[6] The article, unsigned, appeared in No. 23.
[7] The Adventurer, No. 20.
[8] See the concluding article, “Valete Etonenses,” No. 29.
[9] The incident is a good example of the way in which the real ethics of diet are often overlooked, while stress is laid upon some quite minor and subordinate aspect of it.
[10] I was not aware of these lines having appeared in print, until they were quoted by Sir Edward Cook in his More Literary Recreations, 1919. My version of them is slightly different from his; but I think my recollection is trustworthy.
[11] My Days and Dreams, by Edward Carpenter, 1916.
[12] The two years allowed for vegetarianism have now become forty, and all of them years of hard work.
[13] “Our competitive system of industry is a vestigial institution. It is a survival from the militant ages of the past.... It is a system of cannibalism. Instead of instilling the feeling of brotherhood, it compels us to eat each other.”—Savage Survivals, by J. Howard Moore, 1916.
[14] Since the above was written, Dean Inge has added his name to the illustrious list. Is it not time, by the way, that some one collected the Gloomy Dean’s golden sayings in a volume—under the title of Ingots, perhaps?
[15] Article on “The Bringing of Sentient Beings into Existence,” the Ethical World, May 7, 1898.