Animal
Brothers
Second
Letter
My dear friend!
I have heard your arguments.
You said things I had almost expected to hear, because everybody
thinks and answers the way you have answered me. It made me a bit
sad, as I had been hopeful that you might be closer to understanding,
closer than "everybody." And now ... But, as everybody asks and
talks as you do, I suppose you must have a right to do so, and,
to you, it seems perfectly natural to think that way; so I will
no longer be sad about your having spoken that way also.
And I will answer and
explain: You say animals were created to serve as food for humans.
Excuse me but when I came to that point, I laughed heartily. I
do admit that, in the household of Nature, nothing is ever wasted.
Even the carcass of one creature will serve as food for another,
and yes, very often an animal kills another in order to eat its
flesh. I also admit that this is provided in the laws of Nature.
Even such a violent death is calculated, this dying to provide food,
instead of a later death of old age, which would be of hardly any
benefit.
I admit all of that.
But your words: "Animals are created to serve as food for humans,"
they seem the same to me as thought a lion or some other beast of
prey would smack his lips and say: "Man is created to serve as a
good meal for us." Wouldn't you laugh at such words? So, you see,
I laughed too.
But when you say that
the brief, nearly painless moment when the animals are killed does
not matter when compared to the benefit and relish their death renders
to the killers, I cannot condone that opinion.
Many people think the
same as you do, nearly all of them. But have they, have you seen
it all clearly, the way it really is? Haven't you been misled by
your desire to go on eating flesh, suppressing the scruples within
you? Was it not this, maybe semi-conscious desire that made you
glance at it very superficially, with a brief glimpse, with eyes
half closed, so you could soothe yourself by saying: "It's really
not so bad!" Might it not be that way, my dear friend?
Look here, let me tell
you how I see it, clearly, in its whole reality. I don't want to
tell you about the big reptiles, the fat Iguanas in South America;
natives capture them for their savory flesh, then they cut the sinews
from their legs, tie them alive to bunches with their own sinews
(imagine that agony, that pain!) and leave them lying for days in
gloomy, cellar-like rooms, until their flesh is needed for the table.
You will tell me, that
is too far away, too unusual and not applicable to our life and
our habits. You are right. And therefore I also don't want to tell
you about the Southern countries, where poultry, chickens, and pigeons,
are plucked alive; deprived of their plumage, alive. I have seen
for myself, women, holding such a deplorable bird, tied, on their
lap, tearing out all feathers, even the tiniest, completely unmoved
by the poor suffering animals' cries. And why did they do it? Because,
as they say, it makes the flesh of the animal, which is slaughtered
afterwards, paler.
You will say, with
reason, that such medieval cruelties are no longer practiced in
our countries, that killing is more "humane" here.
I just happen to remember
the young English lady who told me one day that she and her husband
were going to accompany the fishermen that night to watch the fishing.
I said to her, it might be better not do that; for the fishermen
in that area allure the creatures of the water with bright lamps.
Attracted by the dazzling light, the fish come to the surface. The
fisherman stabs a fish with a harpoon, its tip of iron pierces the
animals' body and holds it with a barbed hook. Then they pull the
stabbed fish out of the water, free him of the harpoon which means,
they tear the iron hook out of his body, ripping large holes in
his twitching body, and throw him on top of the other captives
leaving him to die of his wounds. For only very few fishermen are
kind-hearted enough to instantly kill the suffering animals. I told
all of that to the young lady, who had spoken much to me of good
books, of progress, and of beautiful ideas. I told her with the
intention of warning her of such an experience, which must be a
dreadful martyrdom to her tender heart. But she burst out laughing
and told me that she had been fishing herself since her childhood
days, that she knew all methods and practiced them herself and
that sentiments such as those I was talking about meant nothing
to her. And, still smiling, this gentle lady of society told me:
"I don't feel anything when I do it. When I catch fish, I cut them
open alive and remove the entrails, as it immensely improves the
taste of the flesh if you do that." I still remember how amused
she was at the sight of my shocked amazement.
Now this was a modern,
sensitive young English lady, a person of the North.
Here again, you will
say that is an exception, an almost incredible one, and has nothing
common with normal methods of fishing. I agree for, if this incident
had not happened to me, I would hardly believe it myself.
So, as I know you reject
all of these things as being out of the rule and you are right
I am not going to tell you how I see "the rule" in fishing. Listen
to me and consider for yourself, whether that is the plain truth
or not.
