that Dr. Paley is in a very small minority amongst
-christian theologians, of candour, honesty, and feeling sufficient
-to induce them to dispute at all so orthodox a thesis as the right
-to slaughter for food. That he is compelled, by the force of truth
-and honesty, to abandon the popular pretexts and subterfuges, and to
-seek refuge in the <i>supposed</i> authority of the book of <i>Genesis</i>, is
-significant enough. Of course, to all reasonable minds, such a course
-is tantamount to giving up the defence of kreophagy altogether; and,
-if it were not for theological necessity, it would be sufficiently
-surprising that Paley’s intelligence or candour did not discover that
-if flesh-eating is to be defended on biblical grounds, so, by parity of
-reasoning, are also to be defended&mdash;slavery, polygamy, wars of the most
-cruel kind, &amp;c.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_192_192" id="Footnote_192_192"></a><a href="#FNanchor_192_192"><span class="label">[192]</span></a> <i>The Principles of Moral and Political Philosophy</i>,
-xii., 11. See, amongst others, the philosophical reflections of Mr.
-Greg in his <i>Enigmas of Life</i>, Appendix. But the subject has been most
-fully and satisfactorily dealt with by Professor Newman in his various
-Addresses.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_193_193" id="Footnote_193_193"></a><a href="#FNanchor_193_193"><span class="label">[193]</span></a> Compare the similar observation of Flourens, Secretary
-of the French Academy of Sciences, in his <i>Treatise on the Longevity
-of Man</i> (Paris, 1812). He quotes Cornaro, Lessio, Haller, and other
-authorities on the reformed regimen.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_194_194" id="Footnote_194_194"></a><a href="#FNanchor_194_194"><span class="label">[194]</span></a> He well exposes the fatal mischief of <i>emulation</i> (in
-place of love of truth and of love of knowledge, for its own sake)
-in schools which tends to intensify, if not produce, the <i>selfism</i>
-dominant in all ranks of the community. Not the least meritorious of
-his exhortations to Governments is his desire that they would employ
-themselves in such useful works as the general planting of trees,
-producing nourishing foods, in place of devastating the earth by wars,
-&amp;c.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_195_195" id="Footnote_195_195"></a><a href="#FNanchor_195_195"><span class="label">[195]</span></a> The reason, as given by himself, for his abandonment
-in after years of his self-imposed reform, is worthy neither of his
-philosophic acumen nor of his ordinary judgment. It seems that on one
-occasion, while his companions were engaged in sea-fishing, he observed
-that the captured fish, when opened, revealed in its interior the
-remains of another fish recently devoured. The young printer seemed
-to see in this fact the ordinance of Nature, by which living beings
-live by slaughter, and the justification of human carnivorousness.
-(See <i>Autobiography</i>.) This was, however, to use the famous Sirian’s
-phrase, “to reason badly;” for the sufficient answer to this alleged
-justification of man’s flesh-eating propensity is simply that the fish
-in question was, by natural organisation, <i>formed</i> to prey upon its
-fellows of the sea, whereas man is <i>not formed</i> by Nature for feeding
-upon his fellows of the land; and, further, that the larger proportion
-of <i>terrestrials</i> do not live by slaughter.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_196_196" id="Footnote_196_196"></a><a href="#FNanchor_196_196"><span class="label">[196]</span></a> <i>Wealth of Nations</i> iii., 341. See, too, Sir Hans Sloane
-(<i>Natural History of Jamaica</i>, i., 21, 22), who enumerates almost
-every species of vegetable food that has been, or may be, used for
-food, in various parts of the globe; the philosophic French traveller,
-Volney (<i>Voyages</i>), who, in comparing flesh with non-flesh feeders, is
-irresistibly forced to admit that the “habit of shedding blood, or even
-of seeing it shed, corrupts all sentiment of humanity;” the Swedish
-traveller Sparrman, the disciple of Linné, who corrects the astonishing
-physiological errors of Buffon as to the human digestive apparatus;
-Anquetil (<i>Récherches sur les Indes</i>), the French translator of the
-<i>Zend-Avesta</i> who, from his sojourn with the vegetarian Hindus and
-Persians, derived those more refined ideas which caused him to discard
-the coarser Western living; and Sir F. M. Eden (<i>State of the Poor</i>).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_197_197" id="Footnote_197_197"></a><a href="#FNanchor_197_197"><span class="label">[197]</span></a> <i>History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire</i>,
-xxvi. Notwithstanding Gibbon’s expression of horror, we shall venture
-to remark that the “unfeeling murderers” of the Tartar steppes, in
-slaughtering each for himself, are more just than the <i>civilised</i>
-peoples of Europe, with whom a pariah-class is set apart to do the
-cruel and degrading work of the community.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_198_198" id="Footnote_198_198"></a><a href="#FNanchor_198_198"><span class="label">[198]</span></a> <i>The Task.</i> When Cowper wrote this (in 1782) the Law was
-entirely silent upon the rights of the lower animals to protection. It
-was not until nearly half a century later that the British Legislature
-passed the first Act (and it was a very partial one) which at all
-considered the rights of any non-human race. Yet Hogarth’s <i>Four Stages
-of Cruelty</i>&mdash;to say nothing of literature&mdash;had been several years
-before the world. It was passed by the persistent energy and courage of
-one man&mdash;an Irish member&mdash;who braved the greatest amount of scorn and
-ridicule, both within and without the Legislature, before he succeeded
-in one of the most meritorious enterprises ever undertaken. Martin’s
-Act has been often amended or supplemented, and always with no little
-opposition and difficulty.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_199_199" id="Footnote_199_199"></a><a href="#FNanchor_199_199"><span class="label">[199]</span></a> The term “Mercy,” it is important to observe, is one
-of those words of ambiguous meaning, which are liable, in popular
-parlance, to be misused. It seems to have a double origin&mdash;from
-<i>misericordia</i>, “Pity” (its better parentage), and <i>merces</i>, “Gain,”
-and, by deduction, “Pardon” granted for some consideration. It is in
-this latter sense that the term seems generally to be used in respect
-of the non-human races. But it is obvious to object that “pardon,”
-applicable to <i>criminals</i>, can have no meaning as applied to the
-innocent. <i>Pity</i> or <i>Compassion</i>, still more <i>Justice</i>&mdash;these are the
-terms properly employed.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_200_200" id="Footnote_200_200"></a><a href="#FNanchor_200_200"><span class="label">[200]</span></a> The observation of a <i>non-Christian</i> moralist
-(<i>Juvenal</i>, xv.) It is the motto chosen by Oswald for his title page.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_201_201" id="Footnote_201_201"></a><a href="#FNanchor_201_201"><span class="label">[201]</span></a> In the Hindu sacred scriptures, and especially in
-the teaching of the great founder of the most extensive religion
-on the globe, this regard for non-human life, however originating,
-is more obvious than in any other sacred books. But it is most
-charmingly displayed in that most interesting of all Eastern poetry
-and drama&mdash;<i>Sakuntala; or The Fatal Ring</i>, of the Hindu Kalidâsa, the
-most frequently translated of all the productions of Hindu literature.
-We may refer our readers also to <i>The Light of Asia</i>, an interesting
-versification of the principal teaching of Sakya-Muni or Gautama.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_202_202" id="Footnote_202_202"></a><a href="#FNanchor_202_202"><span class="label">[202]</span></a> <i>The Cry of Nature: an Appeal to Mercy and to Justice on
-behalf of the Persecuted Animals.</i> By John Oswald. London, 1791.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_203_203" id="Footnote_203_203"></a><a href="#FNanchor_203_203"><span class="label">[203]</span></a> <i>Long Life, or the Art of Prolonging Human Existence.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_204_204" id="Footnote_204_204"></a><a href="#FNanchor_204_204"><span class="label">[204]</span></a> See the <i>Nouvelle Biographie Universelle</i> for complete
-enumeration of his writings.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_205_205" id="Footnote_205_205"></a><a href="#FNanchor_205_205"><span class="label">[205]</span></a> <i>Makrobiotik.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_206_206" id="Footnote_206_206"></a><a href="#FNanchor_206_206"><span class="label">[206]</span></a> Afterwards Sir Richard Phillips, whose admirable
-exposition of his reasons for abandoning flesh-eating, published in the
-<i>Medical Journal</i>, July 1811, is quoted in its due place.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_207_207" id="Footnote_207_207"></a><a href="#FNanchor_207_207"><span class="label">[207]</span></a> <i>Abstinence from Animal Food a Moral Duty</i>, <span class="smcap">ix</span>.
