Shelley's "Vindication of Natural Diet" was first written as part of the notes to "Queen Mab," which was privately issued in 1813. Later in the same year the "Vindication" was separately published as a pamphlet, and it is from this later publication that the present reprint is made. The original pamphlet is now exceedingly scarce, but it is said to have been reprinted in 1835, as an appendix to an American medical work, the "Manual on Health," by Dr. Turnbull, of New York. Two copies only are known to have been preserved of this excessively rare pamphlet, though possibly others may be hidden in unfrequented libraries and out of the way country houses. One copy is in the British Museum, and the other is in the possession of Mr. H. Buxton Forman, who has reprinted it in his great edition of Shelley, where it forms the opening part of the second volume of the "Prose Works." The main object of Shelley's pamphlet was to show that a vegetable diet is the most natural, and therefore the best for mankind. It is not an appeal to humanitarian sentiment, but an argument based on individual experience, concerning the intimate connection of health and morality with food. It has no claim to originality in the arguments adduced; its materials being avowedly drawn from the works of Dr. Lambe and Mr. Newton, of whom an account may be read in Mr. Howard Williams' "Catena," but the style is Shelley's own, and the pamphlet is in many ways one of the most interesting and characteristic of his prose works. At the time of writing his "Vindication of Natural Diet," Shelley had himself, for some months past, adopted a Vegetarian diet, chiefly, no doubt, through his intimacy with the Newton family. There seems no reason to doubt that he continued to practise Vegetarianism during the rest of his stay in England, that is from 1813 to the spring of 1818. Leigh Hunt's account of his life at Marlow, in 1817, is as follows:—"This was the round of his daily life. He was up early, breakfasted sparingly, wrote this 'Revolt of Islam' all the morning; went out in his boat, or in the woods, with some Greek author or the Bible in his hands; came home to a dinner of vegetables (for he took neither meat nor wine); visited, if necessary, the sick and fatherless, whom others gave Bibles to and no help; wrote or studied again, or read to his wife and friends the whole evening; took a crust of bread or a glass of whey for his supper, and went early to bed." In 1818, he left England for Italy, and during his last four years, the most dreamy and speculative period of his life, he seems to have been less strict in his observance of Vegetarian practice. It is not true however, as has sometimes been asserted, that Shelley lost faith in the principles of Vegetarianism; for his change in diet was owing partly to his well-known carelessness about his food, which became more marked at this time, and partly to a desire to avoid He found in this the presage of his ideal future. To his enthusiastic faith in the transforming effect of the Vegetarian principle, we owe some of the finest passages in his poetry. In the close of the eighth canto of "Queen Mab," we have a picture of a time when man no more Slays the lamb that looks him in the face. It is the same ideal of bloodless innocence as that of Israel's prophet-poet, who declares that in the Holy Mountain they shall not hurt nor destroy. Never did sage or singer, prophet or priest, or poet, see a brighter vision of the future than that which is imaged in the description of a glorified earth, from which cruelty, bloodshed, and tyranny, have been banished. "My brethren, we are free! The fruits are glowing Beneath the stars, and the night-winds are flowing O'er the ripe corn. The birds and beasts are dreaming. Never again may blood of bird or beast Stain with its venomous stream a human feast, To the pure skies in accusation steaming; Avenging poisons shall have ceased To feed disease and fear and madness; The dwellers of the earth and air Shall throng around our steps in gladness, Seeking their food or refuge there. Our toil from thought all glorious forms shall cull, To make this earth, our home, more beautiful; And Science, and her sister Poesy, Shall clothe in light the fields and cities of the free!" * * * * * * Over the plain the throngs were scattered then In groups around the fires, which from the sea Even to the gorge of the first mountain-glen Blazed wide and far. The banquet of the free Was spread beneath many a dark cypress-tree; Beneath whose spires which swayed in the red flame Reclining as they ate, of liberty, And hope, and justice, and Laone's name, Earth's children did a woof of happy converse frame. Their feast was such as Earth, the general mother, Pours from her fairest bosom, when she smiles In the embrace of Autumn. To each other As when some parent fondly reconciles Her warring children, she their wrath beguiles With her own sustenance; they relenting weep:— Such was this festival, which, from their isles And continents and winds and oceans deep, All shapes might throng to share that fly or walk or creep. That this was no mere poetic sentiment is proved by this pamphlet, which is an earnest vindication of Vegetarianism. H. S. S. [ORIGINAL TITLE PAGE.] A VINDICATION OF NATURAL DIET. BEING ONE IN A SERIES OF NOTES TO QUEEN MAB (A PHILOSOPHICAL POEM). ?apet????d?, pa?t?? pe?? ?dea e?d?s, ?a??e?s p?? ??e?as, ?a? eas ??e?as ?pe??pe?sas; S??t' a?t? e?a p?a ?a? a?d?as?? ess?e???s?. ???sd'??? a?t? p???s d?s? ?a???, ? ?e? apa?tes ?e?p??ta? ?ata ????, e?? ?a??? afa?ap??tes. ?S?O?. Op. et Dies. 1, 54. [Greek: IapetionidÊ, pantÔn peri mÊdea eidÔs, Chaireis pur klepsas, kai emas phrenas Êperopeusas; Soit' autÔ mega pÊma kai andrasin essomenoisi. Toisd'egÔ anti puros dÔsÔ kakon, Ô ken apantes TerpÔntai kata thumon, eon kakon amphagapÔntes.] [Greek: ÊSIÔD.] Op. et Dies. 1, 54. LONDON: PRICE ONE SHILLING AND SIXPENCE. |