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THE DIETETIC REFORMER
AND
NJ? XXXVI.]
OCTOBER, 1869.
[Price 3d.
THE ANNUAL MEETING, 1869.
The Executive Committee have arranged for the annual gathering to
be held at the Trevelyan Hotel, Manchester, on Wednesday evening,
October 20th. The Business Meeting, to receive accounts and elect
officers, will be held at four o’clock. The Evening Meeting will be held
at six o’clock, when tea will be provided. Early application for tickets
is much desired, in order that proper arrangements may be made.
Members and friends whose annual contributions are in arrear will
facilitate the duties of the secretary by an early remittance, to meet the
liabilities of the society.
It is very desirable that our friends should assemble in as great force
as possible, to aid an effort which it is intended to put forth for the
more effectual working of the movement. Professor Newman has been
desired to prepare a suggestive paper; and it is intended to devote a
large part of the evening meeting to the consideration of his and other
suggestions. The meeting will be open to receive practical advice from
any friendly quarter; and any members who may be prepared to
lend active help are cordially invited to come forward and offer their
services.
DIETETIC
FALLACIES.
The question of food—kind, quality, and variety, as best suited to man in the
various climates of the earth—is one that perhaps deserves a more extended, careful,
and thorough treatment than it has yet received. That various and greatly diverse
climates require corresponding varieties and adaptations of diet, will not be seriously
doubted by anyone who has observed widely and thought closely upon the question.
Still, we are of opinion that these changes are not so essential and not so pro
found as are generally and popularly supposed, provided we are satisfied to live
upon the simple products of the earth, taking them in moderation and in their most
wholesome condition, properly prepared, and in suitable quantities, unaccompanied
with intoxicating beverages and other pernicious substances, such as tobacco,
opium, &z. The typical foods—bread, grapes (fresh or dried), figs, olives, rice,
�98
THE DIETETIC EEFORMER
cheese, &c., can be eaten,enjoyed, and digested almost anywhere by an average healthy
human system. And water, pure, sparkling precious water, cold, warm, or hot
according to circumstances, is always a boon and a blessing to man. But there are
some things that seem to be more specially adapted to particular climates, seasons,
or ages than others, and, for the most part, our beneficent creator and preserver has
so arranged and adapted the products of the various regions and seasons as to
facilitate man and beast in their instinctive and rational efforts to obtain what is
best and most needed. Still this provision is not so uniformly complete and manifest
as to preclude the necessity for wise and discriminating observation, and for the
discipline and stimulus of effort, enterprise, and commerce. At some ages, in some
conditions and climates, men can and do indulge in a greater variety of food than
in others; and it would appear to the unthinking savage, or to the more civilised
but equally unreflecting gourmand, that almost anything in any quantity can be eaten
by some men with impunity. Neither quantity nor quality, provided there is plenty,
seems to be matter of much moment to some carnivorous animals, especially those
of the man kind. But this impunity is only seeming, and is only for a time. Nature,
the law of God in the life of man, as in all other lives, and in all spheres and modes
of being, will not and cannot be mocked or cheated for long. It is a profound
truth, an unrepeatable taw, that whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap.
We may for a time deviate from the line of rectitude as to diet, and still continue
to live on ; but the life we live, not being so true to our nature, will not be so full
of the pure instincts, healthy activities, and joyous inspirations of nature.
If we look through animated nature, we find every creature so wisely con
structed, and endowed with such marvellous instincts as induce it to make choice of
that diet and of those means which are best calculated to maintain and preserve its
existence. Were not this the case, animal life would soon terminate. Man is
surely not intended to be an exception to this grand and beautiful law of adaptation
and healthy conservation. He is the last and the most finished result of Divine
contrivance and creative power and wisdom. But, alas! how has the fine gold
become dim! how has the wine of life become soured! There is no other creature
on the face of the globe that has so manifestly deviated from rectitude and from the
manifest moral intent of his being as man; and we cannot but believe and perceive
that much of the degradation and depravity of human character, conduct, and con
stitution arise from his enormous dietetic transgressions, alike as to the kind of
food, the quantity, and the strange mixings-up of our fantastic cookery, our epicu
rean cravings, and our depraved lusts.
We have been led into making these remarks rather to induce other, with abler
and more discriminating pens, to take up the subject they suggest, than from any
intention to pursue the inquiry in any elaborate essay. Our object is only to write
a brief article or two, hoping to stimulate those who have more leisure and more
ability to go deeper into the question and to treat it more exhaustively.
A recent number of Cassell's Magazine, which we have not seen, is credited with
the following suggestive paragraph, to which our attention has been turned:—
“ Eating in India.—Nor is moderation in eating to be disregarded. Could we
eat as do the natives—that is, confine ourselves to a vegetable diet, and make a
feast of a handful of rice—probably the climate would be as innocuous to us as to
them, but then there would perhaps be an end of the energy which flesh-eaters
show. There seems to be little doubt of this, for, as is well known, when the
French railways were beginning to be made, it was the English ‘navvy’ who
made them, and his French coadjutors were looked upon as a feeble and effeminate
�AND VEGETARIAN MESSENGER.
99
race; and so, for the business of railway making, they practically were. But as
hands were very scarce, a leading contractor tried what he could do with what he
naturally called ‘the foreigners,’ and insisted on his French excavators eating and
drinking somewhat after the fashion of their English mates. The result appeared
decisive—the French navvies grew to be, and are, nearly as effective as the genuine
midland counties man. Thirty years ago no one would have predicted a riot in
England because of an immigration of foreign excavators, yet we have lived to see
even that come to pass. In India the food is seldom to the liking of a European, it
must be eaten when so freshly killed that it cannot be tender. The driver starting
on his journey often takes a live fowl with him, to be killed and cooked when
required ; it would be thoroughly tainted did he kill it beforehand.”
Now, we are ready to admit that this paragraph—which we observe is doing
duty in the periodical press—as a select sub-editorial clipping, is quite as sensible,
though quite as fallacious, as most of the newspaper writing that we see upon
dietetic questions. “ Moderation in eating” ought not to be “ disregarded ” either
in India or elsewhere; but it is not always good policy to eat as the natives do,
as the following spicy paragraph cut from the Daily News will indicate :—
“ How to Cook a Man.—If any one of us looks forward to being eaten by
cannibals, he may wish to be informed how he is likely to be cooked. It is a com
fort to know that the savages who devour him are by no means devoid of refinement
in their culinary disposition. Some French soldiers were lately taken prisoners by
the Canaks, and one of them was killed and eaten. His comrades describe the
process. The Canaks first decapitate their victim, a matter of no small difficulty
cons'dering the bluntness of their hatchets. Ten to fifteen blows are necessary.
The body is then hung up to a tree by the feet, and the blood allowed to run out for
an hour. Meanwhile a hole, a yard and a half deep and a yard wide, is dug in the
ground. The hole is lined with stones, and then in the midst of them a great fire
is lit. When the wood is burnt down a little and glows with heat, it is covered
over with more stones. The man is then cleaned out, and divided into pieces about a
foot long, the hands and feet being thrown away as worthless. The pieces of the
man are placed on the leaves of a large rose tree peculiar to the tropics. The meat is
surrounded with cocoa-nuts, bananas, and some other plants noted for their delicate
flavour. The whole is then tied together firmly, the fire is removed, from the pit,
the meat is placed among the hot stones, and thus, carefully covered, is left to cook
for an hour. Women do not partake of this warriors’ feast. Men alone are allowed
to enjoy so great an honour and so rare a delicacy.”
It is clear from this Daily News paragraph that the Canaks have a system and
morality of diet and social habits very much divergent from those natives of India
who “ make a feast upon a handful of rice.” And, if we had our choice of living
and dying, cooking and eating, we would prefer not to be amongst the Canaks! but
to be as far removed from their philosophy and practical dietetics as .possible. They
may have the more savory dishes ; but commend us to the rice feast. “Better is a
dinner of herbs where love is, than a stalled ox and hatred therewith.” “ Better is
a dry morsel, and quietness therewith, than an house full of sacrifices with strife.”
Solomon perhaps had never heard of the Canaks or other cannibals, in his time ;
but he had observed that flesh eating tended to strife and hatred; whilst a simple,
natural, and bloodless diet favoured and promoted a more amiable and affectionate
social condition.
The very fact that the flesh-eater has to kill before he eats, and to kill what he
eats, cannot but tend to make him a man of strife and bloodshed: and there is but
a step—a fearful yet still a possible step—from killing and eating an ox, and killing
and eating a human being. Our flesh-eating friends are next-door neighbours to
the Canaks, whilst we prefer to live nearer to the rice-eaters of India, who will
never be tempted to cook and eat us, however hungry or angry they may be.
�THE DIETETIC REFORMER
100
But it is objected that if we “ eat as do the natives of India,” that is, confine
ourselves to a vegetable diet, and make a feast of a handful of rice, though
“ probably the climate would be as innocuous to us as to them —what a grand
admission !—“ but then there would perhaps (?) be an end of the energy which flesh
eaters show." Here we have the curious and astounding hypothesis, that what
favours Health and Longevity will perhaps destroy Enebgy ! In our next article
we will look at this curious dietetic problem ; and in the meantime we shall avoid
the Canaks, whose energy, though no doubt great, is greatly to be feared and not
at all to be admired, and certainly ought not to be imitated in civilised and Chris
tian countries. Indeed it is not good enough for even benighted India or degraded
Africa.
B.
MAN’S
AN
ARGUMENT
BEST
FOR
FOOD:
VEGETARIANISM.
(Continued from page 36.J
Our illustrations are, however, open to the objection that they are too few to
afford scientific proofs of the suitableness of such a diet to men in general. We
therefore proceed to adduce facts on a larger scale, and including persons of various
ages, who have been systematically experimented upon for the purpose of discovering
the effects of various kinds of foods. This method seems best adapted to the people
of this century who mostly dislike abstractions and remote inferences. In this
direction we offer substantial facts which tell their own story.
*
An eminent
German physiologist (Vierordt), weighing carefully the results of numerous expe
riments on that which enters the body as food and that which leaves it through
the several channels of purification and discharge, tells us that an adult male, to
keep in good condition, should take about 4oz. of albuminous matter, nearly 3oz. of
fat, and about lOJoz. of amylaceous food daily. About 84oz. of water would be
taken as drink, and about an ounce would have to be allowed for saline matters
contained in or added to the three leading articles of food. The four articles of
diet in the quantities specified below are therefore a model dietary as to chemical
composition.
Bread..........
Potatoes ...
Oatmeal ..
Milk..........
Albuminous Matter:
Gluten and Albumen.
lib
= 861
lib
50
|ib
— 638
lpint. = 350
Fat.
65
7
198
245
1,899
Vierordt ................. 1,920
515
1,440
21
Defect.. 925
+ 653
Defect..
Amylaceous Matter:
Starch, Sugar, and Gum.
3,847 grains.
701
„
1,810
„
315
„
6,673
5,040
Excess.. 1,633 = 653 grains
Defect.. 272
By careful observation then we have it ascertained what a man requires as food,
and by exact analysis we learn what any kind and quantity of food can supply. If
the kind and quantity can be supplied from a Vegetarian diet our case as to its
efficiency will be established, but we can prove much more than this. The experi
ments made at the Glasgow Bridewell in 1840j- shows an advantage in a simple
* Day’s Physiological Chemistry, p. 496.
f Fifth Report of Inspectors of Prisons, Scotland.
�AND VEGETARIAN MESSENGER.
101
Vegetarian diet over one containing a small quantity of flesh-meat, as seen in the
table below. The experiments were made upon eight groups of prisoners, the
greater part being adult males.
(baked)
4
—
91
224
5
—
91
112
28
3
—
91
336
2
1
Oatmeal ..................... 91 oz. 91
336
Potatoes, boiled.......... 336
56
343
259
Bread ................................
427
427
Total solid food.. 427
Buttermilk .............
104 pts.
6
—
56
112
7
—
91
li2
56
280
147
2|
101
10J
101
7
2|
10J
10J
10J-
7
(skim milk)
Total liquid food.
10 J
672
10J
■
*
Broth ................................
8
—
.. per week-.
672
14
24$
2f
3J
less than £ib .,
li very slight
li
—
—
—
■ 1 ■■
—
■
1078 men and
15 m. 570 m. 578 m.
5 m. 378 m. 16 m.
Prisoners submitted 15 m.
to experiments... J 5 boys. 58 fem.
5 fem.. 5 fem. 5 fem. 578 fem. 5 fem.
boys.
2 boys.
* The broth contained 4oz. barley and loz. bone, with vegetables to one quart.
Average weight gained 4
„
„
lost
4
■
The facts here show in No. 1 an improvement in condition upon a diet
consisting of three articles only, viz., oatmeal, potatoes, and buttermilk; and
in No. 2, even with a serious reduction in the last named article, the results are
still very good. No. 3 is a similar dietary, but the potatoes are baked, and half
the prisoners experimented on are young women, but they fell off in weight. 4
and 5 have flesh-meat, Iflbs. being substituted for 71bs. of potatoes, and 3£lbs. for
141bs.; the proportion of females was smaller, but the effect was to produce nearly
as great a loss in weight in one case and a slight loss in the other. No. 6 changes
the flesh for twice its weight in bread, taking away 3| pints buttermilk and 35oz.
oatmeal, with the effect of producing a gain in weight instead of a loss, and we
notice this is the only case in which a group consisting partly of females shows
a gain in weight. Considering the quantity consumed, No. 6 must be pronounced
the most satisfactory diet; No. 3 the least so. No. 2 and No. 7 stand higher than
4 and 5, and on the whole the Vegetarian lists, though restricted to a few articles,
come out triumphant.
Dr. Guy, to whom we are already indebted, quotes! the dietary of the Irish
Military Prisons as excellent for their purpose, although no flesh-meat is used in
them; they consist of bread 56oz., oatmeal 56oz., Indian meal 42oz., total 154oz.,
with 10J pints of milk per week. Dr. Tuffnell reports on the Dublin Prison : “ To
the increase of the dietary, and especially to its alteration I have ever been
upon principle opposed, because I found that I could upon the old scale of dietary
maintain the man in the most perfect condition.” A good reason indeed, and the
highest enconium that could be passed upon a dietary. The same gentleman says
of the dietary used for the “ penal class” at Millbank Prison, and which consists of
bread 84oz., oatmeal 70oz., Indian meal 70oz., potatoes 56oz., and 10| pints of milk
per week:—“ The dietary was favourably reported on by my predecessor, Dr. Baly,
in 1858, and in my own report for 1859. It has stood the test, both of experimental
weighings and of more general observation of the state of health of the prisoners.”
In summing up a very able paper containing a widely-extended view of facts and
experience he has these among other conclusions :—“ That we possess conclusive
f Journal of the Statistical Society, September, 1863.
�102
THE DIETETIC REFORMER
evidence of the sufficiency of a diet from which meat is wholly excluded, and even
of a diet consisting entirely of vegetable matter ; that such a diet would probably
suffice for able-bodied paupers, and even for prisoners sentenced to hard labour, and
for convicts employed at public works; and that this is true of men previously
accustomed to animal food. That the potato is an important element in our
dietaries, and that its omission has probably been the true cause of outbreaks of
scurvy which have been attributed to a mere reduction in the quantity of food.”
We are indebted to Mr. Edwin Chadwick for a view of this similar experience,
combining the effects upon health and life, which is extremely interesting, and
brings our proof out into strong relief. In a speech to the Society of Arts he said :—
“The death-rates in the army had been reduced in many instances by sanitary
measures by one-half, without any important alteration of the dietaries. The effects
of the prison dietaries, combined with improved sanitary conditions, were the most
instructive. Soldiers were taken from the ranks, generally the worst conditioned
men, where the death-rate was seventeen in a thousand, and put into military
prisons in Ireland, where the death-rat§ was reduced to two and a half per
thousand, and the sickness in proportion. The dietary consisted of eight ounces
of oatmeal, eight ounces of Indian meal, and eight ounces of wheaten bread, with
half a pint of milk at the three meals, daily. There was no meat, no tea, no coffee,
no beer, no tobacco, none of the stimuli which they got in the ranks, and their
general health and strength was vastly improved. The medical authority who had
observed the effect of this dietary for years declared he would make no alteration.”
In another part of his address he mentioned the following facts:—“ It had fallen to
him to collect and compare, rudely as it might be, the effects of different public
dietaries, before chemical analysis had been brought to bear on foods. It was at
that time urged by medical authorities, and indeed is still so by many, that dietaries
containing high stimuli beyond those got by the hard-working honest population,
were necessary to sustain the health of the prisoners. He found that the quality of
the diets, as containing more or less of animal food, was very much represented by
the cost, and this varied from Is. 2d. to 5s. and even 7s. per head per week. Now,
it should follow, from the medical recommendation, that the health of the prisoners
would rise in proportion. To determine this question he resorted to statistics.
Taking 104 prison returns—which enabled a comparison of the 20 gaols where the
expense and the quantity of the diet were the lowest, the 20 where the expense and
the quantity of the diet were the highest, and the 20 where they were intermediate
between the highest and the lowest—the results came out as follows :—
Ounces of solid Cost per head
Sick per
Deaths per
food per week.
per week.
cent.
1000.
Twenty lowest prison diets ..................... 188 ................ Is. 10£d. ................. 3
1|
Twenty intermediate diets......................... 213 ............. 2s. 4jd. ........ 18
3
Twenty highest............................................ 228 ............. 3s. 2d. ............... 23J................ 4
The results were objected to on the grounds that in some of the larger prisons,
where the lower dietaries were adopted, the terms of imprisonment were shorter
than in others. But those objections were met by the trial of the simpler dietaries
in the same prisons, with the same classes of prisoners, with labour and without
labour, for the like periods, where the like results appeared. No doubt changes of
diet were beneficial, if not absolutely necessary, for persons in sedentary conditions
or prolonged confinements, but variations wfth simple foods might be made to suffice,
I instead of augmentations in quantities, and in foods of the more stimulating and ex
�AND VEGETARIAN MESSENGER.
103
pensive character, beyond those which sufficed for the general population. Later
experience was in the same direction.”
Hence it appears that animal food plays an unsuspected and deadly part in cases
where it is consumed even in moderate quantities, a conclusion which must astound
most inquirers, and which ought to weigh with all classes and conditions. Length
of days is one of the blessings promised to the faithful, and in this case faithfulness
to knowledge offers the same reward. “ What man is he that desireth life and
loveth many days, that he may see good ? Depart from evil (in eating) and do
good.” We take it to be now demonstrated that good health and length of days
are the reward of a well-chosen diet from which animal food is excluded. In
relation to this world, no more important truth can be declared, for good health is
the most essential element of active life and enjoyment. The exercise of mental
and bodily power depend so directly upon its possession, that no society can attain
to its full growth or do justice to itself whilst it remains in a practice which preys
upon its vitals; nor should the economy of that simple diet which conduces most to
health be an unconsidered element: it may mean less labour and more leisure to
the overworked, or less confinement and more liberty to the delicate; or less devo
tion to the body and more to the mind for the thoughtfully inclined; or it may
render possible a better education, more spacious and better adorned homes, the
cultivation of taste in innocent enjoyment from art—music, drawing, carving,
painting—and more extended converse, and, consequently, closer sympathy in the
family. Some, perhaps many, of these sources of recreation and delight might be
open to the humbler classes in return for habituating themselves to a simple,
healthful diet—a change not always the most attractive to the palate until habit
has made the best course the most delightful. It must not, however, be understood
as absolutely necessary to refrain from delicacies or luxuries on the vegetarian
system, nor yet that vegetarian fare is necessarily cheap. Many desirable fruits are,
with us, very dear, and, if used at all, must be a tax upon the means of our ordinary
population. But we wish to show they are unnecessary; yet, in various ways, a great variety is possible, both in the methods of cooking and in the articles
selected, without injury to health, and, indeed, with good effect.