-Ritson, in a note, quotes the expression of surprise of a French
-writer, that whereas abstinence “from blood and from things strangled”
-is especially and solemnly enjoined by the immediate successors of
-Christ, in a well-known prohibition, yet this sacred obligation is
-daily “made of none effect” by those calling themselves <i>Christians</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_208_208" id="Footnote_208_208"></a><a href="#FNanchor_208_208"><span class="label">[208]</span></a> “I have known,” says Dr. Arbuthnot, “more than one
-instance of irascible passions having been much subdued by a vegetable
-diet.”&mdash;Note by Ritson.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_209_209" id="Footnote_209_209"></a><a href="#FNanchor_209_209"><span class="label">[209]</span></a> Written in 1802. Since that time the “pastime” of
-worrying bulls and bears, has in this country become illegal and
-extinct. Cock-fighting, though illegal, seems to be still popular with
-the “sporting” classes of the community.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_210_210" id="Footnote_210_210"></a><a href="#FNanchor_210_210"><span class="label">[210]</span></a> <i>General Advertiser</i>, March 4th, 1784. Since Ritson
-quoted this from the newspaper of his day, 80 years ago, the same
-scenes of equal and possibly of still greater barbarity have been
-recorded in our newspapers, season after season, of the royal and other
-hunts, with disgusting monotony of detail. Voltaire’s remarks upon
-this head are worthy of quotation: “It has been asserted that Charles
-IX. was the author of a book upon hunting. It is very likely that
-if this prince had cultivated less the art of torturing and killing
-other animals, and had not acquired in the forests the habit of seeing
-blood run, there would have been more difficulty in getting from him
-the order of St. Bartholomew. The chase is one of the most sure means
-for blunting in men the sentiment of pity for their own species; an
-effect so much the more fatal, as those who are addicted to it, placed
-in a more elevated rank, have more need of this bridle.”&mdash;<i>Œuvres</i>
-<span class="smcap">LXXII.</span>, 213. In Flaubert’s remarkable story of <i>La Légende de
-St. Julien</i> the hero “developes by degrees a propensity to bloodshed.
-He kills the mice in the chapel, the pigeons in the garden, and soon
-his advancing years gave him opportunity of indulging this taste
-in hunting. He spends whole days in the chase, caring less for the
-‘sport’ than for the slaughter.” One day he shoots a Fawn, and while
-the despairing mother, “looking up to heaven, cried with a loud voice,
-agonising and human,” St. Julien remorselessly kills her also. Then the
-male parent, a noble-looking Stag, is shot last of all; but, advancing,
-nevertheless, he comes up to the terrified murderer, and “stopped
-suddenly, and with flaming eyes and solemn tone, as of a just judge,
-he spoke three times, while a bell tolled in the distance, ‘Accursed
-one! ruthless of heart! thou shalt slay thy father and mother also,’
-and tottering and closing his eyes he expired.” The blood-stained man
-on one occasion is followed closely by all the victims of his wanton
-cruelty, who press around him with avenging looks and cries. He fulfils
-the prophecy of the Stag, and murders his parents.&mdash;See <i>Fortnightly
-Review</i>, April, 1878.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_211_211" id="Footnote_211_211"></a><a href="#FNanchor_211_211"><span class="label">[211]</span></a> It is scarcely necessary to remind our readers that
-a quarter of a century later (1827), when Martin had the courage to
-introduce the first bill for the prevention of cruelty to certain
-of the domesticated animals (a very partial measure after all), the
-humane attempt was greeted by an almost universal shout of ridicule and
-derision, both in and out of the Legislature.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_212_212" id="Footnote_212_212"></a><a href="#FNanchor_212_212"><span class="label">[212]</span></a> See Appendix.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_213_213" id="Footnote_213_213"></a><a href="#FNanchor_213_213"><span class="label">[213]</span></a> Quoted from an article in the <i>Gentleman’s Magazine</i>,
-(August, 1787), signed <i>Etonensīs</i>, who, amongst other particulars,
-states of the hero of his sketch that he was “one of the most original
-geniuses who have ever existed.... He was well skilled in natural
-philosophy, and might be said to have been a moral philosopher, not in
-<i>theory</i> only, but in strict and uniform <i>practice</i>. He was remarkably
-humane and charitable; and, though poor, was a bold and avowed enemy
-to every species of oppression.... Certain it is, that he accounted
-the murder (as he called it) of the meanest animal, except in self
-defence, a very criminal breach of the laws of nature; insisting that
-the creator of all things had constituted man not the <i>tyrant</i>, but
-the lawful and limited <i>sovereign</i>, of the inferior animals, who, he
-contended, answered the ends of their being better than their little
-despotic lord.... He did not think it</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft11">‘Enough</div>
- <div class="verse">In this late age, advent’rous to have touched</div>
- <div class="verse">Light on the precepts of the Samian Sage,’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0">for he acted in strict conformity with them.... His vegetable and milk
-diet afforded him, in particular, very sufficient nourishment; for
-when I last saw him, he was still a tall, robust, and rather corpulent
-man, though upwards of fourscore.” He was reported it seems, to be a
-believer in the <i>Metempsychosis</i>. “It was probably so said,” remarks
-Ritson, “by ignorant people who cannot distinguish justice or humanity
-from an absurd and impossible system. The compiler of the present book,
-like Pythagoras and John Williamson, abstains from flesh-food, but he
-does not believe in the <i>Metempsychosis</i>, and much doubts whether it
-was the <i>real</i> belief of either of those philosophers.”&mdash;<i>Abstinence
-from Animal Food a Moral Duty</i>, by Joseph Ritson. R. Phillips, London,
-1802.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_214_214" id="Footnote_214_214"></a><a href="#FNanchor_214_214"><span class="label">[214]</span></a> In a sketch of the life of George Nicholson, contributed
-to a Manchester journal, by Mr. W. E. A. Axon.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_215_215" id="Footnote_215_215"></a><a href="#FNanchor_215_215"><span class="label">[215]</span></a> Perhaps the fallacy of this line of apology, on the part
-of the ordinary dietists, cannot be better illustrated than by the
-example of the man-eating tribes of New Zealand, Central Africa, and
-other parts of the world, who confessedly are (or were) <i>hominivorous</i>,
-and who have been by travellers quoted as some of the finest races of
-men on the globe. The “wholesome nutriment” of their human food was as
-forcible an argument for their stomach as the “agreeable flavour” was
-attractive for their palates. Such glaring fallacy might be illustrated
-further by the example of the man-eating tiger who, we may justly
-imagine, would use similar apologies for his practice.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_216_216" id="Footnote_216_216"></a><a href="#FNanchor_216_216"><span class="label">[216]</span></a> <i>On the Conduct, &amp;c.</i>, and <i>The Primeval Diet of Man</i>,
-&amp;c., by George Nicholson, Manchester and London, 1797, 1801. The author
-assumes as his motto for the title-page the words of Rousseau&mdash;<i>Hommes,
-soyez humains! C’est votre premier devoir. Quelle sagesse y a-t-il pour
-vous hors de l’humanité?</i> “Humans, be <i>humane</i>! It is your first duty.