For instance: you go
line-fishing. Many people say: "A beautiful sport, calming to the
nerves." You are sitting in Nature, next to the water, you hold
the fishing-rod and observe the floating cork, and you must learn
to pull the fish out with a skilful movement at the right moment.
If you are successful, there will be great joy for the fisherman
as well as the observers. Everybody will admire the handsome, scaly,
floundering body o the fish and the fisherman will proudly lay
it amidst his other victims, killing it before that, putting it
into a pail of water.
That looks pretty harmless
particularly with eyes half closed in anticipation of a fragrant
meal of fish. But I see it closer, with open eyes, much more clearly.
I see a writhing earthworm being mercilessly seized by the angler's
hand (it might be the hand of an artist who paints pastels, or that
of a bel-esprit). I see a barbed iron hook. The angler's hand
takes the worm, pierces him, draws that torture of iron through
two thirds of the worm's body.
The worm is wriggling,
curling, writhing in anguish. The angler is smiling in satisfaction
and pride, for he has pierced the worm "skillfully." The hook is
concealed, only the little animal is visible, writhing vivaciously
in agony and despair. That's right, it is sure to attract the fish!
And the angler casts the fishing-line into the water, very much
satisfied with himself and with the art of fishing, waiting and
staring at the line, at the floating cork.
Minutes pass by that
way, many, many minutes every minute consists of 60 seconds. What
an eternity must every single second be to the little martyr on
the hook? I have endured great physical pain myself, pain that turned
to anguish and I know what a second meant to me, a big, strong
man; what a vast, horrible desert of time everyone who ever suffered
anguish will know that. Now think how a person would suffer, with
such a hook pierced through his body. Can you imagine that?
The angler is still
staring at the floating-cork. Didn't it move just now? He pulls
out the line. Sure enough, a fish had taken the bait, but he was
a cunning fellow, he had eaten the wriggling worm without touching
the hook. The fisher angrily removes the rest, which is still writhing
feebly. He looks at his watch. This bait had lasted for ten minutes.
Now he opens his can of worms, picks out a new victim, pierces it
skillfully with hands as merciless as ever, when he pierced hundreds
of thousands of worms before, in his long fishing career.
The worm is writhing
in anguish on the hook. Incomprehensible pain horrible, dragging
death. If he were a human being, he would ask in despair, how can
God ever let such things happen. And there is no mercy, no help,
nothing but the final deliverance by Nature itself, when a fish
takes him and eats him quickly, or when his life slowly fades away.
But the fisherman is
sitting close to the water, gazing at the floating cork, regarding
and feeling the Sunday's peace around him. He feels blissful in
his admiration of Nature, he is listening to the birds' songs, and
he is happy to know that these little songsters enjoy a safe and
protected life in our country nowadays, no longer endangered by
man's hunting, thanks to a society of which he, himself, is a well-respected
member: the Humane Society.
There! The floating
cork is sinking!
The angler tightens,
jerks and swings the line. A silvery fish is hanging on, floundering.
The hook has gripped very well, it has pierced the upper jaw and
is protruding at the front of the head, above the mouth.
Skillfully the angler
frees the fish of the barbed hook. that isn't easy, a barbed hook
like that holds fast you have to pull it back and forth several
times and finally rip out that crosswise iron hook with a skilled,
strong jerk. A little hole remains but that doesn't matter, as
the captive will be eaten anyway in a couple of hours. He weighs
his victim in his hands, is delighted and tosses the fish to the
other floundering brothers.
And now the angler
thinks it might be good to use a different sort of bait. He opens
a little box filled with multicolored scrambling bugs and flies,
and he grasps a gleaming beetle that happens to get between his
fingers. Skillfully he seizes the fishing-hook and pierces the beatles'
body in its very midst. The animal struggles with legs and feelers
in frenzy and spreads its wings in a vain attempt to fly. The fisherman
smiles: "Well, you can't do that any more now." Then he casts the
line on the water.
The beetle is floating,
gleaming and moving all his limbs. The angler nods in satisfaction.
That's right that will attract fish. He gets lost in thought,
but he keeps watching the beetle. He doesn't feel anything, doesn't
realize that this little helpless animal is suffering death in agony
beyond description no he is a lover of Nature, he enjoys the
beauty of the gleaming wings and the agility of the movements. And
the beetle cannot scream and anyway, it is only an insect,
and a harmful one besides.