Having shown the advantages of abstaining from flesh, let us add a word to our
working people on their peculiar position. It has to them, no doubt, been a
stumbling-block that the goods of this world should be so unequally distributed,
when they have observed how the intelligent part of society esteem flesh alone
worthy to be called meat, and treat other dishes as adjuncts only. If animal food
be so necessary and so superior in power to yield strength, they might ask : How
comes it that they who have most need of strength get least, and in many
cases none, of this necessary; whilst that part of society which has less occasion
for strength gets most flesh, and nearly monopolises that class of food? It must
appear mysterious. But if our demonstration be sound, it shows, on the contrary,
khat the necessary and best foods are most abundant, and within the reach of all
classes and nations. In that there is no mystery, but supreme satisfaction. It
may thus increase their contentment when reflecting on their condition, by mani
festing the love of our common Father. This makes the poor man rich, for—
Poor and content is rich;
But riches infinite is poor as winter
To him that ever thinks that he is poor.
(To be continued.)
Kappa.
z,
�104
THE DIETETIC REFORMER
MEDICAL AND SCIENTIFIC TESTIMONY IN FAVOUR
OF A VEGETARIAN DIET.
[Note.—It is not implied that all the authorities mentioned are in favour of Vegetarianism, either
in theory or practice. They are Quoted to prove facts, rather than to enforce opinions.]
Peofessoe Owen.—“ The apes and the monkeys, which man nearly resembles
in his dentition, derive their staple food from fruits, grain, the kernels of nuts, and
other forms in which the most sapid and nutritious tissues of the vegetable king
dom are elaborated; and the close resemblance between the quadrumanous and
human dentition shows that man was, from the beginning, adapted to eat the fruit
of the trees of the garden.”—Odontography, p. 471.
Baeon Cuviee.—“ The natural food of man, judging from his structure, appears
to consist principally of the fruits, roots, and other succulent parts of vegetables.”
Animal Kingdom (Orr, London, 1840), p. 46.
M. Daubenton.—“ It is, then, highly probable that man in a state of pure
nature, living in a confined society, and in a genial climate,—where the earth
required but little culture to produce its fruits,—did subsist upon these, without
seeking to prey on animals.”—Observations on Indigestion.
M. Gassendi.—“ Wherefore, I repeat, that from the primeval and spotless insti
tution of our nature, the teeth were destined to the mastication, not of flesh, but of
fruits.”—Works, vol. x. p. 20.
Linnaeus.—“ This species of food [fruit] is that which is most suitable to man;
which is evinced by the series of quadrupeds; analogy; wild men; apes; the
structure of the mouth, of the stomach, and the hands.’’—Linnai Amenitates
Academicce, vol. x. p. 8.
Ray.—“ Certainly man by nature was never made to be a carnivorous animal,
nor is he armed at all for prey or rapine, with jagged and pointed teeth, and crooked
claws sharpened to rend and tear; but with gentle hands to gather fruit and vege
tables, and with teeth to chew and eat them.”—Evelyn's Acetaria, p. 170.
Peofessok Laweence.—“ The teeth of man have not the slightest resemblance
to those of the carnivorous animals, except that their enamel is confined to the ex
ternal surface. He possesses, indeed, teeth called ‘ canine but they do not exceed
the level of the others, and are obviously unsuited to the purposes which the cor
responding teeth execute in carnivorous animals........................ Thus we find that,
whether we consider the teeth and jaws, or the immediate instruments of digestion,
the human structure closely resembles that of the siamce; all of which, in their
natural state, are completely herbivorous” [frugivorous ?]—Lectures on Physiology,
pp. 189, 191.
Bell.—“ It is, I think, not going too far to say, that every fact connected with
the human organisation goes to prove that man was originally formed a frugivorous
animal.................... This opinion is principally derived from the formation of his
teeth and digestive organs; as well as from the character of his skin, and the
general structure of his limbs.”—Anatomy, Physiology, aud Diseases of the Teeth.
De. Spencee Thompson.—“ No physiologist would dispute with those who main
tain that man ought to live on vegetables alone, the possibility of his doing so, or
that many might not be as well or better under such a system as any other,” &c.—
Dictionary of Domestic Medicine, Art. “ Food.”
Hallee.—“ This food, then, which I have hitherto described, and in which flesh
has no part, is salutury ; insomuch that it fully nourishes a man, protracts life to
�AND VEGETARIAN MESSENGER.
105
an advanced period, and prevents or cures such disorders as are attributable to the
acrimony or grossness of the blood.”—Elements of Physiology, vol. vi. p. 199.
Liebig.—“ Grain, and other nutritious vegetables, yield us, not only in starch,
sugar, and gum, the carbon which protects our organs from the action of oxygen,
and produces in the organism the heat which is essential to life, but also in the form
of vegetable fibrine, albumen, and caseine, our blood, from which the other parts of
our body are developed....................... Vegetable fibrine and animal fibrine, vegetable
albumen and animal albumen, hardly differ even in form ; . . . . and when
they are present, the graminivorous animal obtains in its food the very same
principles on the presence of which the nutrition of the carnivora entirely
depends.......................... Vegetables produce, in their organism, the blood of
all animals; for the carnivora, in consuming the blood and flesh of the graminivora,
consume, strictly speaking, only the vegetable principles which have served for the
nutrition of the latter.”
De. Lankestee.—“ Animal food is composed of the same materials as vegetable
food. It is formed of the same elements, and presents the same proximate prin
ciples.”—Guide to the Food Collection, p. 79.
Moleshott.—“ The legumes are superior to meat in abundance of solid consti
tuents which they contain; and while the amount of albuminous substances may
surpass that in meat by one-half, the constituents of fat, and the salts, are also
present in a greater abundance.”
De. Caepentee.—“We freely concede to the advocates of Vegetarianism that,
as regards the endurance of physical labour, there is ample proof of the capacity of
what is commonly called the vegetable regimen, that is, abstinence from flesh meat,
to afford the requisite sustenance.................... We are inclined, then, to believe that
a purely vegetable diet, if it contains a due proportion of oleaginous matter, is cap
able of maintaining the physical powers of the body at their highest natural eleva
tion, even under the exposure of the extreme of cold, &c.”
De. S. Bbown.—“We are ready to admit that Vegetarian writers—especially
the author of Fruits and Farinacea [Churchill, London]—have triumphantly proved
that physical, horse-like strength, is not only compatible with, but also favoured by,
a well-chosen diet from the vegetable kingdom ; and, likewise, that such a table is
conducive to length of days.”—Westminster Review.
“De. Maecet, Omvee, and other physiologists unite in stating that chyle elabo
rated from animal food putrifies in three or four days at longest; while chyle from
vegetable food—from its greater purity and more perfect vitality—may be kept for
many days without becoming putrid.”—/Smith's Fruits and Farinacea.
Edinbuegh Medical and Suegical Jouenal.—‘‘We have known various per
sons who have been delivered from painful and obstinate disorders by giving up the
use of animal food entirely; and others in whom disorders of the nervous system
and the chest have been very much relieved by the same procedure.’’—No. 166.
Medico-Chibuegical Review.—“We are by no means sure, indeed, whether
the entire dietetic treatment of dyspepsia, ordinarily practised, is not fallacious; and
whether, instead of a highly-animalized regimen, it would not be preferable to have
recourse to a simple vegetable diet. Mr. Smith [Fruits and Farinacea} has collected
several cases of the benefits of such a system, from the writings of eminent medical
authors, who had no particular doctrines to support, such as Abercrombie, Cheyne,
and Thakrah ; and from the considerations we have already adduced, we think that
a strong case has been made out in its favour.”
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THE DIETETIC REFORMER
Dr. J. S. Wilkinson.—“ It is quite undeniable that many persons are benefited
by resortingto such a mode of diet.”—Literary and Scientific Lecturer, vol. ii., p. 110.
Dr. Cheyne.—“ For those who are extremely broken down with chronic disease,
I have found no other relief than a total abstinence from all animal food, and from
all sorts of strong and fermented liquors. In about thirty years’ practice, in which
I have (in some degree or other) advised this method in proper cases, I have had but
two cases in whose total recovery I have been mistaken.”
Dr. A. P. Buchan.—“Of the effects of a regimen of the farinacea, combined
with milk and fruits, in subduing the early attacks of phythisis, many examples are
recorded; and there would, probably, be many more, were an appropriate regimen
adopted rather with a view to prevent than to cure this disease, .... When
there is a tendency to consumption in the young, it should be counteracted by strictly
adhering to a diet of the farinacea and ripe fruits. Animal food and fermented liquors
ought to be rigidly prohibited.................. If vegetables and milk were more used in
diet, we should have less scurvy, and likewise fewer putrid and inflammatory fevers.”
Dr. Craigie.—“ Diet consisting of bread and milk, or rice and milk, or the flour
of farinaceous seeds and milk, is quite adequate to prevent the formation of the
gouty diathesis, and to extinguish that diathesis if already formed. . . . Such diet
is also adequate to prevent the disease from appearing in its irregular form, and
affecting the brain and its membranes, and the heart or lungs.”—Elements of the
Practice of Physic, vol. ii. p. 633.
Dr, Cullen.—“ I am firmly persuaded that any man who, early in life, will
enter upon the constant practice of bodily labour and of abstinence from animal
*
food, will be preserved entirely from gout. . . The cure [of rheumatism] requires,
in the first place, an antiphlogistic regimen; and particularly a total abstinence
from animal food, and from all fermented and spirituous liquors.”
Dr. S. Nicolls says (1864.)—“ This hospital [Longford Fever Hospital] is con
ducted on vegetarian and temperance principles—not one pound of flesh-meat, pint
of whisky, or bottle of wine having been used in it for the last fifteen years,—long
experience having satisfied me that animal food, wine, brandy, &c., require to be
given with great caution; indeed, I have seen sad results from their use. . . It
may be said that the class of patients was unused to good food and stimulants—
therefore did not require them. However, such is not the fact, for among them
were officers of this house, members of the constabulary force, tradesmen, gentle
man’s servants, and others accustomed to substantial food. . . A large proportion
of cases (in 1865) were spotted, with sordes on the teeth, and a tongue like maho
gany, and many were brought in with bed sores on their hips and back, and some
with gangrene of the toes and feet. . . Nine persons stricken with the same fever
were removed from one house to the fever hospital, and every one recovered, though
they got neither wine, brandy, nor animal food. . . I still continue the treatment
which for sixteen years I have found so successful.”
Arbuthnot.—“ I know more than one instance of irrascible passions being
much subdued by a vegetable diet.’*
Hufeland.—“The more man follows nature, and is obedient to her laws, the
longer will he live: the further he deviates from these, the shorter will be his
existence. . . Plain, simple food only, promotes moderation and longevity; while
compounded and luxurious food shortens life. . . Instances of the greatest Ion gevity
are to be found among men who, from their youth, lived principally on vegetables,
and who, perhaps, never tasted flesh.”
�AND VEGETARIAN MESSENGER.
107
P.S.—The following may be mentioned as being, entirely or partially, adherents
of Vegetarianism:—Daniel, Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato, Epicurus, Plutarch;
Cornaro, Milton, Swedenborg, Wesley, Howard, Franklin, Shelley, Newton,
Lamartine, Rousseau. Sir Richard Philips, Ritson, Brotherton, General P. Thomp
son, and F. W. Newman.
[The testimonies collated above are issued in a Tract, to be sent to medical men inviting their
opinions and experience. Eriends can be supplied on application to the Secretary. The Execu
tive Committee of the Vegetarian Society also hereby request readers of the Dietetic Reformer
to call the attention of their friends and acquaintances belonging to the medical profession to
the views expressed above, and invite them to write any facts in their experience, whether
favourable or otherwise, and send them to the Secretary. ]
THE VICTORIES OF TRUTH.
What errors (he that reads may see)
Have rul’d in turn the human race,
Have cried to nations, “ Bow the knee,”
And said to hated Truth, “ Give place,
No longer let me see thy face ! ”
What troops have followed at their heels !
What zealots at their shrines have pray’d,
And died beneath their chariot wheels !
What abject homage men have paid !
What gifts upon their altars laid !
But when submitted to the test
• .
Of Time, they fail’d that test to stand;
*?,
Then some one, bolder than the rest,
The downfall of their pow’r has plann’d,
And dragg’d them down with daring hand.
But let the friends of Error mourn,
When Error yields her tainted breath;
Truth to eternal life was bom;
Her friends shall never mourn her death,
Nor weave for her the cypress wreath.
Time spares not age, nor pities youth ;
Man’s proudest works he doth abuse,
Yet has no power to injure Truth;
The wasting years but add new grace
And beauty to her form and face.
She will not fail her friends, and none
Shall live to see her strength decay,
Or beauty fade and die : her sun
Moves on towards a perfect day,
Her glory shall not pass away.
And though we perish in the strife,
The truth is not a thing of breath,
And still the truth shall live, though Life
Roll writhing down the jaws of Death Who too shall die, the scripture saith.
And though he drive us from the field,
And hand us captive to the grave,
From whose black dungeons, barr’d and seal’d,
He calls on Truth her friends to save,
Short is the triumph he shall have.
For He who toil’d at Nazareth
The captive from the strong shall take,
And we shall live and reign when Death,
And he that follows in his wake,
Are buried in the fiery lake.
R. Phillips.
Mm
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THE DIETETIC REFORMER
SHerttb >rtuM
VACCINATION VIEWED POLITICALLY: LETTER FROM
PROFESSOR NEWMAN.
[From the Anti- Vaccinator, of September 25th, 1869.]
Dr. ar Me. Pitman,—You call my attention to an article in the Lancet, commenting
on a private letter of mine to you, which you have thought fit to publish. You
kindly desire to print some reply from me. I really think I may claim that
you or other anti-vaccinators will make the reply, which is not at all difficult. I
have po taste for detailed controversy, especially with an anonymous opponent, and
with a medical man on a medical topic. But I regard the political side of the
question as the primary. It is not developed in that letter—which I never intended
for the public; but I will now enter upon it somewhat more fully.
It does not rest with Parliament to enact how a disease shall be treated. If a
bill were proposed to enforce that everyone who is seized with apoplexy shall be
bled, the Lancet would probably be foremost in the outcry. I should expect it to
propound that Parliament is no authority in medicine; that to protect us from
dangerous treatment by ignorant pretenders, Parliament enacts medical degrees
as mere tests of knowledge, but it must not dictate to those who have displayed
their knowledge by gaining the degree.
Nor is it to the purpose to say that Parliament took advice of physicians before it
legislated. Some thirty or forty years ago, when homoeopaths first disused bleeding
for apoplexy and fever, the disapproval of their conduct by the orthodox medical
faculty was so universal and so vehement, that Parliament might easily, have got
medical warrant to enforce bleeding. Nay, one hundred years ago, physicians were
zealous for inoculation. My father was with difficulty saved from it by the sturdy
refusal of his mother, who said (as she told me) “ If God send small-pox on my
child, I must bear it; but never will I consent to give it him on purpose : how can
anyone know what would come of it ? ”
At that time Parliament might have been advised by educated and learned, phy
sicians to make inoculation compulsory ; and I make no doubt those physicians
spoke as dogmatically to my grandmother in favour of it, as any can now speak of
vaccination ; yet, by the advice of physicians, inoculation is. now made penal! It
is certainly possible that by the advice of physicians vaccination also will hereafter
be made penal. Medicine is a changing and (let us hope) progressive Art; it has
no pretension to be Science, or to have any fixedness at all. The editor of. the
Lancet has probably read the article in the Quarterly Review of April, 1869, entitled
“ The Aims of Modern Medicine.” It is a storehouse of detailed fact for those who
are too young to remember what it narrates of unanimous medical error, pernicious
on the hugest scale. Medicine cannot improve, unless the younger and fresher
minds among physicians are left perfectly free to deviate from the routine of their
elders. Nothing can justify Parliament in enacting a medical creed, or enforcing
any special medical procedures.
.
.
But if physicians must have hands unfettered, have patients no right to choose
lheir physician ?—no right to repudiate treatment which they think quackery ? We
all ought to be re-vaccinated periodically, according to the Lancet. Does, then,
Parliament dare to enact such a thing ? It does not; else I might be taken by
force and vaccinated to-morrow. And if I understand the argument for compulsory
vaccination, it cannot rightly stop short of this. I may be told that extreme danger
requires extreme remedies. Well—I will put really extreme.cases. . In an age and
country of barbarism, I am seized with the plague, or with a highly-infectious
leprosy. If I have the plague, I am to be shot dead with arrows, and mould is to
be heaped over me where I lie. If I have the leprosy, I am to be hunted into soli
tude, and there live, if I can.
.
The law is hard, yet I might accept my fate without murmuring. One who is
dangerous to society, whether from contagion or from mania, cannot retain ordinary
social rights. Better for me to die outright than to infect my kind, nurses, for the
miserable chance of lingering. To put me to death for plague is sharp law, no
doubt; but the legislator would at least know that a pestilential body, once well
�AND VEGETARIAN MESSENGER.
109
covered with earth, does no further harm, so that the despotism effects its end—at
least it stops contagion. I should feel that I died for my country’s good. But if
he enacted that I should be bled, or should have the sore places cut out. or that
poison should be infused into my veins, he could never be sure that the public
gained any benefit from his cruelties. A far more overwhelming proof is needed
by the legislator than so very shifting a thing as medical advice. And here it is
advice from one country only in all the world, and that where men peculiarly
experienced in vaccination condemn it.
One who carries disease with him is ostensibly dangerous. This—and this
only—.justifies legislation against him. But when a man or child is ostensibly
healthy, no case is made out for legislation at all. To enact that a healthy person
shall have a disease lest hereafter he get a worse disease, is a form of despotism
hard to parallel; and, what is peculiarly disgraceful, it is directed against innocent
infants alone, because they are helpless: it does not dare to attack us adults. This
fact justly arouses parents to indignation. Let parliament enact that every M.P.
shall be at once vaccinated, and that it shall be done from arm to arm among them,
every four or five years, as the doctors may prefer,—if they will enact such things
concerning children. The law now says to a parent—“ We are alarmed to see
that your child has no disease. Cow-pox (for the public good) it must have, with
the chance of other hideous diseases: submit, or else make yourself a criminal,
have your hair cropped, and dress in prison garb.”
Such legislation implies that parliament is a Medical Pope, and would justify no
end of monstrous violations of sacred personal right. The Lancet “begs respectfully
to tell me” that, in the matter of “vaccine lymph,” “ the State (!) and private prac
titioners take great care.” Is this very comforting—very reassuring—to one who
has read Ira Connell’s frightful case ? I have a paper before me—reprinted from
the Lancet of Nov. 16, 1861—which contains a detailed account of 46 children in
Piedmont being infected with loathsome disease—soon fatal to some of them—from
receiving the lymph (called vaccine!) out of the arm of one child called (and sup
posed to be) healthy. As the surgeon cannot be omniscient, he eannot know the
diseases hidden in a particular child; he is not to blame for not knowing; but this
is precisely the reason why parliament ought much rather to forbid than to enforce
the vaccinating of one child from another. It makes the enforcement so indefen
sible, that one is unwilling to affix the right epithet.
But.even if cows would kindly get cow-pox for our convenience, so that each
child might have the disease direct from the cow, even so it would be blind tyranny
for the law to say to a parent—“ You shall not keep your child in perfect health: that
is too dangerous a course.” When to this the parent replies by defiance of the law,
and is treated as a criminal, the law-makers are (in my opinion) the real criminals
before God and man. Parents who become martyrs by resisting the law, deserve a
sympathy akin to those who are martyrs of religion.—Yours, F. W. Newman.
