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Tanner Turgeon at Jul 29, 2020 09:07 AM

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CONSIDERATION FOR BIRDS

The Publication of Frances Power Cobbe's Memoirs Calls Attention to It.
Ouida Writes on "Birds and Their Persecutors" in the Nineteenth Century -- A Sharp Criticism.

Strong Condemnation of Those Who Wilfullly Slaughter Them by the Wholesale for Sport.

In, the autobiography of Frances Power Cobbe, that ruling passion of her life, consideration for dumb animals appears and reappears constantly. "The horrors of scientific cruelty to animals" is constantly referred to by her. In speaking of Tennyson, she says:

"I shall account it one of the chief honors which have fallen to my lot that Tennyson asked leave, through his son, to pay me a visit. Needless to say, I accepted the offer with gratitude and fortunately Iw as at home, in our little house in Cheyne Walk, when he called on me. He sat for a long time over my fire, and talked of poetry; of the share melodious words ought to have in it; of the hatefulness of scientific cruelty, against which he was going to write again; and of the new and dangerous phases of thought even then apparent."

The publication of this book, which pushes this one idea constantly to the foreground, similtaneously with the appearance of Ouida's article in the Nineteenth Century, on the slaughter of birds, should show how women are rising against this needless destruction of the "little people of the air"

It has been frequently said that it was the vanity of women which above all things has caused this slaughter of the innocents. But it has not been the sanity of women any more than the stupidity of men. Men have snared the birds for the profit derived from their sale Women have thoughtlessly bought the birds, and their wings and breasts, because they saw them in the milliner's boxes, and finding them there, already dead and dressed, had no compunction about buying them. Nor have the women been any more culpable than those gourmands who have been willing to eat English larks, for which there is even in America an increasing sale It really seems that if there is any time when a person would feel absolutely bestial it is when his sensibilities have become so subordinated to his appetites, that he will be willing, like some foul creature of the primeval forest, to crunch a lark between his molars. Could any sacrilege have seemed more coarse to Keats that this gross devastation of the skylark which "shakes the tremulous dew from his lush clover covert?" As for Shelly who cried: "Bird thou never wert!" He would as soon have thought of masticating the Spirit of Song and Poesy itself as this bird, born to give the last accent of tender beauty to an English morning

228

CONSIDERATION FOR BIRDS

The Publication of Frances Power Cobbe's Memoirs Calls Attention to It.
Ouida Writes on "Birds and Their Persecutors" in the Nineteenth Century -- A Sharp Criticism.

Strong Condemnation of Those Who Wilfullly Slaughter Them by the Wholesale for Sport.

In, the autobiography of Frances Power Cobbe, that ruling passion of her life, consideration for dumb animals appears and reappears constantly. "The horrors of scientific cruelty to animals" is constantly referred to by her. In speaking of Tennyson, she says: