''Shelley's Vegetarianism'' is a 1891 pamphlet on the
vegetarianism
Vegetarianism is the practice of abstaining from the consumption of meat (red meat, poultry, seafood, insects, and the flesh of any other animal). It may also include abstaining from eating all by-products of animal slaughter.
Vegetarianism may ...
of
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Percy Bysshe Shelley ( ; 4 August 17928 July 1822) was one of the major English Romantic poets. A radical in his poetry as well as in his political and social views, Shelley did not achieve fame during his lifetime, but recognition of his achie ...
by
William Axon, published by the
Vegetarian Society. It is a printing of a lecture delivered by Axon before the Shelley Society, at University College in 1890.
Background
Percy Bysshe Shelley was an English Romantic poet who wrote several essays on the subject of vegetarianism and animal rights, including the 1813 book, ''
A Vindication of Natural Diet
''A Vindication of Natural Diet'' is an 1813 book by Percy Bysshe Shelley on vegetarianism and animal rights. It was first written as part of the notes to ''Queen Mab'', which was privately printed in 1813. Later in the same year the essay was s ...
''. Himself an avid vegetarian, Englishman William Edward Armytage Axon was employed as a librarian, with a professional hobby for
antiquary
An antiquarian or antiquary () is an fan (person), aficionado or student of antiquities or things of the past. More specifically, the term is used for those who study history with particular attention to ancient artifact (archaeology), artifac ...
, writing, and bibliography. He has also been called a "leading figure of the vegetarian movement." Axon was the Honorable Secretary and the Vice President of the Vegetarian Society, and a member of the Shelley Society, at the time of the publication of the pamphlet, and co-wrote the preface for the 1884 edition of ''A Vindication of Natural Diet''.
In 1887, Axon published an article on Shelley's vegetarian aspects of living, for the fifth issue of ''Almonds and Raisins'', along with an essay on vegetarianism in Buddhism, and several short poems. In this article, it is noted that Shelley's diet was "in keeping with his whole character, and essential to his imaginative style of writing." On May 15 and June 20, 1890, he sent two advance letters to writer and ethical vegetarian reformer
Henry S. Salt
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, who was also in the Vegetarian Society, as reported in ''The British Library Catalogues'', concerning the planned lecture on the topic of Shelley's vegetarianism. An advertisement for this lecture appears in the November 9 issue of the secular humanist journal ''The Freethinker''.
The Meeting at University College

Axon read "Shelley's Vegetarianism" before the members of the Shelley Society, at University College, on Gower Street in London, at 8 P.M., Wednesday November 12, 1890. The meeting was promoted as being open to visitors, and discussion, following the lecture was invited for all who attended.
On the chair at the meeting was Henry S. Salt. Also attending the meeting was Scottish author and publisher
Alexander Hay Japp, English philologist
Frederick James Furnivall
Frederick James Furnivall (4 February 1825 – 2 July 1910) was an English philologist, best known as one of the co-creators of the ''New English Dictionary''. He founded a number of learned societies on early English literature and made pione ...
, along with Jane Ann Heavisides Simpson, James Burns, and Mrs. McDonel, who each took part in the discussion after the lecture, as well as several other unnamed people. Remarks from Salt regarding the lecture, where that during his life in London, Bracknell, and Marlow, the poet Shelley continued to be in the main an abstainer from flesh-meat, his views on the humanities, and the hygienics of diet, which were printed in the November 22, 1890 edition of ''The Academy''. He concludes his notes from the lecture by reiterating Axon, in that Shelley's diet "was not a mere dietetic whim, but an endeavour after a higher and better life for mankind, an attempt to bring the universe into sympathetic harmony, and to provide a bounteous feast from which none should be excluded."
It was subsequently published in pamphlet form the following year. Axon continued to give addresses on these topics for the next two decades, such as one which is entitled "Some Famous Vegetarians," which began with the ancient Indian sage
Asoka and ended with Shelley, contending that their diet "was no hindrance to their greatness." He also published these topics in several of his future works, including the 1897 book, ''Bygone Sussex''.
Publication

The 15 x 22 centimeter sewed pamphlet was covered in paper wrapping, and was published and circulated the year following Axon's lecture to the Shelley Society, by the Vegetarian Society, at 75 Princess Street, Manchester. It is 13 pages in total length, excluding advertisements and notes by the Vegetarian Society. An edition was published by bibliophile
Thomas J. Wise in the same year. By 1908, the cost of one copy of ''Shelley's Vegetarianism'' was 2 shillings.
Within a few decades, ''Shelley's Vegetarianism'' had been entered into several libraries, including in England, the Worcester Public Library, the Public Library of Boston, and the Harvard Library in the United States, as well as several in Germany, and others throughout Europe. It also appeared in several private libraries including bibliographer and bookseller
Harry Buxton Forman
Henry Buxton Forman (11 July 1842 – 15 June 1917) was a Victorian-era bibliographer and antiquarian bookseller whose literary reputation is based on his bibliographies of Percy Shelley and John Keats. In 1934 he was revealed to have been in a ...
, who owned two copies, and Polish typographer
Samuel Tyszkiewicz.
By 1922, the pamphlet was being sold for 50 cents per issue.
