The Bloodless Revolution Read online




  THE BLOODLESS REVOLUTION

  Radical Vegetarians and the Discovery of India

  TRISTRAM STUART

  DEDICATION

  To my father

  SIMON STUART

  (1930–2002)

  CONTENTS

  COVER

  TITLE PAGE

  DEDICATION

  LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

  INTRODUCTION

  I: GRASS ROOTS

  1 Bushell’s Bushel, Bacon’s Bacon and The Great Instauration

  2 John Robins: The Shakers’ God

  3 Roger Crab: Levelling the Food Chain

  4 Pythagoras and the Sages of India

  5 ‘This proud and troublesome Thing, called Man’: Thomas Tryon, the Brahmin of Britain

  6 John Evelyn: Salvation in a Salad

  7 The Kabbala Stripped Naked

  8 Men Should be Friends even to Brute Beasts: Isaac Newton and the Origins of Pagan Theology

  9 Atheists, Deists and the Turkish Spy

  II: MEATLESS MEDICINE

  10 Dieting with Dr Descartes

  11 Tooth and Nail: Pierre Gassendi and the Human Appendix

  12 The Mitre and the Microscope: Philippe Hecquet’s Catholic Fast Food

  13 Dr Cheyne’s Sensible Diet

  14 Clarissa’s Calories

  15 Rousseau and the Bosoms of Nature

  16 The Counter-Vegetarian Mascot: Pope’s Happy Lamb

  17 Antonio Cocchi and the Cure for Scurvy

  18 The Sparing Diet: Scotland’s Vegetarian Dynasty

  III: ROMANTIC DINNERS

  19 Diet and Diplomacy: Eating Beef in the Land of the Holy Cow

  20 John Zephaniah Holwell: Voltaire’s Hindu Prophet

  21 The Cry of Nature: Killing in the Name of Animal Rights in the French Revolution

  22 The Marquis de Valady faces the Guillotine

  23 Bloodless Brothers

  24 John ‘Walking’ Stewart and the Utility of Death

  25 To Kill a Cat: Joseph Ritson’s Politics of Atheism

  26 Shelley and the Return to Nature

  27 The Malthusian Tragedy: Feeding the World

  EPILOGUE

  ABBREVIATIONS

  BIBLIOGRAPHY

  INDEX

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  NOTES

  COPYRIGHT

  ABOUT THE PUBLISHER

  LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

  PLATES

  SECTION ONE

  Studio of Jan Brueghel the Elder, ‘Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden’, Flemish, early 17th century. Leeds Museums and Galleries (Lotherton Hall) UK/ The Bridgeman Art Library, London (ref: LMG 142825)

  Frans Snyders, ‘The Butcher’s Shop’ c.1640– 50. Pushkin Museum, Moscow, Russia/The Bridgeman Art Library, London (ref: XIR 47570)

  Jan Brueghel the Elder & Peter Paul Rubens, ‘Adam and Eve in Paradise’, c.1615. Mauritshuis, The Hague, The Netherlands/The Bridgeman Art Library (ref: BAL 7152)

  David Teniers the Younger, ‘In the Kitchen’, 1669. Noortman, Maastricht, The Netherlands/The Bridgeman Art Library, London (ref: NOR 61586)

  Frontispiece of Christopher Plantin ed. ‘Biblia Sacra, Hebraice, Chaldaice, Grace & Latine’, Antwerp, 1569. The British Library, London

  Ivory Cabinet, showing Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, Sri Lanka, late 17th century. V&A Images/Victoria and Albert Museum, London (ref: CT62950)

  Iskandar meeting the Brahmans, India, 1719. From the latter half of a manuscript of Firdawsi’s ‘Shahnama’. The British Library, London (ref: Add. 18804, f.117v)

  ‘Maître François’ (illuminator), ‘Alexander the Great meeting the Indian ‘‘gymnosophists’’, or naked philosophers’. From St Augustine, ‘La Cité de Dieu’, Books I-X, Paris. 1475– 1480. Koninklijke Bibliotheek National Library of the Netherlands, Den Haag, Museum Meermanno-Westreenianum (ref: MMW, 10 A 11, f. 93v)