While he is lost in
thought, he happens to touch a tooth with his tongue and by mishap,
it is the ill one. It instantly begins aching. The angler is suffering
the pain gets worse. He thinks that he must see the dentist tomorrow.
And he is terrified at the thought of the dentist touching that
tooth with his instruments of hard metal, how dreadful it must be
when he touches the nerve. There's sure to be a medicine that will
prevent him from feeling all the pain, and yet ... He will certainly
feel a little pain and he is afraid of it. Yes, he is even
afraid of the fine needle which will be pricked into his gum of
that little, momentary prick which will relieve him of any further
pain.
And the angler stares
at the struggling beetle, which has the barbed hook protruding from
its body between its wings, and he thinks philosophically how dreadful
the word is, ow a peaceful man must endure such cruel pain as, for
instance, a toothache. Has he deserved that? He, who never did harm
to any fellow-man. And in general, why must people be plagued with
illness and all sorts of evil? Why? Is it righteous, that the most
gentle of persons have to suffer that way is that supposed to
be justice? And the toothache is growing worse still. So he pulls
out the fishing line, rips the book out of the beetles' body and
tosses the struggling animal away no matter where. Then he winds
up the fishing-line, grasping his cheek now and then, collects everything,
takes the box with the fish and starts for home.
The toothache ceases
as suddenly as it began. And now he is looking forward to the fish,
to the fine way his wife will prepare them. Thinking of his wife,
he also remembers his little son. The boy has been wanting to join
him in fishing for a long time. Next sunday he will take him along,
it can do no harm if the child learns to practice that beautiful
sport as early as possible.
And next Sunday the
angler, the father, will show his son how to pierce a worm on the
fishing-hook in a skilled way. -
This is the picture
of the angler, as I have seen it often, unable myself to help the
victim on the hook. Every time I was horror-struck, when I realized
that hundreds of thousands of people throughout Europe are exercising
this sport every day and particularly every Sunday and considering
it a pleasure. I never could consider it a pleasure to torture worms,
bugs, and flies to death by crucifixion. And some of the people
who do that are persons who show great sensitivity otherwise. But
is it deep enough? -
That is what I had
to tell you about line-fishing, about this method of capturing fish
which you consider a beautiful sport and "not at all cruel." But
you know now that I see it in a different way. Even if I would think
that the fishing hook causes no more than a bearable pain to the
fish, the worms' death in anguish would be reason enough for me,
why I would never be able to eat a fish caught in this way. As I
said before: Even the worm is a brother to me, and I feel with him.
I can see you grinning
as you read these lines, your face assumes a superior look, and
you would like to reply: "But what about fishing with nets? Where
is the stumbling-worm in that? Where is the fishes' death in anguish?
He is merely hauled on land in the net and killed with a blow on
the head. Where is the great suffering in that?"
I can hear you talking
that way, and I must answer: "Here again, you have glanced at it
with your eyes only half opened."
You are smiling skeptically?
Listen, how I have
witnessed fishing with nets, time and again, how I see it, with
my eyes that may indeed be a bit more than wide open, because dread
and horror made me open them that wide; dread and horror that were
born out of compassion.
The fishermen take
to the water. Their nets are big and wide. It takes the power of
many strong men to haul them out of the water. This power grows
in itself, it is increased by the joy of having a great haul. They
pull and pull. Hundreds and thousands of floundering fish are taken
out of the water, shaken out of the nets, into the hold of the fishing-boats,
where the fish are lying one on top of the other, a quivering, silvery,
shimmering mountain, huge and heavy, making the boat lie deeper
in the water. The fish lying on the bottom have to bear the weight
of all of those lying on them, so they can hardly move, or not at
all. The topmost fish flap their tails and move their other fins,
gathering all their strength for a leap, as their instincts tell
them that they might be able to save themselves that way, that they
might escape to the safety of their home element, the water.
The fishermen light
their pipes, chuckling. It was a good haul! And they resume their
work at the oars or wherever their place is. If it is a very large
boat, they may wade through the mass of fish with their big seaman's
boots, stepping on the delicate bodies of the fish, crushing them,
wounding them, killing them. They are laughing as they do it, joking
with each other while they are walking about on their silvery prey.
Their boots don't feel anything, and neither do their hearts, for
tradition made a hide of leather grow around their hearts, as hard,
as unfeeling, as greasy as the one their boots are made of. It never
even comes to their minds that the are walking on the bodies of
living creatures, wounding them by the weight of their steps.