>
/
/
/
/
J. STUART MILL, ESQ., AND TEMPERANCE POLITICS.
[The secretary of the United Kingdom Alliance, Mr. T. H. Barker, has been favoured
by the Hon. Gerrit Smith, of the State of New York, with the following copy
of a letter which that distinguished philanthropist has recently addressed to
John Stuart Mill, Esq., on the subject of “ Temperance Politics.” The letter
will be specially interesting as having been suggested by the correspondence
between Mr. Mill and the Alliance secretary, published in the Alliance News
just before the general election.]
GERRIT SMITH TO JOHN STUART MILL.
Honoured and dear Sir, —A gentleman in England, who is rendering eminent
service to the cause of temperance, requests me to criticise your attitude toward
that cause. So profound is my sense of your pre-eminent wisdom—perhaps, wellnigh as profound as was Buckle’s sense of it—that I could not, without heavily
‘
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THE DIETETIC REFORMER
taxing my diffidence, presume to criticise you in any respect. Nevertheless, I
venture to comply with the request.
The gentleman I refer to would have Government shut up the dramshop. You
*
would have Government leave it open. How shall so wide a difference on a subject
of so vast importance be explained ? Is he more radical in his theories than you are ?
Probably not. Few of the world’s great writers are less cramped than yourself by
the spirit of conservatism. Are you less disposed than he to reduce radical theories
to practice ? Your admirable pleas for woman’s voting prove that you do not
shrink from the boldest practical innovations. This wide difference must be. other
wise accounted for. Perhaps, whilst his philanthropy is particularly moved by
intemperance, yours is by some other vice or suffering. Or, perhaps, it is to be
accounted for, in part or entirely, by the supposition that you are especially jealous
of the interference of society with the rights and practices of the individual, and
he, of the interference of the individual with the interests and welfare of society.
On this supposition it is quite natural that one of you should argue the right of the
individual to buy or sell drams, and the other the right of society to punish him for
such buying or selling.
You make the province of civil government much narrower than most do. I
(though not forgetting that, in doing so, I go against the judgment of many a man
far wiser and better than myself) make it still narrower. For instance, whilst you
would have Government compel the idler to work, I would let him remain an idler,
should moral influences prove inadequate to change him; and whilst you would
have the parent compelled to educate his child, I, with my dread of all possibly
avoidable compulsion, would look to his enlightened and benevolent neighbours to
supply, as far as they can, the unnatural parental lack. Again, I would have
Government shut out not only from the church but also from the school. It should
have nothing to do with either. Then, too, I would have the right to buy and sell
so free, as not to leave a custom-house upon the earth. Nor would I allow Govern
ment to concern itself with the cause of temperance, nor with any other moral
reform, nor with asylums for the blind or the deaf mutes, nor with any other bene
volent institutions. Why, then, you will ask me, am I in favour of the enactment
of sumptuary laws ? I am not. Families should be left to dress as they please,
and to eat and drink what they please. There should be no laws to regulate living.
If, in saying so, I open the way for the question—how I can then consistently be in
favour of Government’s shutting up the dramshop—my reply is that this question
will be answered in what I shall say of the province of Government. I have said
what is not its province—in other words, wbat it should not do. I will now say
what is its province—in other words, what it should do. It should protect person
and property ; and it should attempt nothing more. Its one work is to hold a shield
over its subjects beneath which they can, unjostled by each other, and secure from
foreign aggression, pursue each his own chosen calling, and each live out his own
views of life. The protection of person and property being its sole office, Govern
ment is to protect society not only from the criminal but from the insane, be it
liquor or disease that has produced the insanity. Hence, whilst we are to look to
enlightened and benevolent persons for asylums for the sick and poor, we are to
regard lunatic asylums, including inebriate asylums, as part of the machinery of
Government. By the way, the almshouses and kindred institutions would scarcely
be needed were the dramshop abolished. Rare, in that case, would be the person
who is so impoverished or debased, as to cast himself upon the public charity; and
rare too, in that case, would be the person, whose friends are so impoverished or
debased, as to allow him to be cast upon it.
If I have rightly defined the office of civil government, then, manifestly, were
every part of the earth to be blessed with a true civil government, there would not
be so much as one dramshop left in any part of the earth. For what is the dram
shop but the great manufactory of incendiaries, madmen, and murderers? Its
staggering army in Great Britain counts up nearly a million ; in America scarcely
less. Because of the dramshop hundreds of thousands of British and American
families are deep sunk in misery, stricken with terror, and not a very small portion
of them besmeared with blood. Because of the dramshop night is so often made
* The practioal proposition of the Permissive Bill is something short of this: It is that the
people should have the power of local option or veto.—T. H. B.
�AND VEGETARIAN MESSENGER.
Ill
hideous in Britain and America by screams of “ murder,” and sunrise made sorrowful
by its revelations of the deeds of drunkenness. And, yet, even John Stuart Mill
will not have Government suppress the dramshop ! Its evils, surpassing the sum
total of all other evils, stare him in the face—and yet he allows himself to be
swayed by that microscopic view, which detects in such suppression a particle of
seeming sumptuary legislation I Pardon me for being reminded by your hypercritical
and fastidious objection to the only way of salvation in this life and death case, of
the old story of the extreme ceremoniousness of the gentleman, who made his neverhaving-been-introduced to the drowning man his excuse for not rescuing him.
Even if there is in this proposed suppression of the dramshop something of the
form or semblance of sumptuary legislation, there, nevertheless, is not the least
spirit of it. Moreover, were it so that, incidental to this suppression, there must be
violations of some minor rights and inconsiderable interests, no account should be
made of the violations, but all of them should be forgotten in the joy of the
accomplished object.
I admit that the shutting up of the dramshops might put some families to a
little inconvenience, if not also to a slightly additional expense, in obtaining
alcoholic liquor. I admit, too, that, whilst it is not only unnecessary but pernicious
to persons in health, there is occasionally a bodily ailment in which, provided there
are not other remedial agents of similar effect at hand, such liquor is useful. But
to make trifles like these excuses for keeping open the floodgates of the deadly
dramshop argues the impossibility of finding worthier excuses for continuing the
murderous wrong.
I do not forget that, although you would leave the dramseller unpunished for
keeping a soul-and-body slaughter-house, you would have his customer punished
for the violence of which he may have been guilty in his drunkenness. But to
make this the only security against such violence is too much like stipulating with
the men, reckless or malignant enough to bring fire into the powder house, that
they shall not be punished until an actual explosion has come of their recklessness
or malignity. Surely, surely, London is entitled to more security against dramshop
violence than this, which you propose—yes, to immeasurably more, seeing that,
probably, never a day passes without some of the dramshops being chargeable with
one or more deaths. The deaths may be from suicide or murder—produced suddenly
or gradually—nevertheless, they are all dramshop deaths.
I do not forget the frequent cavil, that, even were the dramshop shut up,
drinking and drunkenness would not therefore be diminished. Nevertheless, over
whelming are the proofs that the drinking and drunkenness are in proportion to the
temptations—in proportion to the frequency and attractiveness of the places for
gratifying the unhappy appetite. Of course, no one is less chargeable with such
cavil than yourself. For your argument against shutting up the dramshop is the
solemn one that human rights would thereby be invaded—invaded by lessening the
facilities for tippling and drunkenness! I scarcely need add that the cavillers I
refer to entirely ignore your argument. With your fear of the increased difficulty
of getting rum they have no sympathy. Their confidence that rum will still be
within as easy reach as ever remains undiminished.
How sad it is that even the wisest and best of men do, by getting used to
crimes—to the presence of criminal usages—become patient with them! Possibly,
before the year is ended, thousands of shops may be opened in London for the sale
of a newly-discovered gas. It will craze no small part of their frequenters. Some
of them it will turn into incendiaries and some into murderers. Nevertheless, so
attractive will be the gas that scores of thousands will go to inhale it. No sooner,
however, will the effect of it be well ascertained than petitions for shutting up
these gas-shops will pour into Parliament. Amongst the most influential names
upon them will be your own. The gas-shops, unsustained by the plea of custom,
would be tried solely by their character, and would, therefore, be as quickly and as
thoroughly condemned as would be the dramshops, were they also unsheltered by
this plea, and put on trial for their character only—their emphatically infernal
character.
We are both in favour of having the people own Government instead of being,
as is the case in many nations, owned by it. Hence we both deprecate Govern
ment’s travelling beyond its legitimate limits. Could it be kept within them, it
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THE DIETETIC REFORMER .
would be a blessing above all price. Travelling beyond them it becomes an evil,
not only from its meddling with matters which do not belong to it, but from its
consequent neglect of its own proper duty. Has it never occurred to you, that
the most effective way to recall Government from its meddlings is to hold it firmly
and constantly to the discharge of its one duty to protect person and property ?
When it shall have been brought to see that, in leaving the dramshop to pour out
destruction and death, it leaves person and property more unprotected than from any
or all other causes ; and when it shall, consequently, have been brought to see that
it has no higher duty to perform than to shut up this fountain of woe, then will
civil government be in a process of education and change, that will leave it no taste
nor time nor talent for continuing its usurpations And then, with hands filled
with its legitimate work, and heart filled with zeal to perform it, and destitute
alike of affinity and ability for every other work, civil government will realise the
sublimest expectations of the most enlightened and philanthropic statesmen. In
that day, it will be held, not only that civil government has the right to shut up
the dramshops, but that, wherever it fails to exercise this right, it fails to prove
itself worthy of the name of civil government.—With the highest regards, yours,
Gebbit Smith.
THE NATIONAL HEALTH.
The Westminster Review for the current quarter has reached a second edition,
the cause of the extraordinary demand for the number being a remarkable article
on “ Prostitution in Relation to the National Health.” The difficulty and delicacy
of this subject have prevented its full discussion, and the result is that there exists
amongst all classes a vast amount of ignorance with respect to it. A writer in the
Westminster Review brings to the investigation he has entered upon a full knowledge,
a powerful pen, a thorough consciousness of the importance of the work he has to
do, and, considering the subject, he avoids everything which may be called offensive.
He states his facts in plain, unmistakable English, it is true, but this is no doubt
the best mode of treating a subject of such vital importance to the community; and
while he pays no respect to the false delicacy of the time, his language is as pare
as his evidence of the existence amongst us of a terrible social pestilence is abundant.
We cannot quote the whole of the article, which is a long one, but the opening,
which is as follows, will show the object of the writer:—
“ We purpose in this article to examine a disease which is at once social, moral,
and physical, and, especially, to exhibit the nature and extent of its agency in
destroying the health and vigour of a large proportion of the inhabitants of the
British Islands, tainting their blood with an ineradicable poison. Of all the mala
dies with which humanity is afflicted, prostitution is, we believe, the worst: its
causes are the most persistent, its physical effects are the most terrible, its social
and moral complications are the most numerous and inextricable, its whole aspect
is the most saddening, and its cure is the most difficult. Among the social prob
lems which it behoves philanthropists and statesmen to solve, this—how may pros
titution be annihilated ?—stands pre-eminent; and though, together with the several
subordinate ones related to and grouped around it, urgently demanding solution, it
is seemingly the most insoluble. The mere statement of the elements of the ques
tion is beset with almost insuperable difficulties; how much greater, therefore,
must be the barriers opposed to its exhaustive discussion ? By conventional agree
ment society is forbidden to speak on the subject unless in whispers ; and he who
ventures to write upon it in a journal for general readers must either suppress
many of the most important facts and arguments relating to it, or run the risk of
damaging the medium which he uses.
“ Women, who ever, as a rule, shape their conduct conformably to the views
and wishes of men, offer the most powerful conservative resistance to any agitation
of this momentous topic: many observe and impose the silence of hypocritical
ignorance—feeling constrained, while wholly conscious of the vast importance of
the evil in question, to act and speak as if unaware of its existence; and many
more, from genuine delicacy, avert their eyes and resolutely ignore it. But surely
�AND VEGETARIAN MESSENGER.
113
this ostrich-like cowardice or timidity cannot continue much longer I It seems
impossible for English women to persist in ignoring a social evil, the disease inci
dental to which is undermining the strength and indirectly destroying the lives
of a large proportion of the adult male population—of their brothers, their sons,
and their husbands, and which is directly destroying their infants, both before
and after birth. We trust that social propriety and true feminine delicacy will
always be held sacred; but there is a false delicacy which is alike hostile to needful
physiological knowledge and physical well-being, which is incompatible with a
healthily-constituted mind, and which ought to be resolutely put away ; and there
are occasions when even true delicacy must suffer violence if the lives and welfare
of others, or self-preservation, cannot be otherwise insured. When, as a genius of
beneficence, Florence Nightingale encountered the horrors of the military hospitals
during the Crimean war, she gave practical recognition of this duty.
“ But it is not on behalf of others only that we now appeal to English women—
it is equally and still more urgently on behalf of themselves. Thousands upon
thousands, chiefly of the lower classes, but partly of the higher, are the innocent
and defenceless victims of a pestilence whose march is so secret, and whose attacks
are so insidious, that none can be certain of escape ; many a trusting maiden radiant
with happiness, health, and beauty, who gives herself in marriage, speedily finds
her joy turned to mourning, her health to disease, and, it may be, her beauty
defaced by its loathsome poison ; many a mother has to deplore the contamination,
not only of her own constitution, but that of her child, to which, either before or
after birth, in countless instances that poison proves fatal. Thus the social malady
which we now propose to discuss is vitally interesting to woman : it affects her
both as a wife and as a mother, and while destroying the health of herself and of
the dearest objects of her affections, too often blights those affections themselves.
Suffering as she does from its effects, shall she be restrained by conventional pro
hibitions, or even by her own sensitive delicacy, from manifesting her interest in
it, from exerting her influence at once to repress it and to remove its causes, or
from labouring in every possible way to place herself and those related to her out of
danger? On the contrary, we believe that this is precisely one of those subjects
which it is her most solemn duty to examine for herself. We believe that only through
the resolute co-operation and influence of women w any great and permanent diminu
tion of the evil in question possible. If the sexual Relation is to be ennobled, if passion
shall ever be so restrained as to become only the intensest expression of affection,
if love shall ever be so purified and hallowed as never to degrade and sacrifice, but
always to exalt and bless its objects, women will assuredly be the chief agents of
the change. So greatly do our hopes of social amelioration depend on the co
operation with wise and earnest men of intelligent and beneficent women, that we
entreat their attention to the facts we are about to describe. We shall say nothing
but what a most delicate and refined woman might listen to from her physician,
nothing but what every woman, if she be capable of understanding it, should, in
our opinion, know. On this subject we believe the language of simplicity to be the
purest and the least calculated to offend the most delicate nature. But the contem
plation of disease, of which we shall have much to say, ih always painful, and not
seldom revolting; no painting can make the pictures of it pleasing; and especially
would the attempt be futile with reference to those diseases the character and
magnitude of which it will be our duty to portray.”
The writer points out that according to the Registrar-General’s returns 408
deaths occurred from diseases associated with thejvice of the streets, and that this
number, great as it is, gives no idea of the real amouiff, as from the shame attaching
to the disease it is assigned as a cause of death in public practice only, and seldom
or never in private practice. A human organism once tainted can never be restored,
he asserts, to the condition of health and strength which it might otherwise have
enjoyed, and this it is that makes the subject of so great social importance. In the
conclusion of the article the writer gives his opinion of the Contagious Diseases
Act in these words:—
“ Prostitution presents two aspects—one social, the other physical, and hence
two questions for solution. First, how may prostitution be eradicated ? And,
second, until it is, how may the diseases engendered of it be extirpated, or" at least
reduced within the narrowest possible limits ? Any adequate discussion of the first
�114
THE DIETETIC REFORMER
involves such a wide and comprehensive consideration of every aspect of the relation
of the sexes, as few men, if any, of the present day are duly qualified to undertake;
the other, dealing only as it does with certain results of prostitution—the diseases
we have described—is more simple, and this we propose to grapple with hereafter,
and pledge ourselves to prove that this question can and ought to be practically
dealt with, that the plan of dealing with it now vigorously pressed on the Legisla
ture of extending the Contagious Diseases Act to the civil population will both
signally fail to accomplish the object in view, and will itself entail evils far
greater than those it is intended to remedy, and that there is a plan open to no
such objection, in harmony with the free spirit of English institutions, which, if
practised, will be successful, and which it is our intention fully to explain in a
succeeding number of this Review."—The Western Daily Press, Sept. Wth.
PHYSICAL HEALTH, STRENGTH, AND ACTIVITY CAN
BE REGULATED BY DIET.
The vitality of plants, the muscular activity of all animals, and the mental as well
as muscular and organic health and vigour of man, depend on phosphorus. These
are legitimate inferences from facts, presented clearly, as you shall see, in the
organisation of plants, animals, and man. In grains and all seeds, the phosphates
which give vitality, and furnish food for the brain and nerves, reside in the germ or
“ chit,” while the fixed phosphates, which are devoted to bones, &c., are mixed with
gluten in the crust under the hull, as seen in the plates of corn and wheat. That
the phosphates are concentrated in the germ of all seeds, and that they vary in
different seeds, is easily ascertained by chemical tests applied to the grain or seed.
It is thus ascertained that some seeds and some grains contain two or three
times as much phosphates as others. Wheat, for example, contains two per cent,
while millet four per cent. 'Grass seed from six to seven per cent, and some, as
clover and herds-grass, from seven to nine. In all seeds and roots and nuts, which
germinate from chits or eyes, the phosphates centre about these eyes, and what is
not found there, is always found connected with the muscle-making part of the grain
or fruit, showing that the phosphates are connected with vitality and the life-giving
principle.
The same thing is shown in animals by a test of their flesh, and by their manner
of living. The flesh of quadrupeds and birds, and fishes, contains phosphorus in
just the°proportion to their natural activity, wild animals much more than domestic ;
the most active birds, like the pigeon and migrating birds, much more than domestic
fowls, and quiet and lazy birds. The migrating fishes, whose astonishing muscular
power enables them to swim up rapids and over falls, contain more phosphates than
the flounder and halibut, which are clumsy and comparatively dormant.
Insects abound in phosphorus in proportion to their activity and strength of
muscle, and among them are the greatest gymnasts in the world. The leap of a
flea is as great in proportion to size of muscle, as if a man should jump over the
Atlantic Ocean, from Boston to London; and a beetle, not weighing s scruple, will
lift and move a junk bottle with contents, weighing, a pound—a weight more than
one hundred times as great, in proportion, as Dr. Winship could lift (and the beetle
wears no yoke). Being wanted for scientific purposes, a beetle was.placed, for safe
keeping, under a bottle filled with liquid, in the inverted cup made in the bottom of
the bottle. Immediately the plucky little insect was seen walking off with the
bottle on his back—as if the strong doctor, being shut up in his own office in the
basement of Park-street Church, with a steeple two hundred feet high, should hoist
the old thing, steeple and all, over into the cemetery.
.
The active bird lives on active insects or small seeds, which contain the most
phosphorus, while the sluggish hen or robin is content with corn or worms, which
contain much less of the life-giving element; and migratory birds,
bbey
remain quiet, raising their young, live on worms and berries, but in the fall get a
supply of strength for annual flight by eating seeds and active insects. The king
bird is the smartest little bird in New England, and gets his name from the fact
�115
AND VEGETARIAN MESSENGER.
that he governs all other birds—large and small, or drives them from his domain if
they give Um offence. Even the hawk, which is such a terror to other birds, seems
to be a source of amusement to the kingbird. Many a time have I seen this little
bird, not one-tenth as large as the hawk, flying just over his back in the air,
keeping out of his way by superior activity, occasionally pouncing on him, and
giving him such annoyance that he was glad to leave the neighbourhood to escape
■Ra little tormenter. A brace of these jolly and eccentric little kingbirds are just
now affording infinite amusement to the denizens and visitors of Chester square,
in Boston, June, 1867. Having, according to the custom of other royal families,
selected a beautiful city residence for a part of the year, and having built their
nest, and the queen being engaged in matters pertaining to the perpetuation of
royalty, the king is obliged to entertain visitors^ This he does by pouncing on the
backs of dogs and driving them from the square; diving at the bright buttons on
the policemen’s coats; knocking off tall, black, awkward stove-funnel hats, &c.