  Bhairavi Ragini, First Wife of Bhairava Raga, Folio from a Ragamala (Garland of Melodies), Bilaspur, Himachal Pradesh, India, 1685– 1690. Los Angeles County Museum of Art (Nasli and Alice Heeramaneck Collection, Museum Associates Purchase. Photo © 2006 Museum Associates/LACMA

  Banyans and Brahmins, from Jan Huygen van Linschoten, ‘Itinerario’, 1596. The Brenthurst Library, Johannesburg, South Africa. Photograph by Clive Hassall

  ‘Indian huts’ from Jan Huygen van Linschoten, ‘Itinerario’, 1596. The Brenthurst Library, Johannesburg, South Africa. Photograph by Clive Hassall

  John Evelyn’s ‘pietre dure’ cabinet showing Orpheus charming the beasts by Domenico Bennotti & Francesco Ffanelli, 1644– 50. V&A Images/Victoria and Albert Museum, London (ref: CT64605)

  School of Jan Brueghel the Elder, ‘Orpheus charming the animals’, Flemish, c.1600– 10. Galleria Borghese, Rome. Alinari Archives/Corbis

  SECTION TWO

  Joseph Highmore, ‘The Harlowe Family’ from the illustrations of Samuel Richardson’s Clarissa, 1747– 8. Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection, USA/The Bridgeman Art Library, London (ref: YBA 156350)

  Jean Baptiste Greuze, ‘Girl weeping over her Dead Canary’, c.1765. National Gallery of Scotland/The Bridgeman Art Library, London (ref: NGS 230482)

  Elizabeth Vigée Le Brun, ‘Self Portrait in a Straw Hat’, 1782. The National Gallery, London

  Jean-Baptiste Greuze, ‘The Milkmaid’, before 1784. Louvre, Paris/The Bridgeman Art Library, London (ref: XIR 90016)

  Frontispiece of Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s ‘Discours sur l’Origine et les Fondemens de l’Inegalité ’, Marc Michel, Amsterdam, 1755. The British Library, London

  Jean Baptiste Greuze, ‘The White Hat’, by c.1780. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston/ The Bridgeman Art Library, London (ref: BST 216007)

  Attributed to Marie Victoire Lemoine, ‘Young Woman with a Dog’, c.1796 Bucharest National Museum of Arts/AKG Images, London

  Jean Laurent Mosnier, ‘The Young Mother’, c.1770– 80. Musée Municipal, Macon, France/The Bridgeman Art Library, London (ref: XIR 180450)

  Eugene Delacroix, ‘Liberty Leading the People’, 1830. Louvre, Paris/The Bridgeman Art Library, London (ref: XIR 3692)

  C.J. Grant, ‘Singular effects of the universal pills on a green grocer!’ From ‘Grant’s Oddities’, London, 1841, plate 8. The Wellcome Trust Medical Photographic Library (ref: V0011125)

  ‘The Mansion of Bliss. A New Game for the Amusement of Youth’, William Darton, London, 1822. V&A Images/Victoria and Albert Museum, London (ref: CT26924)

  The Old Fort, Playhouse and Holwell’s Monument, Calcutta, from Thomas Daniell, ‘Views of Calcutta’, 1786. The British Library, London (ref: P88, 88)

  Attributed to Johann Zoffany, ‘Portrait of John Zephaniah Holwell’, 1765. Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, New Hampshire (ref: P.961.244)

  Marquis de Valady (1766– 1793) and his wife, daughter of the Comte de Vaudreuil.