But this fate hits
only a few of the fish. It is not the rule, so we won't deal with
it any longer. Let us see what becomes of the bulk of them, those
thousands and ten thousands of fish.
You heard me say: Thousands,
ten thousands.
Every fisherman would
laugh at you, if you would demand that he kill those vast numbers
of aquatic animals. And how could he? There wouldn't even be room
enough for it, as the boat is filled with the bulk of the haul.
So the fisherman does no more than grip one fish or another and
kill it by smashing its head. He only does it to those who jump
too much, whose floundering is too powerful, and he does this act
of mercy only to the ones on top, to those who might otherwise succeed
in leaping back into the water with the last bit of strength left
in them. Only to prevent the valuable captives from escaping, does
the fisherman kill one or another of the prisoners. He does it merely
for that practical reason, and not to end the animals' suffering.
Oh, no! Why should he take the trouble? The fish will die by themselves,
without causing all that effort.
Gradually the floundering
of the fishes' bodies decreases, it is no longer so wild and powerful,
bit by bit there is less strength in it, it grows fainter and fainter.
No, nobody needs to care about them, they die by themselves.
That is how the fisherman
thinks and acts. He knows what he is doing, for he is experienced
in his trade.
And the fish?
The fish was torn out
of his life element, water, and thrown into an element which he
had known before for seconds at most. If we, who are native to the
air, fall into water, if we are surrounded and covered by water,
we are drowned within the short time of a few minutes. With many
fish, it is that way too; they die within a few minutes, when exposed
to the air. But that is true only with a minority of fish. Most
of the fish captured in nets, in our areas, will live outside of
their native element, will live in the air for a long time an
hour, two hours, four hours, even half a day, and this is especially
true of salt-water fish.
I just said they live.
But that is not the proper word the contrary word, die,
would be the appropriate one. yes, the fish is dying, not within
minutes, no, he is dying for hours, a grim, horrible death, only
comparable with our death of suffocation. imagine yourself slowly
dying of suffocation the air around you becoming scarcer and scarcer,
yourself lacking it more and ever more. Your whole life merely consisting
of gasping for breath, more and ever more, harder and harder, until
you can gasp no more.
Imagine the fish
no, you should go to the shore or to the fish-market and see for
yourself, how the fish are lying on the ground or in baskets. Then
you will witness their dreadful death, and you will see how they
gradually grow fainter, how they open their mouth more and more
in suffocation, till that mouth is gaping wide, nearly round in
the agony of that slow dying.
As you have the power
of imagination, imagine you were that fish and would have to die
that way, that dreadful way, gasping for breath every second, every
minute! And those seconds of agony grow to minutes, to full, heavy
minutes, to wide, eternal hours. Imagine that anguish .
Each time I come across
a fish-market, or pass along a beach, where the shimmering bodies
of the aquatic creatures are writing, with their mouths gaping in
agony, as if uttering a wailing death-shriek each time then, I
am suffering along with them, and I feel as if I were gasping for
breath myself and were dying with them. At such moments, I feel
myself one with the fish, I feel the life of this brother from the
other element within myself.
Maybe you are smiling.
Such a smile would not beautify you .
But I have not told
you everything yet. I must yet tell you about the fish who are captured
by the millions the herrings. Nobody kills them. They are shovelled
out o the boats alive, they are laid alive into the barrels standing
ready for them; they are placed on a layer of salt and covered with
another layer of those white crystals then the next layer of herrings
follows, then the next layer of salt. The slender, twitching, scaly-shimmering
bodies are covered with biting salt the living fish. That is his
tomb buried alive in a barrel, bedded in burning, biting salt.
Millions of fish die
that way, and millions of people eat them afterwards, most of them
without ever becoming aware, without ever even giving it a thought,
how that food was produced, what road of suffering and death they
are eating with delight.
Must I say still moire
about this small, truthful scene?
But I do want to tell
you still more. I want to tell you about other inhabitants of the
cool water and of the end they are doomed to by man, so that they
may please his palate and his stomach after their death.
I am thinking of the
fish whose origin is still a mystery, in spite of all research,
the fish who very much resembles a snake. I mean the mysterious
eel. How do people prepare him?
He is known to be very
hard-lived, just as snakes are. It seems almost impossible to kill
him unless his head were cut off, but that would ruin his decorative
appearance.
Only very rarely does
anyone decapitate an eel. Generally they try to stun im by blows
on the head or by tossing him on the floor. Then oh, please, it
is an old, perfectly customary kitchen method, practiced without
any thought he is skinned alive and then they put him alive
into the pot or the pan alive!