-What wisdom is there for you without humanity?”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_217_217" id="Footnote_217_217"></a><a href="#FNanchor_217_217"><span class="label">[217]</span></a> <i>Surgical Observations on Tumours.</i> John Abernethy,
-M.D., F.R.C.S.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_218_218" id="Footnote_218_218"></a><a href="#FNanchor_218_218"><span class="label">[218]</span></a> Excessive poverty of blood, it is obvious to remark,
-is caused, not by abstaining from flesh but by abstaining from a
-<i>sufficient</i> amount of <i>nutritious</i> non-flesh foods.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_219_219" id="Footnote_219_219"></a><a href="#FNanchor_219_219"><span class="label">[219]</span></a> <i>Additional Reports</i>, 1814. Amongst valuable diagnoses
-of this kind the reader may be referred in particular to the highly
-interesting one of the Rev. C. H. Collyns, M.A., Oxon, which originally
-appeared in the <i>Times</i> newspaper, and which twice has been republished
-by the Vegetarian Society. The success of the pure regimen in first
-mitigating and, finally, in altogether subduing long-inherited gouty
-affections, was complete and certain. The recently published evidence
-of the President of the newly-formed French Society, Dr. A. H. de
-Villeneuve, is equally satisfactory. (See <i>Bulletin de la Société
-Végétarienne</i> of Paris, as quoted in <i>Nature</i>, Jan., 1881.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_220_220" id="Footnote_220_220"></a><a href="#FNanchor_220_220"><span class="label">[220]</span></a> See, too, the testimony of Newton, <i>Return to Nature</i>,
-and of Shelley in his <i>Essay on the Vegetable Diet</i>, in which he
-describes these children as “the most beautiful and healthy beings
-it is possible to conceive. The girls are the most perfect models
-for a sculptor. Their dispositions, also, are the most gentle and
-conciliating.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_221_221" id="Footnote_221_221"></a><a href="#FNanchor_221_221"><span class="label">[221]</span></a> <i>The Life of William Lambe, M.D., Fellow of the Royal
-College of Physicians.</i> By E. Hare, C.S.I., Inspector-General of
-Hospitals, to which valuable biography we are indebted for the present
-sketch. In Mr. Hare’s memoir will be found, among other testimonies to
-the truths of Vegetarianism, a highly-interesting letter, written to
-him by his friend Dr. H. G. Lyford, an eminent physician of Winchester.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_222_222" id="Footnote_222_222"></a><a href="#FNanchor_222_222"><span class="label">[222]</span></a> <i>Life of Shelley</i>, by Jefferson Hogg, quoted by Mr. Hare
-in Life of Dr. Lambe. Hogg adds that he conformed for good fellowship,
-and found the purer food an agreeable change.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_223_223" id="Footnote_223_223"></a><a href="#FNanchor_223_223"><span class="label">[223]</span></a> See the <i>Dietetic Reformer and Vegetarian Messenger</i>,
-August, 1873.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_224_224" id="Footnote_224_224"></a><a href="#FNanchor_224_224"><span class="label">[224]</span></a> <i>Pythagoran, Anytique reum, doctumque Platona</i>:
-“Pythagoras and the Man accused by Anytus [Socrates] and the learned
-Plato.”&mdash;<i>Satires</i> of Horace.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_225_225" id="Footnote_225_225"></a><a href="#FNanchor_225_225"><span class="label">[225]</span></a> This is, perhaps, scarcely just to Pythagoras and his
-school. It is, without doubt, deeply to be lamented that they did not
-more widely promulgate a doctrine of such vital importance to the
-world; but the reasons of their reserve and partial reticence have
-been indicated already in our notice of the founder of <i>Akreophagy</i>.
-In a word&mdash;like the Founder of Christianity in a later age&mdash;they had
-many things to say which the world could not then learn. Moreover,
-as Gleïzès remarks, the teachers themselves could not have, from the
-nature of the case, the full knowledge of later times.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_226_226" id="Footnote_226_226"></a><a href="#FNanchor_226_226"><span class="label">[226]</span></a> The eloquence and style of Buffon, it need scarcely be
-remarked, are more indisputable than his scientific accuracy. Amongst
-his many errors, none, however, is more surprising than his assertion
-of the carnivorous anatomical organisation of man, which has been
-corrected over and over again by physiologists and <i>savants</i> more
-profound than Buffon.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_227_227" id="Footnote_227_227"></a><a href="#FNanchor_227_227"><span class="label">[227]</span></a> “<i>Lachrymas&mdash;nostri pars optima sensus.</i>”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_228_228" id="Footnote_228_228"></a><a href="#FNanchor_228_228"><span class="label">[228]</span></a> In newly-discovered countries, no decided predominance
-of one species over another has been found; and the reason is,
-that qualities are pretty nearly equally divided, and that the
-strongest animal is not at the same time the most agile or the most
-intelligent.&mdash;<i>Note</i> by Gleïzès.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_229_229" id="Footnote_229_229"></a><a href="#FNanchor_229_229"><span class="label">[229]</span></a> Upon this, not the least interesting and important of
-the side views of Vegetarianism, we refer our readers, amongst numerous
-authorities, to the opinions of Paley, Adam Smith, Prof. Newman,
-Liebig, and W. R. Greg (in <i>Social Problems</i>).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_230_230" id="Footnote_230_230"></a><a href="#FNanchor_230_230"><span class="label">[230]</span></a> That the victims of the Slaughter-House have, in fact, a
-full presentiment of the fate in store for them, must be sufficiently
-evident to every one who has witnessed a number of oxen or sheep
-driven towards the scene of slaughter&mdash;the frantic struggles to escape
-and rush past the horrible locality, the exertions necessary on the
-part of the drovers or slaughtermen to force them to enter as well as
-the frequent breaking away of the maddened victim&mdash;maddened alike by
-the blows and clamours of its executioners and the presentiment of
-its destiny&mdash;who frantically rushes through the public streets and
-scatters the terrified human passengers&mdash;all this abundantly proves
-the transparent falsity of the assertion of the unconsciousness or
-indifference of the victims of the shambles. See a terribly graphic
-description of a scene of this kind in <i>Household Words</i>, No. 14,
-quoted in <i>Dietetic Reformer</i> (1852), in <i>Thalysie</i>, and in the
-<i>Dietetic Reformer</i>, <i>passim</i>. Also in <i>Animal World</i>, &amp;c., &amp;c.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_231_231" id="Footnote_231_231"></a><a href="#FNanchor_231_231"><span class="label">[231]</span></a> <i>Thalysie: ou La Nouvelle Existence</i>: Par J. A. Gleïzès.
-Paris, 1840, in 3 vols., 8vo. See also preface to the German version of
-R. Springer, Berlin, 1872. Our English readers will be glad to learn
-that a translation by the English Vegetarian Society is now being
-contemplated.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_232_232" id="Footnote_232_232"></a><a href="#FNanchor_232_232"><span class="label">[232]</span></a> <i>Poeta</i>, in its original Greek meaning, marks out a
-<i>creator</i> of new, and, therefore, (it is presumable) true ideas.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_233_233" id="Footnote_233_233"></a><a href="#FNanchor_233_233"><span class="label">[233]</span></a> Compare the fate of Gibbon, who, at the same age, found
-himself an outcast from the University for a very opposite offence&mdash;for
-having embraced the dogmas of Catholicism. (See <i>Memoirs of my Life and
-Writings</i>, by Edw. Gibbon.) The future historian of <i>The Decline and
-Fall</i>, it may be added, speedily returned to Protestantism, though not
-to that of his preceptors.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_234_234" id="Footnote_234_234"></a><a href="#FNanchor_234_234"><span class="label">[234]</span></a> <i>Shelley.</i> By J. A. Symonds. Macmillan, 1887.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_235_235" id="Footnote_235_235"></a><a href="#FNanchor_235_235"><span class="label">[235]</span></a> Hogg’s <i>Life of Shelley</i>. Moxon (1858).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_236_236" id="Footnote_236_236"></a><a href="#FNanchor_236_236"><span class="label">[236]</span></a> <i>Shelley.</i> By J. A. Symonds.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_237_237" id="Footnote_237_237"></a><a href="#FNanchor_237_237"><span class="label">[237]</span></a> Cuvier’s <i>Leçons d’Anatomie Comp.</i>, Tom. III., pages
-169, 373, 443, 465, 480. Rees’ <i>Cyclop.</i>, Art Man.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_238_238" id="Footnote_238_238"></a><a href="#FNanchor_238_238"><span class="label">[238]</span></a> Inasmuch as at this moment there are in this country
-more than two thousand persons of all classes, very many for thirty
-or forty years strict abstinents from flesh-meat, enrolled members of
-the Vegetarian Society (not to speak of a probably large number of
-isolated individual abstinents scattered throughout these islands, who,
-for whatever reason, have not attached themselves to the Society), and
-that there have long been Anti-flesh eating Societies in America and
-in Germany, the <i>à fortiori</i> argument in the present instance will be
-allowed to be of <i>double</i> weight.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_239_239" id="Footnote_239_239"></a><a href="#FNanchor_239_239"><span class="label">[239]</span></a> “See Mr. Newton’s Book [<i>Return, to Nature.</i> Cadell,
-1811.] His children are the most beautiful and healthy creatures it
-is possible to conceive. The girls are perfect models for a sculptor;
-their dispositions also are the most gentle and conciliating. The
-judicious treatment they receive may be a correlative cause of this.