Looking out of my office window, which looks over an open lot to the square, the
other day, I saw this kingbird pouncing with tremendous vigour into a thicket of
shrubs, and soon came out a big cat, escaping as' for life, to the nearest shelter,
with the little bird every moment striking at his back and head. This little king
bird lives on bees and hornets—insects proverbial for their industry,.strength, and
persevering activity—and on flies, whose activity keeps them up inthe air for
amusement, and the bird amuses hirnself in catching them; and thus it is clearly
established that active animals require food which contains more phosphorus than
inactive animals, and the inference is conclusive that man also will have more or
less activity of brain or muscle in proportion to' the elements he takes to feed the
brain and muscle.—Philosophy of Eating.
DR. MUSSEY ON HEALTH
*
[From The Radical (Monthly), for January, 1869.
(Continued from p. 69.J
Boston, U.S.]
But to return to the point, as to what feeds the world. Look first at the great
flesh-eaters, — the inhabitants of Northern Europe, Eastern Asia, and North
America, the Laplanders, the Tungooes, and the Buracts. ;. They are the weakest
and least brave of men. Take some of the New Zealand tribes,—-eating like cows,
on all-fours, tearing a smoking hog to pieces with their fingers, and eating all up,-—
flesh-eating monsters ! They are theinost savage and unhealthy of men; while their
children, fruit-eaters during youth, are healthy and mild.. They get disease and
savageness when they leave the fruits for flesh. Take a, tribe of one of the Westmann Islands. The people die rapidly, and have few.children. They live on eggs
and birds almost exclusively. But the Irishman with his potato lives to old age,
and the number of his children we know. On the other hand, look at the fifteen or
sixteen cases which the doctor cites. 1. Some tribes in the South Pacific. Excel in
■beauty and grandeur of form. Few cripples or diseased persons among them. They
are entirely fruit and grain eaters. 2. The earlier Greek athletse. Very powerful.
Ate no animal food. 3. The Saracens under Mohammed. A' terror to. Southern
Europe. Heroes. Food, water, milk, vegetables. And so their great chief, Oinar.
He, too, lived entirely on vegetable food. Celebrated'for his endurance,, purity,
genius. 4. A tribe at Jenno, east of Gape Mesurado; They have flesh which they
can have if they would prefer it. They do prefer fruits and vegetables. A stronger
■race of men not to be found. 5. The Spanish peasants. Food/ milk and wheat
flour, or bread steeped in oil, or bread and cheeSe. Great labourers. And one traveller
says they are the liveliest, healthiest, best-favoured peasants he has seen. 6. The
inhabitants of East Scotland. Strong, large, healthy. Diet, vegetables and oat
meal ; no meat. Scott speaks of the “ hardy warriors of Douglas who lived on the
oat-meal taken from the bag suspended by the great chimney.” 7. The Russian
grenadiers. Called the “ finest body of troops.” Food each day, one pound of black
gbread, and half a pound of vegetable oil. 8. The porters of Smyrna. Carry through
* Health; Its Friends and its Foes.
Lincoln.
By R. D. Musaey, M.D., LL.D.
Boston: Gould and
�116
THE DIETETIC REFORMER .
the streets on their backs four-hundred-pound boxes of sugar, .gome take up nine
hundred pounds of boards for a single-load. Food spare ; coarse bread, figs, other
fruits, water. 9. The blacks of South Carolina,—field hands. Live on sweet potatoes
and corn meal. Healthy during the malaria. But if they become house domestics,
and live more generously, subject to malaria. A proof that the fever is kept off more
by the careful diet than the black’s constitution. It is also said that the young field
hands, who subsist entirely upon fruit and grain, learn much better than the home
servants,who eat everything. 10. The famous Cherokee athletae. They play a most
bellicose game of ball of two hours’ duration, taxing their muscular system to the
utmost. Their food is corn meal. Sometimes those who eat flesh enter the lists. At
first more vigorous than the others. But never endure so long as the corn-eaters.
They fail in breath. 11. The Chili miners. Carry stones of three hundred and sixty
pounds’weight on their backs from the bottom of the mines, three hundred feet deep.
Have no ladders to go up on. Diet, very seldom meat. Usually harricot bean and
bread. 12. The hardy pupils in the old Persian schools. Trained, according to
Xenophon, to heavy camp exercise and severe hunts. Very strong. Food, bread
and water-cresses. 13. The athletse of the Himalaya Mountains. One of them is
often stronger than three Europeans. Can grasp a man at the breast and back
between their palms, and lift him at arms’ length. Never eat meat. 14. The trappists of Kentucky. Labour ech day twelve hours. No cases of cancer and liver
disease. Hardly any sickness. Live to great age. When the Western fever and
cholera have raged about them, they were exempt,—not one case of sickness. Food,
vegetables and milk.
Nor do these statements as to masses of men exhaust the subject; though it
must be admitted they make out a splendid case for grains and vegetables as against
beef and luxuries. As facts making against the necessity of a meat diet, we think
them victorious. Whether they prove more, we do not discuss. But, besides these
cases, the doctor adduces others of individuals which are valuable. He alludes to the
great world-geniuses, Pythagoras, Plato, Newton (when at his heaviest work), and
Descartes, who managed to subsist their minds and bodies to boot without patronising
the butcher. To one Golonel Twitchell, who found himself a bankrupt. He made a
resolution to eat no meat or rich food till he had paid his debts. A very blessed
resolution, worthy of being followed in honest Boston. Had been troubled with cold
feet and little coughs. But, bravo I his bread and water helped him to perfect health
and a fortune. To Colonel Haskett. In perfect health. Walked two thousand miles
in ninety days, on fifteen, eighteen, twenty ounces of bread, with one or two quarts
of water, per diem. To Dr. R. Jackson, a British surgeon. He boasted that he
had worn out two British armies in two wars, and could wear out a third. He never
ate meat. To the Arabs of the desert. Perfectly healthy. Live, some of them, to
200 years. They subsist on very moderate quantities of camel’s milk. On so little,
in fact, that sometimes, upon an autopsy, their stomachs are found greatly contracted.
These Arabs are as hardy and fiery as their splendid horses. Finally, he tells the story
of a miser and his new wife. At forty, the miser proposed marriage with a rich widow
*
The widow possessed the blessing of wealth, but not health. His protestations of
affection were the strongest. “ He loved the very ground she walked on ” (she was
a large holder of real estate). But the widow was out of health. Constitution
shattered. Very much reduced. Stomach used up. The marriage took place. And
her ardent lover, whether, as was surmised, to bring a seasonable issue to her exist
ence, and thus get the property, or to keep her and himself from debts at the
butcher’s and grocer’s, proceeded at once to put her on low diet. She descended to
corn-meal bread, hasty-pudding, and boiled potatoes. But the miser’s ambition over
leaped itself. The widow become healthy, and added to her life fifteen years. So
much, then, for a simple diet. In fact, from a moral point of view, the doctor is
sure that an unstimulating diet of grains tends directly to make people calm, pure,
happy. He alludes to the beautiful type, the Quaker family; cheerful, healthy,
moral; eating, of course, little meat. And to a flesh-eating and most fierce Auburn
prisoner. He was most dangerously violent; but at once became quiet and docile on
a bread and vegetable diet. It was the only thing which would bring him to terms]
The world at large, therefore, attests to the fact that hardihood and health may go
with the grains and fruits. The cutlet and turtle may be very nice and palatable, but
labour can go on bravely without them.
�AND VEGETARIAN MESSENGER.
117
But we must not dismiss the doctor’s book quite yet. His second cardinal rule as
ttrhealth refers to quantity. He insists on a moderate amount of food for the maximum
of health. Especially does he insist on this for the ailing person, and for that unfortunate individual among the class who carries in his body a bottomless pit, a bad
itomach. He admits that a man may drink deeply and advance to ninety, or eat
heartily and live as long. But do you want brilliant nerves, clear tissues, blood that
can leap and bound because unclogged by the weight of an august dinner, a brain
whose tides of light will run through the year with little ebb ? then, he says, look
to the amount of what you eat. And if you are a melancholy, pulled-down repro
bate of a dyspeptic, here, here is your salvation. We will close what we have to
say by giving a few of his capital illustrations upon the point.
First, as to the general matter of quantity. He thinks that from one to two
pounds a day furnish sufficient nutriment for the body to do its work. And facts
which we have gleaned from other sources lead us to believe that his rule could be
made universal, and the race be better off. It is said that in Central Brazil there
are tribes who are as muscular as any men to be found among the Caucasians, and
as hard labourers too. They eat but one light meal a day. A cup of coffee takes
the place of the others. The Egyptian peasantry are a very fine class of men.
Hire them for a Nile expedition. They will bake their bad flour in a heated hole in
the ground, throw the rock-like lump into the boat, work all day at the oar, or at
the pole or line, and then, chipping off a piece of the bread, as big as an orange,
with an axe, will soak it in the muddy Nile, and eat it as an abundant supper.
Breakfast, the same. In many parts of India, too,, where the labourers compare
quite favourably with the English, their diet is almost exclusively rice, and small
at that. Four cents a day pays their wages. They will live on one, and lay up
the other three. John Wesley did enormous work. He averaged eighteen
hours a day in labour. Rode thousands of miles (seven hours a day for months
on horseback). Preached thousands of sermons (often five a day.) Published
over forty volumes. And lived strong till ninety. Jonathan Edwards was a
great student. What he accomplished we know. His allowance was a pound
for a day. Many English poorhouses and workhouses give out daily rations
of two and three pounds. The work done and health accruing are not the maxi
mum. But those work and poor houses where the daily allowance of a pound and
a half is given make the best exhibit of work, and health too. We all know of the
alertness and military prowess of the Bedouins. Yet the majority of them eat but
six ounces of food a day. Often six or seven dates soaked in melted butter give
them all their food for twenty-four hours. The addition of a little ball of rice is
considered a luxury. The case of an English captain is cited. He was taken
prisoner at Algiers. He lived nine months on one pound Of black-bread and a
pitcher of water a day. Moreover he did hard work. Yet he was perfectly well.
A Mr. Reed lived twenty-eight days on thirty pounds of corn. Stronger than ever
at the end of the four weeks. He alludes also to several cases where men have
>lived for years healthfully and happily on apples alone. But, without mentioning
more, what we have shown ought to be conclusive. And when we consider the
feasting habits both of past and present^ and their consequences, stupidity of mind,
loathsome disease of body; when we remember that letter of Cicero, describing a
supper at his house,—his illustrious guest, the bald first Caesar, preparing for the
battle at the board by an emetic taken just before the repast, .that he might feast
high and long; when we recall that famous German Krocher who put down into
his capacious stomach a whole calf in twenty-four hours; the hungry Texans in
the mountains, grumbling because they could get but seven pounds of Buffalo
meat for each man per diem; and the numberless great suppers of everyday occur
rence, paid for by precious headaches, colds, neuralgias, restless nights and fevers,
and followed by other not very pleasant consequences, poor sermons, poor briefs,
poor fields, poor money-drawers,—these melancholy things should cast a light upon
the fact as to the alliance of simplicity of diet with health and happiness, and make
men cease to be fools at their meals.
One word more for the sick man. We have current some very delightful rules
as to the healing art. One is, for example, stuff a cold. A second, fill up the
body, if you feel weak. A third, decidedly Napoleonic, is, a man, like an army,
moves on its stomach. And the joke is, a person seems to use these charming rules
�118
THE DIETETIC REFORMER
all the more as he grows sicker and weaker, until he winds up with a fever or dis
eased bronchial tube. Now we venture to say that in New England every year
thousands fling themselves into graves by their excesses at the table. Nay,
thousands do it, believing the excess a necessity. And we are sure that the saving
gospel to thousands of invalids around us is, “Limit your diet. Don’t starve.
Don’t eat sawdust nor drink skim-milk. But cut off a respectable portion from
every meal.” Look at these rules. Stuff a cold! The very condition of a cold’s
departure is that the system must be freed from an excess of solids and liquids.
Feed up, if you feel weak 1 The very thing which often makes weakness is too
much food ; the chemical laboratory of the stomach becomes used, and needs rest;
and to eat adds to the weakness. We never work a weary limb to get strength.
We let it be quiet. And of the two kinds of overwork for the poor body, common
labour and the overtaxing the chemical power of the assimilative and digestive
organs, we know that where one man gives out from the first fault, fifty give out
from the second. Work a battery of the chemist to excess, and it is done. Give
the inner bodily tissues enormous labour by flinging to them vast quantities of food
to be made into blood and fibre, and these batteries are damaged. But let the
tissues be relieved, and work moderately, and then, soon, daily labour will be
invigorating. The strains which bring disease are not usually on the muscles or
brain, but on the digestive and other internal organs. And now, what the remedy ?
The doctor answers, reduce your feeding. »He tells of a child, quite sick and
feverish, and living, said its mother, in a most careful way. What was the careful
way ? “ Oh ! it has just taken the breast of a chicken, a piece of apple-pie, a slice
of cake, and only a mug of tea ; nothing more.” He mentions a sick student, used
up from a cold and bilious attack. The poor sufferer had been reducing his diet.
Had just eaten only a piece of mince-pie, ditto of squash, two large slices of buttered
bread, a piece of pound-cake, and drank seven cups of tea. Famishing fellow!. A
wonder of abstemiousness! Now perhaps these are uncommon cases. But it is
still true that two-thirds of New England, by leading not an active, robust life, but
a quiet one, by feeding at almost every meal a trifle more than it ought, finds that
in the course of weeks or months, at any rate, years, it has rolled up these trifles,
so as to make a great excess, like the invalid’s fast on pound-cake and the seven
cups. The result in the two classes of cases is the same.
He tried his cure on a miserable asthmatic. Had had in a year a dozen con
vulsive attacks. A short diet of bread and water cured him. He tried a merchant.
Had most severe pains in ,the region of the bowels, and was reduced. His physician
told him to feed up. Accordingly brandy, beef-steak and wine, were largely appealed
to. But no better. While bread and water, in small quantities, cured him, and he
grew fat. A boy was afflicted with constant vomitings for months. Became a
skeleton. Nothing would help. The doctor began treatment by a table-spoonful
of milk a day. Gradually increased the quantity. Was cured. A person was reduced very low from indigestion, with a voracious appetite. The doctor put kim
on four ounces of crackers for eleven days, and five for the next twenty-eight. The
result was, the craving ceased, strength restored. Dr. James Jackson tells of a
convalescent from lung difficulty, who gained flesh on two crackeis a day. We
have all heard of the crusty Englishman, Dr. Abernethy. He probably helped
more of John Bull’s subjects out of bilious troubles than any other physician. And
his one solitary rule for a man sick from indigestion was twelve ounces of coarse
bread per diem, with an interval of six hours between meals. The recipe cured
hundreds. He cites the case of a woman who constantly lost flesh as she increased
her rations, and as constantly gained as she decreased the food to a sPec’flc quan
tity. And now for the case of Jervis Robinson. He was a ship-builder. At
thirty-two he was a profound dyspeptic, weak as water. Tried the filling-up sys
tem ; attacked every day luscious buttered beef-steak; but grew worse At last
tried the radical’s diet. Ate, for four months, three ounces of wheat-meal per day,
one ounce at each meal. For liquid, to a third of a gill of water at each meal, or a
gill a day. At the end of sixty days had lost twenty pounds But bowels became
regular. Kept on his strict diet sixty days more, leaving off the third of a gill of
water for supper. And then, behold! at the end of the two months, on three ounces
of food a day, he had gained twenty pounds. Was well. And, moreover, was
always satisfied with his meals. Now we beg to say that this case is most remarkable
�AND VEGETARIAN MESSENGER.
119 *
and instinctive. Dyspepsia is the small dragon which accompanies a third of the
people of New England. It seems to go with them, like the little dog following in
the street. We are aware of the usual remedy—the pill. The doctor mentions one
senli-martyr who swallowed in four weeks six hundred Brandreth’s pills. And
another who put down one thousand three hundred Morrison Boluses in six months,
or eight a day. We know a man who for twenty years paid out twenty-five hundred
dollars for patent medicines. He took every quack preparation he had ever heard
ofi and the day of his death sent off' for a new medicine. He had emptied into his
stomach four thousand boxes of pills. And finally would buy medicine by the
wholesale, put his pills into a bean-pot, and take a heaping teaspoonful every twentyfour hours. It may be refreshing to know the result of this magnificent dosing.
He finally died. But there is a more excellent way than this. It is the rule as to
Quantity. And we are sure, as blessed old Amos Lawrence used to say, there is
more exhilaration and inspiration to be got from a temperate diet than from all the
baskets of champagne and choice cuts of marbled beef in the world. Louis Cornaro
is, of course, a classic example. At forty he was in consumption, and given up. He
took to a careful diet, and ate for the next fifty years but twelve ounces of food a
day, drinking but the same number of ounces of liquid—two tumblers of wine.
Twice he deviated from his rigorous rule, and paid a severe penalty in each case.
But the diet made him strong and happy. At eighty he wrote a book on the plea
sures of temperance. And, moreover, at forty he was poor, though a nobleman.
But after recovery he purchased a farm, did his farm work on the twelve ounces,
and grew rich. It is known, too, that our ven.erablfi Dr, Jackson (a name never to
be mentioned without respect), considerably changed his views in later years, as to
the matter of quantity and kind of food in connection with lung diseases. He
believed that in very many cases a diet of very moderate quantity, and, moreover,
mostly vegetable, would furnish a far better remedy than any other. And the reason
is clear. In consumption, the system is weak. The organs are enfeebled. Part of
the chemical apparatus has collapsed. And the remedy lies in applying the same
law to the body which you would apply to a horse-wearied out, or a brain exhausted
from thinking. It wants rest. Give the internal organs little to do in the way of
assimilation and digestion ; let nature, the great curer, have time to clean out foul
matter from the tissues and great organs, and then assert its own force. Do this,
and you may expect fruitful results. Finally, the testimony of another distinguished
physician is in point—that ornament of his profession, that representative of our
bright gift of brain, that Christian man, Dr. John Ware. Unfortunately, he has left
us for the higher and holier walk. But his magnificent power of judgment will
Bong be remembered in Boston. At first, the doctor treated cases of indigestion in
the old way; believed in the generous breakfast, dinner, and supper; generally
advised the dyspeptic to eat at least a pound and a half each day; nay, would advise
this quantity with medicine, rather than less without it. But later he revolutionised
his system, and confessed his mistake : and his own later diet is not a bad prescrip
tion for all suffering from that unamiable devil, a torpid liver. Breakfast, one cup
of tea (or coffee), one baked apple, one thin slice of toast. Dinner, a piece of meat
as large as your two fingers, one tablespoonful of squash, and one of potato, or their
equivalent. No more. No bread, no pie, no pudding, no dessert, nothing more,
except part of a tumbler of water. Supper, a baked apple, and at times a cup of
tea. Before retiring, took a cup of milk boiled with half a cup of the hulls of wheat
(which, by the way, to our own disadvantage, we give our horses under the name of
“ shorts’’)- That new diet he used to remark made him a different man. Cured his
costiveness (most obstinate). Gave him strength and cheerfulness. Checked a
disease of the brain that for many years he was sure was in progress. Allowed him
to see and visitKany patients during the day, and to study into midnight. In fact,
added to his life, and took from him years of pain and depression. Now, when it is
remembered that our usual diet goes up to two pounds, and often to four, sometimes
to six and eight, and that a sick man or woman is no wonder in our community, but
is almost the average type of the population, we submit that, in the great light of
the cases we have stated, we need here a vast reform. We need, as the good Dr.