You have to tie the
lid very securely or lay stones or other heavy weights on it, because
the eel in his agonizing pain will rear up with all his might, he
writhes, twitches, bounds, presses against his infernal prison,
tries to force it open, to escape.
and sometimes it does
occur that eels do life the lid off the pot and escape skinned
half cooked or fried. But a human hand recaptures them at once
and puts them right back into the torture-chamber. The hand that
does this is usually a gentle woman's hand, that of a good mother
who wants to prepare such a savory meal for her children and her
husband. It is the hand of a woman who may be quite kind-hearted
otherwise, may be even very tender-hearted, at least towards the
ones she loves, and who is very easily moved when she sees other
people suffering. But she has no feeling for an eels' suffering
and agony. Indeed, that is possible: sometimes we have two different
kinds of heart, one of flesh and emotion, the other of stone and
unfeelingness.
"Everyone" prepares
eels that way, from time immemorial this mother's mother acted
the say way, and so did her grandmother. "Everyone" says, an eel
doesn't feel it so much and besides how else should you prepare
him? No, that good woman is very glad to be able to serve such a
delicious meal to her loved ones; she is glad, and never gives a
thought to the infernal martyrdom a living being, a fellow-creature
must endure for the sake of the treat; no saint ever had to endure
a worse martyrdom.
Every year, there are
hundreds of thousands of these great martyrs, and hardly anybody
ever commemorates them, nobody shed a tear for them. Or am I mistaken?
Indeed I have seen children cry but they are still foolish,
they are only kids. And yet I have seen persons, grownup
persons, who had something like a tear when they saw these poor
creatures offered for sale at the markets and thought of the fate
they were doomed to. Of course: strong people laugh at such things
as long as they don't have to bear them themselves.
And I recall still
another scene: Eels, bunched alive with a string drawn through their
gills. This living bunch is hung in the chimney, the writhing bodies
are smoked alive. This is the origin of the renowned delicacy
smoked eel.
Speaking of delicacies
don't crabs and the famous crayfish belong to your favorite dishes?
Don't you think them a feast, whenever they are offered to you?
Let me describe for
you the crabs' and the crayfish's journey, from the depth of the
water to that treat for your palate, which is awaiting you in a
large dish on a table beautifully decorated. In the water, deep
and cool, the crab or crayfish was captured and hauled out to the
light of the sun. Both of these animals are better off in the air
than fish are, because they can live outside of their aquatic element
without major problems. The air can be life element to them for
a long time.
The captured crabs
are usually packed in baskets or similar containers. I often saw
how the crayfishes' beautiful long feelers were broken off, as the
would take too much room. The feelers are the most sensitive organ
they have, highly developed antennae with the very finest sense
of touch. I can imagine what a hideous pain it must be, when they
are broken off at the roots. Mutilated as they are, the animals
are now offered for sale.
The buyer of a crab
or crayfish carries it home in joyous anticipation of a treat. Crayfish
and crabs are cooked as everybody knows, for not until then do they
assume that proverbial red color so often praised. They are cooked
alive and I believe everybody knows that too. And the housewife
said to me with a superior smile: "But that doesn't matter you
put them into boiling water they die very quickly. And besides,
they are lower animals, their nervous system is very primitive and
doesn't feel things like, for instance, a human being would feel
them." And once more, a superior smile. Crabs and crayfish are cooked,
that is a fact as old and irrefutable as the multiplication table.
But I know how they
die.
Many cookbooks tell
you that the best way is to put them in lukewarm water, weight them
with a stone, and cook them slowly as that will make them more
tasteful.
But let's forget about
that, let's suppose such instructions did not exist, and that everybody
would put the crabs in boiling water in order to kill them quickly.
that ambition is a step towards humanity and might even serve its
purpose if the pot of boiling water had a proper relation to the
animals' size.
And I recall still
another scene: Eels, bunched alive with a string drawn through their
gills. This living bunch is hung in the chimney, the writing bodies
are smoked alive. This is the origin of the renowned delicacy
smoked eel.
Speaking of delicacies
don't crabs and the famous crayfish belong to your favorite dishes?
Don't you think them a feast, whenever they are offered to you?
Let me describe for
you the crabs' and the crayfishes' journey, from the depth of the
water to that treat for your palate, which is awaiting you in a
large dish on a table beautifully decorated. In the water, deep
and cool, the crab or crayfish was captured and hauled out to the
light of the sun. Both of these animals are better off in the air
than fish are, because they can live outside of their aquatic element
without major problems. The air can be life element to them for
a long time.