-In the first five years of their life, of 18,000 children that are
-born, 7,500 die of various diseases&mdash;and how many more that survive
-are rendered miserable by maladies not immediately mortal! The quality
-and quantity of a mother’s milk are materially injured by the use of
-dead flesh. On an island, near Iceland, where no vegetables are to be
-got, the children invariably die of <i>tetanus</i> before they are three
-weeks old, and the population is supplied from the mainland.&mdash;Sir G.
-Mackenzie’s <i>History of Iceland</i>&mdash;note by Shelley.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_240_240" id="Footnote_240_240"></a><a href="#FNanchor_240_240"><span class="label">[240]</span></a> <i>Revolt of Islam</i>, v. 51, 55, 56.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_241_241" id="Footnote_241_241"></a><a href="#FNanchor_241_241"><span class="label">[241]</span></a> Lately given to the world by Mr. Forman who has
-carefully collated and printed from Shelley’s MSS.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_242_242" id="Footnote_242_242"></a><a href="#FNanchor_242_242"><span class="label">[242]</span></a> <i>English Cyclopædia.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_243_243" id="Footnote_243_243"></a><a href="#FNanchor_243_243"><span class="label">[243]</span></a> <i>Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley.</i> Edited by Mrs. Shelley.
-Moxon.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_244_244" id="Footnote_244_244"></a><a href="#FNanchor_244_244"><span class="label">[244]</span></a> <i>Shelley.</i> By J. A. Symonds.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_245_245" id="Footnote_245_245"></a><a href="#FNanchor_245_245"><span class="label">[245]</span></a> See preface to <i>The Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe
-Shelley</i>. Edited by Mrs. Shelley. New edition. London, 1869. The
-increasing reputation of Shelley is proved, at the present time, by the
-increasing number of editions of his writings, and by the increasing
-number of thoughtful criticisms and biographies of the poet, by some
-of the most cultured minds of the day. Since the time, indeed, when
-a popular writer but sometimes rash critic, with condemnable want
-of discernment and still more condemnable prejudice, so egregiously
-misrepresented to his readers the character as well of the poet as of
-his poems&mdash;which latter, nevertheless, he was constrained to admit to
-be the most “melodious” of all English poetry excepting Shakespere,
-and (their “utopian” inspiration apart) the most “perfect”&mdash;(<i>Thoughts
-on Shelley and Byron</i>, by Rev. C. Kingsley, “Fraser,” 1853,) the
-pre-eminence of the poet, both morally and æsthetically, has been
-sufficiently established.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_246_246" id="Footnote_246_246"></a><a href="#FNanchor_246_246"><span class="label">[246]</span></a> In another place he indulges his ironical wit at the
-expense of the beef-eaters, in representing a certain Cretan personage
-in Greek story to have</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft5">“Promoted breeding cattle,</div>
- <div class="verse">To make the Cretans bloodier in battle;</div>
- <div class="verse">For we all know that English people are</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1"><i>Fed upon beef</i>. . . . .</div>
- <div class="verse">We know, too, <i>they are very fond of war</i>&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">A pleasure&mdash;like all pleasures&mdash;rather dear.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_247_247" id="Footnote_247_247"></a><a href="#FNanchor_247_247"><span class="label">[247]</span></a> See <i>Life and Letters</i>. Murray.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_248_248" id="Footnote_248_248"></a><a href="#FNanchor_248_248"><span class="label">[248]</span></a> <i>Memoirs of the Public and Private Life of Sir R.
-Phillips.</i> London, 1808.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_249_249" id="Footnote_249_249"></a><a href="#FNanchor_249_249"><span class="label">[249]</span></a> They had been published by him several years earlier in
-the <i>Medical Journal</i> for July 27 1811.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_250_250" id="Footnote_250_250"></a><a href="#FNanchor_250_250"><span class="label">[250]</span></a> <i>Golden Rules of Social Philosophy: being a System of
-Ethics.</i> 1826.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_251_251" id="Footnote_251_251"></a><a href="#FNanchor_251_251"><span class="label">[251]</span></a> <i>A Dictionary of the Arts of Life and Civilisation.</i>
-1833. London: Sherwood &amp; Co. It will be seen that the origin of his
-revolt from orthodox dietetics, given by himself, differs from that
-narrated in the Life from which we have quoted above. It is possible
-that both incidents may have equally affected him at the moment, but
-that the spectacle of the London slaughter-house remained most vividly
-impressed upon his mind.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_252_252" id="Footnote_252_252"></a><a href="#FNanchor_252_252"><span class="label">[252]</span></a> <i>Million of Facts</i>, p. 176. For the substance of the
-greater part of this biography, our acknowledgments are due to the
-researches of Mr. W. E. A. Axon, F.R.S.L., F.S.S.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_253_253" id="Footnote_253_253"></a><a href="#FNanchor_253_253"><span class="label">[253]</span></a> <i>La Chute d’un Ange. Huitième Vision.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_254_254" id="Footnote_254_254"></a><a href="#FNanchor_254_254"><span class="label">[254]</span></a> <i>Les Confidences</i>, par Alphonse de Lamartine, Paris,
-1849&ndash;51, quoted in <i>Dietetic Reformer</i>, August, 1881. It is in this
-book, too, that he commemorates some of the many atrocities perpetrated
-by schoolboys with impunity, or even with the connivance of their
-masters, for their amusement, upon the helpless victims of their
-unchecked cruelty of disposition.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_255_255" id="Footnote_255_255"></a><a href="#FNanchor_255_255"><span class="label">[255]</span></a> The question of kreophagy and anti-kreophagy had already
-been mooted, it appears, in the <i>Institut</i>, at the period of the great
-Revolution of 1789, as a legitimate consequence of the apparent general
-awakening of the human conscience, when slavery also was first publicly
-denounced. What was the result of the first raising of this question in
-the French Chamber of Savans does not appear, but, as Gleïzès remarks,
-we may easily divine it. One interesting fact was published by the
-discussion in the Deputies’ Chamber&mdash;viz., that in the year 1817, in
-Paris, the consumption of flesh was less than that of the year 1780 by
-40,000,000lb., in proportion to the population (see Gleïzès, <i>Thalysie,
-Quatrième Discours</i>), a fact which can only mean that the rich, who
-support the butchers, had been <i>forced</i> by reduced means to live less
-<i>carnivorously</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_256_256" id="Footnote_256_256"></a><a href="#FNanchor_256_256"><span class="label">[256]</span></a> In the same strain an eminent <i>savan</i>, Sir D.
-Brewster, has given expression to his feeling of aversion from the
-slaughter-house&mdash;a righteous feeling which (strange perversion of
-judgment) is so constantly repressed in spite of all the most forcible
-promptings of conscience and reason! These are his words: “But whatever
-races there be in other spheres, we feel sure that there must be one
-amongst whom there are no man-eaters&mdash;no heroes with red hands&mdash;no
-sovereigns with bloody hearts&mdash;and no statesmen who, leaving the
-people untaught, educate them for the scaffold. In the Decalogue of
-that community will stand pre-eminent, in letters of burnished gold,
-the highest of all social obligations&mdash;‘<i>Thou shalt not kill</i>, neither
-for territory, for fame, for lucre, <i>nor for food</i>, <i>nor for raiment</i>,
-<i>nor for pleasure</i>.’ The lovely forms of life, and sensation, and
-instinct, so delicately fashioned by the Master-hand, shall no longer
-be destroyed and trodden under foot, but shall be the objects of
-increasing love and admiration, the study of the philosopher, the theme
-of the poet, and the companions and auxiliaries of Man.”&mdash;<i>More Worlds
-than One.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_257_257" id="Footnote_257_257"></a><a href="#FNanchor_257_257"><span class="label">[257]</span></a> <i>Bible de l’Humanité&mdash;Redemption de la Nature, VI.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_258_258" id="Footnote_258_258"></a><a href="#FNanchor_258_258"><span class="label">[258]</span></a> Cf. a recently published Essay, in the form of a letter
-to the present Premier, Mr. Gladstone, entitled <i>The Woman and the
-Age</i>. The author, one of the most refined thinkers of our times, has
-at once admirably exposed the utter sham as well as cruelty of a
-vivisecting science, and demonstrated the necessary and natural results
-to the human race from its shameless outrage upon, and cynical contempt
-for, the first principles of morality.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_259_259" id="Footnote_259_259"></a><a href="#FNanchor_259_259"><span class="label">[259]</span></a> <i>The Bird</i>, by Jules Michelet. English Translation.