  Courtesy of Christian de Chefdebien

  SECTION THREE

  Akbar ordering the slaughter to cease, from Abul Fazl’s ‘Akbarnama’, Mughal, c.1590. Johnson Album 8, no 4. V&A Images/Victoria and Albert Museum, London (ref: I.S.2– 1896)

  King Solomon and the animals, from the ‘Iyar-i-Danish’ c.1595. Chester Beatty Library, Dublin (ref: CBL In. 4.74)

  Majnun and the hunter, from an illustrated ‘Silsilat al-Zahab’, Akbar’s court, India, 1613. Chester Beatty Library, Dublin (ref: CBL In. 8.61)

  Top-cover of pen box, signed by Manohar, India, Deccan, late 17th century. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York: Cynthia Hazen Polsky and Leon B. Polsky Fund, 2002 (2002.416 ab)

  Jewel casket, detail of lady holding tree, attributed to Rahim Deccani. Deccan (or probably Golconda) or Kashmir, India, c.1660. V&A Images/Victoria and Albert Museum, London (ref: C
T104143)

  Jewel casket, detail of seated European, attributed to Rahim Deccani. Deccan (or probably Golconda) or Kashmir, India, c.1660. V&A Images/Victoria and Albert Museum, London (ref: CT104144)

  The ‘pietre dure’ Orpheus on Shah Jahan’s Throne in the Hall of Public Audiences in the Red Fort, New Delhi, India, by Ebba Koch. Akademische Druck-u. Verlagsanstalt, Graz, Austria, 1988

  Todi Ragini, Second Wife of Hindol Raga, Folio from a ‘Ragamala’ (Garland of Melodies), Jaipur, India, c.1750. Los Angeles County Museum of Art (Nasli and Alice Heeramaneck Collection, Museum Associates Purchase. Photo © 2006 Museum Associates/LACMA

  Detail of an illustrated vijnaptipatra, by Ustad Salivahana, AD 1610. Courtesy of Shri Jitendra Shah, Lalbhai Dalpatbhai Institute of Indology, Navrangpur, Gujarat, India.

  Illustration from the ‘Lalitavistara’ by the Buddhist Scribe Amrtananda: commissioned by Captain Knox, an officer of the East India. Company’s army, resident in Nepal in 1803– 4. The British Library, London (ref: I.O. SAN 688)

  James Fraser, ‘A street scene in the village of Raniya’, 1816– 20. The British Library, London (ref: Add.Or.4057)

  James Gillray, ‘French Liberty and British Slavery’, London, c.1789. The British Library, London/The Bridgeman Art Library, London (ref: BL 22564)

  James Gillray, ‘Consequences of a Successful French Invasion or We teach de English Republicans to work’, London, c.1798. The Warden and Scholars of New College, Oxford/The Bridgeman Art Library, London (ref: NCO 190453)

  James Gillray, ‘Temperance enjoying a frugal meal’ (Charlotte Sophia of Mecklenburg-Strelitz; King George III), 1792. The National Portrait Gallery, London (ref: NPG D12461)

  James Gillray, ‘A voluptuary under the horrors of Digestion’ (King George IV), 1792. The National Portrait Gallery, London (ref: NPG D12460)

  James Gillray, ‘New morality …’, London, 1798. The National Portrait Gallery, London (ref: NPG D13093)

  Edward Hicks, ‘The Peaceable Kingdom’, c.1840– 5. Brooklyn Museum of Art, New York/The Bridgeman Art Library, London (ref: TBM 84503)

  INTEGRATED

  Thomas Bushell, the Superlative Prodigall, from Thomas Bushell, ‘The First Part of Youth Errors’ (London, 1628). The British Library, London

  Golden Age, from ‘Ovid’s Metamorphoses’ (London, 1732). The British Library, London (ref: 11375.aa.23)

  Ranters and Shakers, from George Hall ‘The Declaration of John Robins, the false Prophet, otherwise called the Shakers God’ (London, 1651). The British Library, London

  A naked rout of Ranters, from John Collins ‘Strange Newes from Newgate’ (London, 1650/1). The British Library, London (ref: E.622.3)

  Naked Adamites, from Obadiah Couchman, ‘The Adamites Sermon’ (F. Cowles: London, 1641). The British Library, London

