On this page
-
Text (1)
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
a horse till the blood flows ! and by such acts , on 6 horse ; ptobabfyv iti Ip lfitiji ^ ed , is subject from time to time , to a momentary pfifo : % Me 111 meii remorselessly avail themselves of the convenience rif jfost-chalffei and Stage-coaches , the conduct of which sends ninety horses out of a hundred , through a lingering course of torturing disease , to a premature death . Is cruelty , as far as it is a matter interesting to horses , chargeable only to the first mentioned description of offenders ? A caiman , in a ragged coat and dirty shirt , strikes his fore-horse on the nose with the butt-end of his whip , and the animal feels the smart for a full hour and a half * while a sporting gentleman , of the first fashion from top to toe , mounts filar *[ favourite mare , " and goads it on to the performance of some
desperate match against time—its agonizing exertions either killing it ori the spot , or inflicting upon it some dire disease in the lungs , or heart , or limbs , to last as long as its life . If either of these two delinquents is a fit mark for punishment , which should have the preference ? Speak out—don ' t be thinking about the coats of the parties—the carman strikes in mere passion ; the gentleman has five hundred pounds depending on his match . If cruelty can admit of an excuse , who , if he has any wanner feeling about him than a Jew-pedlar , will deny , that the carman has the
fceJt ' td propose ? u It is this view of the case that gives me a peculiar distaste for the spirit & £ Mr Martin ' s Act It dispenses punishment with no equal justice . I would have no legislation at all in any such matters , and certainly not such legislation as this . We see its penalties visited only upon those who have rags and dirt against them , with want of education , and other circumstances of their condition , which should Mead in their
favour ; while it spares others , who have no better claim to exemption tlian what they derive from better dress , together with more knowledge , and more refinement , which should be regarded only as an aggravation of their wrong-doing . It is really quite absurd to see a man hunting Qut for cruel people who abuse horses , yet fixing his sole attention upon § mjthfield drovers and hackney-coachmen ; as if there were no carriages likely to present game of this sort , except those with numbers upon them . " -r-pp . 48 , 5 W .
Ffcwtt the foregoing specimen it is easy to conjecture what Richard Ay ton would have said to Andrew Agnew had the latter risen iip in his time to profane the poor by imprisoning iti ^ m in the Sabbath / ! The essa ^ ilvhich follows the foregoin g is " On tari ^ ei&t&tt $ nd matter-of-fact people / ' and a more amusing ttnxlallietti-^ Hi ^ ^ met has nevef btet& writt ^ i ; AiM ^ btki ^ 'W&l ^ trative ojftli ^ extremes , & M $ e cdii ftpd ipic $ 1 & giv& minwh
^ IS ^ r e is an inborn t endency ra thfe human d ( ere there is mind ) to , Amplification—to swell out beyond the limits of Uatur 6 and truth . Our souls are too t j i g fpr our bodies , arid our perceptions and imprdflfltoM&tx } W too high for the scale and circumstances of the physical VOfUm which we live . ; . Our middle-size belies us : we are all Patagd nians in ¦ pur hearts and , our topjues—little creatures with our fifteen QUimraur steps to > 'ft tiii | . e « who nev ^ irtiieless nncl thfs ekr / Oi , 'wiip ^ its spfwe ^^ n ^^ Bf ^^^^^^^ P ^^^ ^^ t ^ BT , i ''^^^^^ W ^^^ F ^^^^^ '^^^^^^^^^^ W ^^^^ ^^ ^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^ ' ^ VJ ^ ' ^^ w ^^^^^^ ^^ I ^^^^ v ' ^^^^^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^^^^^ r ^^« ^ 1 ^^ B ^^ P ^^^ W ( b ^ W ^ f ^ Uf ^ H j ^^^ N ^ r ^ Bv ^ Hmv 4 V ^ 9 ^^ w ^^ ^^^^^( WPN ^ d ¦^¦¦ Bp ^(^ ^ t ^ r ^^ t& ^ QL ^ f /^^ D ^^ ™^ r ^ Bf ^ tfr ^ B ^^^ BI ^^^^ w ^^ vjut iWijfoBgv , our aescnpnviD pirnneis , iu >\ vt 5 v ^ tacy'infl ^ » fr fttnlw
Untitled Article
32 * Rtitbipectfoe GMm .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 1, 1837, page 326, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1832/page/8/
-