Mussey says, a more simple diet, and in much less quantity.
I
,
<
<
||
�'120
THE DIETETIC REFORMER
“SLINK” AT SWINTON.
“ Slink” is a word used to describe unsound or diseased meat. “ Slink” is, in fact,
“ shoddy” meat, and, like “shoddy,” “slink” is of various qualities and prices.
The “ slink” trade is an important one, and many men have realised fortunes in it.
The cattle plague, whilst it ruined thousands, made hundreds. It will hardly be
credited, but it is nevertheless true, that no matter what the disease, or how the
animal has met with its death, the carcass is too valuable to be buried, but is con
verted into food. “ Pig’s cheek,” “ brawn,” “ sausages,” “ veal pies,” are all more
or less under the influence of “ slink.” Manufacturers of these articles exist out
side our towns, and it is chiefly in the cooked state that this abominable traffic is
carried on. Milk cans are the favourite means of conveying “ slink” from place
to place. They attract no attention, and are not liable to be inspected. Some may
be inclined to discredit our statements, but it is only a month or two ago that a
celebrated veal-pie man was fined for having in his possession several putrid calves ;
and every week some person appears in our police courts for exposing diseased cattle
or meat for sale. Last week the Salford magistrates fined one I. Bury £10 and
costs, for bringing a diseased heifer to market; for which offence he is now taking
the alternative of “ three months” in prison.
The Nuisances and Cattle Market Inspectors reduce the live “slink” made in
our large towns to a minimum, but they are almost powerless to prevent the impor
tation of dressed and cooked offal. The inhuman dealers in this traffic are well
read in the law. They know that an inspector’s power terminates with the city
or borough boundary, and just over the line they bid him defiance. In the same
way, just let a cart loaded with “ slink” cross from Salford to Manchester, or vice
versa, and the authorities of either cannot follow and seize it.. They can only give
information to their brother officials. In giving this information much time is lost,
and the fox generally manages to get to earth. Again, only officers of health and
inspectors of nuisances can legally detain suspicious meat, &c. A policeman, as
such, has no right to stop any butcher’s cart or examine any slaughter-house. The
law wants extending here ; and it ought to be lawful for any policeman or inspector
of nuisances to seize any unwholesome meat wherever he may find it. If such
were the case, the “ slink” factories in the neighbourhood would soon be stamped
out. The sickness caused by the fearful amount of bad meat that is sold must be
considerable. Fancy eating joints of meat cut from a cow which has died of puer
peral fever, consumption, pleuro-pneumania, abcesses, and hosts of other com
plaints. We are just learning that consumption is an innocuable complaint, and
therefore the fair inference is that it may also be propagated by means of eating
meat saturated with tubercle. No disease is so catching or fatal as puerperal fever,
and yet we are told on most incontrovertible authority that hardly a cow dies in
or after calving, but is dressed and sold for food. We could enter into many more
details, but they are so disgusting that we will spare our readers their recital, and
only say hardly a parasite exists which cannot be, and is not, propagated in
the human frame by means of unsound meat.
The reason we have called attention to this disagreeable subject this week is
because only the other day a case occurred at Swinton, which well illustrates the
difficulties which surround the seizure of “ slink.” A cow was seized at Swinton
as unfit for food. The nuisance inspector seized it; and to assist and confirm his
judgment, Inspector Bird, of Salford, and Mr. Bostock, veterinary surgeon, were
also called to examine the animal. The verdict was an unanimous one against the
cow. And so the carcase was destroyed. For giving an honest professional opinion,
Mr. Bostock has been favoured with the following specimens of the Swinton Art of
Polite Letter Writing:—
.
,
“ Swinton, August 10th, 69.
“ Mr. Bostock, Sir,—I write to inform you that a public meeting of the ratepayers
of. the Swinton Local Board will be holden at the Bull’s Head on Wednesday evening
next, at seven o’clock, to condemn the proceedings and conduct of Bird, Bostock,
and Claridge, and the shamefull Robbery which by them was committed last week,
and to take further proceedings with respect to the same and to the removal of
Claridge.—Yours respy.,
“A Ratepayer.
�AND VEGETARIAN MESSENGER.
“Your conduct in this affair has met with public condemnation from all Classes
Bffine most respectable Ratepayers.”
“ If you think your qualification worth defending you had better attend tor, it
will be severely tested by Public Opinion. Against other Respectable gentlemen.
Inspectors Claridge and Bird have also been subject to much personal abuse.
The cow in question was very much diseased, lungs and kidneys both being unsound,
especially the lungs.
.
,
Whether or no the “ indignation meeting” was held we do not know, but tor the
fair fame of the Swinton ratepayers we will hope not. The Swinton folks it seems
are indignant” over many things. They object to their Local Board; in other
words they object to being compelled to be less filthy. They cannot understand
being “penny wise and pound foolish,” and so they were to have an “indignation
meeting” against the Local Board. At this meeting we suppose an attempt would
be made to drag in the consumptive cow. If we could have ordered matters, all
present should have been compelled to sup on this cow ; that would have cured them.
Even supposing those indignant Swintonians should prefer eating diseased meat,
we cannot allow them to indulge their unnatural propensities. We should have to
keep their sick, and we know that health depends in a great measure on good food.
PAb-o’-th’-Yate’s” friend’s cow hung herself, and Ab profited thereby; but honest
Ab would not have iled his children’s hair with dripping from a consumptive beast.
We should be happy to contribute our mite towards sending f a ratepayer” to
the village school, for he evidently knows nothing.of two out of the “three B’s;”
and in all probability he has no need to know aught of the last one, for the ‘ sBnk ’
trade is so profitable a one as to render ’rithmejbi©-superfluous.—From, the Shadow
(Manchester).
_______________ _________
Milk Diet.—The general indications for its use are so well laid down by
Niemeyer, that I shall quote what he says:—In the selection of suitable diet for
consumptive patients, the old rules, derived partly from common experience, agree
completely with the views now received in physiology respecting nourishment and
renewal of tissue. All the articles of food especially recommended to consumptive
patients contain large quantities of fat, or of substances which form it, and propor
tionately little of protein substances. This selection corresponds with the empiri
cally ascertained fact, that the production of urea, or the conversion of nitrogenous
elements, is increased by a large supply of protein substances; while,on the other
hand, the conversion and expenditure of the organs and tissues most important to
the organism is reduced by an abundant supply of fat and fat-forming articles.
Therefore, the freest possible use of milk cannot be too strongly recommended to
phthisical patients. But it is entirely superfluous, and indeed erroneous,, to remove
the casein from the milk and make it be drunk in the shape of whey; this, can only
be necessary in the rare cases when the stomach bears whey well and milk badly.
When I frequently order my patients to drink three times daily a pint of milk warm
from the cow, my only object is that, the milk should not be robbed of any of. its
constituents or skimmed before it is drunk.” Warm milk is like other warm fluids,
useful in chronic bronchitis. Milk is also an agent of very great value in affections
of the stomach and of the intestines. It is easy to see how it is useful when we do
not wish to give these organs much work to do; in chronic catarrhs of the stomach,
and in perforating ulcer, milk is constantly used with great advantage. In infants,
when amylaceous food is given too early, a return to milk is often the appropriate
remedy. It is also useful in chronic diarrhoea and dysentery; in the chronic diarrhoea of children its use is familiar; and it is an old and rather neglected remedy in
dysentery. If used with care, it is a valuable adjunct in many stages of the disease,
and I believe that, if more freely and systematically used, it would be found to be
one of the best cures for the obstinate diarrhoeas and other sequelae of tropical .dy
sentery. Of course the milk must be taken with care, and it must be ascertained
whether it is digested or not. If given in too large quantities, it may overload the
stomach and increase the diarrhoea. To improve general constitutional states, there
is no necessity, as in Dr. Karell’s employment of it, for the milk being drunk at
precise hours and in precise quantities. The chief object is to drink the milk in
such quantities as are digestible. There is no virtue in drinking milk warm from
the cow, if you do not like it. It is better to have it previously boiled.
�122
THE DIETETIC REFORMER
The Philosophy of Marriage.—Few people, in estimating the happiness of a
married couple, make due allowance for human imperfection. No two human
beings can be brought into the intimate relationship of husband and wife without
the occasional development of something discordant. Only perfect, absolutely sin
less persons, could live absolutely perfect lives together; and such men and women
can never be found in this world; and as in another world there will be no marrying,
absolutely perfect marriages can never be realised, either in this world or in that
which is to come. But are not the vast majority of married persons quite as happy
as an equal number of unmarried ones? Nay, more, are not the great majority of
married people as happy in their married state as they would be unmarried ? And
still more, are they not as happy with each other as they would be with anybody
else ? By a change of partners, they might get rid of some one or more causes of
disturbances between them—some constitutional defects or infirmities, or some dis
agreeable cherished habits; but they would find in other parties other causes of
disturbance quite as serious, though of an entirely different kind; so that, after all,
it might be very difficult to say on which side there was the greatest amount of
happiness or misery. The fact is that men and women are susceptible of only a
given amount of contentment and happiness in any condition of life; and marry
whom they will, they can never exceed their capacity for enjoyment. Many people
are foolish enough to imagine that marriage is the sovereign cure for all the dis
quietudes and miseries of life; and when they get married, and yet find their
favourite panacea does not work perfectly, they jump to the conclusion that it is
because their marriage was not a true one—that it was ill-assorted, and therefore an
unhappy one; whereas the only difficulty is, that both husband and wife are
human—neither divine nor angelic—and have, like all other human beings, more
or less of sinful infirmity about them.
Physical Influence of Sunday Rest.—“ I have practised as a physician
between thirty and forty years, and during the early part of my life, as the physician
of a public medical institution, I had charge of the poor in one of the most populous
districts of London. I have had occasion to observe - the effect of the observance
and non-observance of the seventh day of rest during that time. I have been in
the habit during a great many years of considering the uses of the Sabbath, and of
observing its abuses. The abuses are chiefly manifested in labour and dissipation.
Its use, medically speaking, is that of a day of rest. As a day of rest I view it as
a day of compensation for the inadequate restorative power of the body under con
tinued labour and excitement. A physician always has respect to the preservation
of the restorative power, because if this once be lost, his healing office is at an end.
A physician is anxious to preserve the balance of circulation as necessary to the
restorative power of the body. The ordinary exertions of man run down the circu
lation every day of his life; and the first general law of nature, by which God
prevents man from destroying himself, is the alternating night and day, that repose
may succeed action. But although the night apparently equalises the circulation,
yet it does not sufficiently restore its balance for the attainment of a long life.
Hence, one day in seven, by the bounty of Providence, is thrown in as a day of com
pensation, to perfect by its repose the animal system. I consider, therefore, that
in the bountiful provision of Providence for the preservation of human life, the
Sabbatical appointment is not as it has been sometimes theologically viewed, simply
a precept, partaking of the nature of a political institution, but that it is to be num
bered amongst the natural duties, if the preservation of life be admitted to be a duty,
and a premature destruction of it a suicidal act.’’—J. R- Farre, M.D.
Bread without Grinding Corn. —The Daily News says, a method has been dis
covered of making bread without grinding the corn, and a patent has been taken out
for the process. It is said that whereas in the process for making bread from flour
there is much waste, so that lOOlbs. of grain yields only 1121bs. of bread ; according
to the new process lOOlbs. of grain will produce 145 or 1501bs. of bread. The new
bread is not only increased in quantity, but is also said to be of better quality. Accord
ing to the old process much, of the gluten was decomposed and lost in the heat of
grinding. It is preserved when grinding is unnecessary; and the new mode of fermen
tation contributes greatly to the whiteness of the bread. Of course we give no opinion
on the invention, whether it does or does not proceed on sound principles ; or whether,
if the principles be sound, their application is practicable.
�AND VEGETARIAN MESSENGER.
133
VEGETARIAN QUERIES.
To the Editor of the Dietetic Reformer.
■ Dear Sir,—I shall be glad if you would permit me to ask a few questions on
practical matters which may possibly be of service to many others like myself, if
some old practised Vegetarians will be at the little trouble to reply to them from
their larger experience.
Rice.—How is this to be ground ? In what sort of mill—what is its cost—and
where obtained? In an ordinary steel flour mill it grinds with great difficulty, and
seems in danger of injuring the mill. It could be used in various ways, but only
safely if ground at home.
Earley and Rye.—Will these grind in an ordinary steel grinding mill used for
corn ?
L Cocoa.—How may the nuts be ground ? I have heard of a cocoa mill: Does it
work satisfactorily, and to the best advantage? An iron pestle and mortar (the
nuts, pestle, and mortar made hot, and then pounded) is said to be the most success
ful method of preparation, as it is then pasty, and the oil comes out.. If so, where
can such pestle and mortar be had, and at what cost ? I do not consider the boiling
of the nib as satisfactory, as well as being a very long process.
Oatmeal.—Is there any simple means of preparing this for domestic use from
the oat, at home. Any simple plan of drying and doing the- necessary decortication
or crushing ?
I Perhaps these are enough for one number.
An Outside Friend.
INFANTS’ FOOD.
To the Editor of the Dietetic Reformer.
Dear Sir, —I wish to let you know what has Recently occurred here, proving the
wisdom and correctness of Dr. Sylvester Graham’s advice for bringing up infants
by hand. An infant, for which the mother had no milk, and which they were
attempting to bring up by hand, was shown to me when a few weeks old. It was
puny, weak, and sickly. It always cried when an attempt was made to feed it, and
could not hold up its head, which hung on one side from weakness. On inquiry, I
ibund that it was fed on gruel, made of fine flour, mixed with ;unboiled milk, and
heavily sweetened with brown sugar; and that latterly, to still its peevishness and
cause it to sleep, a small quantity of rum was added to this. The sugar was given to
prevent costiveness which, otherwise, it suffered from. 1 It was acknowledged that
the child was getting worse daily. “ Put the sugar in your own tea," said I.
“ Throw the rum out of the door, and send up your daughter to me immediately for
a bowl of whole meal wheaten flour, the same as my own bread is made of.” This
I directed them to make into gruel, according to Graham, thus:—“ With a tablespobnful of this meal, and a pint of pure water, make a thin gruel, which should
be boiled about fifteen minutes, and then about a pint of new milk fresh from, the
cow should be added
the milk being of course unboiled, as before. These direc
tions being followed, and the child being fed accordingly, in a week there was
visible improvement, at thosame time that red blotches, like those on the face of a
drunkard, began to appear on the infant’s face. All costiveness had now gone. At
the end of six weeks from the commencement of change of diet the flesh of the
child was firm and hard, its skin clear and bright, and it was perfectly good-tempered and quiet. Its weight, too, was about double what it was a few weeks before.
The red blotches on the child’s face, which appeared after the spirit was given up,
were to be attributed to its constitution having gained strength by that time from its
fiMd sufficient to throw out the poisonous spirit, and they soon went away altogether.
The infant is now at least fully as strong as the generality of children of the same age.
Narberth, S. W.
A. B.
�124
THE DIETETIC REFORMER
DIETETIC SUGGESTIONS INVITED.
To the Editor of the Dietetic Reformer.
Dear Sir,—I should very much like some one to give a few suggestions, rational
and reasonable, as to particulars of the daily consumption of food, in kind and
quantity, for breakfast, dinner, and evening, adapted for a man and wife living on
£200 a-year. I believe a few such suggestions, founded on individual experience,
supplied through the medium of the Dietetic Reformer, would very much help the
cause. I am aware that it may be said that stomachs vary ; but let the examples
furnished be suited for persons in good health and no idlers. If thou canst give me
what I ask, well, if not, can thou give me the name of some one with whom I
could make free to write to ?
I will give thee my fare for to-day :—Breakfast: 5oz. of bread and butter, and
two cups of homoeopathic cocoa. Dinner: Two roasted potatoes; a quarter of a
baked rice pudding (made of 1 quart of milk, Jib. of rice with a little tapioca, and
1 egg); and finished with a slice of bread and butter. Teatime : 6oz. of bread and
butter, and two cups of homoeopathic cocoa. I make my cocoa with one cup of
water and one cup of milk.
I am 84 years of age and my wife 92 ; we have lived together 60 years ; and
are both able to do a day’s work. I can walk a mile in a quarter of an hour.
Have we not much to be thankful for ? So I am.
J. B.
Substitute foe Cod-Liver Oil.— A correspondent, writing from Edinburgh,
says:—“You will be glad to know that Oleum Arachnis (Earth-Nut Oil) is an
advantageous substitute for cod-liver oil, in many cases, especially for children.’’
SLeptfe, fa.
AMERICA.
The American Association for the Advancement of Science held its annual meeting
at Salem, Massachusetts, in August last., From the report of the proceedings of the
Association, furnished by the correspondent of the Toronto Daily Globe, we make the
following extract:—
Your correspondent, not possessing the power of ubiquity, had no difficulty in
making up his mind to leave the learned speakers in section A (on Mathematics,
Physics, and Chemistry) to the regular reporters, and betake himself to the more
attractive session of sectioii B, where the interesting subject of that bugbear of
pork-eaters, the Trichina spiralis, was the first on the list. The subject was intro
duced by Professor J. Baker Edwards, of Montreal, whose remarks may be briefly
related as follows:—
, tt ...
The occurrence, he stated, of two fatal cases of Tnchimasis at Hamilton,
Ontario, and the successful treatment of several cases at Montreal, had drawn fresh
attention to the parasite causing this disease, and accordingly he thought that a
short account of its natural history might be interesting. The cysts containing
this parasite had been first observed and examined microscopically by 1 ledman m
1822 ; these were found in human muscle after death, and occasioned much specu
lation as to their real nature. In 1835 they were minutely examined by Mr James
Paget, and described and named by Professor Owen, but for some years no further
clue as to their origin was obtained. In 1841 it Was found that dogs fed on parts of
a badger containing these worms became infested with them in their muscles ; but
it remained for Zenker in 1860 to show that the human body becomes affected by
these creatures after eating pork containing them. Since that time thousands of
deaths have been traced to this cause, which had previously been attributed to
various other diseases. Trichiniasis was now fully established as one of the ills
that flesh is heir to.” In several hospital examinations of human bodies after death
from various causes, from 2 to 3 per cent of adults were found to contain old en
crusted capsules containing these parasites, showing that the disease existed at
some previous period. In Chicago a medical commission found 2 per cent ot the
�AND VEGETARIAN MESSENGER.
1W
pork offered for sale affected in this manner. Thus it may be inferred that the dis
ease occurred much more frequently than had previously been suspected, but that
it was only in exceptional cases that it caused fatal or even serious results. The
Professor then proceeded to give an account of a case that occurred in Montreal last
March, and which, being speedily diagnosed of a slight nature, was successfully
treated. His description and remarks are of so much general interest and value,
that they may very well be reported here, though at the risk of making this letter
unduly long:—
p ** On Wednesday, the 24th of Mareh, a family in a boarding-house partook of
some hastily fried ham. Within an hour afterwards two of the adults felt nauseated,
And had some pain in the stomach. One took a large dose of brandy, and vomited
his dinner ; the other felt only abdominal pain, spasms, and faintness. He returned
from his work and went to bed. During the night his wife and wife’s mother felt
ill, and suffered from pains in the bowels, together with great feverishness and
Ehirst. During the following day, five other persons, who had partaken of the same
meal, suffered more or less from similar symptoms, and in the evening of Thursday
called in a physician, who, after careful enquiry, diagnosed Trichiniasis, and called
in a second opinion on the case. On Good Friday a slice of ham was submitted for
microscopic examination, in which Professor Edwards discovered, after some hours’
investigation, several characteristic specimens of Trichina spiralis. By Monday
morning, with the assistance of his friend, Mr? Ritchiej he had found several groups
of Trichina, both in the free state and partially, as well as fully, encysted. These
were during the same day shown to a considerable'number-of medical friends.
