
This volume brings together the voices of some of the most respected moral leaders of the nineteenth‑century—poets, philosophers, saints and social reformers—who united to denounce the practice of animal vivisection. Their testimonies argue that scientific progress should never be built on suffering, framing cruelty as a betrayal of both nature and conscience. The author frames the debate as a clash between a reverence for life and a misguided worship of unchecked knowledge.
Each chapter presents a distinct advocate, from the compassionate Earl of Shaftesbury to other prominent figures, accompanied by period illustrations that capture the fervor of the anti‑vivisection campaign. Readers gain a window into the era’s philanthropic spirit, its campaigns to protect children and animals alike, and the ethical arguments that still resonate today. The collection invites listeners to reflect on how the fight against cruelty shaped public discourse long before modern animal‑rights movements.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (66K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2008-07-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1854–1936
A lively public campaigner as well as a writer, he moved between the worlds of law, literature, and social reform in late Victorian and Edwardian Britain. His life joined family literary tradition with determined work on child welfare and the anti-vivisection cause.
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