[53]. "Trooper Peter Halket."
[54]. Walden, "Higher Laws."
[55]. The New Charter, "The Humanitarian View."
[56]. "Foods in Health and Disease."
[57]. Nineteenth Century, May, 1885.
[58]. Take, for example, the rule to which some bird-lovers bind themselves, to wear no feathers but those of birds killed for food. One is reminded of Thomas Paine's epigram: "They pity the plumage, but forget the dying bird."
[59]. Richard Jefferies, "Field and Hedgerows."
Transcriber’s Note
1. Punctuation and capitalization have been normalized. Variations in hyphenation have been retained as they were in the original publication. Index, Anthropophogist changed to Anthropophagist. 2. The cover has been produced by the transcriber and is in the public domain.