“ It was evident that the disease was recent in .the young pig from which the
ham was taken, and that, being in the free and semi-encysted condition, the worms
were in a condition to be aroused into action and activity in a much shorter time
than had they been fully and calcareously encysted.. According to Virchow and
Benker, the period of incubation of the cyst in the stomach is from six to eight days.
This had been erroneously interpreted to mean that such a period must elapse before
any marked symptoms can be recognised. < Such a period of time, however, is meant
to be inclusive of the reproducing power of each individual, from whose body suc
cessive broods of young, numbering from 100 to 200, are discharged. Dr. T. S.
Cobbold had found a period of sixty-nine hours amply .sufficient for the development
of the young muscle flesh worms of the human subject . into the sexually mature
adult Trichina of the dog. If all the worms were calcareously encysted a delay of
from three to six days might be expected before intestinal irritation was a marked
symptom. But in cases where the worms were young and free in the muscle,
development might take place in a few hours, and rapid multiplication take place
before other encysted worms were released from their capsules.
“ Thus a succession of fresh irritations to the muscular and nervous system
might-be expected from the first few hours to a period of- eight or ten weeks. In
the fatal cases examined in Chicago and Hamilton, no-singlecase of encysted trichina
was found in the flesh, but in the Montreal cases one or two distinct and complete
cysts were extracted from the man’s leg. This was eight weeks after eating the
pork, and when the symptoms had somewhat abated, but considerable pain still felt
in the muscles. The great shock to the system, which frequently terminates
fatally, appears to result from excessive generation of the worms at any one period ;
thus young and healthy persons are frequently killed sooner than older and more
feeble persons, the reason being that in the former case probably more food is eaten,
digestion is more rapid, nausea more readily overcome by active exertion, and the
breeding of the worms becomes excessive and continuous. In the Hamilton cases
the young woman died in three weeks, whilst her mother survived six weeks after
eating the fatal repast.
“ In 1866 some valuable experiments were conducted, in reference to the propa
gation of these worms, by Dr. T. Spencer Cobbbld, whose researches on Cestoid
Entozoa place him at the head of English authprities on such subjects. After
feeding animals with trichinous food, seven experiments on birds all proved negative.
fThree sheep, two dogs, one pig, and one mouse gave also negative results. Nine
cases were successful, viz., four dogs, two cats, one pig, one' guinea pig, and one
hedgehog. While we might, therefore, conclude that birds and herbivorous
mammals were very unlikely subjects for infection by this means, it was also found
�126
THE DIETETIC REFORMER
that other animals, as the dog and pig for instance, might partake of the food, and
yet escape infection. This helped to explain the recorded facts, that large parties
have eaten of trichinous food in company, and some have been killed, others have
suffered slightly, and again some escaped altogether.
“ Moreover, in the human objects examined post mortem, where the disease had
not proved fatal, in some cases the cysts were by no means numerous, whilst in
others they had been estimated at from forty to one hundred millions. The exces
sive alarm which was apt to seize the public mind by the discovery of a case here
and there was not, therefore, justified by the facts when properly understood. At
the same time, whatever means could be adopted by the public authorities to prevent
its becoming a familiar disease in our new dominion, should be forthwith adopted.”
At the close of this interesting paper, which was listened to with great attention,
Professor Agassiz stated that he thought parasites existed in all kinds of meat, and
that everybody who eats fish, eats hundreds of them; hence only one of two alter
natives could be adopted to escape injury—either to stop eating flesh and fish, or to
have these articles of food well cooked. With this high authority the reader may
rest assured that, however unpleasant the idea may be, the Trichina Spiralis is quite
harmless as an article of food, provided only it be well roasted or boiled.
The next paper, by Mr. Meehan, was of a botanical character, and of no parti
cular general interest. He was followed by Professor B. W. Hawkins, of New
York, who made some remarks on “ Visual Education.” After referring to the
inability of the majority of mothers to answer satisfactorily the questions constantly
asked by intelligent children, he advised the education of the powers of observation,
rather than those of memory, and recommended the establishment of museums in
connection with the public parks of large cities, so that healthy exercise and
amusement might be combined with instruction. Such institutions, if properly con
ducted, would, he thought, do more good than reformatory establishments, and
would also enable boys to remain longer under the good influence of their mothers
than was the case with the present imperfect system. Professor Agassiz followed by
expressing his belief that we should, ere long, see a great change in our educational
system, and that the basis of it would be the contemplation of the works of nature,
and no longer the study of languages, the study of the human mind, or the process
of mathematical reasoning. Although these must form a part of liberal education,
they should come after the organs had been trained in seeing through observation,
and the mind taught to argue by comparing observations; that was the first great
step in education, and all that followed in scholarship should come afterwards.
geHttos oft JMuo nf gwK
Proceedings of the London’Co-operative Congress, 1869. Price Is. London : F.
Pitman, 20, Paternoster How, E.C.
This large and neat pamphlet of 118 pages, is edited by J. M. Ludlow, and contains
the proceedings of the Co-operative Congress held in London, at the Theatre of the
Society of Arts, on the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd of June, 1869. There are also appendices
containing statistical details respecting societies represented at the Congress; papers
by Mr. Malcolm Macleod and Mr. James Samuelson and other information. Those
*
who take interest in this important movement will be greatly interested with this
report of Proceedings of the London Congress.
The Anti-Vaccinator. Edited by Henby Pitman, Manchester. London : F. Pit
man, 20, Paternoster Row. Manchester : John Heywood. Price Id.
This is a weekly organ of the new movement against compulsory vaccination. We
have before us the first six numbers, and find them replete with facts, arguments, and
reports of progress. No. 6 opens with an able and spirited letter from Professor
Newman on “ Vaccination viewed Politically,” which will be found in another page of
the present number of the Dietetic Reformer. The movement seems to be making
headway ; and we hope will soon result in forcing the question upon Parliament for
a most sifting inquiry leading to a repeal of the obnoxious Act.
Human Nature. London: J. Burns. Monthly.
A publication, thoroughgoing and progressive on dietary questions, and equally so in
philosophy and religion. It includes spiritualism, on which we have nothing to say in
these pages.
1
�AND VEGETARIAN MESSENGER.
AN AUTUMN RAMBLE.
One autumn afternoon, my friend and I
Escaped from city smoke and ceaseless roar
To breathe, along with nature’s breath, somewhat
Of Nature’s loving, beauteous tenderness.
Along the river’s meadowy marge we strayed
By cot and farm to where its banks rise high,
With overhanging trees, which fain would dip
Their thirsty branches far below into
The rippling, glistening wave. And as we went
We spoke of man, self doomed tffijfedless toil
In mine, and mart, and mill, with little time
(And less desire) for art or poesy ;
But rather bent at best on wanton play,
And oft engulfed in drunken orgies wild
And Cyprian vice. Anon we turn aside
Through clough and pSai by many an ashen bush
Tn coral berries clad, to where ’mid groves
And gardens stands serene the stately hall.
The fuchsias hang in showers, and ripening fruit
Makes glad the eye and scents the whispering
While many a marble vase and antique gem
Recalls the classic memories of the past.
In winding lanes we meet the lowing kine
Which stand and gaze’ with gentle, wistful orbs,
Nor dreS@Egit we have no intent to wield
The butcher’s axe to feed a pampered taste.
Returning by the stream as fast the sun
Sinks down ’mid clouds and woods of transient gold,
Our lengthening shadows stretch across the path,
And lendj^bmbreitfnt tolbrook. and hedge,
And fluttering heaps of rustling autumn leaves.
In yonder field, new reaped, a startled hare,
Pursued-l^^oejafnotWogs. but men), makes way
Along the hedge straight for the river’s brink,
Nor stayJMfliwt behind, but plunges in,
And swims beneath the bridge; then, panting, rests
Below the pier upon a stony heap—
*
Appearing one itself—until its foes
Approach as if a murderer theljB™^MF
The one a farmer, fork in hand, goes o’eS' The bridge, and waits the foe on th’ other side;
His fellow stays on this—a collier he,
Returning homeward, safety lamp in hand.
The science which had given the lamp had failed
To give him light. He seized a stone, and hurled
It at the terror-stricken thing, which sprang
Once more, though sorely bruised; into the stream,
And sank, at length, despairing and quite spent.
The farmer went to gather golden grain,
Just reaped from gentle Nature’s bounteous lap ;
The collier went his way to tell the tale
To boon companions ; we pursued our path
With one great question weighing down our hearts—
Why man to man and brute should be so vile,
While Nature’s face wears still a fairy smile.
127
�128
THE DIETETIC REFORMER.
Facts fob Smokers. —A fact for the Anti-Tobacco Association is brought out in
a Parliamentary return just issued. The consumption of tobacco in this country is
enormously increasing. Over 41,000,000 pounds’ weight has been consumed in the
United Kingdom in a single year, without taking into account the illicit trade. Thus
1 lb. 5- oz. per head of population is yearly consumed, as compared with only 13J oz.
a quarter of a century ago. Now, we shall not be so ungenerous as to ascribe this
great increase in the quantity of tobacco consumed to the vicious habits with which
some are wont to credit the “ girls of the period.” But it may be as well that our fair
smokers should be made aware of a fact or two concerning the ‘‘fragrant weed.” In
the laboratory of th’e Excise Department certain tests are occasionally made as to the
genuineness of the tobacco sold. Of 118 samples, 88 were found to be adulterated,
and 45 of these contained liquorice ranging in amount from 1 to JO per cent; four
contained liquorice and sugar, varying from 2 to 10 per cent. Among the other
adulterants were oom mon salt, aniseed, starch, brown paper, and an excessive amount
of sand. A few instances have again occurred of “ smoking mixture ” having been
found adulterated with sweetened cavendish. Of course, the Excise authorities do
what they can to check adulteration. Last year they made a raid upon six Irish
manufacturers who supplied English dealers with Irish roll tobacco coated with starch,
which had been coloured to resemble tobacco. Some 28,0001b. of the adulterated
tobacco were seized in Ireland, and 4,0001b. in England; and the penalties and for
feitures amounted to £4,000. Despite all the precautions, however, the revenue is
extensively defrauded, while the people are poisoned by these adulterations, which
will never be stopped until the act is constituted a criminal offence.
The Resurrection Plant.—This is one of the latest curiosities in the plant line.
We obtained one of Mr. Vick, of Rochester, last spring, and it then resembled a
bunch four or five inches in diameter, of curled-up shoots of young cedar, with a small
cluster of thread-like roots depending from the bottom. Placing it in a saucer of
water the bunch unrolled in a few hours, spreading out quite flat, and presented some
what the appearance of a heavy patch of moss. In this state it remained two or three
weeks If the supply of moisture failed for a time, the plant gave warning by
assuming its regular ball-like form. At the end of that time we transplanted it to the
ground and it looked fine and green under the influence of genial showers. But the
weather grew dry, and the resurrection plant rolled itself into a ball and rolled away
before the wind, the roots not having much grasp on the soil. It lay in the sun on the
ground for a month, when we gave it to a friend,, who placed it in a saucer of water,
and lo it spread out its arms again and showed the green colour of vegetable life. An
American paper thus speaks of this singular plant: “These plants are brought from
the southern parts of Mexico. During the rainy Reason they flourish luxuriantly, but
when the dry weather and hot sun scorch the earth, they, too, dry and curl up, and
blow about at the mercy of the wind. To all appearances they are as dead as the
‘ brown and sere leaf,’ but as soon as the rain comes again, the roots suck up the
water the leaves unfold, and assume a beautiful emerald green appearance. No
matter where the plant may be, on a rock, on a tree, or a house-top, wherever the
winds have blown it, there it rests, and being a true temperance plant, it only asks
for water and at once bursts into new life. Having purchased one of these tufts,
and placed it in a soup plate filled with water, the reader will be surprised to see
it gradually unfold and take on a deep green. The leaves are arranged spirally,
and altogether the resurrection plant is the latest curiosity.”—Rural New Yorker.
We are indebted to some German friend for copies of “ Vereins-Blatt fur Freunde der
naturalichen Lebensweise (Vegetariener.)
Emil Weilshauser.—See second page of our cover.
Subscriptions received since our last issue ;—
July 9.
20.
Aug.12.
22.
” 23.
Sep. 25.
C. Hunter, D. R. 2 0 Sep. 25. R. Templeton.. 10
,, 29. Thos. Ashley.. . 2
Charles Hart .. 2 6
J Hull............. 20 0 Oct. 1. J. H. Sweetnam 2
1. J. Ashmore.... 2
Robert Palmer . 10 0
,, 1. A. Bayle .......... 2
John Kershaw . 2 6
„ T. E. Miller.......... 10
J. Templeton ..50
0 Oct. 1. A. Erlebach ....
„ 1. S Stocks ..........
6
For Tracts :
6
6 Sep. 11. J. Robertson ....
,, 29. W. Lawson........
6
„ 29. E. T. Hill ........
0
A. Ireland & Co., Printers, Manchester.
10 0
5 0
0 6
8 0
0 6
�
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The Dietetic Reformer and Vegetarian Messenger. Vol. XXXVL, October, 1869
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Vegetarian Society (Manchester)
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<img src="http://i.creativecommons.org/p/mark/1.0/88x31.png" alt="Public Domain Mark" /><br />This work (The Dietetic Reformer and Vegetarian Messenger. Vol. XXXVL, October, 1869), identified by Humanist Library and Archives, is free of known copyright restrictions.
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LECTURE
ON
VEGETARIANISM.
BY EMERITUS PROFESSOR F. W. NEWMAN.
[Delivered at Gloucester, December 2, 1870; J/r. Price, M.P., in the Chair,
and reprinted from the Dietetic Reformer, January, 1871.]
LONDON:
F. PITMAN, PATERNOSTER ROW.
1871.
Price One Penny, or Five Shillings per Hundred.
�THE VEGETARIAN SOCIETY.
ESTABLISHED A.D. 1847.
$rmtant.
J. Haughton, Esq., J.P., Dublin.
i
Vice^wsi&ents.
i
W. G. Ward, Esq., Ross.
Professor Newman.
i
SrrasuiTf.
John Davie, Esq., Dunfermline.
P^onoratg Sewtsm.
Mr. T. H. Barker, Manchester; Rev. James Clark, 126, Cross Lane, Salford.
g>ecrctarg.
Mr. R. Bailey Walker, 13, Cathedral Close, Manchester.
SLocal specretanes,
i
I
i
London.................
Leeds....................
Glasgow................
Colchester ..........
Dunfermline ......
Hull .............. .
Perth....................
Bury.......................
Plymouth.............
Dublin...................
Bradford.............
Cardiff.................
Mr. G. Dornbusch, 11, Grove-street Road, South Hackney, N.E.
Mr. John Andrew, 14, Bishopgate-street.
Mr. J. Smith.
Mr. John Beach, Military Road.
Mr. J. Clark.
Mr. T. D. Hardgrove, 1, Rutland Place.
Mr. Henry MTntosh, 36, South Methven-street.
Mr. William Hoyle, Tottington.
Mr. E. H. Poster, Homoeopathic Chemist.
Mr. J. A. Mowatt.
Miss M. A. Kellett, Paradise Green, Great Horton.
Mr. J. K. Collett.
^Foreign CTonrsponlRng SwretariYs.
I
Mr. Emil Weilshaeuser, Neustadt, Silesia.
Baboo Keshub Chunder Sen, Calcutta.
Mr. Alfred von Seefeld, Hanover.
Rev. Dr. Taylor, 349, North Ninth-street, Philadelphia.
'
ipHE OBJECTS of the Society are, to induce habits of abstinence from the Flesh |
i
means of tracts, essays, and lectures, proving the many advantages of a physical,
intellectual, and moral character, resulting from Vegetarian habits of Diet; and thus,
to secure, through the association, example, and efforts of its members, the adoption
of a principle which will tend essentially to true civilisation, to universal brotherhood,
and to the increase of human happiness generally.
Constitution. — The Society is constituted of a President, a Treasurer, an
Executive Committee, a Secretary, Local Secretaries, Foreign Corresponding Secre
taries, and an unlimited number of Members in the United Kingdom, and HonoraryMembers abroad, above the age of fourteen years, who have subscribed to the
Declaration of the Society.
Declaration. —“I hereby declare that I have Abstained from the Flesh of
Animals as Food, for One Month, and upwards ; and that I desire to become a
Member of the Vegetarian Society; and to co-operate with that Body in promul
gating the knowledge of the advantages of a Vegetarian Diet.”
The Subscription is Two Shillings and Sixpence per year, which entitles a mem
ber to a copy of the Dietetic Reformer, quarterly, post free.
All inquiries, and applications for information, should be addressed to the
Secretary of the Vegetarian Society, 13, Cathedral Close, Manchester.
i L of Animals as Food, by the dissemination of information upon the subject, by i
.
�LECTURE ON VEGETARIANISM,
BY EMERITUS PROFESSOR F. W. NEWMAN.
[Delivered at Gloucester, December 2, 1870; Afr. Price, M.P., in the chair.]
“ What shall we eat
is really a question of first importance: but it .is seldom so
treated. In general, the rich eat what they like, and the poor what they can;
neither the one nor the other studies what is best. Besides, there is a perverse
influence at work of which few seem to be aware. Rich men are ashamed to give
cheap food to their friends, even when the cheap is better than the^dear. London
sprats are, in the opinion of many, superior to Greenwich whitebait: yet those who
eat sprats in private, and prefer them, dare not offer them to their friends, because
they are cheap. This does but illustrate a pervading principle. It is a baneful
folly to think, that what is rare, what is difficult, and what is out of season, is
best. And when the richer, who can well afford it, aim at expensive food because
it is expensive, the poorer, who ill afford it, imitate them, and get worse food at
greater cost. I cannot treat the subject of food, unless you will, at least for a little
while, consent to look at things with fresh eyes, and refuse to be blinded by fashion
and routine.
I have called my lecture Vegetarianism; but, as the word does not wholly
explain itself, you may justly ask me for its meaning. Many suppose it to mean,
a diet consisting of table vegetables. It is true, that these are an essential part of
Vegetarian diet, yet they are by no means the most important. Vegetarian food
consists mainly of four heads—farinacea, pulse, fruit, and table vegetables.
1. The foremost is farinacea; they are the “staff of life.” They are chiefly
wheat, barley, oats, maize, perhaps rye; also potatoes, yams, rice and sago,
tapioca, and such like. Vegetarians seldom endure baker’s bread; they always
become fastidious about bread, as teetotalers about water; and very often prefer
unleavened cakes, as Scotch scones, or biscuits not too hard; else, macaroni, also
oatmeal porridge. The makers of aerated bread find that four per cent of the
material is wasted in fermentation. Besides, we have delicious Oswego or rice
blancmange, or it may be hominy and frumenty. I guarantee to you all, that no one
loses a taste for nice things, by vegetarian food, however cheap.
2. Under pulse we practically understand peas, beans, and lentils. They have
excellent feeding qualities, but also a particular defect, which is chiefly remedied
by onions adequately mixed,
3. The word fruit speaks for itself; only it may be well to add that the dearer
fruits are j ust of the least importance for food. Apples might be much cheaper
than they are; and no fruit is more universally serviceable. The cheaper figs,
French, Italian, and Spanish, are less cloying and more feeding than the luscious
Smyrna fig of the shops. Raisins and dates are now supplied in cheerful abundance.