A copy, signed by English writer, critic, and fellow Shelley Society member
William Michael Rossetti, was for sale in 1939 at the former printing house and antiquarian bookshop in London,
Sotheran's
Sotheran's is a bookshop in Sackville Street, London, founded in 1761 in York and created in London in 1815. In 1884, John Harrison Stonehouse became employed as an apprentice, ultimately rising to the position of managing director through his sk ...
, for 15 shillings.
At the following meeting, Rossetti read an essay on "The Shelleys Near Geneva; Dr. Polidori's Diary." A notable facsimile reprint was made by Haskell House, in 1971, which was 16 pages in total length, in a demy octavo collation, and selling for nearly six dollars two years after this publication. Between 1890 and 2010, approximately 20 editions of this pamphlet have been published, with it being held at 147 libraries worldwide.
''Shelley's Vegetarianism'' is described as containing a "compendium of citations" from Shelley's prose and poems. It is cited in many publications, such as the work ''Anglia: Zeitschrift für englische Philologie'', which uses the pamphlet to reflect on Shelley's sometimes wavering adherence to the natural diet throughout the later years of his life, as well as referencing the inscription on his grave, which was a line from William Shakespeare's play ''
The Tempest''.
Content
On the inside of the cover is the Vegetarian Society's definition of vegetarianism, which reads "the practice of living on the products of the Vegetable kingdom, with or without the addition of Eggs and Milk and its products (butter and cheese), to the exclusion of Fish, Flesh, and Fowl." Adjacent to this page is the opening to ''Shelley's Vegetarianism'', which looks at the origin of the word "vegetarian", which did not exist until a quarter of a century after Shelley's death, before being referred to as a "natural diet," "vegetable regimen," or the "Pythagorean system."
It then divulges into the early years of his life, and his dietetic influences from English poet and politician
Lord Byron
George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron (22 January 1788 – 19 April 1824), known simply as Lord Byron, was an English romantic poet and Peerage of the United Kingdom, peer. He was one of the leading figures of the Romantic movement, and h ...
and the Vegetarians "with whom he lived intimately at London and Bracknell," which formed his "instinctive" dietetic simplicity. Much of the pamphlet focuses on the time that the Shelleys spent in the village of Marlow, Buckinghamsire, along with their close friend, novelist
Thomas Love Peacock, whose home they shared. During this period, Shelley practiced occasional regiments of starvation. It also recounts his hygiene, and his fondness for physical exercise, and even strenuous exertion. Axon cites Irish critic and poet
Edward Dowden
Edward Dowden (3 May 18434 April 1913) was an Irish critic, professor, and poet.
Biography
He was the son of John Wheeler Dowden, a merchant and landowner, and was born at Cork, three years after his brother John, who became Bishop of Edinburgh ...
's ''Life'', noting that "it was, indeed, a point of honour with Shelley to prove that some grit lay under his outward appearance of weakness and excitable nerves; for he was an apostle of the Vegetarian faith, and a water drinker, and must not discredit the doctrine which he preached and practised."
Axon also gives an account of Shelley's belief that with vegetarianism comes a wholesome society. It also notes some of his instances of relapses, as recorded by Hogg and Peacock, along with a letter from his son,
Sir Percy Florence Shelley, which also recounts: "I ''think'' I remember my mother telling me that he gave it up to a great extent in his later years—not from want of faith, but from the inconvenience."
The pamphlet also contains excerpts from several of Shelley's poems, including "Letter to Maria Gisborne," "Alastor," "Sensitive Plant," and "Laon and Cyntha," which would come to be known as "
The Revolt of Islam." It also contains portions of the poems "The Eve of St. Agnes" by English Romantic poet
John Keats
John Keats (31 October 1795 – 23 February 1821) was an English poet of the second generation of Romantic poets, with Lord Byron and Percy Bysshe Shelley. His poems had been in publication for less than four years when he died of tuberculo ...
, and "The City of our Dreams" by Felix Adler. Two pages of works published by the Vegetarian Society appear at the end of the work, listed by series. At the end of the ''Shelley's Vegetarianism'' is a page of the members of the Society, along with its aims, subscription directions, and an advertisement for the Vegetarian Messenger located on the opposite page.
Reviews
''Romanticism and the Materiality of Nature'' describes it as "another late-nineteenth century encomium of Shelley's vegetarianism." Romantic literature and culture site
Romantic Circles
''Romantic Circles'' is an academic peer-reviewed website dedicated to the study of Romantic literature and culture, featuring online editions of many texts of the Romantic era, as well as essays devoted to Romantic literature, culture, and theo ...
notes that ''Shelley's Vegetarianism'' contains "very little discussion," adding that it is "enlightening for those who did not know about this aspect of Shelley, but adding very little to the historical understanding of a familiar reader." It concludes with writing "it is the kind of book that can be replaced by studies which examine the same passages in far more detail: readers of
Morton's
Morton's The Steakhouse is a chain of steak restaurants with locations in the United States and franchised abroad, founded in Chicago in 1978. It is a wholly owned subsidiary of Landry's.
History
Morton's was co-founded in 1978 by Arnold J. Mo ...
recent book are well beyond needing Axon."
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{{Portal bar, Books
1890 non-fiction books
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