"I think it will be worth our while to inquire if there be really such great absurdity in the idea of not eating flesh, or if it be possible that the Vegetarians have reason on their side, and that the present movement in favour of a reformed diet may contain the germ of an important change. However that may be, it can do no harm to my readers if they hear what can be said in favour of Vegetarianism; then, if they are not persuaded to adopt a fleshless diet, they will have a clear conscience, and be able to enjoy their beef and mutton all the more afterwards."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/A_Plea_for_Vegetarianism_and_Other_Essays
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
A Plea for Vegetarianism and Other Essays
' is an essay collection by British writer and social reformer Henry S. Salt, first published in 1886 by the Vegetarian Society in Manchester. The work is a defence of vegetarianism, combining moral, aesthetic, economic, and practical arguments. It was among Salt's earliest contributions to the British vegetarianism and animal rights movements.
33 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by A Plea for Vegetarianism and Other Essays →
Related Quotes
"The first and most obvious advantage of a vegetarian diet is its economy. Flesh-meat is so much more expensive than c…"
"The cost of their food is far less than that of the shrewd flesh-eater. I mention this point first as being the most …"
"Even in well-to-do house- holds the price of meat is a source of constant complaint and vexation to the prudent house…"
""What sort of a religion must that be?" was the remark of an old and faithful servant when she heard that her former …"
"Secondly: Is it not equally unquestionable that it is both more humane, and what, for want of a comprehensive word, I…"
"If we assume for a moment that a fleshless diet is practicable, how cruel to animals, and how degrading to men, is th…"
"The greatest and most unerring argument in favour of Vegetarianism is, to my mind, the utter absence of "good taste" …"
"It appears, then, that both on economic and moral grounds there are certain very distinct advantages in a vegetarian …"
"The popular idea is, of course, that meat is the only food which gives strength, and that Vegetarianism is wellnigh i…"
"I must preface this essay by the confession that I am myself a Vegetarian, and that I mean to say all the good I can …"