But peculiarly, as I believe, nuts are undervalued as substantial food. We do them
great injustice. We put them on the table as dessert, to be eaten when the stomach
�2
VEGETARIANISM.
is full, and then slander them as indigestible, because the stomach groans under
an excess of nutriment. We call them heavy, because they are nutritious. In
Syria, walnuts and coarse dry figs make an admirable meal. Filberts I count better
than walnuts, and Brazil nuts better still. Chestnuts have the disadvantage of
needing to be cooked, and being hard to cook uniformly well; but when rightly
dressed, perhaps of all nuts accessible in England they are the most valuable.
Cocoanuts, when we are wiser, will be better applied, than to tempt a jaded appetite
to hurtful indulgence. Almonds are too dear to be available as food; yet concerning
almonds, a physician who is no Vegetarian gave me interesting information the
other day. “No man,” said he, “need starve on a journey, who can fill his
waistcoat pocket with almonds. If you crush almonds thoroughly and duly mix
them with water, no chemist in Europe can distinguish the substanee from milk,
and milk we regard as the most perfect food.” This suggests moreover, that nuts,
to become wholesome, must be very thoroughly crushed and bitten. As to other
fruits, I barely add; that the delicious grape, noblest of the fruits in our latitude,
will be hereafter redeemed by teetotalers from corruption, and will become a general
food. But no fruit must be eaten for amusement, and taken on a full stomach ; or
it will not be food at all.
4. A few words on table vegetables. Potatoes and pulse I have noticed, and
now pass them by. Mushrooms are by far the most delicious, and abound with
nitrogen ; a rare advantage : but we have them too seldom in the market. On the
whole I regard those vegetables to be most important which supply flavour
or correct defects in other food; pre-eminently the tribe of onions, also celery,
parsley, sage, savory, mint, with the foreign articles ginger and pepper. Onions
and celery we do not cook half enough ; indeed cabbage and cauliflower are eateih
half raw by the English ; on which account we do not know their value. Much
the same may be said of what the farmer calls roots, i,e., turnips, carrots, parsnips,
beet. Do not think that I despise any of these, when I insist that this class of food
stands only fourth. One who confines himself to these four heads of diet is indis
putably a Vegetarian.
Yet in fact few Vegetarians do confine themselves to this diet, and herein
consists my difficulty in definition. We are open to the scoff of being, not Vegeta
rians, but Brahmins, who do not object to animal food, but only to the taking of
animal life. Few of us refuse eggs, or milk and its products. This is highly
illogical, if we seek consistency with an abstract theory. I do not shut my eyes
to it. The truth is, that in cookery we need some grease, and it is hard to eat dry
bread without butter or cheese. Our climate does not hitherto produce oils. It is _
not easy to buy oil delicate enough for food, and oil (to most Englishmen) is
offensive, from tasting like degenerate butter. Cheese, like nuts, is maligned as
indigestible, barely because it is heaped on a full stomach. However, since most
Vegetarians admit eggs and milk, I define the diet as consisting of food which is
substantially the growth of the earth, without animal slaughter. If you prefer to
call this Brahminism, I will not object. It is a respectable name.
We shall all admit that the food which is natural to man is best for man ; but
we are not agreed how to find out what is natural. I cannot wholly accede to the
students of comparative anatomy, that the line of argument which they adopt is
decisive; yet it is well to know what it is, and How far it carries us. They assume
that as in wild animals we see instinct unperverted, and as such instinct is a test
of what is natural, we have to compare the structure of the human teeth and
�VEGETARIANISM.
3
digestive apparatus with those of brutes, and thereby learn what is natural to man.
Since unluckily certain sharp teeth of ours are called canine, superficial inquirers
jumped to the conclusion that our teeth were made to rend flesh; and on discovering
that the alimentary canal, of the sheep is much longer than of the lion, longer also
than of the man, they inferred that we are not naturally herbivorous, but carnivor
ous. Vegetarians easily refute these arguments. They reply, that our sharp teeth
are ill-called canine, for they do not lap over one another. Such teeth are larger
and stronger in the ape than in the man. I believe they are chiefly useful to crack
nuts, of which monkeys are very fond. Be this as it may, no monkey naturally
eats flesh; if even, when tame, some may be coaxed into eating it. And it is
undeniable that the digestive apparatus of the monkey comes very near to that of
the man: hence Vegetarians generally infer that flesh meat is unnatural to us.
The same thing follows from the doctrine of the old naturalists, who thought the
pig and the man to have marked similarities ; but wild swine certainly will not eat
flesh, therefore man ought not. As to the length of the alimentary canal, there
also the Vegetarians are easily triumphant. The length of it in the man, as in the
monkey, is between two extremes, the lion and the sheep; therefore the human
constitution for food is intermediate. Man is neither herbivorous, as the sheep and
horse, nor carnivorous, as the lion ; but is frugivorous, as the monkey.
There is another argument of Vegetarians which I must not omit, though I do
not undertake to say how much it proves. They allege that carnivorous animals
never sweat, but man certainly does sweat; therefore he is not carnivorous. Here
I feel myself uncertain as to fact. Carnivorous animals, made to prowl by night,
have thick loose skins for defence against cold and wet, even in hot climates. In
consequence sweat would not easily relieve them from internal heat. How is it
with the sheep ? can they sweat ? I find I do not know. But in truth this whole
side of argument from the comparison of animals seems to me but of secondary
value. We cannot find by it what is natural to us ; for, universally, you cannot
find out the characteristics of the higher being by studying the lower being. The
assumption that you can is the main cUuse why external philosophy gravitates into
materialism and atheism. The specific difference of man and brute lies in the
human mind; and this, at once and manifestly, has an essential bearing on the
question of human food. No known animal lights a fire, or fosters a fire when
lighted. However tender their affections, however warm their gratitude or their
resentment, however wonderful their self-devotion, however they may deserve our
fond protection and our reciprocal gratitude, there is not one that understands the
relation of fuel to fire ; therefore there is not one that can cook. On this account
the old logicians called man “the cooking animal;” and though, happily, this
description does not exhaust the capacity of our nature, it affords (on the lower side
of nature) a sufficient criterion, distinguishing us from all known brutes. Without
our power of cookery, we could not make half the use that we do of Vegetarian food.
What would a potato be to us uncooked ? I fear it might turn out to be a narcotic
poison, like the potato-apple. Of how little avail would onions and cauliflower,
turnips and beans, or even corn itself, be without fire ? We can no more conceive
of man without power of cooking than of man without power of sowing, reaping,
and grinding. It may fairly be maintained by the advocate of flesh eating that if it
pleased the Creator to develop the gorilla’s brain, and give him a little more good
sense, without altering his digestive organs or his teeth, the creature would begin
by roasting chestnuts and broiling mushrooms, and go on to discover that roast
�4
VEGETARIANISM.
flesh has many of the qualities of those princely fungi, in whose praises enthusiastic
votaries rave to us. Now, if I have to admit that a gorilla might perhaps become
a flesh-eater, if he had only the wit to cook, you may think that I abandon the
cause of Vegetarianism. Nay ; but my cause is so strong that I can afford not to
overstrain a single argument.
If man had not the power of cooking, and had a natural incapacity for eating
raw flesh, his command of food would be so limited, that he could not have over
spread the earth as he has done. He certainly never could’have found food in
arctic regions ; scarcely would he have found it adequate for his sustenance in the
temperate zone, when he alighted on a country covered with forest and swamp.
The operations of agriculture require long time and much co-operation before a
wild land can be tamed ; and meanwhile, on what is the first cultivator to live ?
We know what has been the course of history in nearly all countries. Only in
a few, as China, India, Assyria, Egypt, the banks of the great ^navigable
rivers, with alluvial or inundated land, gave such facility to the sower, that
there is not even tradition of the time when tillage began. But in general,
wild men in a wild country ate whatevei’ they could get,—or get most
easily. In the woods wild game abounded—everywhere something, though
varying from continent to continent. Besides birds innumerable, endless tribes
of antelope and deer in one place, of kine in another,—whether the cow or
the buffalo or the bison—of sheep in a third, allured the hunter; and cookery
made the flesh of all eatable. We certainly can eat uncooked oysters. It
is dangerous to deny that savage stomachs, when half-starved, could live on raw
flesh and raw fish. But whether it be cause or effect, the tribes which have come
nearest to this state have been either very degenerate or very primitive specimens
of humanity. If very primitive, they do but display undeveloped man, and they are
the smallest fraction of the human race. The second stage in human civilization, is,
to rear tame cattle; if there are wild animals capable of being tamed. In the old
world the sheep, the cow, the reindeer, or the buffalo became domesticated, time out
of mind; also the camel; and in South America the llama ; but the bison of North
America, it seems, is untameable, so that the pastoral state did not there develop
itself. The transition from pasture to agriculture is a serious difficulty. To defend
crops is most arduous; in fact, is impossible to the private cultivator, unless he is
armed with formidable weapons of war which the savage cannot get. Agriculture
must ordinarily be, in the first instance, the act of the tribe collectively, and the
crops be their common property, protected by their joint force. Until there is a
powerful public executive, armed to defend private property, agriculture is too
dangerous foran individual. On this account certain tribes have abhorred cultivation
and fixed dwellings, as exposing the industrious man to slavery under marauders.
Thus the Nabatheans of old, thus Jonadab the son of Rechab, forbade their children
to build houses, or sow seed, or plant vines, because it interfered with wild liberty.
Tribes who live by hunting only, need a vast space of land in which their game
may live quietly; from a small area it would quickly be frightened away: hence
such tribes have always been a very sparse population, and insignificant in the
world’s history. Those who live by pasturage, driving their flocks and herds from
place to place, and building no houses, have generally been marauders: indeed the
Tartars and Scythians, who used the waggon as their home, in all earlier ages were
the great military nations, the conquerors of the more civilised. Though they
might begin by living on the flesh and milk of their cattle, they soon learned to
�VEGETARIANISM.
5
obtain grain, either by cultivating it themselves (for they were strong enough to
protect it) or by purchasing it from neighbours by giving cattle in exchange or by
extorting it as tribute from peaceful but weaker cultivators. And in proportion as
they lived on grain, they were capable of becoming more populous ; thus population
became denser, step by step, as flesh meat was superseded by wheat and barley, by
maize and rice. In the far north, where Finns and Lapps dwell almost side by side,
the Lapps feed as of old, on the products of the sea, or on the milk and flesh of the
reindeer; but the Finns have introduced corn culture, and live upon grain. The
Finns are the stronger, larger, and handsomer men. At any rate their diet has
agreed with them, even in that latitude; but I do not mean to say that men may
not retain perfect health and strength on either food, so far as health can be tested
by the surgeon. The ancient Germans practised but little agriculture, says Caesar.
By intercourse with Rome, especially on the Roman frontier, they became cul
tivators. In our own island, as we well know, agriculture has existed before Saxon
times; but at the Norman conquest, and long after, the land devoted to cattle or
left in a state of nature vastly predominated. In those days the poorest ate much
more flesh meat than now. There has been a continual diminution of flesh meat,
and far larger supplies of Vegetarian food. This is neither from unjust institutions
nor from unfair taxation ; but it is a normal result of increased population. It is
inevitable on an island, sensibly limited in size: for to produce as much human
food as one acre of cultivated land will yield, three, or even /owr acres of grazing land
are needed. That era had its own disadvantages. The cattle had then little winter
food ; they were killed and salted down in the close of autumn. Much salt meat
and salt fish was eaten, and fresh vegetables were few in species and scarce.
Parsnips are said to have been long the only root, before there were turnips or
carrots : potatoes, we know, came in from America. Native fruit was very limited,
and our climate was thought hardly capable of bearing more sorts ; foreign fruit
was not in the market. Now, what I want to point out, is this : that the diet of
flesh meat belongs to the time of barbarism—the time of loiv cultivation and thin popu
lation; and that it naturally, normally, decreases with higher cultivation. We see the
same thing in ancient civilisation and modern. The Brahmins in India, who stood
at the head in intellect and in beauty, were wholly or prevalently Vegetarians. I
believe, much the same was true of ancient Egypt. Men of lower caste ate flesh,
and the lowest most: and among these principally foul diseases of the skin prevailed ;
no doubt, because, where population is dense, the poorer classes, if they eat flesh
meatat all, are sure to get a sensible portion of their supply diseased and unwholesome.
And now let me say. what is the true test of anything being natural to man.
He is a progressive being; you must test it by his more mature, not by his
immature era; by his civilisation, not by his barbarism. Flesh meat helped him
through his less developed state; it then existed around him in superfluity, while
vegetarian food was scarce ; moreover, the beasts slain for food were then generally
in a natural and healthy condition. But to attempt to keep up in the later and
more developed stage the habits of the earlier and ruder is in many ways perni
cious. At first each man kills his own game, or slaughters a beast of his own
flock; and long after that time is passed, the animals wander in the field or
mountain, or under the forest. The pig eats beech-nuts and oakmast and horse
chestnuts. The steer browses on soft leaves and on grass. There is no stuffing
with oilcake, no stall-feeding nor indoors life. The beast of the field abides in the
field. When the herds abound, and the supply is easily adequate to the human
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VEGETARIANISM.
population, the market is not likely to be tampered with. Neither roguery, nor
artificial management of the animal is to be feared. Great Oriental communities put
the slaughter of cattle for food under religious regulation. With the Jews, and
indeed with the earliest Romans, the butcher was a priest; and anxious distinctions
were made of clean and unclean beasts, to exclude the eating of such flesh as either
was supposed to be unwholesome or was forbidden for some economic reason. Now
ij in fact,—owing, as I believe, to the great pressure for milk in a populous nation,—
i the cow is of a peculiarly feeble constitution with us. This is manifest in her
liability to suffer severely in calving, which is certainly a striking phenomenon.
But surely it is only what might be expected from the very artificial and unnatural
demand that we make on her, to give us milk in quantity far beyond anything
needed for her calf, and for a length of time so prolonged. So intimate is the
relation of calving to milk-giving that to overstrain one side of the female system
must naturally derange the other. But to this is added stall-feeding and cramming,
instead of the open field and natural herbage. Though these practices may save
money to the grazier and produce more pounds of meat and of unhealthy fat, they
cannot conduce to the robustness of the animal, nor of the man who eats it. A
worse thing is now revealed. I lately read in a newspaper that many farmers
believe they have found out the cause of what is called the foot and mouth disease;
namely, they ascribe it to the fact that the animals are bred from parents too
young. Now I lay no stress on their opinion that they have here discovered the
cause of that disease. Their opinion may be erroneous, but they cannot be mistaken
in what they state as a fact; namely, that in eagerness to supply the meat market,
and gain the utmost return to their capital, they artificially bring about a premature
breeding of the cattle. The moment it is mentioned, one sees what the temptation
must be to a breeder; one sees also that the offspring is sure to be feeble, and
therefore liable to any or every disease. It is well known that in Bengal, for
religious reasons, the Brahmin girls are prevalently married at a very tender age,
so that great numbers of mothers are hardly more than children themselves ; and
to this is ascribed the peculiar delicacy and frequent small stature in such classes.
I do not assume that such offspring need be unhealthy; but unless protected as
only men can be protected, if exposed as cattle must be exposed, one must expect
them to catch any epidemic that may be abroad, and more and more to propagate
feebleness. Municipal law struggles in vain against such tricks of the market.
They go on for many years without the persons who practise them being aware of
their harm. Prohibitions are hard to execute ; they are sure to come too late ; and
after they are enacted, some new artifice equally bad grows up. While the pressure
for flesh-meat is great, unless the Government will take into its own hands both
the slaughtering and the sales, it seems impossible to keep the sausage trade under
control. In last Monday’s Daily News I see there is a man to be brought to trial
for boiling up old horses for sausage meat. There is nothing intrinsically wrong
in that, if it were avowed to be horse-flesh; but since all is done by stealth,
evidently far more horrid substances are likely to enter the market.
The United States have a vast abundance of soil, a very thin population : hence
they might, like our ancestors, have flesh meat and milk of a natural kind. But
they have large towns, to be fed on a great scale by enterprising capitalists ; so that
many of the same evils grow up among them as with us. In New York a distiller
of spirits added to his trade the trade of cowkeeping, having learned that co»vs, fed
upon the refuse grains of a distillery, give more milk. It is true that they do ; but
I
'
.
i
�VEGETARIANISM.
7
the milk is inferior in quality ; and the cows gradually become diseased—whether
by the food, or by the unwholesome confinement in the cellars beneath the distillery,
I cannot say. But the complaints of the milk are bitter : moreover, the cowkeepers
in the country around have followed the evil example ; and it is positively stated
that the mortality of children in New York is enormous; which is a suspicious
coincidence. These are but single instances and illustrations of the evils to which
we are exposed, from the tampering of the grazier with the animals in whose flesh
or milk he deals.
But I return to my point. With the progress of population Vegetarianism
naturally increases. I do not say, which is cause, and which is effect: they react
on one another. When more food is wanted, and the price of corn rises, there is a
motive to break up new land. Pasture is diminished. Perhaps by artificial grasses
and by cultivation of roots the quantity of cattle is nevertheless sustained; yet if
the process goes on, as in China (for an extreme case), the larger cattle will not at all
increase in proportion to the population. Nor indeed among ourselves has it increased
proportionally. The English roast beef that foreigners talk of is rarely indeed the
diet of our villagers. Thirty years ago even our town artizans ate little flesh meat.
Bacon, principally fat, was nearly the sole animal food consumed by our peasants,
whose state has but little altered. They may almost be called Vegetarians ; for fat,
like oil, supplies only animal heat, not the substance of muscle. Nevertheless, it
is now taught, that on animal heat vital force depends, which muscle will not give.
Now lest you should pity our peasants too much, I must state that we have the
decisive testimony of the most eminent scientific men to the sufficiency of a purely
Vegetarian diet; men, not themselves Vegetarians, nor intending to urge the
practice. Our society has printed a handbill, with extracts from Haller, Liebig,
Linnaeus, Gassendi, Professor Lawrence, Professor Owen, Baron Cuvier, and many
others. Hear a few illustrations how those speak, who mean to be our opponents.*
Dr. 8. Brown writes: “We are ready to admit that Vegetarian writers have
triumphantly proved, that physical horse-like strength is not only compatible with,
but also favoured by, a well-chosen diet from the vegetable kingdom, and likewise,
that such a table is conducive to length of days.” Dr. W, B. Carpenter writes :
“ We freely concede to the advocates of Vegetarianism, that as regards the endurance
of physical labour there is ample proof of the capacity of [their diet"| to afford the
requisite sustenance.” He adds that if it is sufficiently oily, “ it will maintain the
powers of the body at their highest natural elevation, even under exposure to the
extreme of cold.” Thus the labourer, according to these high authorities, is not at
all dependent on flesh meat. And of this we have abundant proof in foreign nations.
We have no stronger men among our flesh-dieted “navvies” than the African
negroes of the U.S. who were fed, while slaves, on yams, maize, and other vegetable
food. We perhaps cannot anywhere produce a class of men to equal the porters of
Constantinople. The London Spectator., not long back (though it is anything but
Vegetarian in purpose) wondered at the ignorance of men who doubted whether
Vegetarian food was compatible with the greatest strength; for a Constantinople
porter (said the writer) would not only easily carry the load of any English porter,
but would carry off the man besides. Mr. Winwood Reade, a surgeon who has
travelled much in Africa; Mr. A. F. Kennedy, once Governor of Sierra Leone, and
Captain P. Eardley Wilmot, attest that the Kroomen of Western Africa are eminent
in endurance. Mr. Kennedy says “ their power and endurance exceeds that of any
race with which I am acquainted.” Mr. Winwood Reade expresses himself even
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VEGETARIANISM.
more pointedly : “ The Kroomen are, I believe, the strongest men in the world.’’