-Nelson, London, 1870. See, too, his eloquent exposure of the scientific
-or popular error which, denying conscious reason and intelligence,
-in order to explain the mental constitution of the non-human races
-(as well that of the higher mammals as of the inferior species), has
-invented the vague and mystifying term “instinct.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_260_260" id="Footnote_260_260"></a><a href="#FNanchor_260_260"><span class="label">[260]</span></a> <i>La Femme</i>, vi. Onzième Edition. Paris, 1879.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_261_261" id="Footnote_261_261"></a><a href="#FNanchor_261_261"><span class="label">[261]</span></a> This memorable building has been succeeded by the
-present well-known one in Cross Lane, where the Rev. James Clark, one
-of the most esteemed, as well as one of the oldest, members of the
-Vegetarian Society is the able and eloquent officiating minister.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_262_262" id="Footnote_262_262"></a><a href="#FNanchor_262_262"><span class="label">[262]</span></a> These biographical facts we have transferred to our
-pages from an interesting notice by Mr W. E. A. Axon, F.R.S.L.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_263_263" id="Footnote_263_263"></a><a href="#FNanchor_263_263"><span class="label">[263]</span></a> <i>Memoir of the Rev. William. Metcalfe, M.D.</i> By his son,
-Rev. Joseph Metcalfe, Philadelphia, 1865.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_264_264" id="Footnote_264_264"></a><a href="#FNanchor_264_264"><span class="label">[264]</span></a> See <i>Memoir of the Rev. William Metcalfe</i>. By his son,
-the Rev J. Metcalfe. Philadelphia; J. Capen. 1866.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_265_265" id="Footnote_265_265"></a><a href="#FNanchor_265_265"><span class="label">[265]</span></a> See Memoir in <i>Sylvester Graham’s Lectures on the
-Science of Human Life</i>. Condensed by T. Baker, Esq., of the Inner
-Temple, Barrister-at-Law. Manchester: Heywood; London: Pitman.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_266_266" id="Footnote_266_266"></a><a href="#FNanchor_266_266"><span class="label">[266]</span></a> <i>The New American Cyclopædia.</i> Appleton, New York,
-1861. It deserves remark in this place that, in no English cyclopædia
-or biographical dictionary, as far as our knowledge extends, is
-any sort of notice given of this great sanitary reformer. The same
-disappointment is experienced in regard to not a few other great names,
-whether in hygienic or humanitarian literature. The absence of the
-names of such true benefactors of the world in these books of reference
-is all the more surprising in view of the presence of an infinite
-number of persons&mdash;of all kinds&mdash;who have contributed little to the
-stock of true knowledge or to the welfare of the world.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_267_267" id="Footnote_267_267"></a><a href="#FNanchor_267_267"><span class="label">[267]</span></a> The Greek story of the savage horses of the Thracian
-king who were fed upon human flesh, therefore, may very well be true.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_268_268" id="Footnote_268_268"></a><a href="#FNanchor_268_268"><span class="label">[268]</span></a> Graham here quotes various authorities&mdash;Linné, Cuvier,
-Lawrence Bell, and others.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_269_269" id="Footnote_269_269"></a><a name="Footnote_269a_269a" id="Footnote_269a_269a"></a><a href="#FNanchor_269_269"><span class="label">[269]</span></a> Professor Lawrence instances particularly “the
-Laplanders, Samoides, Ostiacs, Tungooses, Burats, and Bamtschatdales,
-in Northern Europe and Asia, as well as the Esquimaux in the northern,
-and the natives of Tierra del Fuego in the southern, extremity of
-America, who, although they live almost entirely on flesh, and
-that often raw, are the smallest, weakest, and least brave people
-of the globe.”&mdash;<i>Lectures on Physiology.</i> Of all races the North
-American native tribes, who subsist almost entirely by the chase, are
-notoriously one of the most ferocious and cruel. That the <i>omnivorous</i>
-classes in “civilised” Europe&mdash;in this country particularly&mdash;have
-attained their present position, political or intellectual, <i>in spite
-of their kreophagistic habits</i> is attributable to a complex set of
-conditions and circumstances (an extensive inquiry, upon which it is
-impossible to enter here) which have, <i>in some measure</i>, mitigated
-the evil results of a barbarous diet, will be sufficiently clear to
-every unprejudiced inquirer. If flesh-eating be the cause, or one of
-the principal causes, of the present dominance of the European, and
-especially English-speaking peoples, it may justly be asked&mdash;how is
-to be explained, <i>e.g.</i>, the dominance of the Saracenic power (in S.
-Europe) during seven centuries&mdash;a dominance in arms as well as in arts
-and sciences&mdash;when the semi-barbarous Christian nations (at least as
-regards the ruling classes) were <i>wholly</i> kreophagistic.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_270_270" id="Footnote_270_270"></a><a href="#FNanchor_270_270"><span class="label">[270]</span></a> For one of the ablest and most exhaustive scientific
-arguments on the same side ever published we refer our readers to
-<i>The Perfect Way in Diet</i>, by Mrs. Algernon Kingsford, M.D. (Kegan
-Paul, London, 1881). Originally written and delivered as a Thesis
-for <i>le Doctorat en Médicine</i> at the Paris University, under the
-title of <i>L’Alimentation Végétale Chez L’Homme</i> (1880), it was almost
-immediately translated into German by Dr. A. Aderholdt under the same
-title of <i>Die Pfanzennahrung bei dem Menschen</i>. It is, we believe,
-about to be translated into Russian. The humane and moral argument of
-this eloquent work is equally admirable and equally persuasive with the
-scientific proofs.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_271_271" id="Footnote_271_271"></a><a href="#FNanchor_271_271"><span class="label">[271]</span></a>
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Sai, che là corre il mondo ove più versi</div>
- <div class="verse">Di sue dolcesse il lusinghier Parnaso,</div>
- <div class="verse">E che’l Vero condito in molli versi</div>
- <div class="verse">I più schivi allettando ha persuaso.</div>
- <div class="verse">Cosi all’ egro fanciul porgiamo aspersi</div>
- <div class="verse">Di soave licor gli orli del vaso:</div>
- <div class="verse">Succhi amari ingannato intanto ei beve,</div>
- <div class="verse">E dall’ inganno sua vita riceve.”</div>
- <div class="verse mleft11">Gerusalemme Liberata, I.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_272_272" id="Footnote_272_272"></a><a href="#FNanchor_272_272"><span class="label">[272]</span></a> See <i>Pflanzenkost; oder die Grundlage einer Neuen
-Weltanschauung</i>, Von Gustav Struve, Stuttgart, 1869. For the substance
-of the brief sketch of the life of Struve we are indebted to the
-courtesy of Herr Emil Weilshaeuser, the recently-elected President of
-the Vegetarian Society of Germany (Jan., 1882), himself the author of
-some valuable words on Reformed Dietetics.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_273_273" id="Footnote_273_273"></a><a href="#FNanchor_273_273"><span class="label">[273]</span></a> See <i>Sakuntalà, or the Fatal Ring</i>, of the Hindu
-Shakspere Kalidâsa, the most interesting production of the Hindu
-Poetry. It has been translated into almost every European language.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_274_274" id="Footnote_274_274"></a><a href="#FNanchor_274_274"><span class="label">[274]</span></a> <i>Mandaras’ Wanderungen.</i> Zweite Ausgabe. Mannheim.