  Roger Crab’s horoscope consultation with William Lilly, ‘de Revelatione’. The Bodleian Library, University of Oxford, England. (ref: MS Ashmole 427 f. 51v)

  Roger Crab, ‘The English Hermite’ (London, 1655). The National Portrait Gallery, London (NPG D2220)

  Illuminated letter S, from Roger Crab, ‘The English Hermite’ (London, 1655), p. 2. The British Library, London (ref: G.1024.E.826.1)

  Jan van Grevenbroeck, Marco Polo in Tartar Attire. Museo Correr, Venice/ The Bridgeman Art Library, London (ref: XIR 34703)

  Indian cow worship, from the frontispiece of Thomas Herbert, ‘A Relation of Some Yeares Travaile, Begunne Anno 1626 Into Afrique … and some parts of the Orientall Indies’ (William Stansby: London, 1634). The British Library, London

  Brahmin with cow, from Frontispiece of Henry Lord, ‘A Display of two forraigne sects in the East Indies’ (London, 1630). The British Library, London (ref: 147.a.20)

  Horoscope of the Nativity of Thomas Tryon’s daughter, from John Gadbury, ‘Collectio Geniturarum’ (London, 1661/2), p. 195. The British Library, London

  Robert White, Portrait of Thomas Tryon after unknown artist. From Thomas Tryon, ‘The Knowledge Of A Man’s Self ’ (T. Bennet: London, 1703). The National Portrait Gallery, London (ref: NPG D8242)

  Naked Adamites, from Bernard Picart, ‘Ceremonies et Coutumes Religieuses de Tous Les Peuples Du Monde ( J.F. Bernard: Amsterdam, 1736). The British Library, London (ref: IV.213)

  Drawing by John Evelyn of the Evelyn family house at Wotton, Surrey, from the terrace above the gardens, 1653. The Trustees of the British Museum, London

  From Knorr von Rosenroth et al., eds, ‘Kabbalæ Denudatæ’, Volume II. ( J.D. Zunneri: Frankfurt, 1684). The British Library, London

  Illustration of a Slaughterhouse and Butchering Tools from Denis Diderot et al., ‘Encyclopedia’ 1751. Archivo Iconografico, S.A./Corbis

  Isaac Newton, ‘Irenicum’. King’s College Library, Cambridge (ref: Keynes 3, f.5)

  Illustration from the eight volumes of ‘Letters Writ by a Turkish Spy’ (London, 1692– 4). The British Library, London (ref: 1482.bb.25)

  Edward Tyson’s chimpanzee before and after dissection, from Edward Tyson, ‘Orang-Outang, sive Homo Sylvestris’ (Thomas Bennet et al.: London, 1699). The British Library, London

  Portrait of George Cheyne. Edinburgh University Library, Sir William Thomason-Walker Collection (Licensor www.scran.ac.uk)

  William Hogarth’s Stage One from the ‘Four Stages of Cruelty’. William Hogarth/V&A Images/Victoria and Albert Museum, London (ref: JX1832)

  ‘Equality’ engraved by L. Gautier, c.1793/4 after Antoine Boizot. Musee de la Revolution Francaise, Visille, France/The Bridgeman Art Library, London (ref: REV 131559)

  ‘The Interior of a Native Hut’ from A. Colin, ‘Twenty four Plates illustrating Hindoo & European Manners in Bengal … after sketches by Mrs c. Belnos’ (Smith & Elder: London, 1832), plate 14. V&A Images/ Victoria and Albert Museum, London (ref: CT69834)

  Roberto de Nobili dressed as Indian ‘sanyassin’. The British Library, London (ref: 4869.dd.15.T17343)

  James Gillray, frontispiece of John Oswald, ‘The Cry of Nature’ ( J. Johnson: London, 1791). The British Library, London (ref: 1388b.26)

  James Sayers, ‘John Bull’s sacrifice to Janus’ (Hannah Humphrey: London,1794). The National Portrait Gallery, London (ref: NPG D12257)