The captured crabs
are usually packed in baskets or similar containers. I often saw
how the crayfishes' beautiful long feelers were broken off, as they
would take too much room. The feelers are the most sensitive organ
they have, highly developed antennae with the very finest sense
of touch. I can imagine what a hideous pain it must be, when they
are broken off at the roots. Mutilated as they are, the animals
are now offered for sale.
The buyer of a crab
or crayfish carries it home in joyous anticipation of a treat. Crayfish
and crabs are cooked, as everybody knows, for not until then do
they assume that proverbial red color so often praised. They are
cooked alive and I believe that everyone knows that too. And the
housewife said to me with a superior smile: "But that doesn't matter
you put them into boiling water they die very quickly. And besides,
they are lower animals, their nervous system is very primitive and
doesn't feel things like, for instance, a human being would feel
them." And once more, a superior smile. Crabs and crayfish are cooked,
that is a fact as old an irrefutable as the multiplication table.
But I know how they
die.
Many cookbooks tell
you that the best way is to put them in luke-warm water, weight
them with a stone, and cook them slowly as that will make them
more tasteful.
But let's forget about
that, let's suppose such instructions did not exist, and that everybody
would put the crabs in boiling water in order to kill them quickly.
That ambition is a step towards humanity and might even serve its
purpose if the pot of boiling water had a proper relation to the
animals' size. In other words: You would have to put the crayfish
into a large, a very large pot filled with strongly boiling water,
in order to kill it halfway rapidly, instead of in a way that is
more than barbaric.
But reality, i. e.
the common way of preparing them, is entirely different.
Generally a pot is
used which is just big enough for the animal to fit in. However
instead of one crayfish or one crab, several at
a time are usually put into the water, for you think: There's room
enough. But these creatures, whose bodies are cold and thick-shelled,
instantly cool the amount of water which is too small for the bulk
of them, so that the boiling water turns to warm, or at most, hot
water.
Now, in this hot water,
the terrified animals, used to the coolness, the nearly icy cold
of the deep water they came from, begin to scramble. They try to
escape, but in vain. The desperate scramblers are pushed back without
mercy, the post is covered by a lid, and the lid is tied securely
or weighted with stones or other heavy things.
Meanwhile the fire
under the pot is glowing and burning, the water is getting hotter
and hotter, it begins to steam, gradually approaching the boiling
point once more oh! very slowly. And the animals are confined
in this steadily increasing heat, without any chance of escape,
helplessly delivered to their constantly increasing pain. Even when
the water has come to the boiling point, that is not yet the end;
they still have to boil for a while in that boiling water in agony.
"Of course crabs and
crayfish must be boiled well" the head-cook says. He should rather
say: "Be boiled well alive." But I remember the dreadful era of
inquisition, and that this era is not yet overcome, as even in our
days humans put creatures, quite defenseless in their hands, into
boiling water alive. And I am horror-struck at the fact that those
who do it are so-called people of education and sensitivity, no
rude barbarians, no uncivilized savages and yet primitive primitive
civilized people, primitive so-called people of culture, Western
people who are proud of their noble thoughts and speeches, and who
commit atrocities with a smiling face not because they have to,
no, because they want to; not because they are unable to consider
and understand how hideous it is what they are doing no, because
they do not want to think about it it might cast a cloud on their
enjoyment.
"You'll never know
how sorry I feel for the crayfish each time I put one into boiling
water, and when he tries to climb out and I have to push him back
in. But, you see, we like to eat crayfish so much and how else
could you prepare the animals?" It was a German baroness who said
these words to me; she loved to eat crayfish, and she could not
bear the sight of a coachman beating his horse or a drover mistreating
a donkey. In such cases, she grew very indignant. She shed tears
when a little bird had a broken leg.
It is so fine to be
sentimental and to be a member of a Humane Society; it commits to
very much, except for extending your love for animals to edible
animals. What is the value of such a love? Is it truly existent
at all? But I know that crayfish, those voiceless creatures, utter
sounds of agony while being cooked alive. It is horrible, but the
cook and the housewife, they say, professionally and poetically:
"The crayfish are singing." ...
Is that enough? Shall
I tell you still more? No, I think you will understand now why
I cannot eat fish or other aquatic creatures. I would betray myself,
if I did.
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