-Friedrich Götz. 1845. For a copy of this now scarce book we are
-indebted to the courtesy of Herr A. von Seefeld, of Hanover.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_275_275" id="Footnote_275_275"></a><a href="#FNanchor_275_275"><span class="label">[275]</span></a> <i>Pflanzenkost, die Grundlage einer neuen
-Weltanschauung.</i> Stuttgart, 1869. Cf. Liebig’s <i>Chemische Briefe</i>
-(“Letters on Chemistry.”)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_276_276" id="Footnote_276_276"></a><a href="#FNanchor_276_276"><span class="label">[276]</span></a> <i>Das Seelenleben; oder die Naturgeschichte des
-Menschen.</i> Von Gustav Struve. Berlin: Theobald Grieben. 1869.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_277_277" id="Footnote_277_277"></a><a href="#FNanchor_277_277"><span class="label">[277]</span></a>
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Weh’ denen, die dem <i>Ewigblinden</i></div>
- <div class="verse">Des Lichtes Himmelsfackel leihen!”</div>
- <div class="verse mleft9">S<span class="smaller">CHILLER</span>. <i>Das Lied von der Glocke.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_278_278" id="Footnote_278_278"></a><a href="#FNanchor_278_278"><span class="label">[278]</span></a> Quoted in <i>Die Naturgemässe Diät: die Diät der Zukunft</i>,
-von Theodor Hahn, Cöthen, 1859. For the substance of biographical
-notice prefixed to this article we are again indebted to the kindness
-of Herr Emil Weilshäuser, of Oppeln.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_279_279" id="Footnote_279_279"></a><a href="#FNanchor_279_279"><span class="label">[279]</span></a> <i>Das Menschendasein in seinen Weltewigen Zügen und
-Zeichen.</i> Von Bogumil Goltz. Frankfurt.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_280_280" id="Footnote_280_280"></a><a href="#FNanchor_280_280"><span class="label">[280]</span></a> Compare the remarks of Jean Paul Richter (1763&ndash;1825),
-in his treatise on Education, <i>Levana</i>, in which he, too, in scarcely
-less emphatic language, protests against the general neglect of this
-department of morals. Among other references to the subject, the
-celebrated novelist thus writes: “Love is the second hemisphere of the
-moral heaven. Yet is the sacred being of love little established. Love
-is an inborn but differently distributed force and blood-heat of the
-heart (<i>blutwärme des herzens</i>). There are cold and warm-blooded souls,
-as there are animals. As for the child, so for the lower animal, love
-is, in fact, an essential impulse; and this central fire often, in the
-form of compassion, pierces its earth-crust, but not in every case....
-The child (under proper education) learns to regard all animal life as
-sacred&mdash;in brief, they impart to him the feeling of a Hindu in place
-of the heart of a Cartesian philosopher. There is here a question of
-something more even than compassion for other animals; but this also
-is in question. Why is it that it has so long been observed that the
-cruelty of the child to the lower animals presages cruelty to men,
-just as the Old-Testament sacrifice of animals preshadowed that of the
-sacrifice of a man? It is for <i>himself only</i> the undeveloped man can
-experience pains and sufferings, which speak to him with the native
-tones of his own experience. Consequently, the inarticulate cry of the
-tortured animal comes to him just as some strange, amusing sound of
-the air; and yet he sees there life, conscious movement, both which
-distinguish them from the inanimate substances. Thus he sins against
-his own life, whilst he sunders it from the rest, as though it were a
-piece of machinery. Let life be to him [the child] sacred (<i>heilig</i>),
-even that which may be destitute of reason; and, in fact, does the
-child know any other? Or, because the heart beats under bristles,
-feathers, or wings, is it, <i>therefore</i>, to be of no account?”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_281_281" id="Footnote_281_281"></a><a href="#FNanchor_281_281"><span class="label">[281]</span></a> See a pamphlet upon this subject by Dr. V.
-Gützlaff&mdash;<i>Schopenhauer ueber die Thiere und den Thierschutz: Ein
-Beitrag zur ethischen Seite der Vivisectionsfrage</i>. Berlin, 1879.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_282_282" id="Footnote_282_282"></a><a href="#FNanchor_282_282"><span class="label">[282]</span></a> <i>Le Fondement de La Morale</i>, par Arthur Schopenhauer,
-traduit de l’Allemand par A. Burdeau. Paris, Baillière et Cie, 1879.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_283_283" id="Footnote_283_283"></a><a href="#FNanchor_283_283"><span class="label">[283]</span></a> Quoted in <i>Die Naturgemässe Diät, die Diät der Zukunft</i>,
-von Theodor Hahn, 1859. We may note here that Moleschott, the eminent
-Dutch physiologist, and a younger contemporary of Liebig, alike with
-the distinguished German Chemist and with the French zoologist, Buffon,
-is chargeable with a strange inconsistency in choosing his place among
-the apologists of kreophagy, in spite of his conviction that “the
-legumes are superior to flesh-meat in abundance of solid constituents
-which they contain; and, while the amount of albuminous substances may
-surpass that in flesh-meat by one-half, the constituents of fat and the
-salts are also present in a greater abundance.” (See <i>Die Naturgemässe
-Diät</i>, von Theodor Hahn, 1859). But, in fact, it is only too obvious
-<i>why</i> at present the large majority of Scientists, while often fully
-admitting the virtues, or even the superiority of the purer diet,
-yet after all enrol themselves on the orthodox side. Either they are
-altogether indifferent to humane teaching, or they want the courage of
-their convictions to proclaim the Truth.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_284_284" id="Footnote_284_284"></a><a href="#FNanchor_284_284"><span class="label">[284]</span></a> Among English philosophic writers, the arguments and
-warnings (published in the <i>Dietetic Reformer</i> during the past fifteen
-years) of the present head of the Society for the promotion of Dietary
-Reform in this country, Professor Newman, in regard to National Economy
-and to the enormous evils, present and prospective, arising from the
-prevalent insensibility to this aspect of National Reform are at once
-the most forcible and the most earnest. It would be well if our public
-men, and all who are in place and power, would give the most earnest
-heed to them. But this, unhappily, under the <i>present</i> prevailing
-political and social conditions, experience teaches to be almost a vain
-expectation.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_285_285" id="Footnote_285_285"></a><a href="#FNanchor_285_285"><span class="label">[285]</span></a> Μήλοισι Grævius, the famous German Scholar
-of the 17th century, maintains to mean here <i>Fruits</i>, not “Flocks,”
-according to the vulgar interpretation, and the translation of Grævius,
-it will be allowed, is at least more consistent with the context than
-is the latter. It must be added that the whole verse bracketed is of
-doubtful genuineness.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_286_286" id="Footnote_286_286"></a><a href="#FNanchor_286_286"><span class="label">[286]</span></a> This remarkable passage, it is highly interesting to
-note, is the earliest indication of the idea of “guardian angels,”
-which afterwards was developed in the Platonic philosophy; and which,
-considerably modified by Jewish belief, derived from the Persian
-theology, finally took form in the Christian creed. Compare the
-beautiful idea of guardian angels, or spirits in the Prologue of the
-<i>Shipwreck</i> of Plautus.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_287_287" id="Footnote_287_287"></a><a href="#FNanchor_287_287"><span class="label">[287]</span></a> See <i>Poetæ Minores Græci ... Aliisque Accessionibus
-Aucta.</i> Edited by Thomas Gaisford. Vol. III. Lipsiæ, 1823.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_288_288" id="Footnote_288_288"></a><a href="#FNanchor_288_288"><span class="label">[288]</span></a>
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Quum sis ipse nocens, moritur cur victima pro te?</div>
- <div class="verse">Stultitia est, <i>morte alterius</i> sperare Salutem.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_289_289" id="Footnote_289_289"></a><a href="#FNanchor_289_289"><span class="label">[289]</span></a> <i>The Light of Asia: or, The Great Renunciation</i>
-(<i>Mahâbhinishkramana</i>). Being the Life and Teaching of Gautama, Prince
-of India, and Founder of Buddhism (as told in verse by an Indian
-Buddhist). By Edwin Arnold. London: Trübner.&mdash;In the Hindu Epic, the
-<i>Mahâbhârata</i>, the same great principle is apparent, though less
-conspicuously:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“The constant virtue of the Good is tenderness and love</div>
- <div class="verse">To all that live in earth, air, sea&mdash;great, small&mdash;below, above:</div>
- <div class="verse">Compassionate of heart, they keep a gentle will to each:</div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Who pities not, hath not the Faith</i>. Full many a one so lives.”</div>
- <div class="verse mleft15"><span class="mleft4">III.&mdash;Story of Savîtri</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_290_290" id="Footnote_290_290"></a><a href="#FNanchor_290_290"><span class="label">[290]</span></a> Compare the beautiful verses of Lucretius&mdash;who, almost
-alone amongst the poets, has indignantly denounced the vile and
-horrible practice of sacrifice&mdash;picturing the inconsolable grief the
-Mother Cow bereft of her young, who has been ravished from her for the
-sacrificial altar:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse mleft1">“Sæpe ante Deûm vitulus delubra decora</div>
- <div class="verse">Thuricremas propter mactatus concidit aras</div>
- <div class="verse">Sanguinis expirans calidum de pectore flumen,</div>
- <div class="verse mleft1">At mater viridis saltus orbata peragrans</div>
- <div class="verse">Noacit humi pedibus vestigia pressa bisulcis,</div>
- <div class="verse">Omnia convisens oculis loca, si queat usquam</div>
- <div class="verse">Conspicere amissum fœtum, completque querellis</div>
- <div class="verse">Frondiferum nemus absistens, et crebra revisit</div>
- <div class="verse">Ad stabulum desiderio perfixa Juvenci;</div>
- <div class="verse">Nec teneræ salices atque herbæ rore vigentes,</div>
- <div class="verse">Fluminaque illa queunt summis labentia ripis</div>
- <div class="verse">Oblectare animum, subitamque avertere curam,</div>
- <div class="verse">Nee vitulorum aliæ species per pabula læta</div>
- <div class="verse">Derivare queunt animum curâque levare.”</div>
- <div class="verse mleft13">(<i>De Rerum Naturâ II.</i>)</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>See also the memorable verses in which the rationalist poet stigmatises
-the vicarious sacrifice of Iphigeneia.&mdash;<i>Tantum Religio potuit suadere
-Malorum</i> (L).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_291_291" id="Footnote_291_291"></a><a href="#FNanchor_291_291"><span class="label">[291]</span></a> See, also, <i>Fasti</i>, already quoted above.