  Woodcut by Bewick, from George Nicholson, ‘On the Conduct of Man to Inferior Animals’ (G. Nicholson: Manchester; Whitrow: London, 1797). Bodleian Library, University of Oxford, England (ref: Johnson f. 235)

  Richard Newton, ‘A Blow Up at Breakfast!’ (W. Holland: London, 1792). The Trustees of the British Museum, London (ref: PD 8092)

  ‘John Stewart’ by Henry Hoppner Meyer, after J.E.H. Robinson. The National Portrait Gallery, London (ref: NPG D4935)

  James Sayers, ‘Caricature of Joseph Ritson’, 1803. The National Portrait Gallery, London (ref: NPG D9623)

  Title illustration from ‘Frankenstein’ by Mary Shelley (1797– 1851). Engraved by Theodor M. von Holst. Bridgeman Art Library (ref: XJF 105430)

  Mahatma Gandhi at the Vegetarian Society, 1931, seated next to the socialist reformer, Henry Salt. Courtesy of Jon Wynne Tyson/West Sussex Wildlife Protection

  ‘Waldesfrieden’ from Richard Ungewitter, ‘Nacktheit und Kultur’, 1913. The British Library, London

  ‘Heil Goring!’ from Kladderadatsch, 1933. From ‘The Nazi War on Cancer’ by Robert N. Proctor. (Princeton University Press, New Jersey, 1999)

  Der Führer als Tierfreund. Nazi propaganda material, c.1936. AKG Images, London

  INTRODUCTION

  Stranded in the countryside and confronted with a live chicken which he has to roast, Withnail is paralysed. ‘I think you should strangle it instantly,’ says his anxious friend Peter, ‘in case it starts trying to make friends with us.’ ‘I can’t,’ he adds, ‘those dreadful, beady eyes’ (Bruce Robinson, Withnail & I (1987)). In 1714 the philosophical wit, Bernard Mandeville, mused on a very similar predicament: ‘I question whether ever any body so much as killed a Chicken without Reluctancy the first time,’ he commented wryly, ‘yet all of them feed he
artily and without Remorse on Beef, Mutton and Fowls when they are bought in the Market.’1 Western society has fostered a culture of caring for animals; and it has maintained humanity’s right to kill and eat them. Today, negotiating compassion with the desire to eat is customary, and there are clearly defined lifestyles available for each person’s particular taste. But it was only after the word ‘vegetarian’ was coined in the 1840s, followed by the formation of the Vegetarian Society in 1847, that ‘vegetarianism’ was applied to a distinct movement that could easily be pigeon-holed, and ignored. Before that, meat-eating was an open question that concerned everyone and it affected not just people’s choice of diet but their fundamental ideas about man’s status on earth.*

  In the era preceding the Industrial Revolution the question of meat-eating was one of the fiercest battle-fronts in the struggle to define humanity’s proper relationship with nature. The vital question: ‘should humans be eating animals?’ was a serious challenge to Western society’s belief that the world and everything in it had been made exclusively for mankind. Vegetarians called for a wholesale reappraisal of the human relationship with nature. Man was lord of the creation: but what kind of a lord, vegetarians asked, ate his own subjects?

  It started with the Bible – with the very first chapter of Genesis. The first words God said to Adam and Eve after creating the world were: ‘Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth’ (Genesis 1:28). In the remote world of fourth-century BC Athens, this view was echoed with remarkable consonance by Aristotle, probably the most revered authority in Western culture after the Scriptures: ‘plants are created for the sake of animals, and the animals for the sake of men’.2 These two pillars of cultural authority provided a religious and philosophical sanction for humanity’s predatory instincts (a characteristic of hominid behaviour which arose more than a million years ago). Anything that wasn’t recognisably Homo sapiens stood little chance of being valued beyond its basic utility. But there were always counter-currents and cracks in the edifice, and it was into these fractures that vegetarians thrust their cultural crowbars.