Yet the Krooman, he adds, lives on a few handfuls of rice per day ; and rice has not
been supposed by our chemists to be at all favourable to human strength. They
depreciated it, as giving too great a proportion of animal heat; but they did not
know that animal heat gives vital force also. It may be said, that these cases
bejong to hot climates ; but indeed Constantinople can be anything but hot. And
we can further appeal to Northern Persia, where the winter is intensely cold. The
English officers at Tabriz, the northern capital,—who for a long series of years had
the drilling of Persian troops,—were enthusiastic in their praises, and testified that
they make the longest marches, on nothing but bread, cheese, and water, carrying
three or four days’ provisions in their sash. These, however, are not strictly
Persians, but of Turkoman race. I did not need to go to Persia for illustration.
The Italians of the north, or anywhere on the Apennines, would have served my
argument. Bread, with figs or raisins, are their sufficient food ; and they were old
Napoleon’s hardiest soldiers round Moscow. Indeed, in every civilised country the
strongest class of men are the peasants, who are everywhere all but Vegetarians.
Dr. E. Smith, who reported to the Privy Council on the food of the three kingdoms,
comes to the conclusion that the Irish are the strongest, next to them the Scotch,
next the northern English; after the southern peasants ; lowest of all, the
towns-man; and that their Vegetarianism is graduated in the same way, the
strongest being the most Vegetarian, and the townsfolk, who are the weakest, being
the greatest eaters of flesh. I do not mean to assert that the diet is the only cause
of strength or weakness : it is sufficient to insist that Vegetarianism is compatible
with the highest strength. The old Greek athlete was a Vegetarian : Hercules,
according to their comic poets, lived chiefly on pease pudding.
But what of health? The testimony of scientific men is here still more
remarkable. Haller, the great physiologist, writes thus: “ This food then, 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 grossness of the blood.” That eminent physician, Dr. Cheyne
of Dublin, who some forty years ago was at the head of his profession, declared:
“ For those who are extremely broken down with chronic disease I have found no
other relief than a total abstinence from all animal food, and from all sorts of strong
and fermented liquors. In about thirty years’ practice, in which I have (in some
degree or other) advised this method in proper cases, I have had but two cases in
whose total recovery I have been mistaken.” A remarkable instance is attested,—
that of Professor Fergusson, the historian,—who at the age of sixty-one had a
dangerous attack of paralysis. He called in his friend Dr. Black, the celebrated
discoverer of latent heat. Dr. Black, though not a Vegetarian, prescribed total
abstinence from flesh-meat. Professor Fergusson obeyed, and not only recovered
entirely and never had a second attack, but was a remarkably vigorous old man at
ninety, and died at ninety-three.* In such cases I think we have an explanation of
the success of some things called quack remedies,—as, the grape-cure of the
Germans. I am ready to believe that it is not so much the grapes that cure, as the
abstinence from a gross and evil diet. Dr. A. P. Buchan teaches that a diet of
farinacea, with milk and fruits, is the most hopeful way of curing pulmonary
consumption : many examples of such cure in an early stage of the disease, says
he, are recorded. He adds: “ If vegetables and milk were more used in diet, we
A gentleman present corrected 93 into 95.
�VEGETARIANISM.
9
should have less scurvy, and likewise fewer putrid and inflammatory fevers.”
Drs. Craigie and Cullen are very strong as to the power of Vegetarianism to preserve
one from gout. Drs. Marcet, Oliver, and other physiologists, declare that human
chyle, elaborated from flesh meat, putrifies in three or four days at longest; while
chvle from vegetable food, from its greater purity and more perfect vitality, may
be kept for many days without becoming putrid. We need not therefore wonder
that Vegetarians are so little liable to fever, or to any form of putrid disease. It is
asserted, indeed, that such a thing is not known, as that a Vegetarian should suffer
cholera. On the other hand, it is also asserted that none but Vegetarians have
attained the age of 100: undoubtedly a majority of centenarians have held to
this diet.
Now I know some persons will answer quick : “I do not want to live to a 100
but remember, I pray you, what such longevity implies. The man who lives to a
100 is generally as strong at eighty, and as perfect in all his faculties, as are the
majority of men at sixty-five ; and he is not as much worn out at ninety as the man
who lives to eighty-two or eighty-three is at eighty. It is not the last seven years,,
of the centenarian which give him advantage, but the twenty years which precede
these seven. However, wish what you please about long life; it remains, that
long life, if it exist in a class of men, implies that that class excels in vital force; is
superior therefore in health, probably in strength ; and health is more valuable than
strength. Once more ; reflect what is contained in the avowal that pulmonary
consumption is best treated, and is sometimes cured, by abstinence from flesh-meat
and wine. Consumption is notoriously a disease of weakness. Hence we must
infer that more strength is given by Vegetarian diet than by that which is called
stimulating. All the arguments converge to the same point. Vital force is
measured by length of life, and by power of recovering from dangerous wounds.
Vegetarianism conduces at once to length of life, and to success in such recovery,
I have mentioned that Dr. Cheyne and Dr. Black trusted in it as a recipe when the
constitution was broken down ; how much more must it be a preservative of
strength to the healthy? Dr. S. Nicolls, of the Longford Fever Hospital, wrote in
1864, after sixteen years’ experience in the hospital, that the success of treatment
by a total withdrawal of flesh-meat and of alcoholic liquors gave him the greatest
satisfaction. The long and short is, that whatever is inflammatory is weakening ;
the highest vigour is got out of that food and drink which gives the maximum pf
nutrition and the minimum of inflammation. We allow ourselves to be cheated by
calling inflammation stimulus. Further, I will ask, of the English race, what
portion is most unhealthy ? Beyond question, the English of the United States.
And they are also the greatest flesh-eaters.
Now let me add a word concerning the North American Indian. It is long
since a few of the tribes introduced the cultivation of maize, ascribed to Hiawatha
in Longfellow’s poem. The Cherokees adopted an agricultural life while yet in
Georgia; but the distant and the roaming tribes continue to dhpend on hunting,
and even their boys and girls must live chiefly on flesh. How solid is the national
constitution is strikingly shown in the strength of the women, who, in the journeyings of a tribe, if visited by child-birth, need but half-a-day’s rest, and then start
on the march, carrying the infant on their back. I lately read a letter from the
well-kno5yn Mrs. Lydia Maria Child, in which she details how an Indian woman
trudged to Mrs. Child’s house through many miles of deep snow, and next day
came the same journey, carrying an infant which she had brought to light in the
i
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VEGETARIANISM.
interval. The vigour and activity of the Indian continues unimpaired till within a
short time (perhaps till within a fortnight) of natural death, when he is made
aware of weakness and death approaching. Now some one might quote these facts as
a clear testimony to the value of a flesh diet; but against it there are two draw
backs. If disease arise in an Indian, it is apt to be exceedingly violent; smallpox
may carry off a whole tribe; they seem to be very inflammatory; but I speak under
correction. Further, no one attributes to them peculiarly long life. They are said
to die worn out at eighty. Again, I do not speak confidently; for it is hard to
be sure of facts. Yet I believe they are less longlived, and recover worse from
disease than the Vegetarian Africans dwelling on the same land; less longlived
also than the Arabs, who live more on milk and less on meat. On the whole, I
think that life in the open air, a cautious choice of healthy places for encamping,
and consequent purity of blood, gives to those men and women their great robustness.
All food comes alike to such stomachs, as regards its power of nourishing ; but if
the flesh meat produces a more inflammable habit, it shortens natural life, as well
as intensifies disease.
I have tried your patience long, in the attempt to develop facts. It remains to
draw my conclusion. I first have to insist, that ever since 1847, we have been
striving to reverse the natural current of affairs—an enterprize which will necessarily
entail disease and a vast train of calamity. In the first 45 years of this century, the
population of the three kingdoms more than doubled itself in spite of emigration.
Great areas of land were broken up for cultivation, partly under the allurements of
a high price for corn, partly to take advantage of the Tithe Commutation Act. But
after the abolition of the Corn Laws in 1847, the increased prosperity of the manu
facturing towns led, not only to an importation of corn, but also to a remarkable
demand of the artizan population for flesh-meat. Cattle were brought from abroad
in great numbers. Prices still went up. A great stimulus was given to cattlebreeding. The markets of England were supplied from Scotland (and Ireland as
well as from foreign ports, until in Ireland land was thrown out of culture, and taken
up for grazing. The clamour for flesh continuing, we bring it from Australia and
from South America, artificially preserved. From importing instead of raising food,
our worst evils are increased. Rustic industry is not developed. The new births
of the country can find no employment there, and flock into towns. Masses of
population become liable to starvation from a displacement of foreign markets, or
from the imprudence of their employers ; and when personal prudence has less
reward, improvidence prevails. Town-life is less robust; sanitary conditions are
harder to fulfil. A nation fed from foreign markets suffers convulsion through
other people’s wars. And when more and more the land is occupied by large
estates, by parks, by wildernesses kept for sheep or deer, while huge towns prevail,
we have the type of national decay. Our statesmen look on helplessly, while a
robust peasantry is supplanted by a feeble and unhealthy town-population. Our
sage sanitarians want to bring water to our cities from Welsh, Scotch, or Cum
berland lakes, for fear we should remember that it is as possible for the country to be
occupied and cultivated by men, as to be grazed by cattle. England will not long
hold up her head in Europe, if she allow the system of empty country and everincreasing towns to prevail. There are other causes of the evil, I am aware, besides
this zeal for flesh meat. We have to open our eyes to more things than one; and
a hard battle perhaps has to be fought. But in regard to flesh-meat, each family has
the remedy in its own hands. The waste of its resources is caused by an attempt to
�VEGETARIANISM.
11
bring back the condition of things belonging to comparative barbarism, and make us
a flesh-eating nation again, when the era of flesh-eating is naturally past. And
what is the consequence ? I repeat a sentence which I have already uttered,
Where the population is dense, the poorer classes, if they eat flesh meat at all, are sure
to get a sensible portion of their supply in an unwholesome state. What said Dr.
Letheby, inspector of the London markets, to the Social Science Association lately?
“The use of unsound meat,” he said, “was more injurious than that of any other
unsound food. In the three city markets there are 400 tons of meat received and
sold daily. With a staff of but two inspectors it was hardly possible to make a
sufficient and satisfactory supervision; but nevertheles they seized from one to two
tons of diseased meat every week. The seizures last year (1867) amounted to no
less than 288,0001bs., or 129 tons.” But he says, in the country at large the case
is vastly worse. Taking all the markets in the country, it had been calculated
“that only one part in every Jive sent to market was sound.” Now, I think the last
statement must be exaggerated. I cannot say that I believe it; yet how very bad
the case must be, to allow of such a statement being made ! If instead of one-fifth
of the meat being unwholesome, it were every day one fiftieth, the case would be
awful enough. For remember, that where one ton is condemned, there is sure to
be a margin of three tons which is suspected, but cannot be condemned; and
importers or graziers, to save themselves from great loss, are driven to disguise
disease as well as they can. This suspected meat is sold at half-price,
and by its cheapness attracts the poor. Hence disease is certain to arise.
Smallpox has surprized us by virulent outbursts; yet what reason is there for
surprize? Do not Pariahs in India, and a like class in Egypt, by eating flesh or fish in
an unwholesome state bring on leprosy and smallpox and other foul con
tagious diseases? How do our doctors suppose that the smallpox arose for
the first time ? They say it came from China, and that it cannot, come to us unless
we catch it from a human being. Was ever anything so imbecile? The first
patient did not catch it from an earlier patient, but brought it on himself by foul
diet or some uncleanness ; and of course, if any of us use the same foulness, he is
liable to bring it on himself without anyone to transmit it to him. Paris is the
city that cooks up and disguises offal; Paris can generate smallpox as well as
China. Our doctors divert us from the true scent. For fear that we should discover
what is our uncleanness of living, they tell us that smallpox comes because we are
not vaccinated—and that also is not at all true. Indeed none are oftener vaccinated
than French soldiers, and no part of the French population suffers worse from
smallpox than the soldiers. Bad diet and unclean herding together must be the
cause. Diet? why, if we are to believe our newspapers, for a fortnight past
gentlemen have been eating in Paris the rats from the sewers, not from any real
deficiency of wholesome food, but from an infatuated determination to get flesh
meat. And at the same time, in the same letter, the correspondent who praises
the flavour of the rat, tells us that the smallpox has broken out again during
the siege; and now, says he, in the week ending November 5th the deaths from
smallpox were 380; in this last week [ending November 12th] they were 419.
Perhaps it is needless to say, why the animals brought to market must be diseased.
It is not natural to an ox to get into a steamer, or into a railway car, nor
to walk through the streets, nor to take his place quietly as in a pew at the
market. A great deal of beating and terrifying him is needed. His
fatigue in a long journey—manage it as you will—is necessarily great; he suffers
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VEGETARIANISM.
also from thirst. The cars and steamers cannot be cleanly. In short, it would be
wonderful if forty-nine in fifty arrived in tolerable health. Ho long as there is a
forced market, the cattle brought from a distance will be like the miserable Africans
carried in slave ships ; and all our cattle will be of a feeble constitution, liable to
diseases from slight cause, because bred artificially and reared artificially. The
poorer classes suffer, first and inevitably, in the squandering of their resources;
secondly, a fraction of them by disease, and many more by infection from the sick.
And those who evade disease do not get more strength, and do get a somewhat
more inflammatory habit from the flesh meat. At the same time, by eating more
expensive food they cannot afford so healthy habitations. Such are the evils on the
side of health and economy.
But besides, the evils of inhumanity in the slaughter of larger cattle are very
terrible. No one has yet found a remedy for the clumsiness of butchers’ boys. 1
cannot now dwell on this acutely painful part of my subject: I will only say, it
quite reconciles me to be called a Brahmin. At the same time, recurring to the
inconsistency of milk and eggs with strict Vegetarianism, I will observe, that by
the avowal of medical science, milk has none of the inflammatory properties of
flesh meat; in so far, it is akin to Vegetarian food. But undoubtedly the pressure
of dense population for milk is an evil, and tends to the adulteration of the milk, to
a deterioration of it by giving to the cow whatever will increase its quantity, and
to an enfeebling of cows generally, by asking too much milk of them, and by breeding
them too quickly. Therefore I take pains to make no increased use of milk since I
am a Vegetarian, nor yet of eggs. We have not yet learned to get substitutes
from oleaginous nuts. We are in a state of transition. A future age will look back
on this as barbarism ; yet we are moving towards the higher and nobler development,
in becoming even thus partial Vegetarians.
Finally, I must not omit one topic, the evils of over-feeding, which flesh-eating
induces. A Vegetarian may eat too much, yet it is more difficult to him, from the
bulk of his food; nearly all over-feeding is practically caused by flesh, fish, and
fowl. The late witty Sydney Smith, wishing to reprove this vice, jocosely said:
“ As accurately as I can calculate, between the ages of ten and seventy I have
eaten forty-four waggon loads of food more than was good for me.” Every ounce
that a man eats more than he needs, positively weakens him, for his vegetable forces
use up his energy in getting rid of the needless food. The gormandizing in great
towns is despicable, from one side, but from another is afflicting ; when one thinks
of countless disease engendered in the classes who eat too much, while there are so
many who get too little. Yet to the poorer a far worse evil than the deprivation
of flesh is, that they are incited to long for it when they see that all who can afford
it will pay any price rather than go without it. Our working classes will not attain
the elevation which is possible to them, until they put on the sentiment of Brahmins
and look down upon flesh-eating as a lower state.
[Reprinted fromfthe Dietetic Reformer, Jan., 1871.]
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REPRINT OF DR. TRALL’S ADDRESS.
Now ready, Price Threepence; or Six Copies sent post free for One Shilling.
SCIENTIFIC BASIS OF .VEGETARIANISM: An Address
O delivered at the Eleventh Annual Meeting of the American Vegetarian Society,
by Dr. TRALL, of New York.
Reprinted from the Dietetic Heformer.
Royal 32mo, price Id. per packet, or 13 for Is.; also in Sixpenny packets,
Three Series of
VEGETARIAN MESSENGER TRACTS. These Tracts are adapted
. * for extensive distribution, and any one Tract may be had separately by order
ing a Sixpenny Packet, and stating the number required ; or, if no particular number
be specified, “Assorted” Packets will be sent.
A Fifth and Improved Edition of
ipHE PENNY VEGETARIAN COOKERY : Or Vegetarianism
JL adapted to the Working Classes; containing an Introduction, showing the
economical and beneficial tendency of Vegetarian habits; an Invalid’s Dietary
Table (being suggestions for Dyspeptic patients); a Family Dietary Table; a
Bachelor’s Dietary Table ; a Marketing Table ; a Chemical Table, and instructions
and recipes for upwards of fifty different articles of food.
296 pp., Foolscap 8vo., Reduced price 2s. 6d. (by post 3s.), cloth boards, the Fifth
Edition of
VEGETARIAN COOKERY. By a Lady. This edition of VegetaT . rian Cookery has been carefully revised and entirely re-written. Many new
Recipes have been added to those already published, and the work now contains—an
Introduction, explanatory of Vegetarian Principles; an Exposition of Vegetarian
Practice, describing three Styles of Cookery, which are illustrated by plans of Tables
and Bills of Fare, with numerous references to the Recipes ; upwards of seven
hundred and fifty Recipes, and a copious Index.
PRIZE ESSAYS.
rpHE PRIMITIVE DIET OF MAN. By Dr. F. R. Lees. !
JL
Price Fourpence.
OW TO PROMOTE STABILITY AND ZEAL AMONG THE !
H
MEMBERS of the VEGETARIAN SOCIETY. By R. Gammage.
Fourpence. Tubbs and Brook, Manchester. Caudwell, London.
Price j
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Victorian Blogging
Description
An account of the resource
A collection of digitised nineteenth-century pamphlets from Conway Hall Library & Archives. This includes the Conway Tracts, Moncure Conway's personal pamphlet library; the Morris Tracts, donated to the library by Miss Morris in 1904; the National Secular Society's pamphlet library and others. The Conway Tracts were bound with additional ephemera, such as lecture programmes and handwritten notes.<br /><br />Please note that these digitised pamphlets have been edited to maximise the accuracy of the OCR, ensuring they are text searchable. If you would like to view un-edited, full-colour versions of any of our pamphlets, please email librarian@conwayhall.org.uk.<br /><br /><span><img src="http://www.heritagefund.org.uk/sites/default/files/media/attachments/TNLHLF_Colour_Logo_English_RGB_0_0.jpg" width="238" height="91" alt="TNLHLF_Colour_Logo_English_RGB_0_0.jpg" /></span>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Conway Hall Library & Archives
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2018
Publisher
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Conway Hall Ethical Society
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Pamphlet
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Lecture on vegetarianism
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Newman, Francis William
Description
An account of the resource
Place of publications: London
Collation: 12, [1] p. 22 cm.
Notes: From the library of Dr Moncure Conway. Signature on front cover: Moncure D. Conway. Delivered at Gloucester, December 2, 1870; Mr. Price, M.P., in the Chair. Reprinted from the Dietetic Reformer, January, 1871. List of publications on vegetarianism on final page. Printed by A. Ireland and Co., Manchester. Objectives and constitution of the Vegetarian Society (established 1847) outlined inside front cover.
Publisher
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F. Pitman
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1904
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
G5299
Subject
The topic of the resource
Vegetarianism
Health
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
<a href="http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/"><img src="http://i.creativecommons.org/p/mark/1.0/88x31.png" alt="Public Domain Mark" /></a><span> </span><br /><span>This work (Lecture on vegetarianism), identified by </span><a href="https://conwayhallcollections.omeka.net/items/show/www.conwayhall.org.uk"><span>Humanist Library and Archives</span></a><span>, is free of known copyright restrictions.</span>
Format
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application/pdf
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Language
A language of the resource
English
Diet
Health
Nutrition
Vegetarianism