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Pace Ceres læta est. . . . . .</div>
- <div class="verse">A Bove succincti cultros removete Ministri, &amp;c.” IV. 407&ndash;416.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_292_292" id="Footnote_292_292"></a><a href="#FNanchor_292_292"><span class="label">[292]</span></a> <i>Florilegium</i> of Stobæus&mdash;(17&ndash;43 and 18&ndash;38), quoted by
-Professor Mayor in <i>Dietetic Reformer</i>, July, 1881. In the erudite
-and exhaustive edition of Juvenal, by Professor Mayor (Macmillan,
-Cambridge), will be found a large number of quotations from Greek and
-Latin writers, and a great deal of interesting matter upon frugal
-living.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_293_293" id="Footnote_293_293"></a><a href="#FNanchor_293_293"><span class="label">[293]</span></a> “<i>Hygiasticon: On the Right Course of Preserving Life
-and Health unto Extreme Old Age; together with Soundness and Integrity
-of the Senses, Judgment, and Memory.</i> Written in Latin by Leonard
-Lessius, and now done into English. The second edition. Printed by
-the printers to the Universitie of Cambridge, 1634.” Lessio, like his
-master Cornaro, Haller, and many other advocates of a reformed diet,
-was influenced not at all by humanitarian, but by health reasons only.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_294_294" id="Footnote_294_294"></a><a href="#FNanchor_294_294"><span class="label">[294]</span></a> Cf. Plutarch&mdash;<i>Essay on Flesh-Eating</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_295_295" id="Footnote_295_295"></a><a href="#FNanchor_295_295"><span class="label">[295]</span></a> <i>Some Memoirs of the Life of Mr. Thomas Tryon, late of
-London, Merchant. Written by Himself.</i> London, 1705.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_296_296" id="Footnote_296_296"></a><a href="#FNanchor_296_296"><span class="label">[296]</span></a> Os homini sublime dedit, cœlumque tueri.&mdash;Ovid,
-<i>Met.</i> I.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_297_297" id="Footnote_297_297"></a><a href="#FNanchor_297_297"><span class="label">[297]</span></a> Compare Seneca and Chrysostom, above.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_298_298" id="Footnote_298_298"></a><a href="#FNanchor_298_298"><span class="label">[298]</span></a> If Tryon could point to diseases among the victims of
-the shambles in the 17th century, what use might he not make of the
-epidemics or endemics of the present day?</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_299_299" id="Footnote_299_299"></a><a href="#FNanchor_299_299"><span class="label">[299]</span></a> <i>The Way to Health, Long Life, and Happiness: or a
-Discourse of Temperance, and the Particular Nature of all things
-Requisite for the Life of Man.... The Like never before Published.
-Communicated to the World, for the General Good, by Philotheos
-Physiologus</i> [Tryon’s <i>nom de plume</i>.] <i>London, 1683</i>. It is (in its
-best parts) the worthy precursor of <i>The Herald of Health</i>, and of the
-valuable hygienic philosophy of its able editor&mdash;Dr. T. L. Nichols.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_300_300" id="Footnote_300_300"></a><a href="#FNanchor_300_300"><span class="label">[300]</span></a> See <i>Biog. Universelle</i>, Art. <i>Philippe Hecquet</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_301_301" id="Footnote_301_301"></a><a href="#FNanchor_301_301"><span class="label">[301]</span></a> <i>Traité des Dispenses, &amp;c.</i> Par Philippe Hecquet, M.D.,
-Paris. Ed. 1709.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_302_302" id="Footnote_302_302"></a><a href="#FNanchor_302_302"><span class="label">[302]</span></a>
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container s5">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“That lies beneath the knife,</div>
- <div class="verse">Looks up, and from her butcher begs her life.”</div>
- <div class="verse mleft2">Æn. VII. (Pope’s translation.) Quoted first by Montaigne. <i>Essais.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_303_303" id="Footnote_303_303"></a><a href="#FNanchor_303_303"><span class="label">[303]</span></a> And, Pope might have added, a more diabolical torture
-still&mdash;calves bled to death by a slow and lingering process&mdash;hung
-up (as they often are) head downwards. Although not universal as
-it was some ten years ago, this, among other Christian practices,
-yet flourishes in many parts of the country, unchecked by legal
-intervention.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_304_304" id="Footnote_304_304"></a><a href="#FNanchor_304_304"><span class="label">[304]</span></a> See Article, Plutarch, above.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_305_305" id="Footnote_305_305"></a><a href="#FNanchor_305_305"><span class="label">[305]</span></a> So far, at least, as the <i>natural and necessary wants</i>
-of each species are concerned.&mdash;That “Nature” is regardless of
-suffering, is but too apparent in all parts of our globe. It is the
-opprobrium and shame of the human species that, placed at the head of
-the various races of beings, it has hitherto been the <i>Tyrant</i>, and not
-the <i>Pacificator</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_306_306" id="Footnote_306_306"></a><a href="#FNanchor_306_306"><span class="label">[306]</span></a> <i>The Four Stages of Cruelty</i>, in which, beginning with
-the torture of other animals, the legitimate sequence is fulfilled in
-the murder of the torturer’s mistress or wife.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_307_307" id="Footnote_307_307"></a><a href="#FNanchor_307_307"><span class="label">[307]</span></a> Which is the accomplice <i>really guilty</i>? The ignorant,
-untaught, wretch who has to gain his living some way or other, or those
-who have been entrusted with, or who have assumed, the control of the
-public conscience&mdash;the statesman, the clergy, and the schoolmaster?
-Undoubtedly it is upon these that almost all the guilt lies, and always
-will lie.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_308_308" id="Footnote_308_308"></a><a href="#FNanchor_308_308"><span class="label">[308]</span></a> Bull-baiting, in this country, has been for some
-years illegal; but that moralists, and other writers of the present
-day, while boasting the abolition of that popular <i>pastime</i>, are
-silent, upon the equally barbarous, if more fashionable <i>sports</i> of
-Deer-hunting, &amp;c., is one of those inconsistencies in logic which are
-as unaccountable as they are common.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_309_309" id="Footnote_309_309"></a><a href="#FNanchor_309_309"><span class="label">[309]</span></a> “That is,” remarks Ritson, “in a state of Society
-influenced by Superstition, Pride, and a variety of prejudices equally
-unnatural and absurd.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_310_310" id="Footnote_310_310"></a><a href="#FNanchor_310_310"><span class="label">[310]</span></a> “The converse of all this is true. He is certainly
-taught by example, and by temptation, and prompted by (what he thinks
-is) interest.”&mdash;Note by Ritson in <i>Abstinence from Flesh a Moral Duty</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_311_311" id="Footnote_311_311"></a><a href="#FNanchor_311_311"><span class="label">[311]</span></a> Among living enlightened medical authorities of the
-present day, Dr. B. W. Richardson, F.R.S., perhaps the most eminent
-hygeist and sanitary reformer in the country now living, has delivered
-his testimony in no doubtful terms to the superiority of the purer
-diet. In his recent publication <i>Salutisland</i> he has banished the
-slaughter-house, with all its abominations, from that model State. See
-also his <i>Hygieia</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_312_312" id="Footnote_312_312"></a><a href="#FNanchor_312_312"><span class="label">[312]</span></a> <i>L’Art de Prolonger la Vie et de Conserver la Santé: ou,
-Traité d’Hygiène.</i> Par M. Pressavin, Gradué de l’Université de Paris;
-Membre du Collège Royal de Chirurgie de Lyon, et Ancien Demonstrateur
-en Matière Medicale-Chirurgicale. A Lyon, 1786.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_313_313" id="Footnote_313_313"></a><a href="#FNanchor_313_313"><span class="label">[313]</span></a> <i>Die Eleusische Fest.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_314_314" id="Footnote_314_314"></a><a href="#FNanchor_314_314"><span class="label">[314]</span></a> <i>Der Alpenjäger.</i> See also Göthe&mdash;<i>Italienische Reise</i>,
-XXIII. 42; <i>Aus Meinem Leben</i>, XXIV. 23; <i>Werther’s Leiden</i>; Brief 12.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_315_315" id="Footnote_315_315"></a><a href="#FNanchor_315_315"><span class="label">[315]</span></a> <i>Introduction to the Principles of Morals and
-Legislation</i> (page 311). By Jeremy Bentham, M.A., Bencher of Lincoln’s
-Inn, &amp;c.; Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1876. It must be added that the
-assumption (on the same page on which this cogent reasoning is found),
-that man has the right to <i>kill</i> his fellow-beings, for the purpose
-of feeding upon their flesh, is one more illustration of the strange
-inconsistencies into which even so generally just and independent a
-thinker as the author of the <i>Book of Fallacies</i> may be forced by
-the “logic of circumstances.” Among recent notable Essays upon the
-Rights of the Lower Animals (the <i>right to live</i> excepted) may here be
-mentioned&mdash;<i>Animals and their Masters</i>, by Sir Arthur Helps (1873), and
-<i>The Rights of an Animal</i>, by Mr. E. B. Nicholson, librarian of the
-Bodleian, Oxford (1877).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_316_316" id="Footnote_316_316"></a><a href="#FNanchor_316_316"><span class="label">[316]</span></a> Compare the <i>Voyages</i> of Volney, one of the most
-philosophical of the thinkers of the eighteenth century, who himself
-for some time seems to have lived on the non-flesh diet. Attributing
-the ferocious character of the American savage, “hunter and butcher,
-who, in every animal sees but an object of prey, and who is become
-an animal of the species of wolves and of tigers,” to such custom,
-this celebrated traveller adds the reflection that “the habit of
-shedding blood, or simply of seeing it shed, corrupts all sentiments
-of humanity.” (See <i>Voyage en Syrie et en Egypte</i>.) See, too, Thevenot
-(the younger), an earlier French traveller, who describes a Banian
-hospital, in which he saw a number of sick Camels, Horses, and Oxen,
-and many invalids of the feathered race. Many of the lower Animals, he
-informs us, were maintained there for life, those who recovered being
-sold to Hindus exclusively.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_317_317" id="Footnote_317_317"></a><a href="#FNanchor_317_317"><span class="label">[317]</span></a> This feeling occasionally appears in his poems, as, for
-instance, when describing a “banquet” and its flesh-eating guests, he
-wonders how “Such bodies could have souls, or souls such bodies.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_318_318" id="Footnote_318_318"></a><a href="#FNanchor_318_318"><span class="label">[318]</span></a> Note on this point the words of the late W. R. Greg, to
-the effect that “the amount of human life sustained on a given area
-may be almost indefinitely increased by the substitution of vegetable
-for animal food;” and his further statement&mdash;“A given acreage of wheat
-will feed at least ten times as many men as the same acreage employed
-in growing ‘mutton.’ It is usually calculated that the consumption of
-wheat by an adult is about one quarter per annum, and we know that good
-land produces four quarters. But let us assume that a man living on
-grain would require two quarters a year; still one acre would support
-two men. But, a man living on [flesh] meat would need 3lbs. a day, and
-it is considered a liberal calculation if an acre spent in grazing
-sheep and cattle will yield in ‘beef’ and ‘mutton’ more than 50lb. on
-an average&mdash;the best farmer in Norfolk having averaged 90lb., but a
-great majority of farms in Great Britain only reach 20lb. On these data
-it would require 22 acres of pasture land to sustain one adult person
-living on [flesh] meat. It is obvious that in view of the adoption of a
-vegetable diet lies the indication of a vast increase in the population
-sustainable on a given area.”&mdash;<i>Social and Political Problems</i>
-(<i>Trübner</i>).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_319_319" id="Footnote_319_319"></a><a href="#FNanchor_319_319"><span class="label">[319]</span></a> “Of the Cruelty connected with he Culinary Arts” in
-<i>Philozoa; or, Moral Reflections on the Actual Condition of the Animal
-Kingdom, and on the Means of Improving the Same</i>; with numerous
-Anecdotes and Illustrative Notes, addressed to Lewis Gompertz, Esq.,
-President of the Animals’ Friend Society: By T. Forster, M.B.,
-F.R.A.S., F.L.S., &amp;c. Brussels, 1839. The writer well insists that,
-however remote may be a <i>universal</i> Reformation, every individual
-person, pretending to any culture or refinement of mind, is morally
-bound to abstain from sanctioning, by his dietetic habits, the
-revolting atrocities “connected with the culinary arts, of which Mr.
-Young, in his Book on Cruelty, has given a long catalogue.”</p></div>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ethics of Diet, by Howard Williams
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ETHICS OF DIET ***
-
-***** This file should be named 55785-h.htm or 55785-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/5/7/8/55785/
-
-Produced by Jane Robins, Reiner Ruf, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
-will be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
-one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
-(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
-permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
-set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
-copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
-protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
-Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
-charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
-do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
-rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
-such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
-research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
-practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
-subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
-redistribution.
-
-
-
-*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
-http://gutenberg.org/license).
-
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
-all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
-If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
-terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
-entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
-and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
-or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
-collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
-individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
-located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
-copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
-works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
-are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
-Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
-freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
-this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
-the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
-keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
-a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
-the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
-before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
-creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
-Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
-the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
-States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
-access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
-whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
-copied or distributed:
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
-from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
-posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
-and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
-or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
-with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
-work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
-through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
-Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
-1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
-terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
-to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
-permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
-word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
-distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
-"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
-posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
-you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
-copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
-request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
-form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
-that
-
-- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
- owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
- has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
- Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
- must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
- prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
- returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
- sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
- address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
- the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or
- destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
- and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
- Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
- money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
- of receipt of the work.
-
-- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
-forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
-both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
-Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
-Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
-collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
-"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
-corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
-property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
-computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
-your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
-your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
-the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
-refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
-providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
-receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
-is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
-opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
-WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
-WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
-If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
-law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
-interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
-the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
-provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
-with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
-promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
-harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
-that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
-or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
-work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
-Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
-
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
-including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
-because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
-people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
-To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
-and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
-Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
-http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
-permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
-Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
-throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
-809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
-business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
-information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
-page at http://pglaf.org
-
-For additional contact information:
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
-SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
-particular state visit http://pglaf.org
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
-To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
-
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
-with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
-Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
-
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
-unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
-keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
-
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
-
- http://www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
-
-</pre>
-
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/55785-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/55785-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 24c50a1..0000000
--- a/old/55785-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55785-h/images/deco_p55.jpg b/old/55785-h/images/deco_p55.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 9b45936..0000000
--- a/old/55785-h/images/deco_p55.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